Dialects that use these instructions
MySQL, MariaDB, and SingleStore (formerly MemSQL) share the database setup requirements described on this page.
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.
If you're interested in using SSL encryption, see this MySQL documentation page.
Users and security
To create and grant the required access to the Looker user, follow the instructions in the section appropriate to your database dialect and version:
MySQL 8.0.X:
In MySQL 8.0.X, the default authentication plugin is caching_sha2_password
. Looker uses the mysql_native_password
plugin
to attempt to authenticate to MySQL databases through the JDBC driver. For this version of MySQL to work properly,
you must take the following additional steps:
Configure the MySQL database to use the
mysql_native_password
plugin. This can be done in multiple ways, and will depend on how your MySQL 8 database is deployed and what type of access you have to the configuration:Start the process with the flag
--default-auth=mysql_native_password
Set the property in the
my.cnf
configuration file:
[mysqld] default-authentication-plugin=mysql_native_password
- If your database instance is hosted through AWS RDS, set the
default_authentication_plugin
parameter through an RDS Parameter Group that is applied to this database instance.
Run the following commands, replacing
some_password_here
with a unique, secure password:CREATE USER looker IDENTIFIED WITH mysql_native_password BY 'some_password_here'; GRANT SELECT ON database_name.* TO 'looker'@'%';
MySQL 5.7.X and earlier, MariaDB, and SingleStore:
Run the following commands, replacing some_password_here
with a unique, secure password:
CREATE USER looker;
SET PASSWORD FOR looker = PASSWORD ('some_password_here');
GRANT SELECT ON database_name.* TO 'looker'@'%';
Temp schema setup for persistent derived tables
These database dialects support the creation of persistent derived tables (PDTs). This feature can be very useful, and we recommend enabling it when possible.
To enable PDTs, you need to configure a temp schema. The following commands show an example of creating a temp database and granting the required privileges to the looker
user.
You can specify the name of the temp database in the Temp Database field when creating your database connection. If you don't specify a temp database name, Looker generates a scratch database named
looker_tmp
. The following commands uselooker_tmp
, but if you specified a different temp database name, use your temp database name instead oflooker_tmp
.
CREATE SCHEMA looker_tmp;
GRANT
SELECT,
INDEX,
INSERT,
UPDATE,
DELETE,
CREATE,
DROP,
ALTER,
CREATE TEMPORARY TABLES
ON looker_tmp.* TO 'looker'@'%';
For SingleStore, or if your database uses GTID-based replication, you must use the create_process
LookML parameter to use PDTs, because GTID does not support CREATE TABLE AS SELECT
statements.
Alternative setup for regular derived tables
If you do not want to allow the creation of persistent derived tables, you can still use regular derived tables. To use regular derived tables, you still need to add certain permissions to a schema called looker_tmp
. However, the looker_tmp
schema does not actually need to exist in your database!
GRANT
SELECT,
INDEX,
INSERT,
DROP,
CREATE TEMPORARY TABLES
ON looker_tmp.* TO 'looker'@'%';
-- Note that the looker_tmp schema does not need to actually exist,
-- even though these permission grants are still needed
Setting the max_allowed_packet
variable
For MySQL, set the MySQL max_allowed_packet
variable to its maximum value, 1073741824, to prevent "SQLException: Packet for query is too large" errors.
Creating the Looker connection to your database
After completing the database configuration, you can connect to the database from Looker. Follow these steps to create the connection from Looker to your database:
- In the Admin section of Looker, select Connections, and then click Add Connection.
From the Dialect drop-down menu, select your database dialect name: MySQL, MySQL 8.0.12+, MariaDB, SingleStore, or SingleStore 7+.
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.
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.
MySQL supports the following features as of Looker 24.20:
Feature | Supported? |
---|---|
Support Level | Supported |
Looker (Google Cloud core) | No |
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 | No |
Location Type | Yes |
List Type | Yes |
Percentile | Yes |
Distinct Percentile | Yes |
SQL Runner Show Processes | Yes |
SQL Runner Describe Table | Yes |
SQL Runner Show Indexes | Yes |
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 |
MySQL 8.0.12+ supports the following features as of Looker 24.20:
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 | No |
Location Type | Yes |
List Type | Yes |
Percentile | Yes |
Distinct Percentile | Yes |
SQL Runner Show Processes | Yes |
SQL Runner Describe Table | Yes |
SQL Runner Show Indexes | Yes |
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 |
MariaDB supports the following features as of Looker 24.20:
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 | No |
Timezones | Yes |
SSL | Yes |
Subtotals | Yes |
JDBC Additional Params | Yes |
Case Sensitive | No |
Location Type | Yes |
List Type | Yes |
Percentile | Yes |
Distinct Percentile | Yes |
SQL Runner Show Processes | Yes |
SQL Runner Describe Table | Yes |
SQL Runner Show Indexes | Yes |
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 | No |
Milliseconds | Yes |
Microseconds | Yes |
Materialized Views | No |
Approximate Count Distinct | No |
SingleStore supports the following features as of Looker 24.20:
Feature | Supported? |
---|---|
Support Level | Supported |
Looker (Google Cloud core) | No |
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 | No |
Location Type | Yes |
List Type | Yes |
Percentile | No |
Distinct Percentile | No |
SQL Runner Show Processes | Yes |
SQL Runner Describe Table | Yes |
SQL Runner Show Indexes | Yes |
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 | No |
Milliseconds | Yes |
Microseconds | Yes |
Materialized Views | No |
Approximate Count Distinct | No |
SingleStore 7+ supports the following features as of Looker 24.20:
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 | No |
Location Type | Yes |
List Type | Yes |
Percentile | Yes |
Distinct Percentile | No |
SQL Runner Show Processes | Yes |
SQL Runner Describe Table | Yes |
SQL Runner Show Indexes | Yes |
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 | No |
Milliseconds | Yes |
Microseconds | Yes |
Materialized Views | No |
Approximate Count Distinct | No |