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drchaim 1 days ago [-]
I discovered ClickHouse around 2017-18 and built a PoC to replace Elasticsearch: 5x better storage and qps, in a couple of weeks.
Managers rejected it because it wasn't well known and was seen as "some database made by Russians."
On a personal level, it's quite sad to have seen that train coming so early and not been able to get on board.
oooyay 21 hours ago [-]
I had the same experience recently. Turns out ClickHouse would reduce our DB operations by 60%, remove the need for a TSDB, and reduce query times from ~300-500ms (and sometimes ~3s) to roughly ~75ms. Lastly, and most impressively we were already seeing a ridiculous level of compression and our storage cost benchmarks were reduced to the cost of S3. This took a $2-3M storage layer down to one measured in the single thousands per month.
ClickHouse is no panacea but if you understand how your data is accessed and thus how to arrange it you will get so many miles out of it.
ashu1461 1 days ago [-]
Same we are also stuck with ES wish could migrate to clickhouse but not able to do so because of the legacy load.
cloudie78 23 hours ago [-]
What do you not like about ES?
arunmu 23 hours ago [-]
Were you using it for simple grep search or actually required advanced searching for eg: BM25. Clickhouse will only help you with grep like search from what I understand.
drchaim 21 hours ago [-]
Actually, there was no search, only on-the-fly aggregations/filtering over "big data". ES was kind of famous at the time, although not the best tool for that job.
afaik CH introduced FTS rececently.
cynicalsecurity 6 hours ago [-]
Supply chain risk.
fsuts 23 hours ago [-]
Can clickhouse to search? If not why did you seek to replace elastic with it
Off topic: IMHO, everything that's been happening over the past few years is a self-fulfilling prophecy in no small part due to attitudes like this. Der Fuhrer did not have to put in much effort to convince the population when even those exposed to the outside world have met with enough suspicion and contempt to "know" (whether it's true or not) that most westerners have never seen us as equals, or even any sort of positive force.
Most probably don't even realize it. I see it as something similar to what racial minorities in the US go through: ask a random stranger on the street if he's racist, and he will honestly say no, even if he actually simply does not realize it, while it deeply affects how he sees the world.
I've also been seeing similar attitudes in relation to the Chinese. People avoiding excellent projects because they were written by some Chinese guy, including things where supply chain security is of no concern. Again apparently not realizing that these days a large part of the work on the Linux kernel is committed by paid employees of several large Chinese companies, all of them tightly intertwined with the government. Forget talking about who is building the hardware we all use.
Whatever, the internet is fracturing and balkanizing at full speed anyway, and the borders are slowly closing. Won't be long before we won't be able exchange anything non-destructive anymore. It was good while it lasted.
budsniffer952 23 hours ago [-]
>ask a random stranger on the street if he's racist, and he will honestly say no, even if he actually simply does not realize it
My lord you people are beyond patronizing.
When people refer to "the Chinese" or "the Russians", we are taking about the nation state, not the people. And there are legitimate security concerns. Whether we should be adversial is another question. But we are.
leoqa 23 hours ago [-]
I am wary of any supply chain attack and more so if the project is maintained by people with relationships in adversarial countries. The risk of exploitation outweighs the convenience.
throw-the-towel 22 hours ago [-]
I agree about the legitimate security concerns, but not with "we're talking about the nation state, not the people". If life has taught me anything in the last few years, it's that normies are incapable of making this distinction, at least in the Old World.
aetherspawn 15 hours ago [-]
My country literally has sanctions on your country. If I do any projects with you, I’ll pay a fine of $200K and go to jail for up to 10 years.
It’s not racism, it’s just caution.
That’s sad because I’ve always wanted to visit Russia and from the outside it looks like a really interesting place.
Now, if you could change your government to one that listens to the European Court of Human Rights (namely: don’t start random wars, respect freedom of religion and respect people’s right not to participate in useless wars they don’t believe in) then we’d be best friends.
malkia 10 hours ago [-]
There is an awesome amount of software written by Russians - nginx, clickhouse, 7zip, Far Manager, WinRAR, even Kotlin (his creator) - I grew up, as bulgarian, with Russian books (especially math) that were indispensible.
Do I like the Russian goverment, or any of their goverments (current, soviet or royal ones) - Hell no! We were liberated "two" or was it "three" times by then only to screw things for us badly (Bulgaria).
The people, the culture, the language, the music, art, science are great...
I still don't understand why so many bulgarians still like Putin... but hey!
curt15 55 minutes ago [-]
All the Jetbrains tooling as well.
goodmythical 23 hours ago [-]
Given that american ignorance is a cultural thing (with many people deliberately electing the way grandpa did it) is it not kind of racist to generalize americans as unknowingly racist?
You said, "ask a random stranger...and he will honestly say no" not "ask a random stanger...and he will probably honestly say no".
Most of most people are racist, it's just different groups. Americans obviously have less distrust of americans, but then I am just as certain that there are many many humans who would proudly share their "dumb american" stories as if that is not every bit as prejudicial to those of us who do not fit the description as any other "weak french" or "commie russian" or "sister fucking indian" or whatever else.
aleph_minus_one 22 hours ago [-]
> but then I am just as certain that there are many many humans who would proudly share their "dumb american" stories as if that is not every bit as prejudicial to those of us who do not fit the description as any other "weak french" or "commie russian" or "sister fucking indian" or whatever else.
Racism is about race (i.e. phenotypical or genotypical properties), while being US-American/French/Russian/Indian/... is about nationality. So, these stories are not about racism (since they are not about race), but about prejudices against other nations/nationalities.
throw9393kddif 21 hours ago [-]
[flagged]
dionian 20 hours ago [-]
yes and the proof was the spam email phoning home to russia. or, whatever other hoaxes they cooked up along the way. strangely most of them didnt make it into the trial where he was acquitted.
himata4113 1 days ago [-]
ClickHouse recently has been a breath of fresh air compared to using timescaledb for a long time. Although psql is the greatest there is and I really enjoyed the fact that I could rely on a single database system to run everything, when it came to migration maintenance and deployment it's really a pain and it also feels like development on timescaledb is a bit wishy washy with all the structural changes from version to version and it really feels like an alpha product sometimes.
k_bx 1 days ago [-]
I was using TimescaleDB some very long time ago, things have changed quite a lot since (it's now even named differently).
In my current setup I was thinking on doing both: upgrading postgresql to timescaledb (to archive old data etc.), and to deploy ClickHouse in parallel. I'm still considering whether to go big on PeerDB to get ClickHouse mirror or just deploy it separately without additional fragility layer.
Would you not recommend using timescaledb at all? I definitely want to avoid alpha-quality software pain, since PostgreSQL is one of the most rock-solid parts of the stack at the moment.
wkrp 21 hours ago [-]
In my (minor) experience Timescale works fine. The developer experience is good and it is very convenient to be able to JOIN against your hypertables. My only real complaints are operational (no logical replication, normal postgres update complaints), but man Clickhouse is really slick. I wrote some small reviews of the two in my submission history if you want a bit more detail.
saisrirampur 16 hours ago [-]
We at PeerDB/CickPipes tried to make that mirroring as frictionless as possible. It is validated at scale across 1000s of customer moving over half a PB of a data per month from Postgres to ClickHouse. You should give it a shot and you might be surprised.
Side note: May be there is way even more native than CDC/logical decoding that you never have to worry about keeping PG and CH in sync. Stay tuned for some updates from us on that end!
- Sai from ClickHouse
himata4113 1 days ago [-]
I would just run both and decomission the old one when a) all data is migrated, b) old data is no longer relevant and can be archived
__s 1 days ago [-]
Worked on peerdb. If you're able to batch changes on your end & push to both postgres & clickhouse, do that. Only move to peerdb when you know you need cdc
fsuts 23 hours ago [-]
Just looked up PeerDB expecting a Db as per its name.
But it’s a ETl tool. Stupid naming
saisrirampur 22 hours ago [-]
I know I know. Some people have loved it as it captures what it does (peering dbs) and some haven't because of the exact reason you called out. So we get it! :)
philippemnoel 16 hours ago [-]
There is significant work happening in the PostgreSQL ecosystem to make "use a single system to run everything" possible. ParadeDB is one such system pushing on full-text/vector search, with some light aggregations, at the index level. There is also work being done by DuckDB folks with pg_duckdb and others like Xata. (disclaimer: I work at ParadeDB)
cpursley 3 hours ago [-]
What’s the closest extension or tooling that provides functionality similar to ClickHouse? I’m looking for something like that before making the full jump and adding another dependency.
mial 5 hours ago [-]
On top of being a really good OLAP database, what has been a game changer for me is the built-in connectors for bringing in data from remote sources. It can manage automatic recurring import of a s3 folder containing parquet/json files and it can also connect directly to Postgres. For our data warehouse at a medium sized newspaper, we switched from Druid+postgres+trino to just one big clickhouse node and I’ve never looked back. Much more performant, practical, and a lot less maintenance.
ksajadi 20 hours ago [-]
For our metrics and autoscaling engine at Cloud 66, we went through 5 iterations before settling on Clickhouse:
1. Redis
2. Cassandra
3. Handrolled: Ruby + RabbitMQ
4. Handrolled: Go + RabbitMQ
5. Clickhouse
Every time we reached some limit or huge optimization burdens that were unfeasible. Clickhouse has been rock solid for the past 4 years.
murkt 7 hours ago [-]
I am having a hard time picturing what could be the problem that you were solving.
Redis, Cassandra, RabbitMQ and Clickhouse. RabbitMQ looks like a black sheep in this lineup.
tills13 7 hours ago [-]
Also like redis and clickhouse are diametrically different platforms. Wild to go from one to the other.
cpursley 2 hours ago [-]
I’m gonna guess that it’s because Ruby is dog slow and not concurrent.
kjuulh 17 hours ago [-]
Love clickhouse it is just super performant. I've had to tweak a few queries for performance here and there but it has been more than stellar. I'd initially set up a real time pipeline ingest for us to handle our larger incremental ingests when i started (used redshift in the past, very expensive and quite slow in comparison), it has been unnecessary so far, as clickhouse has just been able to chew through tons of data and large transformations without breaking a sweat.
Only issue i had was that the default configuration had some quite heavy handed tracing turned on which tanked performance on the relatively little machine we had for it, it has since been scaled up and is the core of our data stack.
I can't recommend clickhouse enough. If you were truly large I'd probably choose something else, but as long as we're staying on a few nodes it is manageable complexity and we enjoy using it.
mscdex 2 hours ago [-]
What "heavy handed tracing" was turned on by default?
jaysh 1 days ago [-]
ClickHouse replacing Loki finally made our observability stack feel 'right'. It really is a powerhouse for logs and general analytical queries.
tills13 6 hours ago [-]
We are fully embracing LGTM ourselves but this is really interesting. Loki for us has been great, though, so what is better about CH other than maybe sql being more expressive than LogQL?
jaysh 5 hours ago [-]
Off the top of my head:
- substantially better performance on the same hardware, even moreso for larger range queries (multiple days)
- no new query language to learn
- significantly more expressive as you said
- agents for scraping logs use way less CPU (I used to use grafana-agent which used about 80%, vector uses sub 5%)
- very intuitive to manage TTLs - I can keep some logs for 10 years, and some for 1 week based on the event in the JSON
- more compact storage, I didn't check scientifically but CH storage is better compressed at least 4-5x for us
- no running into maximum stream limits - struggled with these even on Grafana Cloud and didn't realise we silently lost a lot of logs
Honestly: why wouldn't you. Loki always felt like a mistake to me. A brand new query language, really counter-intuitive configuration, large ramp-up time for complex queries, lots of arguing about labels/cardinality etc. It all goes away when you drop it. I think logging should not be exotic or behave in unexpected ways.
oulipo2 1 days ago [-]
How do you use it for visualization? Do you use ClickStack? or something else?
jaysh 23 hours ago [-]
Still via Grafana. I ran it side-by-side with Loki and despite trying to optimise Loki and using ClickHouse out of the box - it really was shocking how much faster ClickHouse was for every single query (e.g. in the last 12 hours give my the frequency of logs with a particular JSON event or even "find this log entry, then join back and find the number of times a different entry appears within the same correlation_id)
CubsFan1060 23 hours ago [-]
What does the layout in click house look like? Do the input logs need to have a very defined structure?
jaysh 23 hours ago [-]
Not really, ClickHouse is super forgiving so you can do something like:
CREATE TABLE default.events (
`timestamp` DateTime
`event` String -- e.g. 'product.updated' or empty/null
`message` -- human readable message
`raw` -- the raw message - this is very useful when pushing logs that aren't JSON - you just let the `event` be null and dump the entire message here
)
ENGINE = MergeTree
PARTITION BY toDate(timestamp)
ORDER BY (timestamp, event)
TTL timestamp + toIntervalMonth(6)
ClickHouse is extremely performant even in the cases of e.g.: SELECT count(*) FROM `events` WHERE `raw` LIKE '%hello world%'
Of course, the more columns you splat out (e.g. like correlation_id, user_id, order_id, etc) the better you can index and expect those queries to perform but in general I don't bother outside the obvious core domain ones (exampled above), the performance is so good that unindexed queries are significantly faster than indexed queries in Loki. I have reached the point where I JSON extract on-the-fly for the WHERE clause with very large queries with no meaningful performance issues.
oulipo2 21 hours ago [-]
Interesting, so you can bind a Clickhouse table as an extension to Grafana? Would you make a little Gist / post about it to show?
We recently moved to openobserve for due to cost, but visualisations are good enough too.
malkia 10 hours ago [-]
There is HyperDX - search is not fastest, but it could be something that we do too - haven't checked deeply if high-cardinality is big issue with ClickHouse, but seeing some high cardinality data with what we post.
Just replied to that question! Let me know if you have other questions.
adsharma 22 hours ago [-]
It's interesting that the blog post places SQLite and Ladybird on the spectrum, but omits it's chief open source rival: DuckDB.
Agree that Level 3 is what inspires confidence. But we need to invent new business models to sustain in the era of vibe-coded databases.
nasretdinov 6 hours ago [-]
I think the main advantage of ClickHouse over DuckDB is *MergeTree family. It lets you sort data in the background, which allows for absurd levels of compression and performance when done right. ClickHouse can easily be 10x as performant as DuckDB querying Parquet when querying non-indexed columns, and obviously infinitely faster than DuckDB when you're touching primary key.
There are so many comparisons between the two, but realistically ClickHouse and DuckDB occupy completely separate niches, where DuckDB is just a really powerful analytics _engine_, and ClickHouse is a full database management system, with replication, MergeTree engine, etc.
aaronblohowiak 20 hours ago [-]
while ClickHouse can scale down to compete with duckdb, I dont believe (but happy to be corrected) that duckdb can scale up like ClickHouse can.
most people dont have that scale problems, but when you do...
lazyasciiart 1 days ago [-]
> You can open a pull request as an experiment, without aiming for it to be merged - it will be tested with the same level of scrutiny as production releases. Found a new memory allocator, a new compression library, a new hash table, a data format, or a sorting algorithm? - bring it to ClickHouse, and it will expose it inside-out
Wow
benjamkovi 1 days ago [-]
ClickHouse dev here, but this is true. ClickHouse contributed finding several bugs on our third-party libs (jemalloc, librdkafka for 100%, there much more, but I only worked on these), in linux kernel and basically everywhere. We have very rigorous fuzzers (yes, multiple fuzzers on multiple levels), running tests in insane number of configurations. I think the last number I heard a year ago is around 400 hours for a complete CI run for a single commit (not PR, but commit). So yeah, pretty insane, in the good way.
tdiff 21 hours ago [-]
It is sad they are afraid to mention on the page that "data processing for a web analytics system ... similar to Google Analytics" was actually something used in Yandex.
corentin88 20 hours ago [-]
Elsewhere on the page, they avoid mentioning Yandex. In fact, do they ever mention Yandex?
That’s probably not to advertise for that company. I don’t see why it’s sad?
civet_java 17 hours ago [-]
Or could it be because hecklers might call them "un-American" if they did list Yandex? The two aren't the same.
brunojppb 1 days ago [-]
Clickhouse has been a game changer for some of the companies i have worked in the past. This reminds me of this podcast episode (1) from the Rust in Production pod about their Rust adoption.
I've been using clickhouse for the last year for in-house analytics and found it a really pleasant experience, thanks for all the progress you've made
dandellion 1 days ago [-]
Same. We replicated some data from Postgres, it was easy to set up, similar enough that the transition was trivial, and really good performance out of the box. One of those good "use the right tool for the job" experiences.
computersuck 2 hours ago [-]
Has anyone tried using ClickHouse to build a SIEM or security related tool?
I used to keep all of OnlineOrNot's timeseries data entirely in a hot postgres db with the rest of the relational data.
Used to take a few seconds to get a week's uptime data and do some useful analysis.
Since moving to Clickhouse I think I can grab a full year's data in around 200ms (probably less if I try optimising it). Still completely blows my mind everyday.
baq 1 days ago [-]
clickhouse is the low key amazing tech people are busy using instead of posting about. keep it up!
tarun_anand 19 hours ago [-]
How does CH compare with the recent announcements made by Databricks Reyden...
sakesun 3 hours ago [-]
One actually exists. The other doesn't
dmix 20 hours ago [-]
We use Clickhouse in a rails app for our customer facing dashboard analytics, logging, and datalake type stuff where Postgres is too heavy and expensive. The web admin panel they built is great and we’ve had solid performance.
spprashant 1 days ago [-]
If your data is too big for postgres, it seems like moving straight to Clickhouse is the best option. We have been through an whole array of distributed database technologies, and Clickhouse might be first one that doesn't have too many compromises.
fsuts 23 hours ago [-]
What do you mean?
Postrgesql is a relational and row based db, ClickHouse is columnar
Clickhouse doesn’t replace postgresql:
saisrirampur 21 hours ago [-]
Sai from ClickHouse here. Totally with you here, ClickHouse isn't a replacement for Postgres. Most use-cases are co-existence - Postgres for OLTP and ClickHouse for OLAP, basically right tool for the right job situation. Both are purpose-built technologies with a similar OSS ethos/story. Btw on an interesting co-incidence, Postgres turned 30 this year and ClickHouse turned 10.
Above is exactly why we are embracing the Postgres + ClickHouse stack and are investing heavily to make workflows across both these DBs very easy for developers - PeerDB for native CDC, pg_clickhouse extension for querying CH from PG, pg_stat_ch for query PG observability from ClickHouse and more such are planned for future. And recently we also announced ClickHouse Managed Postgres which pacakages this entire stack as a fully managed service https://clickhouse.com/cloud/postgres
spprashant 22 hours ago [-]
This is a extremely common issue that happens in growing firms.
You start off with everything in Postgres, it makes the most sense.
Soon you realize some tables are growing really huge - usually some sort of time-series or log data reaching 10TB+. You can no longer fit it in one node. You can try you luck with some sharding extensions, but they add complexity to upgrades.
In that case it makes total sense to move these large tables off Postgres, and I think Clickhouse is a straight up replacement here. You can still keep your relational heavy tables in Postgres.
Yes it affects you ability to cleanly join data, and guarantee 100% consistency. With some smart application code, and schema design, you can replace parts of Postgres with Clickhouse for the big data problem.
ezekg 17 hours ago [-]
I did this exact thing this year. I moved about >5 TB of event and log data into Clickhouse. I went from having to increase Postgres storage capacity every few months ($$$) to never thinking about it. Migrating to Clickhouse took me from constant timeouts on analytics queries to all queries returning in well under 100ms, and automated data retention using TTLs going from nightly pruning jobs that failed constantly (Postgres hates DELETEs on large tables) to again, never thinking about it. Because of this, I was able to increase retention per-account from a mere 30 days like I had -- just to keep performance and storage costs under control -- to much, much longer. Huge fan.
gempir 22 hours ago [-]
You can keep "columnar" data in a row based database like postgres, it's just more expensive. But with little data that's fine and reduces infrastructural complexity. When you reach too much data it gets to a point where you then actually want to use the correct database for your usecase.
eklavya 22 hours ago [-]
Not to mention ACID and CAP and all that. I use clickhouse AND postgres. Clickhouse is not a replacement for postgres at all.
bdavid21wnec 18 hours ago [-]
CHDB deserves a lot of credit too, wish they would unmark the rust version as experimental. The python version works very well!
ddorian43 1 days ago [-]
Clickhouse is *really* gatekeeping the "zero copy replication" where you store data on object-storage and have high availability from the open source version.
nasretdinov 6 hours ago [-]
That feature is central for ClickHouse Cloud offering which essentially is what lets others have (the rest of) ClickHouse for free. If you need that feature I think it's quite obvious you'll have to pay. I don't think it's an unreasonable stance at all.
P.S. I don't believe you are right to call it "zero copy" either. The object storage itself is replicated and definitely does copy and/or split data a lot under the hood. In some sense it's no different from ClickHouse's replication, apart from that ClickHouse can't use erasure codes to reduce the data footprint, whereas many advanced object stores can
rastignack 3 hours ago [-]
The thing is you are going to be comoditized on this too. And it’s going to be faster to migrate off your database with AI. You are going to need to have a plan.
ddorian43 6 hours ago [-]
It is called "zero copy" in clickhouse land.
That feature, is becoming central for an OLAP db, even a free/open-source one.
pepperoni_pizza 1 days ago [-]
I think that is just the nature of the open core business - but like most such businesses, they're not very clear about how that is what they are, pretending to be open source business instead.
fsuts 23 hours ago [-]
Vc funded with recent rounds so 10 years hasn’t been enough time to make money
There's no need to package it because ClickHouse is just a single binary.
aleks_me2 23 hours ago [-]
[flagged]
Edo91 21 hours ago [-]
[flagged]
haeseong 1 days ago [-]
The query speed deserves the praise, but the JSON ingestion path has quiet footguns nobody mentions here. Every numeric column comes back as a string over JSONEachRow, so a forgotten Number() cast silently turns arithmetic into string concatenation, and with input_format_skip_unknown_fields enabled a single typo in a column name drops that field with no error at all. Worth wiring an assertion that inserts a row and reads it back into CI before trusting the dashboards.
charrondev 24 hours ago [-]
We’ve done our JSON ingestion by keeping a schema in the app for all the types we expect, and injecting the types into the query builder.
Then as needed we have materialized columns on our different tables.
ignoramous 24 hours ago [-]
[dead]
Talpur1 1 days ago [-]
10 Years! quite a long journey, specailly observeability part is need of hour
Managers rejected it because it wasn't well known and was seen as "some database made by Russians."
On a personal level, it's quite sad to have seen that train coming so early and not been able to get on board.
ClickHouse is no panacea but if you understand how your data is accessed and thus how to arrange it you will get so many miles out of it.
afaik CH introduced FTS rececently.
Most probably don't even realize it. I see it as something similar to what racial minorities in the US go through: ask a random stranger on the street if he's racist, and he will honestly say no, even if he actually simply does not realize it, while it deeply affects how he sees the world.
I've also been seeing similar attitudes in relation to the Chinese. People avoiding excellent projects because they were written by some Chinese guy, including things where supply chain security is of no concern. Again apparently not realizing that these days a large part of the work on the Linux kernel is committed by paid employees of several large Chinese companies, all of them tightly intertwined with the government. Forget talking about who is building the hardware we all use.
Whatever, the internet is fracturing and balkanizing at full speed anyway, and the borders are slowly closing. Won't be long before we won't be able exchange anything non-destructive anymore. It was good while it lasted.
My lord you people are beyond patronizing.
When people refer to "the Chinese" or "the Russians", we are taking about the nation state, not the people. And there are legitimate security concerns. Whether we should be adversial is another question. But we are.
It’s not racism, it’s just caution.
That’s sad because I’ve always wanted to visit Russia and from the outside it looks like a really interesting place.
Now, if you could change your government to one that listens to the European Court of Human Rights (namely: don’t start random wars, respect freedom of religion and respect people’s right not to participate in useless wars they don’t believe in) then we’d be best friends.
Do I like the Russian goverment, or any of their goverments (current, soviet or royal ones) - Hell no! We were liberated "two" or was it "three" times by then only to screw things for us badly (Bulgaria).
The people, the culture, the language, the music, art, science are great...
I still don't understand why so many bulgarians still like Putin... but hey!
You said, "ask a random stranger...and he will honestly say no" not "ask a random stanger...and he will probably honestly say no".
Most of most people are racist, it's just different groups. Americans obviously have less distrust of americans, but then I am just as certain that there are many many humans who would proudly share their "dumb american" stories as if that is not every bit as prejudicial to those of us who do not fit the description as any other "weak french" or "commie russian" or "sister fucking indian" or whatever else.
Racism is about race (i.e. phenotypical or genotypical properties), while being US-American/French/Russian/Indian/... is about nationality. So, these stories are not about racism (since they are not about race), but about prejudices against other nations/nationalities.
In my current setup I was thinking on doing both: upgrading postgresql to timescaledb (to archive old data etc.), and to deploy ClickHouse in parallel. I'm still considering whether to go big on PeerDB to get ClickHouse mirror or just deploy it separately without additional fragility layer.
Would you not recommend using timescaledb at all? I definitely want to avoid alpha-quality software pain, since PostgreSQL is one of the most rock-solid parts of the stack at the moment.
Side note: May be there is way even more native than CDC/logical decoding that you never have to worry about keeping PG and CH in sync. Stay tuned for some updates from us on that end!
- Sai from ClickHouse
But it’s a ETl tool. Stupid naming
Every time we reached some limit or huge optimization burdens that were unfeasible. Clickhouse has been rock solid for the past 4 years.
Redis, Cassandra, RabbitMQ and Clickhouse. RabbitMQ looks like a black sheep in this lineup.
Only issue i had was that the default configuration had some quite heavy handed tracing turned on which tanked performance on the relatively little machine we had for it, it has since been scaled up and is the core of our data stack.
I can't recommend clickhouse enough. If you were truly large I'd probably choose something else, but as long as we're staying on a few nodes it is manageable complexity and we enjoy using it.
- substantially better performance on the same hardware, even moreso for larger range queries (multiple days)
- no new query language to learn
- significantly more expressive as you said
- agents for scraping logs use way less CPU (I used to use grafana-agent which used about 80%, vector uses sub 5%)
- very intuitive to manage TTLs - I can keep some logs for 10 years, and some for 1 week based on the event in the JSON
- more compact storage, I didn't check scientifically but CH storage is better compressed at least 4-5x for us
- no running into maximum stream limits - struggled with these even on Grafana Cloud and didn't realise we silently lost a lot of logs
Honestly: why wouldn't you. Loki always felt like a mistake to me. A brand new query language, really counter-intuitive configuration, large ramp-up time for complex queries, lots of arguing about labels/cardinality etc. It all goes away when you drop it. I think logging should not be exotic or behave in unexpected ways.
Of course, the more columns you splat out (e.g. like correlation_id, user_id, order_id, etc) the better you can index and expect those queries to perform but in general I don't bother outside the obvious core domain ones (exampled above), the performance is so good that unindexed queries are significantly faster than indexed queries in Loki. I have reached the point where I JSON extract on-the-fly for the WHERE clause with very large queries with no meaningful performance issues.
Agree that Level 3 is what inspires confidence. But we need to invent new business models to sustain in the era of vibe-coded databases.
There are so many comparisons between the two, but realistically ClickHouse and DuckDB occupy completely separate niches, where DuckDB is just a really powerful analytics _engine_, and ClickHouse is a full database management system, with replication, MergeTree engine, etc.
most people dont have that scale problems, but when you do...
Wow
That’s probably not to advertise for that company. I don’t see why it’s sad?
1. https://open.spotify.com/episode/0TBKDUhO0KihBxEzZqnQx1
https://clickhouse.com/resources/engineering/siem
https://clickhouse.com/blog/how-huntress-improved-performanc...
Used to take a few seconds to get a week's uptime data and do some useful analysis.
Since moving to Clickhouse I think I can grab a full year's data in around 200ms (probably less if I try optimising it). Still completely blows my mind everyday.
Postrgesql is a relational and row based db, ClickHouse is columnar
Clickhouse doesn’t replace postgresql:
Above is exactly why we are embracing the Postgres + ClickHouse stack and are investing heavily to make workflows across both these DBs very easy for developers - PeerDB for native CDC, pg_clickhouse extension for querying CH from PG, pg_stat_ch for query PG observability from ClickHouse and more such are planned for future. And recently we also announced ClickHouse Managed Postgres which pacakages this entire stack as a fully managed service https://clickhouse.com/cloud/postgres
You start off with everything in Postgres, it makes the most sense. Soon you realize some tables are growing really huge - usually some sort of time-series or log data reaching 10TB+. You can no longer fit it in one node. You can try you luck with some sharding extensions, but they add complexity to upgrades.
In that case it makes total sense to move these large tables off Postgres, and I think Clickhouse is a straight up replacement here. You can still keep your relational heavy tables in Postgres.
Yes it affects you ability to cleanly join data, and guarantee 100% consistency. With some smart application code, and schema design, you can replace parts of Postgres with Clickhouse for the big data problem.
P.S. I don't believe you are right to call it "zero copy" either. The object storage itself is replicated and definitely does copy and/or split data a lot under the hood. In some sense it's no different from ClickHouse's replication, apart from that ClickHouse can't use erasure codes to reduce the data footprint, whereas many advanced object stores can
That feature, is becoming central for an OLAP db, even a free/open-source one.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ClickHouse
Then as needed we have materialized columns on our different tables.