MySQL NDB Cluster uses the MySQL server with the
    NDB storage engine. Support for the
    NDB storage engine is not included in
    standard MySQL Server 8.0 binaries built by Oracle. Instead, users
    of NDB Cluster binaries from Oracle should upgrade to the most
    recent binary release of NDB Cluster for supported
    platforms—these include RPMs that should work with most Linux
    distributions. NDB Cluster 8.0 users who build from source should
    use the sources provided for MySQL 8.0 and build with the options
    required to provide NDB support. (Locations where the sources can be
    obtained are listed later in this section.)
      MySQL NDB Cluster does not support InnoDB Cluster, which must be
      deployed using MySQL Server 8.0 with the
      InnoDB storage engine as well as
      additional applications that are not included in the NDB Cluster
      distribution. MySQL Server 8.0 binaries cannot be used with MySQL
      NDB Cluster. For more information about deploying and using
      InnoDB Cluster, see MySQL AdminAPI.
      Section 25.2.6, “MySQL Server Using InnoDB Compared with NDB Cluster”, discusses differences
      between the NDB and InnoDB
      storage engines.
Supported Platforms. NDB Cluster is currently available and supported on a number of platforms. For exact levels of support available for on specific combinations of operating system versions, operating system distributions, and hardware platforms, please refer to https://www.mysql.com/support/supportedplatforms/cluster.html.
Availability. NDB Cluster binary and source packages are available for supported platforms from https://dev.mysql.com/downloads/cluster/.
NDB Cluster release numbers. 
      NDB 8.0 follows the same release pattern as the MySQL Server 8.0
      series of releases, beginning with MySQL 8.0.13 and MySQL NDB
      Cluster 8.0.13. In this Manual and other
      MySQL documentation, we identify these and later NDB Cluster
      releases employing a version number that begins with
      “NDB”. This version number is that of the
      NDBCLUSTER storage engine used in the
      NDB 8.0 release, and is the same as the MySQL 8.0 server version
      on which the NDB Cluster 8.0 release is based.
    
Version strings used in NDB Cluster software. The version string displayed by the mysql client supplied with the MySQL NDB Cluster distribution uses this format:
mysql-mysql_server_version-cluster
    mysql_server_version represents the
    version of the MySQL Server on which the NDB Cluster release is
    based. For all NDB Cluster 8.0 releases, this is
    8.0., where
    nn is the release number. Building from
    source using -DWITH_NDB or the
    equivalent adds the -cluster suffix to the
    version string. (See
    Section 25.3.1.4, “Building NDB Cluster from Source on Linux”, and
    Section 25.3.2.2, “Compiling and Installing NDB Cluster from Source on Windows”.) You can see
    this format used in the mysql client, as shown
    here:
  
$> mysql
Welcome to the MySQL monitor.  Commands end with ; or \g.
Your MySQL connection id is 2
Server version: 8.0.44-cluster Source distribution
Type 'help;' or '\h' for help. Type '\c' to clear the buffer.
mysql> SELECT VERSION()\G
*************************** 1. row ***************************
VERSION(): 8.0.44-cluster
1 row in set (0.00 sec)The first General Availability release of NDB Cluster using MySQL 8.0 is NDB 8.0.19, using MySQL 8.0.19.
The version string displayed by other NDB Cluster programs not normally included with the MySQL 8.0 distribution uses this format:
mysql-mysql_server_version ndb-ndb_engine_version
    mysql_server_version represents the
    version of the MySQL Server on which the NDB Cluster release is
    based. For all NDB Cluster 8.0 releases, this is
    8.0., where
    nn is the release number.
    ndb_engine_version is the version of the
    NDB storage engine used by this release
    of the NDB Cluster software. For all NDB 8.0 releases, this number
    is the same as the MySQL Server version. You can see this format
    used in the output of the SHOW command in the
    ndb_mgm client, like this:
  
ndb_mgm> SHOW
Connected to Management Server at: localhost:1186
Cluster Configuration
---------------------
[ndbd(NDB)]     2 node(s)
id=1    @10.0.10.6  (mysql-8.0.44 ndb-8.0.44, Nodegroup: 0, *)
id=2    @10.0.10.8  (mysql-8.0.44 ndb-8.0.44, Nodegroup: 0)
[ndb_mgmd(MGM)] 1 node(s)
id=3    @10.0.10.2  (mysql-8.0.44 ndb-8.0.44)
[mysqld(API)]   2 node(s)
id=4    @10.0.10.10  (mysql-8.0.44 ndb-8.0.44)
id=5 (not connected, accepting connect from any host)Compatibility with standard MySQL 8.0 releases. 
      While many standard MySQL schemas and applications can work using
      NDB Cluster, it is also true that unmodified applications and
      database schemas may be slightly incompatible or have suboptimal
      performance when run using NDB Cluster (see
      Section 25.2.7, “Known Limitations of NDB Cluster”). Most of these issues
      can be overcome, but this also means that you are very unlikely to
      be able to switch an existing application datastore—that
      currently uses, for example, MyISAM
      or InnoDB—to use the
      NDB storage engine without allowing
      for the possibility of changes in schemas, queries, and
      applications. A mysqld compiled without
      NDB support (that is, built without
      -DWITH_NDB or
      -DWITH_NDBCLUSTER_STORAGE_ENGINE)
      cannot function as a drop-in replacement for a
      mysqld that is built with it.
    
NDB Cluster development source trees. NDB Cluster development trees can also be accessed from https://github.com/mysql/mysql-server.
The NDB Cluster development sources maintained at https://github.com/mysql/mysql-server are licensed under the GPL. For information about obtaining MySQL sources using Git and building them yourself, see Section 2.8.5, “Installing MySQL Using a Development Source Tree”.
As with MySQL Server 8.0, NDB Cluster 8.0 releases are built using CMake.
NDB Cluster 8.0 is available beginning with NDB 8.0.19 as a General Availability release, and is recommended for new deployments. NDB Cluster 7.6 and 7.5 are previous GA releases still supported in production; for information about NDB Cluster 7.6, see What is New in NDB Cluster 7.6. For similar information about NDB Cluster 7.5, see What is New in NDB Cluster 7.5. NDB Cluster 7.4 and 7.3 are previous GA releases which are no longer maintained. We recommend that new deployments for production use MySQL NDB Cluster 8.0.
The contents of this chapter are subject to revision as NDB Cluster continues to evolve. Additional information regarding NDB Cluster can be found on the MySQL website at http://www.mysql.com/products/cluster/.
Additional Resources. More information about NDB Cluster can be found in the following places:
- For answers to some commonly asked questions about NDB Cluster, see Section A.10, “MySQL 8.0 FAQ: NDB Cluster”. 
- The NDB Cluster Forum: https://forums.mysql.com/list.php?25. 
- Many NDB Cluster users and developers blog about their experiences with NDB Cluster, and make feeds of these available through PlanetMySQL.