This section describes syntax warnings and errors that you may encounter when using the table compression feature with file-per-table tablespaces and general tablespaces.
SQL Compression Syntax Warnings and Errors for File-Per-Table Tablespaces
When innodb_strict_mode
is
enabled (the default), specifying
ROW_FORMAT=COMPRESSED
or
KEY_BLOCK_SIZE
in CREATE
TABLE
or ALTER TABLE
statements produces the following error if
innodb_file_per_table
is
disabled.
ERROR 1031 (HY000): Table storage engine for 't1' doesn't have this option
The table is not created if the current configuration does not permit using compressed tables.
When innodb_strict_mode
is
disabled, specifying ROW_FORMAT=COMPRESSED
or
KEY_BLOCK_SIZE
in CREATE
TABLE
or ALTER TABLE
statements produces the following warnings if
innodb_file_per_table
is
disabled.
mysql> SHOW WARNINGS;
+---------+------+---------------------------------------------------------------+
| Level | Code | Message |
+---------+------+---------------------------------------------------------------+
| Warning | 1478 | InnoDB: KEY_BLOCK_SIZE requires innodb_file_per_table. |
| Warning | 1478 | InnoDB: ignoring KEY_BLOCK_SIZE=4. |
| Warning | 1478 | InnoDB: ROW_FORMAT=COMPRESSED requires innodb_file_per_table. |
| Warning | 1478 | InnoDB: assuming ROW_FORMAT=DYNAMIC. |
+---------+------+---------------------------------------------------------------+
These messages are only warnings, not errors, and the table is created without compression, as if the options were not specified.
The “non-strict” behavior lets you import a
mysqldump
file into a database that does not
support compressed tables, even if the source database contained
compressed tables. In that case, MySQL creates the table in
ROW_FORMAT=DYNAMIC
instead of preventing the
operation.
To import the dump file into a new database, and have the tables
re-created as they exist in the original database, ensure the
server has the proper setting for the
innodb_file_per_table
configuration parameter.
The attribute KEY_BLOCK_SIZE
is permitted
only when ROW_FORMAT
is specified as
COMPRESSED
or is omitted. Specifying a
KEY_BLOCK_SIZE
with any other
ROW_FORMAT
generates a warning that you can
view with SHOW WARNINGS
. However, the table
is non-compressed; the specified
KEY_BLOCK_SIZE
is ignored).
Level | Code | Message |
---|---|---|
Warning | 1478 | InnoDB: ignoring KEY_BLOCK_SIZE= |
If you are running with
innodb_strict_mode
enabled, the
combination of a KEY_BLOCK_SIZE
with any
ROW_FORMAT
other than
COMPRESSED
generates an error, not a warning,
and the table is not created.
Table 17.12, “ROW_FORMAT and KEY_BLOCK_SIZE Options”
provides an overview the ROW_FORMAT
and
KEY_BLOCK_SIZE
options that are used with
CREATE TABLE
or
ALTER TABLE
.
Table 17.12 ROW_FORMAT and KEY_BLOCK_SIZE Options
Option | Usage Notes | Description |
---|---|---|
ROW_FORMAT=REDUNDANT |
Storage format used prior to MySQL 5.0.3 | Less efficient than ROW_FORMAT=COMPACT ; for backward
compatibility |
ROW_FORMAT=COMPACT |
Default storage format since MySQL 5.0.3 | Stores a prefix of 768 bytes of long column values in the clustered index page, with the remaining bytes stored in an overflow page |
ROW_FORMAT=DYNAMIC |
Store values within the clustered index page if they fit; if not, stores only a 20-byte pointer to an overflow page (no prefix) | |
ROW_FORMAT=COMPRESSED |
Compresses the table and indexes using zlib | |
KEY_BLOCK_SIZE= |
Specifies compressed page size of 1, 2, 4, 8 or 16 kilobytes; implies
ROW_FORMAT=COMPRESSED . For general
tablespaces, a KEY_BLOCK_SIZE value
equal to the InnoDB page size is not
permitted. |
Table 17.13, “CREATE/ALTER TABLE Warnings and Errors when InnoDB Strict Mode is OFF”
summarizes error conditions that occur with certain combinations
of configuration parameters and options on the
CREATE TABLE
or
ALTER TABLE
statements, and how
the options appear in the output of SHOW TABLE
STATUS
.
When innodb_strict_mode
is
OFF
, MySQL creates or alters the table, but
ignores certain settings as shown below. You can see the warning
messages in the MySQL error log. When
innodb_strict_mode
is
ON
, these specified combinations of options
generate errors, and the table is not created or altered. To see
the full description of the error condition, issue the
SHOW ERRORS
statement: example:
mysql>CREATE TABLE x (id INT PRIMARY KEY, c INT)
->ENGINE=INNODB KEY_BLOCK_SIZE=33333;
ERROR 1005 (HY000): Can't create table 'test.x' (errno: 1478) mysql>SHOW ERRORS;
+-------+------+-------------------------------------------+ | Level | Code | Message | +-------+------+-------------------------------------------+ | Error | 1478 | InnoDB: invalid KEY_BLOCK_SIZE=33333. | | Error | 1005 | Can't create table 'test.x' (errno: 1478) | +-------+------+-------------------------------------------+
Table 17.13 CREATE/ALTER TABLE Warnings and Errors when InnoDB Strict Mode is OFF
Syntax | Warning or Error Condition | Resulting ROW_FORMAT , as shown in SHOW TABLE
STATUS |
---|---|---|
ROW_FORMAT=REDUNDANT |
None | REDUNDANT |
ROW_FORMAT=COMPACT |
None | COMPACT |
ROW_FORMAT=COMPRESSED or
ROW_FORMAT=DYNAMIC or
KEY_BLOCK_SIZE is specified |
Ignored for file-per-table tablespaces unless
innodb_file_per_table is
enabled. General tablespaces support all row formats. See
Section 17.6.3.3, “General Tablespaces”. |
the default row format for file-per-table tablespaces; the
specified row format for general tablespaces |
Invalid KEY_BLOCK_SIZE is specified (not 1, 2, 4, 8
or 16) |
KEY_BLOCK_SIZE is ignored |
the specified row format, or the default row format |
ROW_FORMAT=COMPRESSED and valid
KEY_BLOCK_SIZE are specified |
None; KEY_BLOCK_SIZE specified is used |
COMPRESSED |
KEY_BLOCK_SIZE is specified with
REDUNDANT , COMPACT
or DYNAMIC row format |
KEY_BLOCK_SIZE is ignored |
REDUNDANT , COMPACT or
DYNAMIC |
ROW_FORMAT is not one of
REDUNDANT , COMPACT ,
DYNAMIC or
COMPRESSED |
Ignored if recognized by the MySQL parser. Otherwise, an error is issued. | the default row format or N/A |
When innodb_strict_mode
is
ON
, MySQL rejects invalid
ROW_FORMAT
or
KEY_BLOCK_SIZE
parameters and issues errors.
Strict mode is ON
by default. When
innodb_strict_mode
is OFF
,
MySQL issues warnings instead of errors for ignored invalid
parameters.
It is not possible to see the chosen
KEY_BLOCK_SIZE
using SHOW TABLE
STATUS
. The statement SHOW CREATE
TABLE
displays the KEY_BLOCK_SIZE
(even if it was ignored when creating the table). The real
compressed page size of the table cannot be displayed by MySQL.
SQL Compression Syntax Warnings and Errors for General Tablespaces
If
FILE_BLOCK_SIZE
was not defined for the general tablespace when the tablespace was created, the tablespace cannot contain compressed tables. If you attempt to add a compressed table, an error is returned, as shown in the following example:mysql> CREATE TABLESPACE `ts1` ADD DATAFILE 'ts1.ibd' Engine=InnoDB; mysql> CREATE TABLE t1 (c1 INT PRIMARY KEY) TABLESPACE ts1 ROW_FORMAT=COMPRESSED KEY_BLOCK_SIZE=8; ERROR 1478 (HY000): InnoDB: Tablespace `ts1` cannot contain a COMPRESSED table
Attempting to add a table with an invalid
KEY_BLOCK_SIZE
to a general tablespace returns an error, as shown in the following example:mysql> CREATE TABLESPACE `ts2` ADD DATAFILE 'ts2.ibd' FILE_BLOCK_SIZE = 8192 Engine=InnoDB; mysql> CREATE TABLE t2 (c1 INT PRIMARY KEY) TABLESPACE ts2 ROW_FORMAT=COMPRESSED KEY_BLOCK_SIZE=4; ERROR 1478 (HY000): InnoDB: Tablespace `ts2` uses block size 8192 and cannot contain a table with physical page size 4096
For general tablespaces, the
KEY_BLOCK_SIZE
of the table must be equal to theFILE_BLOCK_SIZE
of the tablespace divided by 1024. For example, if theFILE_BLOCK_SIZE
of the tablespace is 8192, theKEY_BLOCK_SIZE
of the table must be 8.Attempting to add a table with an uncompressed row format to a general tablespace configured to store compressed tables returns an error, as shown in the following example:
mysql> CREATE TABLESPACE `ts3` ADD DATAFILE 'ts3.ibd' FILE_BLOCK_SIZE = 8192 Engine=InnoDB; mysql> CREATE TABLE t3 (c1 INT PRIMARY KEY) TABLESPACE ts3 ROW_FORMAT=COMPACT; ERROR 1478 (HY000): InnoDB: Tablespace `ts3` uses block size 8192 and cannot contain a table with physical page size 16384
innodb_strict_mode
is not
applicable to general tablespaces. Tablespace management rules
for general tablespaces are strictly enforced independently of
innodb_strict_mode
. For more
information, see Section 15.1.21, “CREATE TABLESPACE Statement”.
For more information about using compressed tables with general tablespaces, see Section 17.6.3.3, “General Tablespaces”.