WITH Clause
ClickHouse supports Common Table Expressions (CTE) and substitutes the code defined in the WITH
clause in all places of use for the rest of SELECT
query. Named subqueries can be included to the current and child query context in places where table objects are allowed. Recursion is prevented by hiding the current level CTEs from the WITH expression.
Please note that CTEs do not guarantee the same results in all places they are called because the query will be re-executed for each use case.
An example of such behavior is below
with cte_numbers as
(
select
num
from generateRandom('num UInt64', NULL)
limit 1000000
)
select
count()
from cte_numbers
where num in (select num from cte_numbers)
If CTEs were to pass exactly the results and not just a piece of code, you would always see 1000000
However, due to the fact that we are referring cte_numbers
twice, random numbers are generated each time and, accordingly, we see different random results, 280501, 392454, 261636, 196227
and so on...
Syntax
WITH <expression> AS <identifier>
or
WITH <identifier> AS <subquery expression>
Examples
Example 1: Using constant expression as “variable”
WITH '2019-08-01 15:23:00' as ts_upper_bound
SELECT *
FROM hits
WHERE
EventDate = toDate(ts_upper_bound) AND
EventTime <= ts_upper_bound;
Example 2: Evicting a sum(bytes) expression result from the SELECT clause column list
WITH sum(bytes) as s
SELECT
formatReadableSize(s),
table
FROM system.parts
GROUP BY table
ORDER BY s;
Example 3: Using results of a scalar subquery
/* this example would return TOP 10 of most huge tables */
WITH
(
SELECT sum(bytes)
FROM system.parts
WHERE active
) AS total_disk_usage
SELECT
(sum(bytes) / total_disk_usage) * 100 AS table_disk_usage,
table
FROM system.parts
GROUP BY table
ORDER BY table_disk_usage DESC
LIMIT 10;
Example 4: Reusing expression in a subquery
WITH test1 AS (SELECT i + 1, j + 1 FROM test1)
SELECT * FROM test1;
Recursive Queries
The optional RECURSIVE modifier allows for a WITH query to refer to its own output. Example:
Example: Sum integers from 1 through 100
WITH RECURSIVE test_table AS (
SELECT 1 AS number
UNION ALL
SELECT number + 1 FROM test_table WHERE number < 100
)
SELECT sum(number) FROM test_table;
┌─sum(number)─┐
│ 5050 │
└─────────────┘
The general form of a recursive WITH
query is always a non-recursive term, then UNION ALL
, then a recursive term, where only the recursive term can contain a reference to the query's own output. Recursive CTE query is executed as follows:
- Evaluate the non-recursive term. Place result of non-recursive term query in a temporary working table.
- As long as the working table is not empty, repeat these steps:
- Evaluate the recursive term, substituting the current contents of the working table for the recursive self-reference. Place result of recursive term query in a temporary intermediate table.
- Replace the contents of the working table with the contents of the intermediate table, then empty the intermediate table.
Recursive queries are typically used to work with hierarchical or tree-structured data. For example, we can write a query that performs tree traversal:
Example: Tree traversal
First let's create tree table:
DROP TABLE IF EXISTS tree;
CREATE TABLE tree
(
id UInt64,
parent_id Nullable(UInt64),
data String
) ENGINE = MergeTree ORDER BY id;
INSERT INTO tree VALUES (0, NULL, 'ROOT'), (1, 0, 'Child_1'), (2, 0, 'Child_2'), (3, 1, 'Child_1_1');
We can traverse those tree with such query:
Example: Tree traversal
WITH RECURSIVE search_tree AS (
SELECT id, parent_id, data
FROM tree t
WHERE t.id = 0
UNION ALL
SELECT t.id, t.parent_id, t.data
FROM tree t, search_tree st
WHERE t.parent_id = st.id
)
SELECT * FROM search_tree;
┌─id─┬─parent_id─┬─data──────┐
│ 0 │ ᴺᵁᴸᴸ │ ROOT │
│ 1 │ 0 │ Child_1 │
│ 2 │ 0 │ Child_2 │
│ 3 │ 1 │ Child_1_1 │
└────┴───────────┴───────────┘
Search order
To create a depth-first order, we compute for each result row an array of rows that we have already visited:
Example: Tree traversal depth-first order
WITH RECURSIVE search_tree AS (
SELECT id, parent_id, data, [t.id] AS path
FROM tree t
WHERE t.id = 0
UNION ALL
SELECT t.id, t.parent_id, t.data, arrayConcat(path, [t.id])
FROM tree t, search_tree st
WHERE t.parent_id = st.id
)
SELECT * FROM search_tree ORDER BY path;
┌─id─┬─parent_id─┬─data──────┬─path────┐
│ 0 │ ᴺᵁᴸᴸ │ ROOT │ [0] │
│ 1 │ 0 │ Child_1 │ [0,1] │
│ 3 │ 1 │ Child_1_1 │ [0,1,3] │
│ 2 │ 0 │ Child_2 │ [0,2] │
└────┴───────────┴───────────┴─────────┘
To create a breadth-first order, standard approach is to add column that tracks the depth of the search:
Example: Tree traversal breadth-first order
WITH RECURSIVE search_tree AS (
SELECT id, parent_id, data, [t.id] AS path, toUInt64(0) AS depth
FROM tree t
WHERE t.id = 0
UNION ALL
SELECT t.id, t.parent_id, t.data, arrayConcat(path, [t.id]), depth + 1
FROM tree t, search_tree st
WHERE t.parent_id = st.id
)
SELECT * FROM search_tree ORDER BY depth;
┌─id─┬─link─┬─data──────┬─path────┬─depth─┐
│ 0 │ ᴺᵁᴸᴸ │ ROOT │ [0] │ 0 │
│ 1 │ 0 │ Child_1 │ [0,1] │ 1 │
│ 2 │ 0 │ Child_2 │ [0,2] │ 1 │
│ 3 │ 1 │ Child_1_1 │ [0,1,3] │ 2 │
└────┴──────┴───────────┴─────────┴───────┘
Cycle detection
First let's create graph table:
DROP TABLE IF EXISTS graph;
CREATE TABLE graph
(
from UInt64,
to UInt64,
label String
) ENGINE = MergeTree ORDER BY (from, to);
INSERT INTO graph VALUES (1, 2, '1 -> 2'), (1, 3, '1 -> 3'), (2, 3, '2 -> 3'), (1, 4, '1 -> 4'), (4, 5, '4 -> 5');
We can traverse that graph with such query:
Example: Graph traversal without cycle detection
WITH RECURSIVE search_graph AS (
SELECT from, to, label FROM graph g
UNION ALL
SELECT g.from, g.to, g.label
FROM graph g, search_graph sg
WHERE g.from = sg.to
)
SELECT DISTINCT * FROM search_graph ORDER BY from;
┌─from─┬─to─┬─label──┐
│ 1 │ 4 │ 1 -> 4 │
│ 1 │ 2 │ 1 -> 2 │
│ 1 │ 3 │ 1 -> 3 │
│ 2 │ 3 │ 2 -> 3 │
│ 4 │ 5 │ 4 -> 5 │
└──────┴────┴────────┘
But if we add cycle in that graph, previous query will fail with Maximum recursive CTE evaluation depth
error:
INSERT INTO graph VALUES (5, 1, '5 -> 1');
WITH RECURSIVE search_graph AS (
SELECT from, to, label FROM graph g
UNION ALL
SELECT g.from, g.to, g.label
FROM graph g, search_graph sg
WHERE g.from = sg.to
)
SELECT DISTINCT * FROM search_graph ORDER BY from;
Code: 306. DB::Exception: Received from localhost:9000. DB::Exception: Maximum recursive CTE evaluation depth (1000) exceeded, during evaluation of search_graph AS (SELECT from, to, label FROM graph AS g UNION ALL SELECT g.from, g.to, g.label FROM graph AS g, search_graph AS sg WHERE g.from = sg.to). Consider raising max_recursive_cte_evaluation_depth setting.: While executing RecursiveCTESource. (TOO_DEEP_RECURSION)
The standard method for handling cycles is to compute an array of the already visited nodes:
Example: Graph traversal with cycle detection
WITH RECURSIVE search_graph AS (
SELECT from, to, label, false AS is_cycle, [tuple(g.from, g.to)] AS path FROM graph g
UNION ALL
SELECT g.from, g.to, g.label, has(path, tuple(g.from, g.to)), arrayConcat(sg.path, [tuple(g.from, g.to)])
FROM graph g, search_graph sg
WHERE g.from = sg.to AND NOT is_cycle
)
SELECT * FROM search_graph WHERE is_cycle ORDER BY from;
┌─from─┬─to─┬─label──┬─is_cycle─┬─path──────────────────────┐
│ 1 │ 4 │ 1 -> 4 │ true │ [(1,4),(4,5),(5,1),(1,4)] │
│ 4 │ 5 │ 4 -> 5 │ true │ [(4,5),(5,1),(1,4),(4,5)] │
│ 5 │ 1 │ 5 -> 1 │ true │ [(5,1),(1,4),(4,5),(5,1)] │
└──────┴────┴────────┴──────────┴───────────────────────────┘
Infinite queries
It is also possible to use infinite recursive CTE queries if LIMIT
is used in outer query:
Example: Infinite recursive CTE query
WITH RECURSIVE test_table AS (
SELECT 1 AS number
UNION ALL
SELECT number + 1 FROM test_table
)
SELECT sum(number) FROM (SELECT number FROM test_table LIMIT 100);
┌─sum(number)─┐
│ 5050 │
└─────────────┘