Redis
This engine allows integrating ClickHouse with Redis. For Redis takes kv model, we strongly recommend you only query it in a point way, such as where k=xx or where k in (xx, xx).
Creating a Table
CREATE TABLE [IF NOT EXISTS] [db.]table_name
(
    name1 [type1],
    name2 [type2],
    ...
) ENGINE = Redis(host:port[, db_index[, password[, pool_size]]]) PRIMARY KEY(primary_key_name);
Engine Parameters
- host:port— Redis server address, you can ignore port and default Redis port 6379 will be used.
- db_index— Redis db index range from 0 to 15, default is 0.
- password— User password, default is blank string.
- pool_size— Redis max connection pool size, default is 16.
- primary_key_name- any column name in the column list.
- primarymust be specified, it supports only one column in the primary key. The primary key will be serialized in binary as a Redis key.
- columns other than the primary key will be serialized in binary as Redis value in corresponding order. 
- queries with key equals or in filtering will be optimized to multi keys lookup from Redis. If queries without filtering key full table scan will happen which is a heavy operation. 
Usage Example
Create a table in ClickHouse which allows to read data from Redis:
CREATE TABLE redis_table
(
    `key` String,
    `v1` UInt32,
    `v2` String,
    `v3` Float32
)
ENGINE = Redis('redis1:6379') PRIMARY KEY(key);
Insert:
INSERT INTO redis_table Values('1', 1, '1', 1.0), ('2', 2, '2', 2.0);
Query:
SELECT COUNT(*) FROM redis_table;
┌─count()─┐
│       2 │
└─────────┘
SELECT * FROM redis_table WHERE key='1';
┌─key─┬─v1─┬─v2─┬─v3─┐
│ 1   │  1 │ 1  │  1 │
└─────┴────┴────┴────┘
SELECT * FROM redis_table WHERE v1=2;
┌─key─┬─v1─┬─v2─┬─v3─┐
│ 2   │  2 │ 2  │  2 │
└─────┴────┴────┴────┘
Update:
Note that the primary key cannot be updated.
ALTER TABLE redis_table UPDATE v1=2 WHERE key='1';
Delete:
ALTER TABLE redis_table DELETE WHERE key='1';
Truncate:
Flush Redis db asynchronously. Also Truncate support SYNC mode.
TRUNCATE TABLE redis_table SYNC;
Join:
Join with other tables.
SELECT * FROM redis_table JOIN merge_tree_table ON merge_tree_table.key=redis_table.key;
Limitations
Redis engine also supports scanning queries, such as where k > xx, but it has some limitations:
- Scanning query may produce some duplicated keys in a very rare case when it is rehashing. See details in Redis Scan.
- During the scanning, keys could be created and deleted, so the resulting dataset can not represent a valid point in time.