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Query ClickHouse/Hydrolix tables as Elasticsearch indices

WARNING

Note: If you are using Hydrolix as your data source please follow to Query Hydrolix tables as Elasticsearch indices subsection of this document for more information. If you plan to use ClickHouse, continue below.

In this scenario, user's only data source is ClickHouse, which contains two tables named logs and siem. Quesma is configured to expose ClickHouse tables via Elasticsearch API, making them visible in Kibana/OpenSearch Dashboard (OSD) as Elasticsearch indices and also to ingest data to these two tables in ClickHouse only.

If you are interesed in more details about ingesting your data, refer to Ingest page.

Note

In this approach, Quesma still requires a minimal Elasticsearch/OpenSearch cluster for:

  • storing Kibana/OSD metadata
  • storing user data and authentication (unless its explicitly disabled)
  • storing any additional indexes appearing at ingest endpoint and not explicitely listed in Quesma ingest processor

Architecture diagram:

Quesma installation

Prerequisites:

  • ClickHouse is running.
  • Kibana/OSD and minimal instance of Elasticsearch/OpenSearch are running.
  • Docker is installed, at least 20.10 version.

Installation steps:

  1. Create a configuration file named quesma.yaml with the following content, make sure to replace placeholders (#PLACE_YOUR*) with actual values.
    yaml
    licenseKey: #PLACE_YOUR_LICENSE_KEY_HERE 
    # license key is required for backend connector of `clickhouse` type, 
    # please contact Quesma support (support@quesma.com) to obtain yours
    # in case you are using self-hosted clickhouse instance, you can use `clickhouse-os` backend connector and continue without the license key  
    frontendConnectors:
      - name: elastic-query
        type: elasticsearch-fe-query
        config:
          listenPort: 8080
     - name: elastic-ingest
        type: elasticsearch-fe-ingest
        config:
          listenPort: 8080
    backendConnectors:
      - name: minimal-elasticsearch
        type: elasticsearch
        config:
          url: #PLACE_YOUR_ELASTICSEARCH_URL_HERE, for example: http://192.168.0.7:9200
          user: #PLACE_YOUR_ELASTICSEARCH_USERNAME_HERE
          password: #PLACE_YOUR_ELASTICSEARCH_PASSWORD_HERE
      - name: clickhouse-instance
        type: clickhouse-os
        #type: clickhouse # use for ClickHouse cloud service only
        config:
          url: #PLACE_YOUR_CLICKHOUSE_URL_HERE, for example: clickhouse://192.168.0.7:9000
          user: #PLACE_YOUR_CLICKHOUSE_USER_HERE
          password: #PLACE_YOUR_CLICKHOUSE_PASSWORD_HERE
          database: #PLACE_YOUR_CLICKHOUSE_DATABASE_NAME_HERE
    processors:
      - name: query-processor
        type: quesma-v1-processor-query
        config:
          indexes:      # `siem` and `logs` are just examples, 
            siem:       # make sure to replace them with your actual table names in your ClickHouse instance
              target:
                - clickhouse-instance
            logs:
              target:
                - clickhouse-instance
            '*':        # DO NOT remove, always required
              target:
                - minimal-elasticsearch
      - name: ingest-processor
        type: quesma-v1-processor-ingest
        config:
          indexes:      # `siem` and `logs` are just examples, 
            siem:       # make sure to replace them with your actual table or index names in your ClickHouse instance
              target:
                - clickhouse-instance
            logs:
              target:
                - clickhouse-instance
            '*':        # DO NOT remove, always required
              target:
                - minimal-elasticsearch
    pipelines:
      - name: elasticsearch-proxy-read
        frontendConnectors: [ elastic-query ]
        processors: [ query-processor ]
        backendConnectors: [ minimal-elasticsearch, clickhouse-instance ]
     - name: elasticsearch-proxy-write # remove if you do NOT want to write data to ClickHouse
        frontendConnectors: [ elastic-ingest ]
        processors: [ ingest-processor ]
        backendConnectors: [ minimal-elasticsearch, clickhouse-instance ]

Note: To learn more about configuration options, refer to Configuration primer

  1. Run Quesma with the following command:

    bash
    docker run --name quesma -p 8080:8080 \
     -e QUESMA_CONFIG_FILE=/configuration/quesma.yaml \
    -v $(pwd)/quesma.yaml:/configuration/quesma.yaml quesma/quesma:latest

    You have now a running Quesma instance running with Elasticsearch API endpoint on port 8080. You can also enable Quesma's admin panel at localhost:9999 by adding -p 9999:9999 to docker run command.

  2. Reconfigure client endpoint:

    • For Kibana: update your Kibana configuration, so that it points to Quesma Elasticsearch API endpoint mentioned above, instead of Elasticsearch original endpoint. In your Kibana configuration file, replace the elasticsearch.hosts value with Quesma's host and port, e.g.:

      yaml
      elasticsearch.hosts: ["http://quesma:8080"]

      or optionally using ELASTICSEARCH_HOSTS environment variable.

      If you use Elasticsearch/Kibana without authentication, please modify the frontendConnectors section in the following way:

      yaml
      frontendConnectors:
        - name: elastic-query
          type: elasticsearch-fe-query
          config:
            listenPort: 8080
            disableAuth: true
        - name: elastic-ingest
          type: elasticsearch-fe-ingest
          config:
            listenPort: 8080
            disableAuth: true
    • For OpenSearchDashboards: modify opensearch_dashboards.yml file and change opensearch.hosts property. Also, make sure to update the Elasticsearch/OpenSearch endpoint configuration for any clients ingesting data.

      If you use OpenSearch/OpenSearchDashboards without authentication, please modify the frontendConnectors section in the following way:

      yaml
      frontendConnectors:
        - name: elastic-query
          type: elasticsearch-fe-query
          config:
            listenPort: 8080
            disableAuth: true
        - name: elastic-ingest
          type: elasticsearch-fe-ingest
          config:
            listenPort: 8080
            disableAuth: true
  3. Restart Kibana/OSD.

  4. Add DataViews/Index Patterns:

    • For Kibana: in order to view your ClickHouse tables in Kibana, you need to create Data Views for tables (indexes) from the config. If you're unsure how to do it, follow the Data Views creation guide for more information.
    • For OpenSearchDashboards: you may need to add Index Patterns. See instructions.