A number of features supported by other storage engines are not
supported for NDB
tables. Trying to
use any of these features in NDB Cluster does not cause errors
in or of itself; however, errors may occur in applications that
expects the features to be supported or enforced. Statements
referencing such features, even if effectively ignored by
NDB
, must be syntactically and otherwise
valid.
Index prefixes. Prefixes on indexes are not supported for
NDB
tables. If a prefix is used as part of an index specification in a statement such asCREATE TABLE
,ALTER TABLE
, orCREATE INDEX
, the prefix is not created byNDB
.A statement containing an index prefix, and creating or modifying an
NDB
table, must still be syntactically valid. For example, the following statement always fails with Error 1089 Incorrect prefix key; the used key part is not a string, the used length is longer than the key part, or the storage engine doesn't support unique prefix keys, regardless of storage engine:CREATE TABLE t1 ( c1 INT NOT NULL, c2 VARCHAR(100), INDEX i1 (c2(500)) );
This happens on account of the SQL syntax rule that no index may have a prefix larger than itself.
Savepoints and rollbacks. Savepoints and rollbacks to savepoints are ignored as in
MyISAM
.Durability of commits. There are no durable commits on disk. Commits are replicated, but there is no guarantee that logs are flushed to disk on commit.
Replication. Statement-based replication is not supported. Use
--binlog-format=ROW
(or--binlog-format=MIXED
) when setting up cluster replication. See Chapter 7, NDB Cluster Replication, for more information.Replication using global transaction identifiers (GTIDs) is not compatible with NDB Cluster, and is not supported in NDB Cluster 8.0. Do not enable GTIDs when using the
NDB
storage engine, as this is very likely to cause problems up to and including failure of NDB Cluster Replication.Semisynchronous replication is not supported in NDB Cluster.
Generated columns. The
NDB
storage engine does not support indexes on virtual generated columns.As with other storage engines, you can create an index on a stored generated column, but you should bear in mind that
NDB
usesDataMemory
for storage of the generated column as well asIndexMemory
for the index. See JSON columns and indirect indexing in NDB Cluster, for an example.NDB Cluster writes changes in stored generated columns to the binary log, but does log not those made to virtual columns. This should not effect NDB Cluster Replication or replication between
NDB
and other MySQL storage engines.
See Section 2.7.3, “Limits Relating to Transaction Handling in NDB Cluster”,
for more information relating to limitations on transaction
handling in NDB
.