When you create a new table, you can specify which storage engine
to use by adding an ENGINE
table option to the
CREATE TABLE
statement:
-- ENGINE=INNODB not needed unless you have set a different
-- default storage engine.
CREATE TABLE t1 (i INT) ENGINE = INNODB;
-- Simple table definitions can be switched from one to another.
CREATE TABLE t2 (i INT) ENGINE = CSV;
CREATE TABLE t3 (i INT) ENGINE = MEMORY;
When you omit the ENGINE
option, the default
storage engine is used. The default engine is
InnoDB
in MySQL 5.7. You
can specify the default engine by using the
--default-storage-engine
server
startup option, or by setting the
default-storage-engine
option in
the my.cnf
configuration file.
You can set the default storage engine for the current session by
setting the
default_storage_engine
variable:
SET default_storage_engine=NDBCLUSTER;
The storage engine for TEMPORARY
tables created
with CREATE
TEMPORARY TABLE
can be set separately from the engine
for permanent tables by setting the
default_tmp_storage_engine
,
either at startup or at runtime.
To convert a table from one storage engine to another, use an
ALTER TABLE
statement that
indicates the new engine:
ALTER TABLE t ENGINE = InnoDB;
See Section 13.1.18, “CREATE TABLE Statement”, and Section 13.1.8, “ALTER TABLE Statement”.
If you try to use a storage engine that is not compiled in or that
is compiled in but deactivated, MySQL instead creates a table
using the default storage engine. For example, in a replication
setup, perhaps your source server uses InnoDB
tables for maximum safety, but the replica servers use other
storage engines for speed at the expense of durability or
concurrency.
By default, a warning is generated whenever
CREATE TABLE
or
ALTER TABLE
cannot use the default
storage engine. To prevent confusing, unintended behavior if the
desired engine is unavailable, enable the
NO_ENGINE_SUBSTITUTION
SQL mode.
If the desired engine is unavailable, this setting produces an
error instead of a warning, and the table is not created or
altered. See Section 5.1.10, “Server SQL Modes”.
For new tables, MySQL always creates an .frm
file to hold the table and column definitions. The table's index
and data may be stored in one or more other files, depending on
the storage engine. The server creates the
.frm
file above the storage engine level.
Individual storage engines create any additional files required
for the tables that they manage. If a table name contains special
characters, the names for the table files contain encoded versions
of those characters as described in
Section 9.2.4, “Mapping of Identifiers to File Names”.