Undo tablespaces contain undo logs, which are collections of records containing information about how to undo the latest change by a transaction to a clustered index record.
Undo tablespaces are described under the following topics in this section:
Two default undo tablespaces are created when the MySQL instance is initialized. Default undo tablespaces are created at initialization time to provide a location for rollback segments that must exist before SQL statements can be accepted. A minimum of two undo tablespaces is required to support automated truncation of undo tablespaces. See Truncating Undo Tablespaces.
Default undo tablespaces are created in the location defined by
the innodb_undo_directory
variable. If the
innodb_undo_directory
variable
is undefined, default undo tablespaces are created in the data
directory. Default undo tablespace data files are named
undo_001
and undo_002
.
The corresponding undo tablespace names defined in the data
dictionary are innodb_undo_001
and
innodb_undo_002
.
As of MySQL 8.0.14, additional undo tablespaces can be created at runtime using SQL. See Adding Undo Tablespaces.
Prior to MySQL 8.0.23, the initial size of an undo tablespace
depends on the innodb_page_size
value. For the default 16KB page size, the initial undo
tablespace file size is 10MiB. For 4KB, 8KB, 32KB, and 64KB page
sizes, the initial undo tablespace files sizes are 7MiB, 8MiB,
20MiB, and 40MiB, respectively. As of MySQL 8.0.23, the initial
undo tablespace size is normally 16MiB. The initial size may
differ when a new undo tablespace is created by a truncate
operation. In this case, if the file extension size is larger
than 16MB, and the previous file extension occurred within the
last second, the new undo tablespace is created at a quarter of
the size defined by the
innodb_max_undo_log_size
variable.
Prior to MySQL 8.0.23, an undo tablespace is extended four
extents at a time. From MySQL 8.0.23, an undo tablespace is
extended by a minimum of 16MB. To handle aggressive growth, the
file extension size is doubled if the previous file extension
happened less than 0.1 seconds earlier. Doubling of the
extension size can occur multiple times to a maximum of 256MB.
If the previous file extension occurred more than 0.1 seconds
earlier, the extension size is reduced by half, which can also
occur multiple times, to a minimum of 16MB. If the
AUTOEXTEND_SIZE
option is defined for an undo
tablespace, it is extended by the greater of the
AUTOEXTEND_SIZE
setting and the extension
size determined by the logic described above. For information
about the AUTOEXTEND_SIZE
option, see
Section 17.6.3.9, “Tablespace AUTOEXTEND_SIZE Configuration”.
Because undo logs can become large during long-running
transactions, creating additional undo tablespaces can help
prevent individual undo tablespaces from becoming too large. As
of MySQL 8.0.14, additional undo tablespaces can be created at
runtime using
CREATE UNDO
TABLESPACE
syntax.
CREATE UNDO TABLESPACE tablespace_name ADD DATAFILE 'file_name.ibu';
The undo tablespace file name must have an
.ibu
extension. It is not permitted to
specify a relative path when defining the undo tablespace file
name. A fully qualified path is permitted, but the path must be
known to InnoDB
. Known paths are those
defined by the
innodb_directories
variable.
Unique undo tablespace file names are recommended to avoid
potential file name conflicts when moving or cloning data.
In a replication environment, the source and each replica must have its own undo tablespace file directory. Replicating the creation of an undo tablespace file to a common directory would cause a file name conflict.
At startup, directories defined by the
innodb_directories
variable are
scanned for undo tablespace files. (The scan also traverses
subdirectories.) Directories defined by the
innodb_data_home_dir
,
innodb_undo_directory
, and
datadir
variables are
automatically appended to the
innodb_directories
value
regardless of whether the
innodb_directories
variable is
defined explicitly. An undo tablespace can therefore reside in
paths defined by any of those variables.
If the undo tablespace file name does not include a path, the
undo tablespace is created in the directory defined by the
innodb_undo_directory
variable.
If that variable is undefined, the undo tablespace is created in
the data directory.
The InnoDB
recovery process requires that
undo tablespace files reside in known directories. Undo
tablespace files must be discovered and opened before redo
recovery and before other data files are opened to permit
uncommitted transactions and data dictionary changes to be
rolled back. An undo tablespace not found before recovery
cannot be used, which can lead to database inconsistencies. An
error message is reported at startup if an undo tablespace
known to the data dictionary is not found. The known directory
requirement also supports undo tablespace portability. See
Moving Undo Tablespaces.
To create undo tablespaces in a path relative to the data
directory, set the
innodb_undo_directory
variable
to the relative path, and specify the file name only when
creating an undo tablespace.
To view undo tablespace names and paths, query
INFORMATION_SCHEMA.FILES
:
SELECT TABLESPACE_NAME, FILE_NAME FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.FILES
WHERE FILE_TYPE LIKE 'UNDO LOG';
A MySQL instance supports up to 127 undo tablespaces including the two default undo tablespaces created when the MySQL instance is initialized.
Prior to MySQL 8.0.14, additional undo tablespaces are created
by configuring the
innodb_undo_tablespaces
startup variable. This variable is deprecated and no longer
configurable as of MySQL 8.0.14.
Prior to MySQL 8.0.14, increasing the
innodb_undo_tablespaces
setting creates the specified number of undo tablespaces and
adds them to the list of active undo tablespaces. Decreasing
the innodb_undo_tablespaces
setting removes undo tablespaces from the list of active undo
tablespaces. Undo tablespaces that are removed from the active
list remain active until they are no longer used by existing
transactions. The
innodb_undo_tablespaces
variable can be configured at runtime using a
SET
statement or defined in a configuration file.
Prior to MySQL 8.0.14, deactivated undo tablespaces cannot be
removed. Manual removal of undo tablespace files is possible
after a slow shutdown but is not recommended, as deactivated
undo tablespaces may contain active undo logs for some time
after the server is restarted if open transactions were
present when shutting down the server. As of MySQL 8.0.14,
undo tablespaces can be dropped using
DROP UNDO
TABALESPACE
syntax. See
Dropping Undo Tablespaces.
As of MySQL 8.0.14, undo tablespaces created using
CREATE UNDO
TABLESPACE
syntax can be dropped at runtime using
DROP UNDO
TABALESPACE
syntax.
An undo tablespace must be empty before it can be dropped. To
empty an undo tablespace, the undo tablespace must first be
marked as inactive using
ALTER UNDO
TABLESPACE
syntax so that the tablespace is no longer
used for assigning rollback segments to new transactions.
ALTER UNDO TABLESPACE tablespace_name SET INACTIVE;
After an undo tablespace is marked as inactive, transactions currently using rollback segments in the undo tablespace are permitted to finish, as are any transactions started before those transactions are completed. After transactions are completed, the purge system frees the rollback segments in the undo tablespace, and the undo tablespace is truncated to its initial size. (The same process is used when truncating undo tablespaces. See Truncating Undo Tablespaces.) Once the undo tablespace is empty, it can be dropped.
DROP UNDO TABLESPACE tablespace_name;
Alternatively, the undo tablespace can be left in an empty
state and reactivated later, if needed, by issuing an
ALTER UNDO
TABLESPACE
statement.
tablespace_name
SET
ACTIVE
The state of an undo tablespace can be monitored by querying the
Information Schema
INNODB_TABLESPACES
table.
SELECT NAME, STATE FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.INNODB_TABLESPACES
WHERE NAME LIKE 'tablespace_name';
An inactive
state indicates that rollback
segments in an undo tablespace are no longer used by new
transactions. An empty
state indicates that
an undo tablespace is empty and ready to be dropped, or ready to
be made active again using an
ALTER UNDO
TABLESPACE
statement. Attempting to drop an undo
tablespace that is not empty returns an error.
tablespace_name
SET
ACTIVE
The default undo tablespaces (innodb_undo_001
and innodb_undo_002
) created when the MySQL
instance is initialized cannot be dropped. They can, however, be
made inactive using an
ALTER UNDO
TABLESPACE
statement. Before a default undo tablespace
can be made inactive, there must be an undo tablespace to take
its place. A minimum of two active undo tablespaces are required
at all times to support automated truncation of undo
tablespaces.
tablespace_name
SET
INACTIVE
Undo tablespaces created with
CREATE UNDO
TABLESPACE
syntax can be moved while the server is
offline to any known directory. Known directories are those
defined by the
innodb_directories
variable.
Directories defined by
innodb_data_home_dir
,
innodb_undo_directory
, and
datadir
are automatically
appended to the
innodb_directories
value
regardless of whether the
innodb_directories
variable is
defined explicitly. Those directories and their subdirectories
are scanned at startup for undo tablespaces files. An undo
tablespace file moved to any of those directories is discovered
at startup and assumed to be the undo tablespace that was moved.
The default undo tablespaces (innodb_undo_001
and innodb_undo_002
) created when the MySQL
instance is initialized must reside in the directory defined by
the innodb_undo_directory
variable. If the
innodb_undo_directory
variable
is undefined, default undo tablespaces reside in the data
directory. If default undo tablespaces are moved while the
server is offline, the server must be started with the
innodb_undo_directory
variable
configured to the new directory.
The I/O patterns for undo logs make undo tablespaces good candidates for SSD storage.
The innodb_rollback_segments
variable defines the number of
rollback segments
allocated to each undo tablespace and to the global temporary
tablespace. The
innodb_rollback_segments
variable can be configured at startup or while the server is
running.
The default setting for
innodb_rollback_segments
is
128, which is also the maximum value. For information about the
number of transactions that a rollback segment supports, see
Section 17.6.6, “Undo Logs”.
There are two methods of truncating undo tablespaces, which can be used individually or in combination to manage undo tablespace size. One method is automated, enabled using configuration variables. The other method is manual, performed using SQL statements.
The automated method does not require monitoring undo tablespace size and, once enabled, it performs deactivation, truncation, and reactivation of undo tablespaces without manual intervention. The manual truncation method may be preferable if you want to control when undo tablespaces are taken offline for truncation. For example, you may want to avoid truncating undo tablespaces during peak workload times.
Automated Truncation
Automated truncation of undo tablespaces requires a minimum of two active undo tablespaces, which ensures that one undo tablespace remains active while the other is taken offline to be truncated. By default, two undo tablespaces are created when the MySQL instance is initialized.
To have undo tablespaces automatically truncated, enable the
innodb_undo_log_truncate
variable. For example:
mysql> SET GLOBAL innodb_undo_log_truncate=ON;
When the
innodb_undo_log_truncate
variable is enabled, undo tablespaces that exceed the size limit
defined by the
innodb_max_undo_log_size
variable are subject to truncation. The
innodb_max_undo_log_size
variable is dynamic and has a default value of 1073741824 bytes
(1024 MiB).
mysql> SELECT @@innodb_max_undo_log_size;
+----------------------------+
| @@innodb_max_undo_log_size |
+----------------------------+
| 1073741824 |
+----------------------------+
When the
innodb_undo_log_truncate
variable is enabled:
Default and user-defined undo tablespaces that exceed the
innodb_max_undo_log_size
setting are marked for truncation. Selection of an undo tablespace for truncation is performed in a circular fashion to avoid truncating the same undo tablespace each time.Rollback segments residing in the selected undo tablespace are made inactive so that they are not assigned to new transactions. Existing transactions that are currently using rollback segments are permitted to finish.
The purge system empties rollback segments by freeing undo logs that are no longer in use.
After all rollback segments in the undo tablespace are freed, the truncate operation runs and truncates the undo tablespace to its initial size.
The size of an undo tablespace after a truncate operation may be larger than the initial size due to immediate use following the completion of the operation.
The
innodb_undo_directory
variable defines the location of default undo tablespace files. If theinnodb_undo_directory
variable is undefined, default undo tablespaces reside in the data directory. The location of all undo tablespace files including user-defined undo tablespaces created usingCREATE UNDO TABLESPACE
syntax can be determined by querying the Information SchemaFILES
table:SELECT TABLESPACE_NAME, FILE_NAME FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.FILES WHERE FILE_TYPE LIKE 'UNDO LOG';
Rollback segments are reactivated so that they can be assigned to new transactions.
Manual Truncation
Manual truncation of undo tablespaces requires a minimum of three active undo tablespaces. Two active undo tablespaces are required at all times to support the possibility that automated truncation is enabled. A minimum of three undo tablespaces satisfies this requirement while permitting an undo tablespace to be taken offline manually.
To manually initiate truncation of an undo tablespace, deactivate the undo tablespace by issuing the following statement:
ALTER UNDO TABLESPACE tablespace_name SET INACTIVE;
After the undo tablespace is marked as inactive, transactions
currently using rollback segments in the undo tablespace are
permitted to finish, as are any transactions started before
those transactions are completed. After transactions are
completed, the purge system frees the rollback segments in the
undo tablespace, the undo tablespace is truncated to its initial
size, and the undo tablespace state changes from
inactive
to empty
.
When an ALTER UNDO TABLESPACE
statement deactivates an undo tablespace,
the purge thread looks for that undo tablespace at the next
opportunity. Once the undo tablespace is found and marked for
truncation, the purge thread returns with increased frequency
to quickly empty and truncate the undo tablespace.
tablespace_name
SET
INACTIVE
To check the state of an undo tablespace, query the Information
Schema INNODB_TABLESPACES
table.
SELECT NAME, STATE FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.INNODB_TABLESPACES
WHERE NAME LIKE 'tablespace_name';
Once the undo tablespace is in an empty
state, it can be reactivated by issuing the following statement:
ALTER UNDO TABLESPACE tablespace_name SET ACTIVE;
An undo tablespace in an empty
state can also
be dropped. See Dropping Undo Tablespaces.
Expediting Automated Truncation of Undo Tablespaces
The purge thread is responsible for emptying and truncating undo
tablespaces. By default, the purge thread looks for undo
tablespaces to truncate once every 128 times that purge is
invoked. The frequency with which the purge thread looks for
undo tablespaces to truncate is controlled by the
innodb_purge_rseg_truncate_frequency
variable, which has a default setting of 128.
mysql> SELECT @@innodb_purge_rseg_truncate_frequency;
+----------------------------------------+
| @@innodb_purge_rseg_truncate_frequency |
+----------------------------------------+
| 128 |
+----------------------------------------+
To increase the frequency, decrease the
innodb_purge_rseg_truncate_frequency
setting. For example, to have the purge thread look for undo
tablespaces once every 32 times that purge is invoked, set
innodb_purge_rseg_truncate_frequency
to 32.
mysql> SET GLOBAL innodb_purge_rseg_truncate_frequency=32;
Performance Impact of Truncating Undo Tablespace Files
When an undo tablespace is truncated, the rollback segments in the undo tablespace are deactivated. The active rollback segments in other undo tablespaces assume responsibility for the entire system load, which may result in a slight performance degradation. The extent to which performance is affected depends on a number of factors:
Number of undo tablespaces
Number of undo logs
Undo tablespace size
Speed of the I/O subsystem
Existing long running transactions
System load
The easiest way to avoid the potential performance impact is to increase the number of undo tablespaces.
Monitoring Undo Tablespace Truncation
As of MySQL 8.0.16, undo
and
purge
subsystem counters are provided for
monitoring background activities associated with undo log
truncation. For counter names and descriptions, query the
Information Schema INNODB_METRICS
table.
SELECT NAME, SUBSYSTEM, COMMENT FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.INNODB_METRICS WHERE NAME LIKE '%truncate%';
For information about enabling counters and querying counter data, see Section 17.15.6, “InnoDB INFORMATION_SCHEMA Metrics Table”.
Undo Tablespace Truncation Limit
As of MySQL 8.0.21, the number of truncate operations on the
same undo tablespace between checkpoints is limited to 64. The
limit prevents potential issues caused by an excessive number of
undo tablespace truncate operations, which can occur if
innodb_max_undo_log_size
is set
too low on a busy system, for example. If the limit is exceeded,
an undo tablespace can still be made inactive, but it is not
truncated until after the next checkpoint. the limit was raised
from 64 to 50,000 in MySQL 8.0.22.
Undo Tablespace Truncation Recovery
An undo tablespace truncate operation creates a temporary
undo_
file in the server log directory. That log directory is defined
by space_number
_trunc.loginnodb_log_group_home_dir
.
If a system failure occurs during the truncate operation, the
temporary log file permits the startup process to identify undo
tablespaces that were being truncated and to continue the
operation.
The following status variables permit tracking the total number
of undo tablespaces, implicit
(InnoDB
-created) undo tablespaces, explicit
(user-created) undo tablespaces, and the number of active undo
tablespaces:
mysql> SHOW STATUS LIKE 'Innodb_undo_tablespaces%';
+----------------------------------+-------+
| Variable_name | Value |
+----------------------------------+-------+
| Innodb_undo_tablespaces_total | 2 |
| Innodb_undo_tablespaces_implicit | 2 |
| Innodb_undo_tablespaces_explicit | 0 |
| Innodb_undo_tablespaces_active | 2 |
+----------------------------------+-------+
For status variable descriptions, see Section 7.1.10, “Server Status Variables”.