Encrypting network traffic
It is a best practice to encrypt network traffic between the Looker application and your database. Consider one of the options described on the Enabling secure database access documentation page.
Database configuration
Before you create a connection to Vertica, create a new database user and schema that is exclusive for your Looker applications. The Looker user needs read and write permissions into a separate schema to store PDTs and read-only privileges to other schemas in the Vertica database. This is optional but recommended.
The following is an example of creating a user and schema for Looker:
CREATE USER looker Identified BY 'mypassword';
CREATE SCHEMA looker_scratch;
GRANT CREATE ON SCHEMA looker_scratch to looker;
Creating the Looker connection to your database
In the Admin section of Looker, select Connections, and then click Add Connection.
Fill out the connection details. The majority of the settings are common to most database dialects. See the Connecting Looker to your database documentation page for information. Some of the settings are described next:
- Name: Give a name to the connection. This is how the LookML model will reference the connection.
- Dialect: Select Vertica from the drop-down of dialects.
- Host: Enter the Vertica server name or IP.
- Port: The default is 5433.
- Database: Enter Vertica's database name.
- Username and Password: Enter the username and password of the user that will connect to Looker.
- Schema: Enter the schema that contains the tables that you want to explore in Looker.
- Temp Database: This is the scratch schema where you want Looker to create any temporal derived tables to improve performance. It is optional but recommended, and should be created beforehand.
- Max connections per node: This setting can be left at the default value initially. See the Connecting Looker to your database documentation page for more information.
- Connection Pool Timeout: This is optional. Use the default value.
- Database Time Zone: The time zone your Vertica database uses to store dates and times. For example, UTC. This is optional.
- Query Time Zone: The time zone you want your queries to display. For example, US Eastern (America – New York). This is optional.
- Additional JDBC parameters: This is optional. Use this field to enable additional database settings. For example, to enable Vertica's native load balancing, use the JDBC connection parameter
ConnectionLoadBalance=1
. To assign a label to identify Looker's sessions, use the JDBC connection parameterLabel=<mylabel>
. You can pass several parameters one after the other using&
, as shown on this page. For a complete list of available JDBC connection parameters, see Vertica's documentation.
To verify that the connection is successful, click Test. See the Testing database connectivity documentation page for troubleshooting information.
To save these settings, click Connect.
Feature support
For Looker to support some features, your database dialect must also support them.
Vertica supports the following features as of Looker 24.14:
Feature | Supported? |
---|---|
Support Level | Supported |
Looker (Google Cloud core) | Yes |
Symmetric Aggregates | Yes |
Derived Tables | Yes |
Persistent SQL Derived Tables | Yes |
Persistent Native Derived Tables | Yes |
Stable Views | Yes |
Query Killing | Yes |
SQL-based Pivots | Yes |
Timezones | Yes |
SSL | Yes |
Subtotals | Yes |
JDBC Additional Params | Yes |
Case Sensitive | Yes |
Location Type | Yes |
List Type | No |
Percentile | Yes |
Distinct Percentile | No |
SQL Runner Show Processes | Yes |
SQL Runner Describe Table | Yes |
SQL Runner Show Indexes | No |
SQL Runner Select 10 | Yes |
SQL Runner Count | Yes |
SQL Explain | Yes |
Oauth Credentials | No |
Context Comments | Yes |
Connection Pooling | No |
HLL Sketches | No |
Aggregate Awareness | Yes |
Incremental PDTs | Yes |
Milliseconds | Yes |
Microseconds | Yes |
Materialized Views | No |
Approximate Count Distinct | No |
Next steps
After you have completed the database connection, configure authentication options.