asynch
is an asynchronous ClickHouse Python driver with native TCP interface support, which reuses most of clickhouse-driver features and complies with PEP249.
> pip install asynch
If you want to install clickhouse-cityhash
to enable transport compression
> pip install asynch[compression]
Basically, a connection to a ClickHouse server can be established in two ways:
-
with a DSN string, e.g.,
clickhouse://[user:password]@host:port/database
;from asynch import connect # connecting with a DSN string async def connect_database(): conn = await connect( dsn = "clickhouse://ch_user:P@55w0rD:@127.0.0.1:9000/chdb", )
-
with separately given connection/DSN parameters:
user
(optional),password
(optional),host
,port
,database
.from asynch import connect # connecting with DSN parameters async def connect_database(): conn = await connect( user = "ch_user", password = "P@55w0rD", host = "127.0.0.1", port = 9000, database = "chdb", )
If a DSN string is given, it takes priority over any specified connection parameter.
Create a database and a table by executing SQL statements via an instance of the Cursor
class (here its child DictCursor
class) acquired from an instance of the Connection
class.
async def create_table(conn: Connection):
async with conn.cursor(cursor=DictCursor) as cursor:
await cursor.execute("CREATE DATABASE IF NOT EXISTS test")
await cursor.execute("""
CREATE TABLE if not exists test.asynch
(
`id` Int32,
`decimal` Decimal(10, 2),
`date` Date,
`datetime` DateTime,
`float` Float32,
`uuid` UUID,
`string` String,
`ipv4` IPv4,
`ipv6` IPv6
)
ENGINE = MergeTree
ORDER BY id
"""
)
Fetching one row from an executed SQL statement:
async def fetchone(conn: Connection):
# by default, an instance of the `Cursor` class
async with conn.cursor() as cursor:
await cursor.execute("SELECT 1")
ret = await cursor.fetchone()
assert ret == (1,)
Fetching all the rows from an executed SQL statement:
async def fetchall():
async with conn.cursor() as cursor:
await cursor.execute("SELECT 1")
ret = await cursor.fetchall()
assert ret == [(1,)]
Using an instance of the DictCursor
class to get results as a sequence of dict
ionaries representing the rows of an executed SQL query:
async def dict_cursor():
async with conn.cursor(cursor=DictCursor) as cursor:
await cursor.execute("SELECT 1")
ret = await cursor.fetchall()
assert ret == [{"1": 1}]
Inserting data with dict
s via a DictCursor
instance:
from asynch.cursors import DictCursor
async def insert_dict():
async with conn.cursor(cursor=DictCursor) as cursor:
ret = await cursor.execute(
"""INSERT INTO test.asynch(id,decimal,date,datetime,float,uuid,string,ipv4,ipv6) VALUES""",
[
{
"id": 1,
"decimal": 1,
"date": "2020-08-08",
"datetime": "2020-08-08 00:00:00",
"float": 1,
"uuid": "59e182c4-545d-4f30-8b32-cefea2d0d5ba",
"string": "1",
"ipv4": "0.0.0.0",
"ipv6": "::",
}
],
)
assert ret == 1
Inserting data with tuple
s:
async def insert_tuple():
async with conn.cursor(cursor=DictCursor) as cursor:
ret = await cursor.execute(
"""INSERT INTO test.asynch(id,decimal,date,datetime,float,uuid,string,ipv4,ipv6) VALUES""",
[
(
1,
1,
"2020-08-08",
"2020-08-08 00:00:00",
1,
"59e182c4-545d-4f30-8b32-cefea2d0d5ba",
"1",
"0.0.0.0",
"::",
)
],
)
assert ret == 1
Before the v0.2.4:
async def use_pool():
pool = await asynch.create_pool()
async with pool.acquire() as conn:
async with conn.cursor() as cursor:
await cursor.execute("SELECT 1")
ret = await cursor.fetchone()
assert ret == (1,)
pool.close()
await pool.wait_closed()
Since the v0.2.5:
async def use_pool():
# init a Pool and fill it with `minsize` opened connections
async with Pool(minsize=1, maxsize=2) as pool:
# acquire a connection from the pool
async with pool.connection() as conn:
async with conn.cursor() as cursor:
await cursor.execute("SELECT 1")
ret = await cursor.fetchone()
assert ret == (1,)
- clickhouse-driver, ClickHouse Python Driver with native interface support.
This project is licensed under the Apache-2.0 License.