This section summarizes what has been added to, deprecated in, and removed from MySQL 8.0. A companion section lists MySQL server options and variables that have been added, deprecated, or removed in MySQL 8.0; see Section 1.4, “Server and Status Variables and Options Added, Deprecated, or Removed in MySQL 8.0”.
The following features have been added to MySQL 8.0:
Data dictionary. MySQL now incorporates a transactional data dictionary that stores information about database objects. In previous MySQL releases, dictionary data was stored in metadata files and nontransactional tables. For more information, see Chapter 16, MySQL Data Dictionary.
Atomic data definition statements (Atomic DDL). An atomic DDL statement combines the data dictionary updates, storage engine operations, and binary log writes associated with a DDL operation into a single, atomic transaction. For more information, see Section 15.1.1, “Atomic Data Definition Statement Support”.
Upgrade procedure. Previously, after installation of a new version of MySQL, the MySQL server automatically upgrades the data dictionary tables at the next startup, after which the DBA is expected to invoke mysql_upgrade manually to upgrade the system tables in the
mysql
schema, as well as objects in other schemas such as thesys
schema and user schemas.As of MySQL 8.0.16, the server performs the tasks previously handled by mysql_upgrade. After installation of a new MySQL version, the server now automatically performs all necessary upgrade tasks at the next startup and is not dependent on the DBA invoking mysql_upgrade. In addition, the server updates the contents of the help tables (something mysql_upgrade did not do). A new
--upgrade
server option provides control over how the server performs automatic data dictionary and server upgrade operations. For more information, see Section 3.4, “What the MySQL Upgrade Process Upgrades”.Session Reuse. MySQL Server now supports SSL session reuse by default with a timeout setting to control how long the server maintains a session cache that establishes the period during which a client is permitted to request session reuse for new connections. All MySQL client programs support session reuse. For server-side and client-side configuration information, see Section 8.3.5, “Reusing SSL Sessions”.
In addition, C applications now can use the C API capabilities to enable session reuse for encrypted connections (see SSL Session Reuse).
Security and account management. These enhancements were added to improve security and enable greater DBA flexibility in account management:
MySQL Enterprise Audit now supports using the scheduler component to configure and execute a recurring task to flush the in-memory cache. For setup instructions, see Enabling the Audit Log Flush Task.
A new password-validation system variable permits the configuration and enforcement of a minimum number of characters that users must change when attempting to replace their own MySQL account passwords. This new verification setting is a percentage of the total characters in the current password. For example, if
validate_password.changed_characters_percentage
has a value of 50, at least half of the characters in the replacement account password must not be present in the current password, or the password is rejected. For more information, see Section 8.4.3, “The Password Validation Component”.MySQL Enterprise Edition now provides data masking and de-identification capabilities based on components, rather than being based on a plugin library that was introduced in MySQL 8.0.13. MySQL Enterprise Data Masking and De-Identification components support for multibyte characters, masking dictionaries stored in a database table, and several new functions. For more information, see Section 8.5.1, “Data-Masking Components Versus the Data-Masking Plugin”.
Prior to MySQL 8.0.33, the
mysql
system database was used for MySQL Enterprise Audit's persistent storage of filter and user account data. For enhanced flexibility, the newaudit_log_database
server system variable now permits specifying other databases in the global schema namespace at server startup. Themysql
system database is the default setting for table storage.The grant tables in the
mysql
system database are nowInnoDB
(transactional) tables. Previously, these wereMyISAM
(nontransactional) tables. The change of grant table storage engine underlies an accompanying change to the behavior of account-management statements. Previously, an account-management statement (such asCREATE USER
orDROP USER
) that named multiple users could succeed for some users and fail for others. Now, each statement is transactional and either succeeds for all named users or rolls back and has no effect if any error occurs. The statement is written to the binary log if it succeeds, but not if it fails; in that case, rollback occurs and no changes are made. For more information, see Section 15.1.1, “Atomic Data Definition Statement Support”.A new
caching_sha2_password
authentication plugin is available. Like thesha256_password
plugin,caching_sha2_password
implements SHA-256 password hashing, but uses caching to address latency issues at connect time. It also supports more transport protocols and does not require linking against OpenSSL for RSA key pair-based password-exchange capabilities. See Section 8.4.1.2, “Caching SHA-2 Pluggable Authentication”.The
caching_sha2_password
andsha256_password
authentication plugins provide more secure password encryption than themysql_native_password
plugin (deprecated in 8.0.34), andcaching_sha2_password
provides better performance thansha256_password
. Due to these superior security and performance characteristics ofcaching_sha2_password
, it is now the preferred authentication plugin, and is also the default authentication plugin rather thanmysql_native_password
. For information about the implications of this change of default plugin for server operation and compatibility of the server with clients and connectors, see caching_sha2_password as the Preferred Authentication Plugin.The MySQL Enterprise Edition SASL LDAP authentication plugin now supports GSSAPI/Kerberos as an authentication method for MySQL clients and servers on Linux. This is useful in Linux environments where applications access LDAP using Microsoft Active Directory, which has Kerberos enabled by default. See LDAP Authentication Methods.
MySQL Enterprise Edition now supports an authentication method that enables users to authenticate to MySQL Server using Kerberos, provided that appropriate Kerberos tickets are available or can be obtained. For details, see Section 8.4.1.8, “Kerberos Pluggable Authentication”.
MySQL now supports roles, which are named collections of privileges. Roles can be created and dropped. Roles can have privileges granted to and revoked from them. Roles can be granted to and revoked from user accounts. The active applicable roles for an account can be selected from among those granted to the account, and can be changed during sessions for that account. For more information, see Section 8.2.10, “Using Roles”.
MySQL now incorporates the concept of user account categories, with system and regular users distinguished according to whether they have the
SYSTEM_USER
privilege. See Section 8.2.11, “Account Categories”.Previously, it was not possible to grant privileges that apply globally except for certain schemas. This is now possible if the
partial_revokes
system variable is enabled. See Section 8.2.12, “Privilege Restriction Using Partial Revokes”.The
GRANT
statement has anAS
clause that specifies additional information about the privilege context to use for statement execution. This syntax is visible at the SQL level, although its primary purpose is to enable uniform replication across all nodes of grantor privilege restrictions imposed by partial revokes, by causing those restrictions to appear in the binary log. See Section 15.7.1.6, “GRANT Statement”.user
[WITH ROLE]MySQL now maintains information about password history, enabling restrictions on reuse of previous passwords. DBAs can require that new passwords not be selected from previous passwords for some number of password changes or period of time. It is possible to establish password-reuse policy globally as well as on a per-account basis.
It is now possible to require that attempts to change account passwords be verified by specifying the current password to be replaced. This enables DBAs to prevent users from changing password without proving that they know the current password. It is possible to establish password-verification policy globally as well as on a per-account basis.
Accounts are now permitted to have dual passwords, which enables phased password changes to be performed seamlessly in complex multiple-server systems, without downtime.
MySQL now enables administrators to configure user accounts such that too many consecutive login failures due to incorrect passwords cause temporary account locking. The required number of failures and the lock time are configurable per account.
These new capabilities provide DBAs more complete control over password management. For more information, see Section 8.2.15, “Password Management”.
MySQL now supports FIPS mode, if compiled using OpenSSL, and an OpenSSL library and FIPS Object Module are available at runtime. FIPS mode imposes conditions on cryptographic operations such as restrictions on acceptable encryption algorithms or requirements for longer key lengths. See Section 8.8, “FIPS Support”.
The TLS context the server uses for new connections now is reconfigurable at runtime. This capability may be useful, for example, to avoid restarting a MySQL server that has been running so long that its SSL certificate has expired. See Server-Side Runtime Configuration and Monitoring for Encrypted Connections.
OpenSSL 1.1.1 supports the TLS v1.3 protocol for encrypted connections, and MySQL 8.0.16 and higher supports TLS v1.3 as well, if both the server and client are compiled using OpenSSL 1.1.1 or higher. See Section 8.3.2, “Encrypted Connection TLS Protocols and Ciphers”.
MySQL now sets the access control granted to clients on the named pipe to the minimum necessary for successful communication on Windows. Newer MySQL client software can open named pipe connections without any additional configuration. If older client software cannot be upgraded immediately, the new
named_pipe_full_access_group
system variable can be used to give a Windows group the necessary permissions to open a named pipe connection. Membership in the full-access group should be restricted and temporary.Previously, MySQL user accounts authenticated to the server using a single authentication method. As of MySQL 8.0.27, MySQL supports multifactor authentication (MFA), which makes it possible to create accounts that have up to three authentication methods. MFA support entails these changes:
CREATE USER
andALTER USER
syntax has been extended to permit specification of multiple authentication methods.The
authentication_policy
system variable enables MFA policy to be established by controlling how many factors can be used and the types of authentication permitted for each factor. This places constraints on how the authentication-related clauses ofCREATE USER
andALTER USER
statements may be used.Client programs have new
--password1
,--password2
, and--password3
command-line options for specifying multiple passwords. For applications that use the C API, the newMYSQL_OPT_USER_PASSWORD
option for themysql_options4()
C API function enables the same capability.
In addition, MySQL Enterprise Edition now supports authentication to MySQL Server using devices such as smart cards, security keys, and biometric readers. This authentication method is based on the Fast Identity Online (FIDO) standard, and uses a pair of plugins,
authentication_fido
on the server side andauthentication_fido_client
on the client side. The server-side FIDO authentication plugin is included only in MySQL Enterprise Edition distributions. It is not included in MySQL community distributions. However, the client-side plugin is included in all distributions, including community distributions. This enables clients from any distribution to connect to a server that has the server-side plugin loaded.Multifactor authentication can use existing MySQL authentication methods, the new FIDO authentication method, or a combination of both. For more information, see Section 8.2.18, “Multifactor Authentication”, and Section 8.4.1.11, “FIDO Pluggable Authentication”.
Resource management. MySQL now supports creation and management of resource groups, and permits assigning threads running within the server to particular groups so that threads execute according to the resources available to the group. Group attributes enable control over its resources, to enable or restrict resource consumption by threads in the group. DBAs can modify these attributes as appropriate for different workloads. Currently, CPU time is a manageable resource, represented by the concept of “virtual CPU” as a term that includes CPU cores, hyperthreads, hardware threads, and so forth. The server determines at startup how many virtual CPUs are available, and database administrators with appropriate privileges can associate these CPUs with resource groups and assign threads to groups. For more information, see Section 7.1.16, “Resource Groups”.
Table encryption management. Table encryption can now be managed globally by defining and enforcing encryption defaults. The
default_table_encryption
variable defines an encryption default for newly created schemas and general tablespace. The encryption default for a schema can also be defined using theDEFAULT ENCRYPTION
clause when creating a schema. By default, a table inherits the encryption of the schema or general tablespace it is created in. Encryption defaults are enforced by enabling thetable_encryption_privilege_check
variable. The privilege check occurs when creating or altering a schema or general tablespace with an encryption setting that differs from thedefault_table_encryption
setting, or when creating or altering a table with an encryption setting that differs from the default schema encryption. TheTABLE_ENCRYPTION_ADMIN
privilege permits overriding default encryption settings whentable_encryption_privilege_check
is enabled. For more information, see Defining an Encryption Default for Schemas and General Tablespaces.InnoDB enhancements. These
InnoDB
enhancements were added:The current maximum auto-increment counter value is written to the redo log each time the value changes, and saved to an engine-private system table on each checkpoint. These changes make the current maximum auto-increment counter value persistent across server restarts. Additionally:
A server restart no longer cancels the effect of the
AUTO_INCREMENT = N
table option. If you initialize the auto-increment counter to a specific value, or if you alter the auto-increment counter value to a larger value, the new value is persisted across server restarts.A server restart immediately following a
ROLLBACK
operation no longer results in the reuse of auto-increment values that were allocated to the rolled-back transaction.If you modify an
AUTO_INCREMENT
column value to a value larger than the current maximum auto-increment value (in anUPDATE
operation, for example), the new value is persisted, and subsequentINSERT
operations allocate auto-increment values starting from the new, larger value.
For more information, see Section 17.6.1.6, “AUTO_INCREMENT Handling in InnoDB”, and InnoDB AUTO_INCREMENT Counter Initialization.
When encountering index tree corruption,
InnoDB
writes a corruption flag to the redo log, which makes the corruption flag crash safe.InnoDB
also writes in-memory corruption flag data to an engine-private system table on each checkpoint. During recovery,InnoDB
reads corruption flags from both locations and merges results before marking in-memory table and index objects as corrupt.The
InnoDB
memcached plugin supports multipleget
operations (fetching multiple key-value pairs in a single memcached query) and range queries. See Section 17.20.4, “InnoDB memcached Multiple get and Range Query Support”.A new dynamic variable,
innodb_deadlock_detect
, may be used to disable deadlock detection. On high concurrency systems, deadlock detection can cause a slowdown when numerous threads wait for the same lock. At times, it may be more efficient to disable deadlock detection and rely on theinnodb_lock_wait_timeout
setting for transaction rollback when a deadlock occurs.The new Information Schema
INNODB_CACHED_INDEXES
table reports the number of index pages cached in theInnoDB
buffer pool for each index.InnoDB
temporary tables are now created in the shared temporary tablespace,ibtmp1
.The
InnoDB
tablespace encryption feature supports encryption of redo log and undo log data. See Redo Log Encryption, and Undo Log Encryption.InnoDB
supportsNOWAIT
andSKIP LOCKED
options withSELECT ... FOR SHARE
andSELECT ... FOR UPDATE
locking read statements.NOWAIT
causes the statement to return immediately if a requested row is locked by another transaction.SKIP LOCKED
removes locked rows from the result set. See Locking Read Concurrency with NOWAIT and SKIP LOCKED.SELECT ... FOR SHARE
replacesSELECT ... LOCK IN SHARE MODE
, butLOCK IN SHARE MODE
remains available for backward compatibility. The statements are equivalent. However,FOR UPDATE
andFOR SHARE
supportNOWAIT
,SKIP LOCKED
, andOF
options. See Section 15.2.13, “SELECT Statement”.tbl_name
OF
applies locking queries to named tables.tbl_name
ADD PARTITION
,DROP PARTITION
,COALESCE PARTITION
,REORGANIZE PARTITION
, andREBUILD PARTITION
ALTER TABLE
options are supported by native partitioning in-place APIs and may be used withALGORITHM={COPY|INPLACE}
andLOCK
clauses.DROP PARTITION
withALGORITHM=INPLACE
deletes data stored in the partition and drops the partition. However,DROP PARTITION
withALGORITHM=COPY
orold_alter_table=ON
rebuilds the partitioned table and attempts to move data from the dropped partition to another partition with a compatiblePARTITION ... VALUES
definition. Data that cannot be moved to another partition is deleted.The
InnoDB
storage engine now uses the MySQL data dictionary rather than its own storage engine-specific data dictionary. For information about the data dictionary, see Chapter 16, MySQL Data Dictionary.mysql
system tables and data dictionary tables are now created in a singleInnoDB
tablespace file namedmysql.ibd
in the MySQL data directory. Previously, these tables were created in individualInnoDB
tablespace files in themysql
database directory.The following undo tablespace changes are introduced in MySQL 8.0:
By default, undo logs now reside in two undo tablespaces that are created when the MySQL instance is initialized. Undo logs are no longer created in the system tablespace.
As of MySQL 8.0.14, additional undo tablespaces can be created in a chosen location at runtime using
CREATE UNDO TABLESPACE
syntax.CREATE UNDO TABLESPACE tablespace_name ADD DATAFILE 'file_name.ibu';
Undo tablespaces created using
CREATE UNDO TABLESPACE
syntax can be dropped at runtime usingDROP UNDO TABLESPACE
syntax.DROP UNDO TABLESPACE tablespace_name;
ALTER UNDO TABLESPACE
syntax can be used to mark an undo tablespace as active or inactive.ALTER UNDO TABLESPACE tablespace_name SET {ACTIVE|INACTIVE};
A
STATE
column that shows the state of a tablespace was added to the Information SchemaINNODB_TABLESPACES
table. An undo tablespace must be in anempty
state before it can be dropped.The
innodb_undo_log_truncate
variable is enabled by default.The
innodb_rollback_segments
variable defines the number of rollback segments per undo tablespace. Previously,innodb_rollback_segments
specified the total number of rollback segments for the MySQL instance. This change increases the number of rollback segments available for concurrent transactions. More rollback segments increases the likelihood that concurrent transactions use separate rollback segments for undo logs, resulting in less resource contention.
Default values for variables that affect buffer pool preflushing and flushing behavior were modified:
The
innodb_max_dirty_pages_pct_lwm
default value is now 10. The previous default value of 0 disables buffer pool preflushing. A value of 10 enables preflushing when the percentage of dirty pages in the buffer pool exceeds 10%. Enabling preflushing improves performance consistency.The
innodb_max_dirty_pages_pct
default value was increased from 75 to 90.InnoDB
attempts to flush data from the buffer pool so that the percentage of dirty pages does not exceed this value. The increased default value permits a greater percentage of dirty pages in the buffer pool.
The default
innodb_autoinc_lock_mode
setting is now 2 (interleaved). Interleaved lock mode permits the execution of multi-row inserts in parallel, which improves concurrency and scalability. The newinnodb_autoinc_lock_mode
default setting reflects the change from statement-based replication to row based replication as the default replication type in MySQL 5.7. Statement-based replication requires the consecutive auto-increment lock mode (the previous default) to ensure that auto-increment values are assigned in a predictable and repeatable order for a given sequence of SQL statements, whereas row-based replication is not sensitive to the execution order of SQL statements. For more information, see InnoDB AUTO_INCREMENT Lock Modes.For systems that use statement-based replication, the new
innodb_autoinc_lock_mode
default setting may break applications that depend on sequential auto-increment values. To restore the previous default, setinnodb_autoinc_lock_mode
to 1.Renaming a general tablespace is supported by
ALTER TABLESPACE ... RENAME TO
syntax.The
--innodb-dedicated-server
server option, which is disabled by default, can be used to haveInnoDB
automatically set values the following system variables according to the amount of memory detected on the server:This option is intended for MySQL server instances that run on a dedicated server. For more information, see Section 17.8.12, “Enabling Automatic InnoDB Configuration for a Dedicated MySQL Server”.
The new Information Schema
INNODB_TABLESPACES_BRIEF
view provides space, name, path, flag, and space type data forInnoDB
tablespaces.The zlib library version bundled with MySQL was raised from version 1.2.3 to version 1.2.11. MySQL implements compression with the help of the zlib library.
If you use
InnoDB
compressed tables, see Section 3.5, “Changes in MySQL 8.0” for related upgrade implications.Serialized dictionary information (SDI) is present in all
InnoDB
tablespace files except for global temporary tablespace and undo tablespace files. SDI is serialized metadata for table and tablespace objects. The presence of SDI data provides metadata redundancy. For example, dictionary object metadata may be extracted from tablespace files if the data dictionary becomes unavailable. SDI extraction is performed using the ibd2sdi tool. SDI data is stored inJSON
format.The inclusion of SDI data in tablespace files increases tablespace file size. An SDI record requires a single index page, which is 16KB in size by default. However, SDI data is compressed when it is stored to reduce the storage footprint.
The
InnoDB
storage engine now supports atomic DDL, which ensures that DDL operations are either fully committed or rolled back, even if the server halts during the operation. For more information, see Section 15.1.1, “Atomic Data Definition Statement Support”.Tablespace files can be moved or restored to a new location while the server is offline using the
innodb_directories
option. For more information, see Section 17.6.3.6, “Moving Tablespace Files While the Server is Offline”.The following redo logging optimizations were implemented:
User threads can now write concurrently to the log buffer without synchronizing writes.
User threads can now add dirty pages to the flush list in a relaxed order.
A dedicated log thread is now responsible for writing the log buffer to the system buffers, flushing system buffers to disk, notifying user threads about written and flushed redo, maintaining the lag required for the relaxed flush list order, and write checkpoints.
System variables were added for configuring the use of spin delay by user threads waiting for flushed redo:
innodb_log_wait_for_flush_spin_hwm
: Defines the maximum average log flush time beyond which user threads no longer spin while waiting for flushed redo.innodb_log_spin_cpu_abs_lwm
: Defines the minimum amount of CPU usage below which user threads no longer spin while waiting for flushed redo.innodb_log_spin_cpu_pct_hwm
: Defines the maximum amount of CPU usage above which user threads no longer spin while waiting for flushed redo.
The
innodb_log_buffer_size
variable is now dynamic, which permits resizing of the log buffer while the server is running.
For more information, see Section 10.5.4, “Optimizing InnoDB Redo Logging”.
As of MySQL 8.0.12, undo logging is supported for small updates to large object (LOB) data, which improves performance of LOB updates that are 100 bytes in size or less. Previously, LOB updates were a minimum of one LOB page in size, which is less than optimal for updates that might only modify a few bytes. This enhancement builds upon support added in MySQL 8.0.4 for partial update of LOB data.
As of MySQL 8.0.12,
ALGORITHM=INSTANT
is supported for the followingALTER TABLE
operations:Adding a column. This feature is also referred to as “Instant
ADD COLUMN
”. Limitations apply. See Section 17.12.1, “Online DDL Operations”.Adding or dropping a virtual column.
Adding or dropping a column default value.
Changing the index type.
Renaming a table.
Operations that support
ALGORITHM=INSTANT
only modify metadata in the data dictionary. No metadata locks are taken on the table, and table data is unaffected, making the operations instantaneous. If not specified explicitly,ALGORITHM=INSTANT
is used by default by operations that support it. IfALGORITHM=INSTANT
is specified but not supported, the operation fails immediately with an error.For more information about operations that support
ALGORITHM=INSTANT
, see Section 17.12.1, “Online DDL Operations”.As of MySQL 8.0.13, the
TempTable
storage engine supports storage of binary large object (BLOB) type columns. This enhancement improves performance for queries that use temporary tables containing BLOB data. Previously, temporary tables that contained BLOB data were stored in the on-disk storage engine defined byinternal_tmp_disk_storage_engine
. For more information, see Section 10.4.4, “Internal Temporary Table Use in MySQL”.As of MySQL 8.0.13, the
InnoDB
data-at-rest encryption feature supports general tablespaces. Previously, only file-per-table tablespaces could be encrypted. To support encryption of general tablespaces,CREATE TABLESPACE
andALTER TABLESPACE
syntax was extended to include anENCRYPTION
clause.The Information Schema
INNODB_TABLESPACES
table now includes anENCRYPTION
column that indicates whether or not a tablespace is encrypted.The
stage/innodb/alter tablespace (encryption)
Performance Schema stage instrument was added to permit monitoring of general tablespace encryption operations.Disabling the
innodb_buffer_pool_in_core_file
variable reduces the size of core files by excludingInnoDB
buffer pool pages. To use this variable, thecore_file
variable must be enabled and the operating system must support theMADV_DONTDUMP
non-POSIX extension tomadvise()
, which is supported in Linux 3.4 and later. For more information, see Section 17.8.3.7, “Excluding Buffer Pool Pages from Core Files”.As of MySQL 8.0.13, user-created temporary tables and internal temporary tables created by the optimizer are stored in session temporary tablespaces that are allocated to a session from a pool of temporary tablespaces. When a session disconnects, its temporary tablespaces are truncated and released back to the pool. In previous releases, temporary tables were created in the global temporary tablespace (
ibtmp1
), which did not return disk space to the operating system after temporary tables were dropped.The
innodb_temp_tablespaces_dir
variable defines the location where session temporary tablespaces are created. The default location is the#innodb_temp
directory in the data directory.The
INNODB_SESSION_TEMP_TABLESPACES
table provides metadata about session temporary tablespaces.The global temporary tablespace (
ibtmp1
) now stores rollback segments for changes made to user-created temporary tables.As of MySQL 8.0.14,
InnoDB
supports parallel clustered index reads, which can improveCHECK TABLE
performance. This feature does not apply to secondary index scans. Theinnodb_parallel_read_threads
session variable must be set to a value greater than 1 for parallel clustered index reads to occur. The default value is 4. The actual number of threads used to perform a parallel clustered index read is determined by theinnodb_parallel_read_threads
setting or the number of index subtrees to scan, whichever is smaller.As of 8.0.14, when the server is started with
--innodb-dedicated-server
, the size and number of log files are configured according to the automatically configured buffer pool size. Previously, log file size was configured according to the amount of memory detected on the server, and the number of log files was not configured automatically.As of 8.0.14, the
ADD DATAFILE
clause of theCREATE TABLESPACE
statement is optional, which permits users without theFILE
privilege to create tablespaces. ACREATE TABLESPACE
statement executed without anADD DATAFILE
clause implicitly creates a tablespace data file with a unique file name.By default, when the amount of memory occupied by the TempTable storage engine exceeds the memory limit defined by the
temptable_max_ram
variable, the TempTable storage engine begins allocating memory-mapped temporary files from disk. As of MySQL 8.0.16, this behavior is controlled by thetemptable_use_mmap
variable. Disablingtemptable_use_mmap
causes the TempTable storage engine to useInnoDB
on-disk internal temporary tables instead of memory-mapped files as its overflow mechanism. For more information, see Internal Temporary Table Storage Engine.As of MySQL 8.0.16, the
InnoDB
data-at-rest encryption feature supports encryption of themysql
system tablespace. Themysql
system tablespace contains themysql
system database and the MySQL data dictionary tables. For more information, see Section 17.13, “InnoDB Data-at-Rest Encryption”.The
innodb_spin_wait_pause_multiplier
variable, introduced in MySQL 8.0.16, provides greater control over the duration of spin-lock polling delays that occur when a thread waits to acquire a mutex or rw-lock. Delays can be tuned more finely to account for differences in PAUSE instruction duration on different processor architectures. For more information, see Section 17.8.8, “Configuring Spin Lock Polling”.InnoDB
parallel read thread performance for large data sets was improved in MySQL 8.0.17 through better utilization of read threads, through a reduction in read thread I/O for prefetch activity that occurs during parallel scans, and through support for parallel scanning of partitions.The parallel read thread feature is controlled by the
innodb_parallel_read_threads
variable. The maximum setting is now 256, which is the total number of threads for all client connections. If the thread limit is reached, connections fall back to using a single thread.The
innodb_idle_flush_pct
variable, introduced in MySQL 8.0.18, permits placing a limit on page flushing during idle periods, which can help extend the life of solid state storage devices. See Limiting Buffer Flushing During Idle Periods.Efficient sampling of
InnoDB
data for the purpose of generating histogram statistics is supported as of MySQL 8.0.19. See Histogram Statistics Analysis.As of MySQL 8.0.20, the doublewrite buffer storage area resides in doublewrite files. In previous releases, the storage area resided in the system tablespace. Moving the storage area out of the system tablespace reduces write latency, increases throughput, and provides flexibility with respect to placement of doublewrite buffer pages. The following system variables were introduced for advanced doublewrite buffer configuration:
Defines the doublewrite buffer file directory.
Defines the number of doublewrite files.
Defines the maximum number of doublewrite pages per thread for a batch write.
Defines the number of doublewrite pages to write in a batch.
For more information, see Section 17.6.4, “Doublewrite Buffer”.
The Contention-Aware Transaction Scheduling (CATS) algorithm, which prioritizes transactions that are waiting for locks, was improved in MySQL 8.0.20. Transaction scheduling weight computation is now performed a separate thread entirely, which improves computation performance and accuracy.
The First In First Out (FIFO) algorithm, which had also been used for transaction scheduling, was removed. The FIFO algorithm was rendered redundant by CATS algorithm enhancements. Transaction scheduling previously performed by the FIFO algorithm is now performed by the CATS algorithm.
A
TRX_SCHEDULE_WEIGHT
column was added to theINFORMATION_SCHEMA.INNODB_TRX
table, which permits querying transaction scheduling weights assigned by the CATS algorithm.The following
INNODB_METRICS
counters were added for monitoring code-level transaction scheduling events:lock_rec_release_attempts
The number of attempts to release record locks.
lock_rec_grant_attempts
The number of attempts to grant record locks.
lock_schedule_refreshes
The number of times the wait-for graph was analyzed to update transaction schedule weights.
For more information, see Section 17.7.6, “Transaction Scheduling”.
As of MySQL 8.0.21, to improve concurrency for operations that require access to lock queues for table and row resources, the lock system mutex (
lock_sys->mutex
) was replaced in by sharded latches, and lock queues were grouped into table and page lock queue shards, with each shard protected by a dedicated mutex. Previously, the single lock system mutex protected all lock queues, which was a point of contention on high-concurrency systems. The new sharded implementation permits more granular access to lock queues.The lock system mutex (
lock_sys->mutex
) was replaced by the following sharded latches:A global latch (
lock_sys->latches.global_latch
) consisting of 64 read-write lock objects (rw_lock_t
). Access to an individual lock queue requires a shared global latch and a latch on the lock queue shard. Operations that require access to all lock queues take an exclusive global latch, which latches all table and page lock queue shards.Table shard latches (
lock_sys->latches.table_shards.mutexes
), implemented as an array of 512 mutexes, with each mutex dedicated to one of 512 table lock queue shards.Page shard latches (
lock_sys->latches.page_shards.mutexes
), implemented as an array of 512 mutexes, with each mutex dedicated to one of 512 page lock queue shards.
The Performance Schema
wait/synch/mutex/innodb/lock_mutex
instrument for monitoring the single lock system mutex was replaced by instruments for monitoring the new global, table shard, and page shard latches:wait/synch/sxlock/innodb/lock_sys_global_rw_lock
wait/synch/mutex/innodb/lock_sys_table_mutex
wait/synch/mutex/innodb/lock_sys_page_mutex
As of MySQL 8.0.21, table and table partition data files created outside of the data directory using the
DATA DIRECTORY
clause are restricted to directories known toInnoDB
. This change permits database administrators to control where tablespace data files are created and ensures that the data files can be found during recovery.General and file-per-table tablespaces data files (
.ibd
files) can no longer be created in the undo tablespace directory (innodb_undo_directory
) unless that directly is known toInnoDB
.Known directories are those defined by the
datadir
,innodb_data_home_dir
, andinnodb_directories
variables.Truncating an
InnoDB
table that resides in a file-per-table tablespace drops the existing tablespace and creates a new one. As of MySQL 8.0.21,InnoDB
creates the new tablespace in the default location and writes a warning to the error log if the current tablespace directory is unknown. To haveTRUNCATE TABLE
create the tablespace in its current location, add the directory to theinnodb_directories
setting before runningTRUNCATE TABLE
.As of MySQL 8.0.21, redo logging can be enabled and disabled using
ALTER INSTANCE {ENABLE|DISABLE} INNODB REDO_LOG
syntax. This functionality is intended for loading data into a new MySQL instance. Disabling redo logging helps speed up data loading by avoiding redo log writes.The new
INNODB_REDO_LOG_ENABLE
privilege permits enabling and disabling redo logging.The new
Innodb_redo_log_enabled
status variable permits monitoring redo logging status.At startup,
InnoDB
validates the paths of known tablespace files against tablespace file paths stored in the data dictionary in case tablespace files have been moved to a different location. The newinnodb_validate_tablespace_paths
variable, introduced in MySQL 8.0.21, permits disabling tablespace path validation. This feature is intended for environments where tablespaces files are not moved. Disabling tablespace path validation improves startup time on systems with a large number of tablespace files.For more information, see Section 17.6.3.7, “Disabling Tablespace Path Validation”.
As of MySQL 8.0.21, on storage engines that support atomic DDL, the
CREATE TABLE ... SELECT
statement is logged as one transaction in the binary log when row-based replication is in use. Previously, it was logged as two transactions, one to create the table, and the other to insert data. With this change,CREATE TABLE ... SELECT
statements are now safe for row-based replication and permitted for use with GTID-based replication. For more information, see Section 15.1.1, “Atomic Data Definition Statement Support”.Truncating an undo tablespace on a busy system could affect performance due to associated flushing operations that remove old undo tablespace pages from the buffer pool and flush the initial pages of the new undo tablespace to disk. To address this issue, the flushing operations are removed as of MySQL 8.0.21.
Old undo tablespace pages are released passively as they become least recently used, or are removed at the next full checkpoint. The initial pages of the new undo tablespace are now redo logged instead of flushed to disk during the truncate operation, which also improves durability of the undo tablespace truncate operation.
To prevent potential issues caused by an excessive number of undo tablespace truncate operations, truncate operations on the same undo tablespace between checkpoints are now limited to 64. If the limit is exceeded, an undo tablespace can still be made inactive, but it is not truncated until after the next checkpoint.
INNODB_METRICS
counters associated with defunct undo truncate flushing operations were removed. Removed counters include:undo_truncate_sweep_count
,undo_truncate_sweep_usec
,undo_truncate_flush_count
, andundo_truncate_flush_usec
.As of MySQL 8.0.22, the new
innodb_extend_and_initialize
variable permits configuring howInnoDB
allocates space to file-per-table and general tablespaces on Linux. By default, when an operation requires additional space in a tablespace,InnoDB
allocates pages to the tablespace and physically writes NULLs to those pages. This behavior affects performance if new pages are allocated frequently. You can disableinnodb_extend_and_initialize
on Linux systems to avoid physically writing NULLs to newly allocated tablespace pages. Wheninnodb_extend_and_initialize
is disabled, space is allocated usingposix_fallocate()
calls, which reserve space without physically writing NULLs.A
posix_fallocate()
operation is not atomic, which makes it possible for a failure to occur between allocating space to a tablespace file and updating the file metadata. Such a failure can leave newly allocated pages in an uninitialized state, resulting in a failure whenInnoDB
attempts to access those pages. To prevent this scenario,InnoDB
writes a redo log record before allocating a new tablespace page. If a page allocation operation is interrupted, the operation is replayed from the redo log record during recovery.As of MySQL 8.0.23,
InnoDB
supports encryption of doublewrite file pages belonging to encrypted tablespaces. The pages are encrypted using the encryption key of the associated tablespace. For more information, see Section 17.13, “InnoDB Data-at-Rest Encryption”.The
temptable_max_mmap
variable, introduced in MySQL 8.0.23, defines the maximum amount of memory the TempTable storage engine is permitted to allocate from memory-mapped (MMAP) files before it starts storing internal temporary table data on disk. A setting of 0 disables allocation from MMAP files. For more information, see Section 10.4.4, “Internal Temporary Table Use in MySQL”.The
AUTOEXTEND_SIZE
option, introduced in MySQL 8.0.23, defines the amount by whichInnoDB
extends the size of a tablespace when it becomes full, making it possible to extend tablespace size in larger increments. TheAUTOEXTEND_SIZE
option is supported with theCREATE TABLE
,ALTER TABLE
,CREATE TABLESPACE
, andALTER TABLESPACE
statements. For more information, see Section 17.6.3.9, “Tablespace AUTOEXTEND_SIZE Configuration”.An
AUTOEXTEND_SIZE
size column was added to the Information SchemaINNODB_TABLESPACES
table.The
innodb_segment_reserve_factor
system variable, introduced in MySQL 8.0.26, permits configuring the percentage of tablespace file segment pages that are reserved as empty pages. For more information, see Configuring the Percentage of Reserved File Segment Pages.On platforms that support
fdatasync()
system calls, theinnodb_use_fdatasync
variable, introduced in MySQL 8.0.26, permits usingfdatasync()
instead offsync()
for operating system flushes. Anfdatasync()
system call does not flush changes to file metadata unless required for subsequent data retrieval, providing a potential performance benefit.As of MySQL 8.0.28, the
tmp_table_size
variable defines the maximum size of any individual in-memory internal temporary table created by the TempTable storage engine. An appropriate size limit prevents individual queries from consuming an inordinate amount global TempTable resources. See Internal Temporary Table Storage Engine.From MySQL 8.0.28, the
innodb_open_files
variable, which defines the number of filesInnoDB
can have open at one time, can be set at runtime using aSELECT innodb_set_open_files_limit(
statement. The statement executes a stored procedure that sets the new limit.N
)To prevent non-LRU manged files from consuming the entire
innodb_open_files
limit, non-LRU managed files are limited to 90 percent of theinnodb_open_files
limit, which reserves 10 percent of theinnodb_open_files
limit for LRU managed files.The
innodb_open_files
limit includes temporary tablespace files, which were not counted toward the limit previously.From MySQL 8.0.28,
InnoDB
supportsALTER TABLE ... RENAME COLUMN
operations usingALGORITHM=INSTANT
.For more information about this and other DDL operations that support
ALGORITHM=INSTANT
, see Section 17.12.1, “Online DDL Operations”.From MySQL 8.0.29,
InnoDB
supportsALTER TABLE ... DROP COLUMN
operations usingALGORITHM=INSTANT
.Prior to MySQL 8.0.29, an instantly added column could only be added as the last column of the table. From MySQL 8.0.29, an instantly added column can be added to any position in the table.
Instantly added or dropped columns create a new version of the affected row. Up to 64 row versions are permitted. A new
TOTAL_ROW_VERSIONS
column was added to the Information SchemaINNODB_TABLES
table to track the number of row versions.For more information about DDL operations that support
ALGORITHM=INSTANT
, see Section 17.12.1, “Online DDL Operations”.From MySQL 8.0.30, the
innodb_doublewrite
system variable supportsDETECT_ONLY
andDETECT_AND_RECOVER
settings. With theDETECT_ONLY
setting, database page content is not written to the doublewrite buffer, and recovery does not use the doublewrite buffer to fix incomplete page writes. This lightweight setting is intended for detecting incomplete page writes only. TheDETECT_AND_RECOVER
setting is equivalent to the existingON
setting. For more information, see Section 17.6.4, “Doublewrite Buffer”.From MySQL 8.0.30,
InnoDB
supports dynamic configuration of redo log capacity. Theinnodb_redo_log_capacity
system variable can be set at runtime to increase or decrease the total amount of disk space occupied by redo log files.With this change, the number of redo log files and their default location has also changed. From MySQL 8.0.30,
InnoDB
maintains 32 redo log files in the#innodb_redo
directory in the data directory. Previously,InnoDB
created two redo log files in the data directory by default, and the number and size of redo log files were controlled by theinnodb_log_files_in_group
andinnodb_log_file_size
variables. These two variables are now deprecated.When the
innodb_redo_log_capacity
setting is defined,innodb_log_files_in_group
andinnodb_log_file_size
settings are ignored; otherwise, those settings are used to compute theinnodb_redo_log_capacity
setting (innodb_log_files_in_group
*innodb_log_file_size
=innodb_redo_log_capacity
). If none of those variables are set, redo log capacity is set to theinnodb_redo_log_capacity
default value, which is 104857600 bytes (100MB).Several status variables are provided for monitoring the redo log and redo log resizing operations.
For more information, see Section 17.6.5, “Redo Log”.
With MySQL 8.0.31, there are two new status variables for monitoring online buffer pool resizing operations. The
Innodb_buffer_pool_resize_status_code
status variable reports a status code indicating the stage of an online buffer pool resizing operation. TheInnodb_buffer_pool_resize_status_progress
status variable reports a percentage value indicating the progress of each stage.For more information, see Section 17.8.3.1, “Configuring InnoDB Buffer Pool Size”.
Character set support. The default character set has changed from
latin1
toutf8mb4
. Theutf8mb4
character set has several new collations, includingutf8mb4_ja_0900_as_cs
, the first Japanese language-specific collation available for Unicode in MySQL. For more information, see Section 12.10.1, “Unicode Character Sets”.JSON enhancements. The following enhancements or additions were made to MySQL's JSON functionality:
Added the
->>
(inline path) operator, which is equivalent to callingJSON_UNQUOTE()
on the result ofJSON_EXTRACT()
.This is a refinement of the column path operator
->
introduced in MySQL 5.7;col->>"$.path"
is equivalent toJSON_UNQUOTE(col->"$.path")
. The inline path operator can be used wherever you can useJSON_UNQUOTE(JSON_EXTRACT())
, suchSELECT
column lists,WHERE
andHAVING
clauses, andORDER BY
andGROUP BY
clauses. For more information, see the description of the operator, as well as JSON Path Syntax.Added two JSON aggregation functions
JSON_ARRAYAGG()
andJSON_OBJECTAGG()
.JSON_ARRAYAGG()
takes a column or expression as its argument, and aggregates the result as a singleJSON
array. The expression can evaluate to any MySQL data type; this does not have to be aJSON
value.JSON_OBJECTAGG()
takes two columns or expressions which it interprets as a key and a value; it returns the result as a singleJSON
object. For more information and examples, see Section 14.19, “Aggregate Functions”.Added the JSON utility function
JSON_PRETTY()
, which outputs an existingJSON
value in an easy-to-read format; each JSON object member or array value is printed on a separate line, and a child object or array is intended 2 spaces with respect to its parent.This function also works with a string that can be parsed as a JSON value.
For more detailed information and examples, see Section 14.17.8, “JSON Utility Functions”.
When sorting
JSON
values in a query usingORDER BY
, each value is now represented by a variable-length part of the sort key, rather than a part of a fixed 1K in size. In many cases this can reduce excessive usage. For example, a scalarINT
or evenBIGINT
value actually requires very few bytes, so that the remainder of this space (up to 90% or more) was taken up by padding. This change has the following benefits for performance:Sort buffer space is now used more effectively, so that filesorts need not flush to disk as early or often as with fixed-length sort keys. This means that more data can be sorted in memory, avoiding unnecessary disk access.
Shorter keys can be compared more quickly than longer ones, providing a noticeable improvement in performance. This is true for sorts performed entirely in memory as well as for sorts that require writing to and reading from disk.
Added support in MySQL 8.0.2 for partial, in-place updates of
JSON
column values, which is more efficient than completely removing an existing JSON value and writing a new one in its place, as was done previously when updating anyJSON
column. For this optimization to be applied, the update must be applied usingJSON_SET()
,JSON_REPLACE()
, orJSON_REMOVE()
. New elements cannot be added to the JSON document being updated; values within the document cannot take more space than they did before the update. See Partial Updates of JSON Values, for a detailed discussion of the requirements.Partial updates of JSON documents can be written to the binary log, taking up less space than logging complete JSON documents. Partial updates are always logged as such when statement-based replication is in use. For this to work with row-based replication, you must first set
binlog_row_value_options=PARTIAL_JSON
; see this variable's description for more information.Added the JSON utility functions
JSON_STORAGE_SIZE()
andJSON_STORAGE_FREE()
.JSON_STORAGE_SIZE()
returns the storage space in bytes used for the binary representation of a JSON document prior to any partial update (see previous item).JSON_STORAGE_FREE()
shows the amount of space remaining in a table column of typeJSON
after it has been partially updated usingJSON_SET()
orJSON_REPLACE()
; this is greater than zero if the binary representation of the new value is less than that of the previous value.Each of these functions also accepts a valid string representation of a JSON document. For such a value,
JSON_STORAGE_SIZE()
returns the space used by its binary representation following its conversion to a JSON document. For a variable containing the string representation of a JSON document,JSON_STORAGE_FREE()
returns zero. Either function produces an error if its (non-null) argument cannot be parsed as a valid JSON document, andNULL
if the argument isNULL
.For more information and examples, see Section 14.17.8, “JSON Utility Functions”.
JSON_STORAGE_SIZE()
andJSON_STORAGE_FREE()
were implemented in MySQL 8.0.2.Added support in MySQL 8.0.2 for ranges such as
$[1 to 5]
in XPath expressions. Also added support in this version for thelast
keyword and relative addressing, such that$[last]
always selects the last (highest-numbered) element in the array and$[last-1]
the next to last element.last
and expressions using it can also be included in range definitions. For example,$[last-2 to last-1]
returns the last two elements but one from an array. See Searching and Modifying JSON Values, for additional information and examples.Added a JSON merge function intended to conform to RFC 7396.
JSON_MERGE_PATCH()
, when used on 2 JSON objects, merges them into a single JSON object that has as members a union of the following sets:Each member of the first object for which there is no member with the same key in the second object.
Each member of the second object for which there is no member having the same key in the first object, and whose value is not the JSON
null
literal.Each member having a key that exists in both objects, and whose value in the second object is not the JSON
null
literal.
As part of this work, the
JSON_MERGE()
function has been renamedJSON_MERGE_PRESERVE()
.JSON_MERGE()
continues to be recognized as an alias forJSON_MERGE_PRESERVE()
in MySQL 8.0, but is now deprecated and is subject to removal in a future version of MySQL.For more information and examples, see Section 14.17.4, “Functions That Modify JSON Values”.
Implemented “last duplicate key wins” normalization of duplicate keys, consistent with RFC 7159 and most JavaScript parsers. An example of this behavior is shown here, where only the rightmost member having the key
x
is preserved:mysql> SELECT JSON_OBJECT('x', '32', 'y', '[true, false]', > 'x', '"abc"', 'x', '100') AS Result; +------------------------------------+ | Result | +------------------------------------+ | {"x": "100", "y": "[true, false]"} | +------------------------------------+ 1 row in set (0.00 sec)
Values inserted into MySQL
JSON
columns are also normalized in this way, as shown in this example:mysql> CREATE TABLE t1 (c1 JSON); mysql> INSERT INTO t1 VALUES ('{"x": 17, "x": "red", "x": [3, 5, 7]}'); mysql> SELECT c1 FROM t1; +------------------+ | c1 | +------------------+ | {"x": [3, 5, 7]} | +------------------+
This is an incompatible change from previous versions of MySQL, where a “first duplicate key wins” algorithm was used in such cases.
See Normalization, Merging, and Autowrapping of JSON Values, for more information and examples.
Added the
JSON_TABLE()
function in MySQL 8.0.4. This function accepts JSON data and returns it as a relational table having the specified columns.This function has the syntax
JSON_TABLE(
, whereexpr
,path
COLUMNScolumn_list
) [AS]alias
)expr
is an expression that returns JSON data,path
is a JSON path applied to the source, andcolumn_list
is a list of column definitions. An example is shown here:mysql> SELECT * -> FROM -> JSON_TABLE( -> '[{"a":3,"b":"0"},{"a":"3","b":"1"},{"a":2,"b":1},{"a":0},{"b":[1,2]}]', -> "$[*]" COLUMNS( -> rowid FOR ORDINALITY, -> -> xa INT EXISTS PATH "$.a", -> xb INT EXISTS PATH "$.b", -> -> sa VARCHAR(100) PATH "$.a", -> sb VARCHAR(100) PATH "$.b", -> -> ja JSON PATH "$.a", -> jb JSON PATH "$.b" -> ) -> ) AS jt1; +-------+------+------+------+------+------+--------+ | rowid | xa | xb | sa | sb | ja | jb | +-------+------+------+------+------+------+--------+ | 1 | 1 | 1 | 3 | 0 | 3 | "0" | | 2 | 1 | 1 | 3 | 1 | "3" | "1" | | 3 | 1 | 1 | 2 | 1 | 2 | 1 | | 4 | 1 | 0 | 0 | NULL | 0 | NULL | | 5 | 0 | 1 | NULL | NULL | NULL | [1, 2] | +-------+------+------+------+------+------+--------+
The JSON source expression can be any expression that yields a valid JSON document, including a JSON literal, a table column, or a function call that returns JSON such as
JSON_EXTRACT(t1, data, '$.post.comments')
. For more information, see Section 14.17.6, “JSON Table Functions”.
Data type support. MySQL now supports use of expressions as default values in data type specifications. This includes the use of expressions as default values for the
BLOB
,TEXT
,GEOMETRY
, andJSON
data types, which previously could not be assigned default values at all. For details, see Section 13.6, “Data Type Default Values”.Optimizer. These optimizer enhancements were added:
MySQL now supports invisible indexes. An invisible index is not used by the optimizer at all, but is otherwise maintained normally. Indexes are visible by default. Invisible indexes make it possible to test the effect of removing an index on query performance, without making a destructive change that must be undone should the index turn out to be required. See Section 10.3.12, “Invisible Indexes”.
MySQL now supports descending indexes:
DESC
in an index definition is no longer ignored but causes storage of key values in descending order. Previously, indexes could be scanned in reverse order but at a performance penalty. A descending index can be scanned in forward order, which is more efficient. Descending indexes also make it possible for the optimizer to use multiple-column indexes when the most efficient scan order mixes ascending order for some columns and descending order for others. See Section 10.3.13, “Descending Indexes”.MySQL now supports creation of functional index key parts that index expression values rather than column values. Functional key parts enable indexing of values that cannot be indexed otherwise, such as
JSON
values. For details, see Section 15.1.15, “CREATE INDEX Statement”.In MySQL 8.0.14 and later, trivial
WHERE
conditions arising from constant literal expressions are removed during preparation, rather than later on during optimization. Removal of the condition earlier in the process makes it possible to simplify joins for queries with outer joins having trivial conditions, such as this one:SELECT * FROM t1 LEFT JOIN t2 ON condition_1 WHERE condition_2 OR 0 = 1
The optimizer now sees during preparation that 0 = 1 is always false, making
OR 0 = 1
redundant, and removes it, leaving this:SELECT * FROM t1 LEFT JOIN t2 ON condition_1 where condition_2
Now the optimizer can rewrite the query as an inner join, like this:
SELECT * FROM t1 LEFT JOIN t2 WHERE condition_1 AND condition_2
For more information, see Section 10.2.1.9, “Outer Join Optimization”.
In MySQL 8.0.16 and later, MySQL can use constant folding at optimization time to handle comparisons between a column and a constant value where the constant is out of range or on a range boundary with respect to the type of the column, rather than doing so for each row at execution time. For example, given a table
t
with aTINYINT UNSIGNED
columnc
, the optimizer can rewrite a condition such asWHERE c < 256
toWHERE 1
(and optimize the condition away altogether), orWHERE c >= 255
toWHERE c = 255
.See Section 10.2.1.14, “Constant-Folding Optimization”, for more information.
Beginning with MySQL 8.0.16, the semijoin optimizations used with
IN
subqueries can now be applied toEXISTS
subqueries as well. In addition, the optimizer now decorrelates trivially-correlated equality predicates in theWHERE
condition attached to the subquery, so that they can be treated similarly to expressions inIN
subqueries; this applies to bothEXISTS
andIN
subqueries.For more information, see Section 10.2.2.1, “Optimizing IN and EXISTS Subquery Predicates with Semijoin Transformations”.
As of MySQL 8.0.17, the server rewrites any incomplete SQL predicates (that is, predicates having the form
WHERE
, in whichvalue
value
is a column name or constant expression and no comparison operator is used) internally asWHERE
during the contextualization phase, so that the query resolver, query optimizer, and query executor need work only with complete predicates.value
<> 0One visible effect of this change is that, for Boolean values,
EXPLAIN
output now showstrue
andfalse
, rather than1
and0
.Another effect of this change is that evaluation of a JSON value in an SQL boolean context performs an implicit comparison against JSON integer 0. Consider the table created and populated as shown here:
mysql> CREATE TABLE test (id INT, col JSON); mysql> INSERT INTO test VALUES (1, '{"val":true}'), (2, '{"val":false}');
Previously, the server attempted to convert an extracted
true
orfalse
value to an SQL boolean when comparing it in an SQL boolean context, as shown by the following query usingIS TRUE
:mysql> SELECT id, col, col->"$.val" FROM test WHERE col->"$.val" IS TRUE; +------+---------------+--------------+ | id | col | col->"$.val" | +------+---------------+--------------+ | 1 | {"val": true} | true | +------+---------------+--------------+
In MySQL 8.0.17 and later, the implicit comparison of the extracted value with JSON integer 0 leads to a different result:
mysql> SELECT id, col, col->"$.val" FROM test WHERE col->"$.val" IS TRUE; +------+----------------+--------------+ | id | col | col->"$.val" | +------+----------------+--------------+ | 1 | {"val": true} | true | | 2 | {"val": false} | false | +------+----------------+--------------+
Beginning with MySQL 8.0.21, you can use
JSON_VALUE()
on the extracted value to perform type conversion prior to performing the test, as shown here:mysql> SELECT id, col, col->"$.val" FROM test -> WHERE JSON_VALUE(col, "$.val" RETURNING UNSIGNED) IS TRUE; +------+---------------+--------------+ | id | col | col->"$.val" | +------+---------------+--------------+ | 1 | {"val": true} | true | +------+---------------+--------------+
Also beginning with MySQL 8.0.21, the server provides the warning Evaluating a JSON value in SQL boolean context does an implicit comparison against JSON integer 0; if this is not what you want, consider converting JSON to an SQL numeric type with JSON_VALUE RETURNING when comparing extracted values in an SQL boolean context in this manner.
In MySQL 8.0.17 and later a
WHERE
condition havingNOT IN (
orsubquery
)NOT EXISTS (
is transformed internally into an antijoin. (An antijoin returns all rows from the table for which there is no row in the table to which it is joined matching the join condition.) This removes the subquery which can result in faster query execution since the subquery's tables are now handled on the top level.subquery
)This is similar to, and reuses, the existing
IS NULL
(Not exists
) optimization for outer joins; see EXPLAIN Extra Information.Beginning with MySQL 8.0.21, a single-table
UPDATE
orDELETE
statement can now in many cases make use of a semijoin transformation or subquery materialization. This applies to statements of the forms shown here:UPDATE t1 SET t1.a=
value
WHERE t1.a IN (SELECT t2.a FROM t2)DELETE FROM t1 WHERE t1.a IN (SELECT t2.a FROM t2)
This can be done for a single-table
UPDATE
orDELETE
meeting the following conditions:The
UPDATE
orDELETE
statement uses a subquery having a[NOT] IN
or[NOT] EXISTS
predicate.The statement has no
ORDER BY
clause, and has noLIMIT
clause.(The multi-table versions of
UPDATE
andDELETE
do not supportORDER BY
orLIMIT
.)The target table does not support read-before-write removal (relevant only for
NDB
tables).Semijoin or subquery materialization is allowed, based on any hints contained in the subquery and the value of
optimizer_switch
.
When the semijoin optimization is used for an eligible single-table
DELETE
orUPDATE
, this is visible in the optimizer trace: for a multi-table statement there is ajoin_optimization
object in the trace, while there is none for a single-table statement. The conversion is also visible in the output ofEXPLAIN FORMAT=TREE
orEXPLAIN ANALYZE
; a single-table statement shows<not executable by iterator executor>
, while a multi-table statement reports a full plan.Also beginning with MySQL 8.0.21, semi-consistent reads are supported by multi-table
UPDATE
statements usingInnoDB
tables, for transaction isolation levels weaker thanREPEATABLE READ
.Improved hash join performance. MySQL 8.0.23 reimplements the hash table used for hash joins, resulting in several improvements in hash join performance. This work includes a fix for an issue (Bug #31516149, Bug #99933) whereby only roughly 2/3 of the memory allocated for the join buffer (
join_buffer_size
) could actually be used by a hash join.The new hash table is generally faster than the old one, and uses less memory for alignment, keys/values, and in scenarios where there are many equal keys. In addition, the server can now free old memory when the size of the hash table increases.
Common table expressions. MySQL now supports common table expressions, both nonrecursive and recursive. Common table expressions enable use of named temporary result sets, implemented by permitting a
WITH
clause precedingSELECT
statements and certain other statements. For more information, see Section 15.2.20, “WITH (Common Table Expressions)”.As of MySQL 8.0.19, the recursive
SELECT
part of a recursive common table expression (CTE) supports aLIMIT
clause.LIMIT
withOFFSET
is also supported. See Recursive Common Table Expressions, for more information.Window functions. MySQL now supports window functions that, for each row from a query, perform a calculation using rows related to that row. These include functions such as
RANK()
,LAG()
, andNTILE()
. In addition, several existing aggregate functions now can be used as window functions (for example,SUM()
andAVG()
). For more information, see Section 14.20, “Window Functions”.Lateral derived tables. A derived table now may be preceded by the
LATERAL
keyword to specify that it is permitted to refer to (depend on) columns of preceding tables in the sameFROM
clause. Lateral derived tables make possible certain SQL operations that cannot be done with nonlateral derived tables or that require less-efficient workarounds. See Section 15.2.15.9, “Lateral Derived Tables”.Aliases in single-table DELETE statements. In MySQL 8.0.16 and later, single-table
DELETE
statements support the use of table aliases.Regular expression support. Previously, MySQL used the Henry Spencer regular expression library to support regular expression operators (
REGEXP
,RLIKE
). Regular expression support has been reimplemented using International Components for Unicode (ICU), which provides full Unicode support and is multibyte safe. TheREGEXP_LIKE()
function performs regular expression matching in the manner of theREGEXP
andRLIKE
operators, which now are synonyms for that function. In addition, theREGEXP_INSTR()
,REGEXP_REPLACE()
, andREGEXP_SUBSTR()
functions are available to find match positions and perform substring substitution and extraction, respectively. Theregexp_stack_limit
andregexp_time_limit
system variables provide control over resource consumption by the match engine. For more information, see Section 14.8.2, “Regular Expressions”. For information about ways in which applications that use regular expressions may be affected by the implementation change, see Regular Expression Compatibility Considerations.One effect of this change is that
[a-zA-Z]
and[0-9]
perform much better in MySQL 8.0 than[[:alpha:]]
and[[:digit:]]
, respectively. Existing applications that use the character classes in pattern matching should be upgraded to use the ranges instead.Internal temporary tables. The
TempTable
storage engine replaces theMEMORY
storage engine as the default engine for in-memory internal temporary tables. TheTempTable
storage engine provides efficient storage forVARCHAR
andVARBINARY
columns. Theinternal_tmp_mem_storage_engine
session variable defines the storage engine for in-memory internal temporary tables. Permitted values areTempTable
(the default) andMEMORY
. Thetemptable_max_ram
variable defines the maximum amount of memory that theTempTable
storage engine can use before data is stored to disk.Logging. These enhancements were added to improve logging:
Error logging was rewritten to use the MySQL component architecture. Traditional error logging is implemented using built-in components, and logging using the system log is implemented as a loadable component. In addition, a loadable JSON log writer is available. For more information, see Section 7.4.2, “The Error Log”.
From MySQL 8.0.30, error log components can be loaded implicitly at startup before the
InnoDB
storage engine is available. This new method of loading error log components loads and enables the components defined by thelog_error_services
variable.Previously, error log components had to be installed first using
INSTALL COMPONENT
and could only be loaded afterInnoDB
was fully available, as the list of components to load was read from themysql.components
table, which is anInnoDB
table.Implicit loading of error log components has these advantages:
Log components are loaded earlier in the startup sequence, making logged information available sooner.
It helps avoid loss of buffered log information should a failure occur during startup.
Loading log components using
INSTALL COMPONENT
is not required, simplifying error log configuration.
The explicit method of loading log components using
INSTALL COMPONENT
remains supported for backward compatibility.For more information, see Section 7.4.2.1, “Error Log Configuration”.
Backup lock. A new type of backup lock permits DML during an online backup while preventing operations that could result in an inconsistent snapshot. The new backup lock is supported by
LOCK INSTANCE FOR BACKUP
andUNLOCK INSTANCE
syntax. TheBACKUP_ADMIN
privilege is required to use these statements.Replication. The following enhancements have been made to MySQL Replication:
MySQL Replication now supports binary logging of partial updates to JSON documents using a compact binary format, saving space in the log over logging complete JSON documents. Such compact logging is done automatically when statement-based logging is in use, and can be enabled by setting the new
binlog_row_value_options
system variable toPARTIAL_JSON
. For more information, see Partial Updates of JSON Values, as well as the description ofbinlog_row_value_options
.
Connection management. MySQL Server now permits a TCP/IP port to be configured specifically for administrative connections. This provides an alternative to the single administrative connection that is permitted on the network interfaces used for ordinary connections even when
max_connections
connections are already established. See Section 7.1.12.1, “Connection Interfaces”.MySQL now provides more control over the use of compression to minimize the number of bytes sent over connections to the server. Previously, a given connection was either uncompressed or used the
zlib
compression algorithm. Now, it is also possible to use thezstd
algorithm, and to select a compression level forzstd
connections. The permitted compression algorithms can be configured on the server side, as well as on the connection-origination side for connections by client programs and by servers participating in source/replica replication or Group Replication. For more information, see Section 6.2.8, “Connection Compression Control”.Configuration. The maximum permitted length of host names throughout MySQL has been raised to 255 ASCII characters, up from the previous limit of 60 characters. This applies to, for example, host name-related columns in the data dictionary,
mysql
system schema, Performance Schema,INFORMATION_SCHEMA
, andsys
schema; theMASTER_HOST
value for theCHANGE MASTER TO
statement; theHost
column inSHOW PROCESSLIST
statement output; host names in account names (such as used in account-management statements and inDEFINER
attributes); and host name-related command options and system variables.Caveats:
The increase in permitted host name length can affect tables with indexes on host name columns. For example, tables in the
mysql
system schema that index host names now have an explicitROW_FORMAT
attribute ofDYNAMIC
to accommodate longer index values.Some file name-valued configuration settings might be constructed based on the server host name. The permitted values are constrained by the underlying operating system, which may not permit file names long enough to include 255-character host names. This affects the
general_log_file
,log_error
,pid_file
,relay_log
, andslow_query_log_file
system variables and corresponding options. If host name-based values are too long for the OS, explicit shorter values must be provided.Although the server now supports 255-character host names, connections to the server established using the
--ssl-mode=VERIFY_IDENTITY
option are constrained by maximum host name length supported by OpenSSL. Host name matches pertain to two fields of SSL certificates, which have maximum lengths as follows: Common Name: maximum length 64; Subject Alternative Name: maximum length as per RFC#1034.
Plugins. Previously, MySQL plugins could be written in C or C++. MySQL header files used by plugins now contain C++ code, which means that plugins must be written in C++, not C.
C API. The MySQL C API now supports asynchronous functions for nonblocking communication with the MySQL server. Each function is the asynchronous counterpart to an existing synchronous function. The synchronous functions block if reads from or writes to the server connection must wait. The asynchronous functions enable an application to check whether work on the server connection is ready to proceed. If not, the application can perform other work before checking again later. See C API Asynchronous Interface.
Additional target types for casts. The functions
CAST()
andCONVERT()
now support conversions to typesDOUBLE
,FLOAT
, andREAL
. Added in MySQL 8.0.17. See Section 14.10, “Cast Functions and Operators”.JSON schema validation. MySQL 8.0.17 adds two functions
JSON_SCHEMA_VALID()
andJSON_SCHEMA_VALIDATION_REPORT()
for validating JSON documents again JSON schemas.JSON_SCHEMA_VALID()
returns TRUE (1) if the document validates against the schema and FALSE (0) if it does not.JSON_SCHEMA_VALIDATION_REPORT()
returns a JSON document containing detailed information about the results of the validation. The following statements apply to both of these functions:The schema must conform to Draft 4 of the JSON Schema specification.
required
attributes are supported.External resources and the
$ref
keyword are not supported.Regular expression patterns are supported; invalid patterns are silently ignored.
See Section 14.17.7, “JSON Schema Validation Functions”, for more information and examples.
Multi-valued indexes. Beginning with MySQL 8.0.17,
InnoDB
supports the creation of a multi-valued index, which is a secondary index defined on aJSON
column that stores an array of values and which can have multiple index records for a single data record. Such an index uses a key part definition such asCAST(data->'$.zipcode' AS UNSIGNED ARRAY)
. A multi-valued index is used automatically by the MySQL optimizer for suitable queries, as can be viewed in the output ofEXPLAIN
.As part of this work, MySQL adds a new function
JSON_OVERLAPS()
and a newMEMBER OF()
operator for working withJSON
documents, additionally extending theCAST()
function with a newARRAY
keyword, as described in the following list:JSON_OVERLAPS()
compares twoJSON
documents. If they contain any key-value pairs or array elements in common, the function returns TRUE (1); otherwise it returns FALSE (0). If both values are scalars, the function performs a simple test for equality. If one argument is a JSON array and the other is a scalar, the scalar is treated as an array element. Thus,JSON_OVERLAPS()
acts as a complement toJSON_CONTAINS()
.MEMBER OF()
tests whether the first operand (a scalar or JSON document) is a member of the JSON array passed as the second operand, returning TRUE (1) if it is, and FALSE (0) if it is not. No type conversion of the operand is performed.CAST(
permits creation of a functional index by casting the JSON array found in a JSON document atexpression
AStype
ARRAY)json_path
to an SQL array. Type specifiers are limited to those already supported byCAST()
, with the exception ofBINARY
(not supported). This usage ofCAST()
(and theARRAY
keyword) is supported only byInnoDB
, and only for the creation of a multi-valued index.
For detailed information about multi-valued indexes, including examples, see Multi-Valued Indexes. Section 14.17.3, “Functions That Search JSON Values”, provides information about
JSON_OVERLAPS()
andMEMBER OF()
, along with examples of use.Hintable time_zone. As of MySQL 8.0.17, the
time_zone
session variable is hintable usingSET_VAR
.Redo Log Archiving. As of MySQL 8.0.17,
InnoDB
supports redo log archiving. Backup utilities that copy redo log records may sometimes fail to keep pace with redo log generation while a backup operation is in progress, resulting in lost redo log records due to those records being overwritten. The redo log archiving feature addresses this issue by sequentially writing redo log records to an archive file. Backup utilities can copy redo log records from the archive file as necessary, thereby avoiding the potential loss of data. For more information, see Redo Log Archiving.The Clone Plugin. As of MySQL 8.0.17, MySQL provides a clone plugin that permits cloning
InnoDB
data locally or from a remote MySQL server instance. A local cloning operation stores cloned data on the same server or node where the MySQL instance runs. A remote cloning operation transfers cloned data over the network from a donor MySQL server instance to the recipient server or node where the cloning operation was initiated.The clone plugin supports replication. In addition to cloning data, a cloning operation extracts and transfers replication coordinates from the donor and applies them on the recipient, which enables using the clone plugin for provisioning Group Replication members and replicas. Using the clone plugin for provisioning is considerably faster and more efficient than replicating a large number of transactions. Group Replication members can also be configured to use the clone plugin as an alternative method of recovery, so that members automatically choose the most efficient way to retrieve group data from seed members.
For more information, see Section 7.6.7, “The Clone Plugin”, and Section 20.5.4.2, “Cloning for Distributed Recovery”.
As of MySQL 8.0.27, concurrent DDL operations on the donor MySQL Server instance are permitted while a cloning operation is in progress. Previously, a backup lock was held during the cloning operation, preventing concurrent DDL on the donor. To revert to the previous behavior of blocking concurrent DDL on the donor during a clone operation, enable the
clone_block_ddl
variable. See Section 7.6.7.4, “Cloning and Concurrent DDL”.As of MySQL 8.0.29, the
clone_delay_after_data_drop
variable permits specifying a delay period immediately after removing existing data on the recipient MySQL Server instance at the start of a remote cloning operation. The delay is intended to provide enough time for the file system on the recipient host to free space before data is cloned from the donor MySQL Server instance. Certain file systems free space asynchronously in a background process. On these file systems, cloning data too soon after dropping existing data can result in clone operation failures due to insufficient space. The maximum delay period is 3600 seconds (1 hour). The default setting is 0 (no delay).As of MySQL 8.0.37, cloning is allowed between different point releases. In other words, only the major and minor version numbers must match when previously the point release number also had to match.
For example, clone functionality now permits cloning 8.0.37 to 8.0.41 or 8.0.51 to 8.0.39. Previous restrictions still apply to versions older than 8.0.37, so cloning the likes of 8.0.36 to 8.0.42 or vice-versa is not permitted.
Hash Join Optimization. Beginning with MySQL 8.0.18, a hash join is used whenever each pair of tables in a join includes at least one equi-join condition, and no indexes apply to any join condition. A hash join does not require indexes, although it can be used with indexes applying to single-table predicates only. A hash join is more efficient in most cases than the block-nested loop algorithm. Joins such as those shown here can be optimized in this manner:
SELECT * FROM t1 JOIN t2 ON t1.c1=t2.c1; SELECT * FROM t1 JOIN t2 ON (t1.c1 = t2.c1 AND t1.c2 < t2.c2) JOIN t3 ON (t2.c1 = t3.c1)
Hash joins can also be used for Cartesian products—that is, when no join condition is specified.
You can see when the hash join optimization is being used for a particular query using
EXPLAIN FORMAT=TREE
orEXPLAIN ANALYZE
. (In MySQL 8.0.20 and later, you can also useEXPLAIN
, omittingFORMAT=TREE
.)The amount of memory available to a hash join is limited by the value of
join_buffer_size
. A hash join that requires more than this much memory is executed on disk; the number of disk files that can be used by an on-disk hash join is limited byopen_files_limit
.As of MySQL 8.0.19, the
hash_join
optimizer switch which was introduced in MySQL 8.0.18 no longer supported (hash_join=on still appears as part of the value of optimizer_switch, but setting it no longer has any effect). TheHASH_JOIN
andNO_HASH_JOIN
optimizer hints are also no longer supported. The switch and the hint are both now deprecated; expect them to be removed in a future MySQL release. In MySQL 8.0.18 and later, hash joins can be disabled using theNO_BNL
optimizer switch.In MySQL 8.0.20 and later, block nested loop is no longer used in the MySQL server, and a hash join is employed any time a block nested loop would have been used previously, even when the query contains no equi-join conditions. This applies to inner non-equijoins, semijoins, antijoins, left outer joins, and right outer joins. The
block_nested_loop
flag for theoptimizer_switch
system variable as well as theBNL
andNO_BNL
optimizer hints are still supported, but henceforth control use of hash joins only. In addition, both inner and outer joins (including semijoins and antijoins) can now employ batched key access (BKA), which allocates join buffer memory incrementally so that individual queries need not use up large amounts of resources that they do not actually require for resolution. BKA for inner joins only is supported starting with MySQL 8.0.18.MySQL 8.0.20 also replaces the executor used in previous versions of MySQL with the iterator executor. This work includes replacement of the old index subquery engines that governed queries of the form
WHERE
for thosevalue
IN (SELECTcolumn
FROMtable
WHERE ...)IN
queries which have not been optimized as semijoins, as well as queries materialized in the same form, which formerly depended on the old executor.For more information and examples, see Section 10.2.1.4, “Hash Join Optimization”. See also Batched Key Access Joins.
EXPLAIN ANALYZE Statement. A new form of the
EXPLAIN
statement,EXPLAIN ANALYZE
, is implemented in MySQL 8.0.18, providing expanded information about the execution ofSELECT
statements inTREE
format for each iterator used in processing the query, and making it possible to compare estimated cost with the actual cost of the query. This information includes startup cost, total cost, number of rows returned by this iterator, and the number of loops executed.In MySQL 8.0.21 and later, this statement also supports a
FORMAT=TREE
specifier.TREE
is the only supported format.See Obtaining Information with EXPLAIN ANALYZE, for more information.
Query cast injection. In version 8.0.18 and later, MySQL injects cast operations into the query item tree inside expressions and conditions in which the data type of the argument and the expected data type do not match. This has no effect on query results or speed of execution, but makes the query as executed equivalent to one which is compliant with the SQL standard while maintaining backwards compatibility with previous releases of MySQL.
Such implicit casts are now performed between temporal types (
DATE
,DATETIME
,TIMESTAMP
,TIME
) and numeric types (SMALLINT
,TINYINT
,MEDIUMINT
,INT
/INTEGER
,BIGINT
;DECIMAL
/NUMERIC
;FLOAT
,DOUBLE
,REAL
;BIT
) whenever they are compared using any of the standard numeric comparison operators (=
,>=
,>
,<
,<=
,<>
/!=
, or<=>
). In this case, any value that is not already aDOUBLE
is cast as one. Cast injection is also now performed for comparisons betweenDATE
orTIME
values andDATETIME
values, where the arguments are cast whenever necessary asDATETIME
.Beginning with MySQL 8.0.21, such casts are also performed when comparing string types with other types. String types that are cast include
CHAR
,VARCHAR
,BINARY
,VARBINARY
,BLOB
,TEXT
,ENUM
, andSET
. When comparing a value of a string type with a numeric type orYEAR
, the string cast is toDOUBLE
; if the type of the other argument is notFLOAT
,DOUBLE
, orREAL
, it is also cast toDOUBLE
. When comparing a string type to aDATETIME
orTIMESTAMP
value, the string is cast is toDATETIME
; when comparing a string type withDATE
, the string is cast toDATE
.It is possible to see when casts are injected into a given query by viewing the output of
EXPLAIN ANALYZE
,EXPLAIN FORMAT=JSON
, or, as shown here,EXPLAIN FORMAT=TREE
:mysql> CREATE TABLE d (dt DATETIME, d DATE, t TIME); Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.62 sec) mysql> CREATE TABLE n (i INT, d DECIMAL, f FLOAT, dc DECIMAL); Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.51 sec) mysql> CREATE TABLE s (c CHAR(25), vc VARCHAR(25), -> bn BINARY(50), vb VARBINARY(50), b BLOB, t TEXT, -> e ENUM('a', 'b', 'c'), se SET('x' ,'y', 'z')); Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.50 sec) mysql> EXPLAIN FORMAT=TREE SELECT * from d JOIN n ON d.dt = n.i\G *************************** 1. row *************************** EXPLAIN: -> Inner hash join (cast(d.dt as double) = cast(n.i as double)) (cost=0.70 rows=1) -> Table scan on n (cost=0.35 rows=1) -> Hash -> Table scan on d (cost=0.35 rows=1) mysql> EXPLAIN FORMAT=TREE SELECT * from s JOIN d ON d.dt = s.c\G *************************** 1. row *************************** EXPLAIN: -> Inner hash join (d.dt = cast(s.c as datetime(6))) (cost=0.72 rows=1) -> Table scan on d (cost=0.37 rows=1) -> Hash -> Table scan on s (cost=0.35 rows=1) 1 row in set (0.01 sec) mysql> EXPLAIN FORMAT=TREE SELECT * from n JOIN s ON n.d = s.c\G *************************** 1. row *************************** EXPLAIN: -> Inner hash join (cast(n.d as double) = cast(s.c as double)) (cost=0.70 rows=1) -> Table scan on s (cost=0.35 rows=1) -> Hash -> Table scan on n (cost=0.35 rows=1) 1 row in set (0.00 sec)
Such casts can also be seen by executing
EXPLAIN [FORMAT=TRADITIONAL]
, in which case it is also necessary to issueSHOW WARNINGS
after executing theEXPLAIN
statement.Time zone support for TIMESTAMP and DATETIME. As of MySQL 8.0.19, the server accepts a time zone offset with inserted datetime (
TIMESTAMP
andDATETIME
) values. This offset uses the same format as that employed when setting thetime_zone
system variable, except that a leading zero is required when the hours portion of the offset is less than 10, and'-00:00'
is not allowed. Examples of datetime literals that include time zone offsets are'2019-12-11 10:40:30-05:00'
,'2003-04-14 03:30:00+10:00'
, and'2020-01-01 15:35:45+05:30'
.Time zone offsets are not displayed when selecting datetime values.
Datetime literals incorporating time zone offsets can be used as prepared statement parameter values.
As part of this work, the value used to set the
time_zone
system variable is now also restricted to the range-13:59
to+14:00
, inclusive. (It remains possible to assign name values totime_zone
such as'EST'
,'Posix/Australia/Brisbane'
, and'Europe/Stockholm'
to this variable, provided that the MySQL time zone tables are loaded; see Populating the Time Zone Tables).For more information and examples, see Section 7.1.15, “MySQL Server Time Zone Support”, as well as Section 13.2.2, “The DATE, DATETIME, and TIMESTAMP Types”.
Precise information for JSON schema CHECK constraint failures. When using
JSON_SCHEMA_VALID()
to specify aCHECK
constraint, MySQL 8.0.19 and later provides precise information about the reasons for failures of such constraints.For examples and more information, see JSON_SCHEMA_VALID() and CHECK constraints. See also Section 15.1.20.6, “CHECK Constraints”.
Row and column aliases with ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE. Beginning with MySQL 8.0.19, it is possible to reference the row to be inserted, and, optionally, its columns, using aliases. Consider the following
INSERT
statement on a tablet
having columnsa
andb
:INSERT INTO t SET a=9,b=5 ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE a=VALUES(a)+VALUES(b);
Using the alias
new
for the new row, and, in some cases, the aliasesm
andn
for this row's columns, theINSERT
statement can be rewritten in many different ways, some examples of which are shown here:INSERT INTO t SET a=9,b=5 AS new ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE a=new.a+new.b; INSERT INTO t VALUES(9,5) AS new ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE a=new.a+new.b; INSERT INTO t SET a=9,b=5 AS new(m,n) ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE a=m+n; INSERT INTO t VALUES(9,5) AS new(m,n) ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE a=m+n;
For more information and examples, see Section 15.2.7.2, “INSERT ... ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE Statement”.
SQL standard explicit table clause and table value constructor. Added table value constructors and explicit table clauses according to the SQL standard. These are implemented in MySQL 8.0.19, respectively, as the
TABLE
statement and theVALUES
statement.The
TABLE
statement has the formatTABLE
, and is equivalent totable_name
SELECT * FROM
. It supportstable_name
ORDER BY
andLIMIT
clauses ( the latter with optionalOFFSET
), but does not allow for the selection of individual table columns.TABLE
can be used anywhere that you would employ the equivalentSELECT
statement; this includes joins, unions,INSERT ... SELECT
,REPLACE
,CREATE TABLE ... SELECT
statements, and subqueries. For example:TABLE t1 UNION TABLE t2
is equivalent toSELECT * FROM t1 UNION SELECT * FROM t2
CREATE TABLE t2 TABLE t1
is equivalent toCREATE TABLE t2 SELECT * FROM t1
SELECT a FROM t1 WHERE b > ANY (TABLE t2)
is equivalent toSELECT a FROM t1 WHERE b > ANY (SELECT * FROM t2)
.
VALUES
can be used to supply a table value to anINSERT
,REPLACE
, orSELECT
statement, and consists of theVALUES
keyword followed by a series of row constructors (ROW()
) separated by commas. For example, the statementINSERT INTO t1 VALUES ROW(1,2,3), ROW(4,5,6), ROW(7,8,9)
provides an SQL-compliant equivalent to the MySQL-specificINSERT INTO t1 VALUES (1,2,3), (4,5,6), (7,8,9)
. You can also select from aVALUES
table value constructor just as you would a table, bearing in mind that you must supply a table alias when doing so, and use thisSELECT
just as you would any other; this includes joins, unions, and subqueries.For more information about
TABLE
andVALUES
, and for examples of their use, see the following sections of this documentation:Optimizer hints for FORCE INDEX, IGNORE INDEX. MySQL 8.0 introduces index-level optimizer hints which serve as analogs to the traditional index hints as described in Section 10.9.4, “Index Hints”. The new hints are listed here, along with their
FORCE INDEX
orIGNORE INDEX
equivalents:GROUP_INDEX
: Equivalent toFORCE INDEX FOR GROUP BY
NO_GROUP_INDEX
: Equivalent toIGNORE INDEX FOR GROUP BY
JOIN_INDEX
: Equivalent toFORCE INDEX FOR JOIN
NO_JOIN_INDEX
: Equivalent toIGNORE INDEX FOR JOIN
ORDER_INDEX
: Equivalent toFORCE INDEX FOR ORDER BY
NO_ORDER_INDEX
: Equivalent toIGNORE INDEX FOR ORDER BY
INDEX
: Same asGROUP_INDEX
plusJOIN_INDEX
plusORDER_INDEX
; equivalent toFORCE INDEX
with no modifierNO_INDEX
: Same asNO_GROUP_INDEX
plusNO_JOIN_INDEX
plusNO_ORDER_INDEX
; equivalent toIGNORE INDEX
with no modifier
For example, the following two queries are equivalent:
SELECT a FROM t1 FORCE INDEX (i_a) FOR JOIN WHERE a=1 AND b=2; SELECT /*+ JOIN_INDEX(t1 i_a) */ a FROM t1 WHERE a=1 AND b=2;
The optimizer hints listed previously follow the same basic rules for syntax and usage as existing index-level optimizer hints.
These optimizer hints are intended to replace
FORCE INDEX
andIGNORE INDEX
, which we plan to deprecate in a future MySQL release, and subsequently to remove from MySQL. They do not implement a single exact equivalent forUSE INDEX
; instead, you can employ one or more ofNO_INDEX
,NO_JOIN_INDEX
,NO_GROUP_INDEX
, orNO_ORDER_INDEX
to achieve the same effect.For further information and examples of use, see Index-Level Optimizer Hints.
JSON_VALUE() function. MySQL 8.0.21 implements a new function
JSON_VALUE()
intended to simplify indexing ofJSON
columns. In its most basic form, it takes as arguments a JSON document and a JSON path pointing to a single value in that document, as well as (optionally) allowing you to specify a return type with theRETURNING
keyword.JSON_VALUE(
is equivalent to this:json_doc
,path
RETURNINGtype
)CAST( JSON_UNQUOTE( JSON_EXTRACT(json_doc, path) ) AS type );
You can also specify
ON EMPTY
,ON ERROR
, or both clauses, similar to those employed withJSON_TABLE()
.You can use
JSON_VALUE()
to create an index on an expression on aJSON
column like this:CREATE TABLE t1( j JSON, INDEX i1 ( (JSON_VALUE(j, '$.id' RETURNING UNSIGNED)) ) ); INSERT INTO t1 VALUES ROW('{"id": "123", "name": "shoes", "price": "49.95"}');
A query using this expression, such as that shown here, can make use of the index:
SELECT j->"$.name" as name, j->"$.price" as price FROM t1 WHERE JSON_VALUE(j, '$.id' RETURNING UNSIGNED) = 123;
In many cases, this is simpler than creating a generated column from the
JSON
column and then creating an index on the generated column.For more information and examples, see the description of
JSON_VALUE()
.User comments and user attributes. MySQL 8.0.21 introduces the ability to set user comments and user attributes when creating or updating user accounts. A user comment consists of arbitrary text passed as the argument to a
COMMENT
clause used with aCREATE USER
orALTER USER
statement. A user attribute consists of data in the form of a JSON object passed as the argument to anATTRIBUTE
clause used with either of these two statements. The attribute can contain any valid key-value pairs in JSON object notation. Only one ofCOMMENT
orATTRIBUTE
can be used in a singleCREATE USER
orALTER USER
statement.User comments and user attributes are stored together internally as a JSON object, the comment text as the value of an element having
comment
as its key. This information can be retrieved from theATTRIBUTE
column of the Information SchemaUSER_ATTRIBUTES
table; since it is in JSON format, you can use MySQL's JSON function and operators to parse its contents (see Section 14.17, “JSON Functions”). Successive changes to the user attribute are merged with its current value as when using theJSON_MERGE_PATCH()
function.Example:
mysql> CREATE USER 'mary'@'localhost' COMMENT 'This is Mary Smith\'s account'; Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.33 sec) mysql> ALTER USER 'mary'@'localhost' -≫ ATTRIBUTE '{"fname":"Mary", "lname":"Smith"}'; Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.14 sec) mysql> ALTER USER 'mary'@'localhost' -≫ ATTRIBUTE '{"email":"mary.smith@example.com"}'; Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.12 sec) mysql> SELECT -> USER, -> HOST, -> ATTRIBUTE->>"$.fname" AS 'First Name', -> ATTRIBUTE->>"$.lname" AS 'Last Name', -> ATTRIBUTE->>"$.email" AS 'Email', -> ATTRIBUTE->>"$.comment" AS 'Comment' -> FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.USER_ATTRIBUTES -> WHERE USER='mary' AND HOST='localhost'\G *************************** 1. row *************************** USER: mary HOST: localhost First Name: Mary Last Name: Smith Email: mary.smith@example.com Comment: This is Mary Smith's account 1 row in set (0.00 sec)
For more information and examples, see Section 15.7.1.3, “CREATE USER Statement”, Section 15.7.1.1, “ALTER USER Statement”, and Section 28.3.46, “The INFORMATION_SCHEMA USER_ATTRIBUTES Table”.
New optimizer_switch flags. MySQL 8.0.21 adds two new flags for the
optimizer_switch
system variable, as described in the following list:By default, MySQL attempts to use an ordered index for any
ORDER BY
orGROUP BY
query that has aLIMIT
clause, whenever the optimizer determines that this would result in faster execution. Because it is possible in some cases that choosing a different optimization for such queries actually performs better, it is now possible to disable this optimization by setting theprefer_ordering_index
flag tooff
.The default value for this flag is
on
.subquery_to_derived
flagWhen this flag is set to
on
, the optimizer transforms eligible scalar subqueries into joins on derived tables. For example, the querySELECT * FROM t1 WHERE t1.a > (SELECT COUNT(a) FROM t2)
is rewritten asSELECT t1.a FROM t1 JOIN ( SELECT COUNT(t2.a) AS c FROM t2 ) AS d WHERE t1.a > d.c
.This optimization can be applied to a subquery which is part of a
SELECT
,WHERE
,JOIN
, orHAVING
clause; contains one or more aggregate functions but noGROUP BY
clause; is not correlated; and does not use any nondeterministic functions.The optimization can also be applied to a table subquery which is the argument to
IN
,NOT IN
,EXISTS
, orNOT EXISTS
, and which does not contain aGROUP BY
. For example, the querySELECT * FROM t1 WHERE t1.b < 0 OR t1.a IN (SELECT t2.a + 1 FROM t2)
is rewritten asSELECT a, b FROM t1 LEFT JOIN (SELECT DISTINCT 1 AS e1, t2.a AS e2 FROM t2) d ON t1.a + 1 = d.e2 WHERE t1.b < 0 OR d.e1 IS NOT NULL
.Starting with MySQL 8.0.24, this optimization can also be applied to a correlated scalar subquery by applying an extra grouping to it, and then an outer join on the lifted predicate. For example, a query such as
SELECT * FROM t1 WHERE (SELECT a FROM t2 WHERE t2.a=t1.a) > 0
can be rewritten asSELECT t1.* FROM t1 LEFT OUTER JOIN (SELECT a, COUNT(*) AS ct FROM t2 GROUP BY a) AS derived ON t1.a = derived.a WHERE derived.a > 0
. MySQL performs a cardinality check to make sure that the subquery does not return more than one row (ER_SUBQUERY_NO_1_ROW
). See Section 15.2.15.7, “Correlated Subqueries”, for more information.This optimization is normally disabled, since it does not yield a noticeable performance benefit in most cases; the flag is set to
off
by default.
For more information, see Section 10.9.2, “Switchable Optimizations”. See also Section 10.2.1.19, “LIMIT Query Optimization”, Section 10.2.2.1, “Optimizing IN and EXISTS Subquery Predicates with Semijoin Transformations”, and Section 10.2.2.4, “Optimizing Derived Tables, View References, and Common Table Expressions with Merging or Materialization”.
XML enhancements. As of MySQL 8.0.21, the
LOAD XML
statement now supportsCDATA
sections in the XML to be imported.Casting to the YEAR type now supported. Beginning with MySQL 8.0.22, the server allows casting to
YEAR
. Both theCAST()
andCONVERT()
functions support single-digit, two-digit, and four-digitYEAR
values. For one-digit and two-digit values, the allowed range is 0-99. Four-digit values must be in the range 1901-2155.YEAR
can also be used as the return type for theJSON_VALUE()
function; this function supports four-digit years only.String, time-and-date, and floating-point values can all be cast to
YEAR
. Casting ofGEOMETRY
values toYEAR
is not supported.For more information, including conversion rules, see the description of the
CONVERT()
function.Retrieval of TIMESTAMP values as UTC. MySQL 8.0.22 and later supports conversion of a
TIMESTAMP
column value from the system time zone to a UTCDATETIME
on retrieval, usingCAST(
, where the specifier is one ofvalue
AT TIME ZONEspecifier
AS DATETIME)[INTERVAL] '+00:00'
or'UTC'
. The precision of theDATETIME
value returned by the cast can be specified up to 6 decimal places, if desired. TheARRAY
keyword is not supported with this construct.TIMESTAMP
values inserted into a table using a timezone offset are also supported. Use ofAT TIME ZONE
is not supported forCONVERT()
or any other MySQL function or construct.For further information and examples, see the description of the
CAST()
function.Dump file output synchronization. MySQL 8.0.22 and later supports periodic synchronization when writing to files by
SELECT INTO DUMPFILE
andSELECT INTO OUTFILE
statements. This can be enabled by setting theselect_into_disk_sync
system variable toON
; the size of the write buffer is determined by the value set forselect_into_buffer_size
; the default is 131072 (217) bytes.In addition, an optional delay following synchronization to disk can be set using
select_into_disk_sync_delay
; the default is no delay (0 milliseconds).For more information, see the descriptions of the variables referenced previously in this item.
Single preparation of statements. As of MySQL 8.0.22, a prepared statement is prepared a single time, rather than once each time it is executed. This is done when executing
PREPARE
. This is also true for any statement inside a stored procedure; the statement is prepared once, when the stored procedure is first executed.One result of this change is that the fashion in which dynamic parameters used in prepared statements are resolved is also changed in the ways listed here:
A prepared statement parameter is assigned a data type when the statement is prepared; the type persists for each subsequent execution of the statement (unless the statement is reprepared; see following).
Using a different data type for a given parameter or user variable within a prepared statement for executions of the statement subsequent to the first execution may cause the statement to be reprepared; for this reason, it is advisable to use the same data type for a given parameter when re-executing a prepared statement.
The following constructs employing window functions are no longer accepted, in order to align with the SQL standard:
LEAD(
andexpr
,nn
)LAG(
, whereexpr
,nn
)nn
is a negative number
This facilitates greater compliance with the SQL standard. See the individual function descriptions for further details.
A user variable referenced within a prepared statement now has its data type determined when the statement is prepared; the type persists for each subsequent execution of the statement.
A user variable referenced by a statement occurring within a stored procedure now has its data type determined the first time the statement is executed; the type persists for any subsequent invocation of the containing stored procedure.
When executing a prepared statement of the form
SELECT
, passing an integer valueexpr1
,expr2
, ... FROMtable
ORDER BY ?N
for the parameter no longer causes ordering of the results by theN
th expression in the select list; the results are no longer ordered, as is expected withORDER BY
.constant
Preparing a statement used as a prepared statement or within a stored procedure only once enhances the performance of the statement, since it negates the added cost of repeated preparation. Doing so also avoids possible multiple rollbacks of preparation structures, which has been the source of numerous issues in MySQL.
For more information, see Section 15.5.1, “PREPARE Statement”.
RIGHT JOIN as LEFT JOIN handling. As of MySQL 8.0.22, the server handles all instances of
RIGHT JOIN
internally asLEFT JOIN
, eliminating a number of special cases in which a complete conversion was not performed at parse time.Derived condition pushdown optimization. MySQL 8.0.22 (and later) implements derived condition pushdown for queries having materialized derived tables. For a query such as
SELECT * FROM (SELECT i, j FROM t1) AS dt WHERE i >
, it is now possible in many cases to push the outerconstant
WHERE
condition down to the derived table, in this case resulting inSELECT * FROM (SELECT i, j FROM t1 WHERE i >
.constant
) AS dtPreviously, if the derived table was materialized and not merged, MySQL materialized the entire table, then qualified the rows with the
WHERE
condition. Moving theWHERE
condition into the subquery using the derived condition pushdown optimization can often reduce the number of rows must be processed, which can decrease the time needed to execute the query.An outer
WHERE
condition can be pushed down directly to a materialized derived table when the derived table does not use any aggregate or window functions. When the derived table has aGROUP BY
and does not use any window functions, the outerWHERE
condition can be pushed down to the derived table as aHAVING
condition. TheWHERE
condition can also be pushed down when the derived table uses a window function and the outerWHERE
references columns used in the window function'sPARTITION
clause.Derived condition pushdown is enabled by default, as indicated by the
optimizer_switch
system variable'sderived_condition_pushdown
flag. The flag, added in MySQL 8.0.22, is set toon
by default; to disable the optimization for a specific query, you can use theNO_DERIVED_CONDITION_PUSHDOWN
optimizer hint (also added in MySQL 8.0.22). If the optimization is disabled due toderived_condition_pushdown
being set tooff
, you can enable it for a given query usingDERIVED_CONDITION_PUSHDOWN
.The derived condition pushdown optimization cannot be employed for a derived table that contains a
LIMIT
clause. Prior to MySQL 8.0.29, the optimization also cannot be used when the query containsUNION
. In MySQL 8.0.29 and later, conditions can be pushed down to both query blocks of a union in most cases; see Section 10.2.2.5, “Derived Condition Pushdown Optimization”, for more information.In addition, a condition that itself uses a subquery cannot be pushed down, and a
WHERE
condition cannot be pushed down to a derived table that is also an inner table of an outer join. For additional information and examples, see Section 10.2.2.5, “Derived Condition Pushdown Optimization”.Non-locking reads on MySQL grant tables. As of MySQL 8.0.22, to permit concurrent DML and DDL operations on MySQL grant tables, read operations that previously acquired row locks on MySQL grant tables are executed as non-locking reads.
The operations that are now performed as non-locking reads on MySQL grant tables include:
SELECT
statements and other read-only statements that read data from grant tables through join lists and subqueries, includingSELECT ... FOR SHARE
statements, using any transaction isolation level.DML operations that read data from grant tables (through join lists or subqueries) but do not modify them, using any transaction isolation level.
For additional information, see Grant Table Concurrency.
64-bit support for FROM_UNIXTIME(), UNIX_TIMESTAMP(), CONVERT_TZ(). As of MySQL 8.0.28, the functions
FROM_UNIXTIME()
,UNIX_TIMESTAMP()
, andCONVERT_TZ()
handle 64-bit values on platforms that support them. This includes 64-bit versions of Linux, MacOS, and Windows.On compatible platforms,
UNIX_TIMESTAMP()
now handles values up to'3001-01-18 23:59:59.999999'
UTC, andFROM_UNIXTIME()
can convert values up to 32536771199.999999 seconds since the Unix Epoch;CONVERT_TZ()
now accepts values that do not exceed'3001-01-18 23:59:59.999999'
UTC following conversion.The behavior of these functions on 32-bit platforms is unaffected by these changes. The behavior of the
TIMESTAMP
type is also not affected (on any platform); for working with datetimes after'2038-01-19 03:14:07.999999'
, UTC, use theDATETIME
type instead.For more information, see the descriptions of the individual functions just discussed, in Section 14.7, “Date and Time Functions”.
Resource allocation control. Beginning with MySQL 8.0.28, you can see the amount of memory used for queries issued by all regular users by checking the
Global_connection_memory
status variable. (This total does not include resources used by system users such as MySQL root. It is also exclusive of any memory taken by theInnoDB
buffer pool.)To enable updates of
Global_connection_memory
, it is necessary to setglobal_connection_memory_tracking = 1
; this is0
(off) by default. You can control how oftenGlobal_connection_memory
is updated by settingconnection_memory_chunk_size
.It is also possible to set memory usage limits for normal users on the session or global level, or both, by setting either or both of the system variables listed here:
connection_memory_limit
: Amount of memory allocated for each connection. Whenever this limit is exceeded for any user, new queries from this user are rejected.global_connection_memory_limit
: Amount of memory allocated for all connections. Whenever this limit is exceeded, new queries from any regular user are rejected.
These limits do not apply to system processes or administrative accounts.
See the descriptions of the referenced variables for more information.
Detached XA transactions. MySQL 8.0.29 adds support for XA transactions which, once prepared, are no longer connected to the originating connection. This means that they can be committed or rolled back by another connection, and that the current session can immediately begin another transaction.
A system variable
xa_detach_on_prepare
controls whether XA transaction are detached; the default isON
, which causes all XA transactions to be detached. Use of temporary tables is disallowed for XA transactions when this is in effect.For more information, see Section 15.3.8.2, “XA Transaction States”.
Automatic binary log purge control. MySQL 8.0.29 adds the
binlog_expire_logs_auto_purge
system variable, which provides a single interface for enabling and disabling automatic purging of the binary logs. This is enabled (ON
) by default; to disable automatic purging of the binary log files, set this variable toOFF
.binlog_expire_logs_auto_purge
must beON
in order for automatic purging of the binary log files to proceed; the value of this variable takes precedence over that of any other server option or variable, including (but not exclusive to)binlog_expire_logs_seconds
.The setting for
binlog_expire_logs_auto_purge
has no effect onPURGE BINARY LOGS
.Conditional routine and trigger creation statements. Beginning with MySQL 8.0.29, the following statements support an
IF NOT EXISTS
option:For
CREATE FUNCTION
when creating a stored function andCREATE PROCEDURE
, this option prevents an error from occurring if there is already a routine having the same name. ForCREATE FUNCTION
when used to create a loadable function, the option prevents an error if there already exists a loadable function having that name. ForCREATE TRIGGER
, the option prevents an error from occurring if there already exists in the same schema and on the same table a trigger having the same name.This enhancement aligns the syntax of these statements more closely with that of
CREATE DATABASE
,CREATE TABLE
,CREATE USER
, andCREATE EVENT
(all of which already supportIF NOT EXISTS
), and acts to complement theIF EXISTS
option supported byDROP PROCEDURE
,DROP FUNCTION
, andDROP TRIGGER
statements.For more information, see the descriptions of the indicated SQL statements, as well as Function Name Resolution. See also Section 19.5.1.7, “Replication of CREATE TABLE ... SELECT Statements”.
Included FIDO library upgrade. MySQL 8.0.30 upgrades the included
fido2
library (used with theauthentication_fido
plugin) from version 1.5.0 to version 1.8.0.See Section 8.4.1.11, “FIDO Pluggable Authentication”, for more information.
Character sets: Language-specific collations. Previously, when more than one language had the exact same collation definition, MySQL implemented collations for only one of the languages, which meant that some languages were covered only by
utf8mb4
Unicode 9.0 collations specific to other languages. MySQL 8.0.30 (and later) fixes such issues by providing language-specific collations for those languages that were previously covered only by language-specific collations for other languages. Languages covered by the new collations are listed here:Norwegian (Nynorsk)
and
Norwegian (Bokmål)
Serbian (Latin characters)
Bosnian (Latin characters)
Bulgarian
Galician
Mongolian (Cyrillic characters)
MySQL provides
*_as_cs
and*_ai_ci
collations for each of the languages just listed.For more information, see Language-Specific Collations.
IF EXISTS and IGNORE UNKNOWN USER options for REVOKE. MySQL 8.0.30 implements two new options for
REVOKE
which can be used to determine whether a statement yields an error or a warning when a user, role, or privilege specified in the statement cannot be found, or cannot be assigned. Very basic syntax showing the placement of these new options is provided here:REVOKE [IF EXISTS] privilege_or_role ON object FROM user_or_role [IGNORE UNKNOWN USER]
IF EXISTS
causes an unsuccessfulREVOKE
statement to raise a warning instead of an error, as long as the named target user or role actually exists, despite any references in the statement to any roles or privileges which cannot be found.IGNORE UNKNOWN USER
causes an unsuccessfulREVOKE
to raise a warning rather than an error when the target user or role named in the statement cannot be found.For further information and examples, see Section 15.7.1.8, “REVOKE Statement”.
Generated invisible primary keys. Beginning with MySQL 8.0.30, it is possible to run a replication source server such that a generated invisible primary key (GIPK) is added to any
InnoDB
table that is created without an explicit primary key. The generated key column definition added to such a table is equivalent to what is shown here:my_row_id BIGINT UNSIGNED NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT INVISIBLE PRIMARY KEY
GIPK mode is not enabled by default. To enable it, set the
sql_generate_invisible_primary_key
server system variable toON
.Generated invisible primary keys are normally visible in the output of statements such as
SHOW CREATE TABLE
andSHOW INDEX
, as well as in MySQL Information Schema tables such as theCOLUMNS
andSTATISTICS
tables. You can cause them to be hidden in such cases instead, by settingshow_gipk_in_create_table_and_information_schema
toOFF
.As part of this work, a new
--skip-generated-invisible-primary-key
option is added to mysqldump and mysqlpump to exclude generated invisible primary keys, columns, and column values from their output.GIPKs and replication between tables with or without primary keys. In MySQL Replication, a replica effectively ignores any setting for
sql_generate_invisible_primary_key
on the source, such that it has no effect on replicated tables. MySQL 8.0.32 and later makes it possible for the replica to add a generated invisible primary key to anyInnoDB
table that otherwise, as replicated, has no primary key. You can do this by invokingCHANGE REPLICATION SOURCE TO ... REQUIRE_TABLE_PRIMARY_KEY_CHECK = GENERATE
on the replica.REQUIRE_TABLE_PRIMARY_KEY_CHECK = GENERATE
is not compatible with MySQL Group Replication.For further information, see Section 15.1.20.11, “Generated Invisible Primary Keys”.
Crash-safe XA transactions. Previously, XA transactions were not fully resilient to an unexpected halt with respect to the binary log, and if this occurred while the server was executing
XA PREPARE
,XA COMMIT
, orXA ROLLBACK
, the server was not guaranteed to be recoverable to the correct state, possibly leaving the binary log with extra XA transactions that had not been applied, or missing one or more XA transactions that had been applied. Beginning with MySQL 8.0.30, this is no longer an issue, and a server that drops out of a replication topology for whatever reason can always be brought back to a consistent XA transaction state when rejoining.Known issue: When the same transaction XID is used to execute XA transactions sequentially and a break occurs during the execution of
XA COMMIT ... ONE PHASE
, using this same XID, after this transaction has been prepared in the storage engine, it may not be possible any longer to synchronize the state between the binary log and the storage engine.For more information, see Section 15.3.8.3, “Restrictions on XA Transactions”.
Nesting with UNION. Beginning with MySQL 8.0.31, bodies of parenthesized query expressions can be nested up to 63 levels deep in combination with
UNION
. Such queries were previously rejected with errorER_NOT_SUPPORTED_YET
, but are now allowed.EXPLAIN
output for such a query is shown here:mysql> EXPLAIN FORMAT=TREE ( -> (SELECT a, b, c FROM t ORDER BY a LIMIT 3) ORDER BY b LIMIT 2 -> ) ORDER BY c LIMIT 1\G *************************** 1. row *************************** EXPLAIN: -> Limit: 1 row(s) (cost=5.55..5.55 rows=1) -> Sort: c, limit input to 1 row(s) per chunk (cost=2.50 rows=0) -> Table scan on <result temporary> (cost=2.50 rows=0) -> Temporary table (cost=5.55..5.55 rows=1) -> Limit: 2 row(s) (cost=2.95..2.95 rows=1) -> Sort: b, limit input to 2 row(s) per chunk (cost=2.50 rows=0) -> Table scan on <result temporary> (cost=2.50 rows=0) -> Temporary table (cost=2.95..2.95 rows=1) -> Limit: 3 row(s) (cost=0.35 rows=1) -> Sort: t.a, limit input to 3 row(s) per chunk (cost=0.35 rows=1) -> Table scan on t (cost=0.35 rows=1) 1 row in set (0.00 sec)
MySQL follows SQL standard semantics when collapsing bodies of parenthesized query expressions, so that a higher outer limit cannot override an inner lower one. For example,
(SELECT ... LIMIT 5) LIMIT 10
can return no more than five rows.The 63-level limit is imposed only after the MySQL Optimizer's parser has performed any simplifications or merges which it can.
For more information, see Section 15.2.11, “Parenthesized Query Expressions”.
Disabling query rewrites. Previously, when using the
Rewriter
plugin, all queries were subject to being rewritten, regardless of user. This could be problematic in certain cases, such as when administering the system, or when applying statements originating from a replication source or a dump file created by mysqldump or another MySQL program. MySQL 8.0.31 provides a solution to such issues by implementing a new user privilegeSKIP_QUERY_REWRITE
; statements issued by a user having this privilege are ignored byRewriter
and not rewritten.MySQL 8.0.31 also adds a new server system variable
rewriter_enabled_for_threads_without_privilege_checks
. When set toOFF
, rewritable statements issued by threads for whichPRIVILEGE_CHECKS_USER
isNULL
(such as replication applier threads) are not rewritten by theRewriter
plugin. The default isON
, which means such statements are rewritten.For more information, see Section 7.6.4, “The Rewriter Query Rewrite Plugin”.
Replication filtering of XA statements. Previously, the statements
XA START
,XA END
,XA COMMIT
, andXA ROLLBACK
were filtered by the default database whenever using--replicate-do-db
or--replicate-ignore-db
, which could lead to missed transactions. As of MySQL 8.0.31, these statements are not filtered in such cases, regardless of the value ofbinlog_format
.Replication filtering and privilege checks. Beginning with MySQL 8.0.31, when replication filtering is in use, a replica no longer raises replication errors related to privilege checks or
require_row_format
validation for events which are filtered out, making it possible to filter out any transactions that fail validation.Because privilege checks on filtered rows can no longer cause replication to stop, a replica can now accept only the portion of a database to which a given user has been granted access; this is true as long as updates to this part of the database are replicated only in row-based format.
This capability may also be of use when migrating to HeatWave Service from an on-premise or cloud service which uses tables for administration or other purposes to which the inbound replication user does not have access.
For more information, see Section 19.2.5, “How Servers Evaluate Replication Filtering Rules”, as well as Section 19.5.1.29, “Replica Errors During Replication”.
INTERSECT and EXCEPT table operators. MySQL 8.0.31 adds support for the SQL
INTERSECT
andEXCEPT
table operators. Wherea
andb
represent result sets of queries, these operators behave as follows:
includes only rows appearing in both result setsa
INTERSECTb
a
andb
.
returns only those rows from result seta
EXCEPTb
a
which do not also appear inb
.
INTERSECT DISTINCT
,INTERSECT ALL
,EXCEPT DISTINCT
, andEXCEPT ALL
are all supported;DISTINCT
is the default for bothINTERSECT
andEXCEPT
(this is the same as forUNION
).For more information and examples, see Section 15.2.8, “INTERSECT Clause”, and Section 15.2.4, “EXCEPT Clause”.
User-defined histograms. Beginning with MySQL 8.0.31, it is possible to set the histogram of a column to a user-specified JSON value. This can be done using the following SQL syntax:
ANALYZE TABLE tbl_name UPDATE HISTOGRAM ON col_name USING DATA 'json_data'
This statement creates or overwrites a histogram for column
col_name
of tabletbl_name
using the histogram's JSON representationjson_data
. After executing this statement, you can verify that the histogram was created or updated by querying the Information SchemaCOLUMN_STATISTICS
table, like this:SELECT HISTOGRAM FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.COLUMN_STATISTICS WHERE TABLE_NAME='tbl_name' AND COLUMN_NAME='col_name';
The column value returned should be the same
json_data
used in the previousANALYZE TABLE
statement.This can be of use in cases where values deemed important are missed by the histogram sampling process. When this happens, you may want to modify the histogram or set your own histogram based on the complete data set. In addition, sampling a large user data set and building a histogram from it are resource-heavy operations which can impact user queries. With this enhancement, histogram generation can be moved off the (primary) server and performed on a replica instead; the generated histograms can then be assigned to the proper table columns on the source server.
For more information and examples, see Histogram Statistics Analysis.
Server build ID (Linux). MySQL 8.0.31 adds the read-only
build_id
system variable for Linux systems, where a 160-bitSHA1
signature is generated at compile time; the value ofbuild_id
is that of the generated value converted to a hexadecimal string, providing a unique identifier for the build.build_id
is written to the server log each time MySQL starts.If you build MySQL from source, you can observe that this value changes each time you recompile the server. See Section 2.8, “Installing MySQL from Source”, for more information.
This variable is not supported on platforms other than Linux.
Default EXPLAIN output format. MySQL 8.0.32 adds a system variable
explain_format
which determines the format of the output from anEXPLAIN
statement used to obtain a query execution plan in the absence of anyFORMAT
option. For example, if the value ofexplain_format
isTREE
, then the output from any suchEXPLAIN
uses the tree-like format, just as if the statement had specifiedFORMAT=TREE
.This behavior is overridden by the value set in a
FORMAT
option. Suppose thatexplain_format
is set toTREE
; even so,EXPLAIN FORMAT=JSON
displays the result using the JSON output format.stmt
For more information and examples, see the description of the
explain_format
system variable, as well as Obtaining Execution Plan Information. There are also implications for the behavior ofEXPLAIN ANALYZE
; see Obtaining Information with EXPLAIN ANALYZE.ST_TRANSFORM() Cartesian SRS support. Prior to MySQL 8.0.30, the
ST_TRANSFORM()
function did not support Cartesian Spatial Reference Systems. In MySQL 8.0.30 and later, this function provides support for the Popular Visualisation Pseudo Mercator (EPSG 1024) projection method, used for WGS 84 Pseudo-Mercator (SRID 3857). MySQL 8.0.32 and later supports all Cartesian SRSs, except for EPSG 1042, EPSG 1043, EPSG 9816, and EPSG 9826.mysql client --system-command option. The
--system-command
option for the mysql client, available in MySQL 8.0.40 and later, enables or disables thesystem
command.This option is enabled by default. To disable it, use
--system-command=OFF
or--skip-system-command
, which causes thesystem
command to be rejected with an error.
The following features are deprecated in MySQL 8.0 and may be removed in a future series. Where alternatives are shown, applications should be updated to use them.
For applications that use features deprecated in MySQL 8.0 that have been removed in a higher MySQL series, statements may fail when replicated from a MySQL 8.0 source to a higher-series replica, or may have different effects on source and replica. To avoid such problems, applications that use features deprecated in 8.0 should be revised to avoid them and use alternatives when possible.
Wildcard characters in database grants. The use of the characters
%
and_
as wildcards in database grants is deprecated as of MySQL 8.0.35. You should expect for the wildcard functionality to removed in a future MySQL release and for these characters always to be treated as literals, as they are already whenever the value of thepartial_revokes
server system variable isON
.In addition, the treatment of
%
by the server as a synonym forlocalhost
when checking privileges is now also deprecated as of MySQL 8.0.35, and thus subject to removal in a future version of MySQL.Pluggable FIDO authentication is deprecated in MySQL 8.0.35 and later.
The
--character-set-client-handshake
option, originally intended for use with upgrades from very old versions of MySQL, is now deprecated in MySQL 8.0.35 and later MySQL 8.0 releases, where a warning is issued whenever it is used. You should expect this option to be removed in a future version of MySQL; applications depending on this option should begin migration away from it as soon as possible.The
old
andnew
server system variables and related server options are deprecated in MySQL 8.0, beginning with MySQL 8.0.35. A warning is now issued whenever either of these variables is set or read. Because these variables are destined for removal in a future version of MySQL, applications which depend on them should begin migration away from them as soon as possible.Legacy audit log filtering mode is deprecated as of MySQL 8.0.34. New deprecation warnings are emitted for legacy audit log filtering system variables. These deprecated variables are either read-only or dynamic.
(Read-only)
audit_log_policy
now writes a warning message to the MySQL server error log during server startup when the value is notALL
(default value).(Dynamic)
audit_log_include_accounts
,audit_log_exclude_accounts
,audit_log_statement_policy
, andaudit_log_connection_policy
. Dynamic variables print a warning message based on usage:Passing in a non-NULL value to
audit_log_include_accounts
oraudit_log_exclude_accounts
during MySQL server startup now writes a warning message to the server error log.Passing in a non-default value to
audit_log_statement_policy
oraudit_log_connection_policy
during MySQL server startup now writes a warning message to the server error log.ALL
is the default value for both variables.Changing an existing value using
SET
syntax during a MySQL client session now writes a warning message to the client log.Persisting a variable using
SET PERSIST
syntax during a MySQL client session now writes a warning message to the client log.
In MySQL 8.0.34 and later, the
mysql_native_password
authentication plugin is deprecated and it now produces a deprecation warning in the server error log if an account attempts to authenticate usingmysql_native_password
as an authentication method.The
ssl_fips_mode
server system variable,--ssl-fips-mode
client option, and theMYSQL_OPT_SSL_FIPS_MODE
option are deprecated and subject to removal in a future version of MySQL.The
keyring_file
andkeyring_encrypted_file
plugins are deprecated as of MySQL 8.0.34. These keyring plugins are superseded by thecomponent_keyring_file
andcomponent_keyring_encrypted_file
components. For a concise comparison of keyring components and plugins, see Section 8.4.4.1, “Keyring Components Versus Keyring Plugins”.As of MySQL 8.0.31, the
keyring_oci
plugin is deprecated and subject to removal in a future release of MySQL. Instead, consider using thecomponent_keyring_oci
component for storing keyring data (see Section 8.4.4.11, “Using the Oracle Cloud Infrastructure Vault Keyring Component”).The
utf8mb3
character set is deprecated. Please useutf8mb4
instead.The following character sets are deprecated:
ucs2
(see Section 12.9.4, “The ucs2 Character Set (UCS-2 Unicode Encoding)”)macroman
andmacce
(see Section 12.10.2, “West European Character Sets”, and Section 12.10.3, “Central European Character Sets”)
In MySQL 8.0.28 and later, any of these character sets or their collations produces a deprecation warning when used in either of the following ways:
When starting the MySQL server with
--character-set-server
or--collation-server
When specified in any SQL statement, including but not limited to
CREATE TABLE
,CREATE DATABASE
,SET NAMES
, andALTER TABLE
You should use
utf8mb4
instead any of the character sets listed previously.User-defined collations are deprecated. Beginning with MySQL 8.0.33, either of the following causes a warning to be written to the log:
Use of
COLLATE
in any SQL statement together with the name of a user-defined collationUsing the name of a user-defined collation for the value of
collation_server
,collation_database
, orcollation_connection
.
You should expect support for user-defined collations to be removed in a future version of MySQL.
Because
caching_sha2_password
is the default authentication plugin in MySQL 8.0 and provides a superset of the capabilities of thesha256_password
authentication plugin,sha256_password
is deprecated; expect it to be removed in a future version of MySQL. MySQL accounts that authenticate usingsha256_password
should be migrated to usecaching_sha2_password
instead.The
validate_password
plugin has been reimplemented to use the component infrastructure. The plugin form ofvalidate_password
is still available but is now deprecated; expect it to be removed in a future version of MySQL. MySQL installations that use the plugin should make the transition to using the component instead. See Section 8.4.3.3, “Transitioning to the Password Validation Component”.The
ENGINE
clause for theALTER TABLESPACE
andDROP TABLESPACE
statements is deprecated.The
PAD_CHAR_TO_FULL_LENGTH
SQL mode is deprecated.AUTO_INCREMENT
support is deprecated for columns of typeFLOAT
andDOUBLE
(and any synonyms). Consider removing theAUTO_INCREMENT
attribute from such columns, or convert them to an integer type.The
UNSIGNED
attribute is deprecated for columns of typeFLOAT
,DOUBLE
, andDECIMAL
(and any synonyms). Consider using a simpleCHECK
constraint instead for such columns.FLOAT(
andM
,D
)DOUBLE(
syntax to specify the number of digits for columns of typeM
,D
)FLOAT
andDOUBLE
(and any synonyms) is a nonstandard MySQL extension. This syntax is deprecated.The
ZEROFILL
attribute is deprecated for numeric data types, as is the display width attribute for integer data types. Consider using an alternative means of producing the effect of these attributes. For example, applications could use theLPAD()
function to zero-pad numbers up to the desired width, or they could store the formatted numbers inCHAR
columns.For string data types, the
BINARY
attribute is a nonstandard MySQL extension that is shorthand for specifying the binary (_bin
) collation of the column character set (or of the table default character set if no column character set is specified). In MySQL 8.0, this nonstandard use ofBINARY
is ambiguous because theutf8mb4
character set has multiple_bin
collations, so theBINARY
attribute is deprecated; expect support for it to be removed in a future version of MySQL. Applications should be adjusted to use an explicit_bin
collation instead.The use of
BINARY
to specify a data type or character set remains unchanged.Previous versions of MySQL supported the nonstandard shorthand expressions
ASCII
andUNICODE
, respectively, forCHARACTER SET latin1
andCHARACTER SET ucs2
.ASCII
andUNICODE
are deprecated (MySQL 8.0.28 and later) and now produce a warning. UseCHARACTER SET
instead, in both cases.The nonstandard C-style
&&
,||
, and!
operators that are synonyms for the standard SQLAND
,OR
, andNOT
operators, respectively, are deprecated. Applications that use the nonstandard operators should be adjusted to use the standard operators.NoteUse of
||
is deprecated unless thePIPES_AS_CONCAT
SQL mode is enabled. In that case,||
signifies the SQL-standard string concatenation operator).The
JSON_MERGE()
function is deprecated. UseJSON_MERGE_PRESERVE()
instead.The
SQL_CALC_FOUND_ROWS
query modifier and accompanyingFOUND_ROWS()
function are deprecated. See theFOUND_ROWS()
description for information about an alternative strategy.Support for
TABLESPACE = innodb_file_per_table
andTABLESPACE = innodb_temporary
clauses withCREATE TEMPORARY TABLE
is deprecated as of MySQL 8.0.13.For
SELECT
statements, use of anINTO
clause afterFROM
but not at the end of theSELECT
is deprecated as of MySQL 8.0.20. It is preferred to place theINTO
at the end of the statement.For
UNION
statements, these two variants containingINTO
are deprecated as of MySQL 8.0.20:In the trailing query block of a query expression, use of
INTO
beforeFROM
.In a parenthesized trailing block of a query expression, use of
INTO
, regardless of its position relative toFROM
.
See Section 15.2.13.1, “SELECT ... INTO Statement”, and Section 15.2.18, “UNION Clause”.
FLUSH HOSTS
is deprecated as of MySQL 8.0.23. Instead, truncate the Performance Schemahost_cache
table:TRUNCATE TABLE performance_schema.host_cache;
The
TRUNCATE TABLE
operation requires theDROP
privilege for the table.The mysql_upgrade client is deprecated because its capabilities for upgrading the system tables in the
mysql
system schema and objects in other schemas have been moved into the MySQL server. See Section 3.4, “What the MySQL Upgrade Process Upgrades”.The
--no-dd-upgrade
server option is deprecated. It is superseded by the--upgrade
option, which provides finer control over data dictionary and server upgrade behavior.The
mysql_upgrade_info
file, which is created data directory and used to store the MySQL version number, is deprecated; expect it to be removed in a future version of MySQL.The
relay_log_info_file
system variable and--master-info-file
option are deprecated. Previously, these were used to specify the name of the relay log info log and source info log whenrelay_log_info_repository=FILE
andmaster_info_repository=FILE
were set, but those settings have been deprecated. The use of files for the relay log info log and source info log has been superseded by crash-safe replica tables, which are the default in MySQL 8.0.The
max_length_for_sort_data
system variable is now deprecated due to optimizer changes that make it obsolete and of no effect.These legacy parameters for compression of connections to the server are deprecated: The
--compress
client command-line option; theMYSQL_OPT_COMPRESS
option for themysql_options()
C API function; theslave_compressed_protocol
system variable. For information about parameters to use instead, see Section 6.2.8, “Connection Compression Control”.Use of the
MYSQL_PWD
environment variable to specify a MySQL password is deprecated.Use of
VALUES()
to access new row values inINSERT ... ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE
is deprecated as of MySQL 8.0.20. Use aliases for the new row and columns, instead.Because specifying
ON ERROR
beforeON EMPTY
when invokingJSON_TABLE()
is counter to the SQL standard, this syntax is now deprecated in MySQL. Beginning with MySQL 8.0.20, the server prints a warning whenever you attempt to do so. When specifying both of these clauses in a singleJSON_TABLE()
invocation, make sure thatON EMPTY
is used first.Columns with index prefixes have never been supported as part of a table's partitioning key; previously, these were allowed when creating, altering, or upgrading partitioned tables but were excluded by the table's partitioning function, and no warning that this had occurred was issued by the server. This permissive behavior is now deprecated, and subject to removal in a future version of MySQL in which using any such columns in the partitioning key causes the
CREATE TABLE
orALTER TABLE
statement in they occur to be rejected.As of MySQL 8.0.21, whenever columns using index prefixes are specified as part of the partitioning key, a warning is generated for each such column. Whenever a
CREATE TABLE
orALTER TABLE
statement is rejected because all columns in the proposed partitioning key would have index prefixes, the resulting error now provides the exact reason for the rejection. In either instance, this includes cases in which the columns used in the partitioning function are defined implicitly as those in the table's primary key by employing an emptyPARTITION BY KEY()
clause.For more information and examples, see Column index prefixes not supported for key partitioning.
The InnoDB memcached plugin is deprecated as of MySQL 8.0.22; expect support for it to be removed in a future version of MySQL.
The
temptable_use_mmap
variable is deprecated as of MySQL 8.0.26; expect support for it to be removed in a future version of MySQL.The
BINARY
operator is deprecated as of MySQL 8.0.27, and you should expect its removal in a future version of MySQL. Use ofBINARY
now causes a warning. UseCAST(... AS BINARY)
instead.The
default_authentication_plugin
variable is deprecated as of MySQL 8.0.27; expect support for it to be removed in a future version of MySQL.The
default_authentication_plugin
variable is still used in MySQL 8.0.27, but in conjunction with and at a lower precedence than the newauthentication_policy
system variable, which is introduced in MySQL 8.0.27 with the multifactor authentication feature. For details, see The Default Authentication Plugin.The
--abort-slave-event-count
and--disconnect-slave-event-count
server options, used by the MySQL test suite and not normally used in production, are deprecated as of MySQL 8.0.29; expect both options to be removed in a future version of MySQL.The
myisam_repair_threads
system variable and myisamchk--parallel-recover
option are deprecated as of MySQL 8.0.29; expect support for both to be removed in a future release of MySQL.From MySQL 8.0.29, values other than 1 (the default) for
myisam_repair_threads
produce a warning.Previously, MySQL accepted
DATE
,TIME
,DATETIME
, andTIMESTAMP
literals containing an arbitrary number of (arbitrary) delimiter characters, as well asDATETIME
andTIMESTAMP
literals with an arbitrary number of whitespace characters before, after, and between the date and time parts. As of MySQL 8.0.29, the server raises a deprecation warning whenever the literal value contains any of the following:One or more nonstandard delimiter characters
Excess delimiter characters
Whitespace other than the space character (' ',
0x20
)Excess space characters
One deprecation warning is issued per temporal value, even if there are multiple issues with it. This warning is not promoted to an error in strict mode, so that performing an
INSERT
of such a value still succeeds when strict mode is in effect.You should expect the nonstandard behavior to be removed in a future version of MySQL, and take steps now to insure that your applications do not depend on it.
See String and Numeric Literals in Date and Time Context, for more information and examples.
The
replica_parallel_type
system variable and its associated server option--replica-parallel-type
are deprecated as of MySQL 8.0.29. Beginning with this release, reading or setting this value raises a deprecation warning; expect it to be removed in a future version of MySQL.Beginning with MySQL 8.0.30, setting the
replica_parallel_workers
system variable (or the equivalent server option) to 0 is deprecated, and elicits a warning. When you want a replica to use single threading, usereplica_parallel_workers=1
instead, which produces the same result, but with no warning.The
--skip-host-cache
server option is deprecated beginning with MySQL 8.0.30; expect its removal in a future MySQL release. Use thehost_cache_size
system variable instead.The
--old-style-user-limits
option, intended for backwards compatibility with very old (pre-5.0.3) releases, is deprecated as of MySQL 8.0.30; using it now raises a warning. You should expect this option to be removed in a future release of MySQL.The
innodb_log_files_in_group
andinnodb_log_file_size
variables are deprecated as of MySQL 8.0.30. These variables are superseded by theinnodb_redo_log_capacity
variable. For more information, see Section 17.6.5, “Redo Log”.As of MySQL 8.0.32, the use of “FULL” as an unquoted identifier is deprecated, due to the fact that it is a reserved keyword in the SQL standard. This means that a statement such as
CREATE TABLE full (c1 INT, c2 INT)
now raises a warning (ER_WARN_DEPRECATED_IDENT
). To prevent this from happening, change the name or, as shown here, encase it in backticks (`
):CREATE TABLE `full` (c1 INT, c2 INT);
For more information, see Section 11.3, “Keywords and Reserved Words”.
Beginning with MySQL 8.0.32, the use of the dollar sign (
$
) as the leading character of an unquoted identifier is deprecated and produces a warning. Such usage is subject to removal in a future release of MySQL. This includes identifiers used as names of databases, tables, views, columns, or stored programs, as well as aliases for any of these. The dollar sign may still be used as the first character of a quoted identifier. See Section 11.2, “Schema Object Names”, for more information.The
binlog_format
server system variable is deprecated as of MySQL 8.0.34, and is subject to being removed in a future release. Changing the binary logging format, is also deprecated, with the expectation that the removal ofbinlog_format
will leave row-based binary logging, already the default in MySQL 8.0, as the only binary logging format used or supported by MySQL. For this reason, new MySQL installations should use only row-based binary logging; existing replication setups usingbinlog_format=STATEMENT
orbinlog_format=MIXED
logging format should be migrated to the row-based format.The system variables
log_bin_trust_function_creators
andlog_statements_unsafe_for_binlog
, are used exclusively for statement-based logging and replication. For this reason, they are now also deprecated, and subject to removal in a future version of MySQL.Setting or selecting the value of
binlog_format
,log_bin_trust_function_creators
, orlog_statements_unsafe_for_binlog
raises a warning in MySQL 8.0.34 and later.The mysqlpump client utility program is deprecated beginning with MySQL 8.0.34, and produces a deprecation warning when invoked. This program is subject to removal in a future version of MySQL. Since MySQL provides other means of performing database dumps and backups with the same or additional functionality, including mysqldump and MySQL Shell, this program is now considered redundant.
The associated lz4_decompress and zlib_decompress utilities are also deprecated as of MySQL 8.0.34.
The use of a version number without a whitespace character following (or end of comment) is deprecated as of MySQL 8.0.34, and raises a warning. This statement raises a warning in MySQL 8.0.34 or later, as shown here:
mysql> CREATE TABLE t1(a INT, KEY (a)) /*!50110KEY_BLOCK_SIZE=1024*/ ENGINE=MYISAM; Query OK, 0 rows affected, 1 warning (0.01 sec) mysql> SHOW WARNINGS\G *************************** 1. row *************************** Level: Warning Code: 4164 Message: Immediately starting the version comment after the version number is deprecated and may change behavior in a future release. Please insert a white-space character after the version number. 1 row in set (0.00 sec)
To avoid such warnings, insert one or more whitespace characters after the version number, like this:
mysql> CREATE TABLE t2(a INT, KEY (a)) /*!50110 KEY_BLOCK_SIZE=1024*/ ENGINE=MYISAM; Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.00 sec)
See also Section 11.7, “Comments”.
As of MySQL 8.0.34, the
sync_relay_log_info
system variable is deprecated, along with its equivalent server startup option--sync-relay-log-info
. You should expect support for this variable, and for storing replication applier metadata in a file, to be removed in a future version of MySQL. You are advised to update any of your MySQL applications which may depend on it before this occurs.The
binlog_transaction_dependency_tracking
server system variable is deprecated as of MySQL 8.0.35, and subject to removal in a future version of MySQL. Referencing this variable or the equivalent mysqld startup option--binlog-transaction-dependency-tracking
now triggers a warning. There are no plans to replace this variable or its functionality, which is expected later to be made internal to the server.
The following items are obsolete and have been removed in MySQL 8.0. Where alternatives are shown, applications should be updated to use them.
For MySQL 5.7 applications that use features removed in MySQL 8.0, statements may fail when replicated from a MySQL 5.7 source to a MySQL 8.0 replica, or may have different effects on source and replica. To avoid such problems, applications that use features removed in MySQL 8.0 should be revised to avoid them and use alternatives when possible.
The
innodb_locks_unsafe_for_binlog
system variable was removed. TheREAD COMMITTED
isolation level provides similar functionality.The
information_schema_stats
variable, introduced in MySQL 8.0.0, was removed and replaced byinformation_schema_stats_expiry
in MySQL 8.0.3.information_schema_stats_expiry
defines an expiration setting for cachedINFORMATION_SCHEMA
table statistics. For more information, see Section 10.2.3, “Optimizing INFORMATION_SCHEMA Queries”.Code related to obsolete
InnoDB
system tables was removed in MySQL 8.0.3.INFORMATION_SCHEMA
views based onInnoDB
system tables were replaced by internal system views on data dictionary tables. AffectedInnoDB
INFORMATION_SCHEMA
views were renamed:Table 1.1 Renamed InnoDB Information Schema Views
Old Name New Name INNODB_SYS_COLUMNS
INNODB_COLUMNS
INNODB_SYS_DATAFILES
INNODB_DATAFILES
INNODB_SYS_FIELDS
INNODB_FIELDS
INNODB_SYS_FOREIGN
INNODB_FOREIGN
INNODB_SYS_FOREIGN_COLS
INNODB_FOREIGN_COLS
INNODB_SYS_INDEXES
INNODB_INDEXES
INNODB_SYS_TABLES
INNODB_TABLES
INNODB_SYS_TABLESPACES
INNODB_TABLESPACES
INNODB_SYS_TABLESTATS
INNODB_TABLESTATS
INNODB_SYS_VIRTUAL
INNODB_VIRTUAL
After upgrading to MySQL 8.0.3 or later, update any scripts that reference previous
InnoDB
INFORMATION_SCHEMA
view names.The following features related to account management are removed:
Using
GRANT
to create users. Instead, useCREATE USER
. Following this practice makes theNO_AUTO_CREATE_USER
SQL mode immaterial forGRANT
statements, so it too is removed, and an error now is written to the server log when the presence of this value for thesql_mode
option in the options file prevents mysqld from starting.Using
GRANT
to modify account properties other than privilege assignments. This includes authentication, SSL, and resource-limit properties. Instead, establish such properties at account-creation time withCREATE USER
or modify them afterward withALTER USER
.IDENTIFIED BY PASSWORD '
syntax forauth_string
'CREATE USER
andGRANT
. Instead, useIDENTIFIED WITH
forauth_plugin
AS 'auth_string
'CREATE USER
andALTER USER
, where the'
value is in a format compatible with the named plugin.auth_string
'Additionally, because
IDENTIFIED BY PASSWORD
syntax was removed, thelog_builtin_as_identified_by_password
system variable is superfluous and was removed.The
PASSWORD()
function. Additionally,PASSWORD()
removal means thatSET PASSWORD ... = PASSWORD('
syntax is no longer available.auth_string
')The
old_passwords
system variable.
The query cache was removed. Removal includes these items:
The
FLUSH QUERY CACHE
andRESET QUERY CACHE
statements.These system variables:
query_cache_limit
,query_cache_min_res_unit
,query_cache_size
,query_cache_type
,query_cache_wlock_invalidate
.These status variables:
Qcache_free_blocks
,Qcache_free_memory
,Qcache_hits
,Qcache_inserts
,Qcache_lowmem_prunes
,Qcache_not_cached
,Qcache_queries_in_cache
,Qcache_total_blocks
.These thread states:
checking privileges on cached query
,checking query cache for query
,invalidating query cache entries
,sending cached result to client
,storing result in query cache
,Waiting for query cache lock
.The
SQL_CACHE
SELECT
modifier.
These deprecated query cache items remain deprecated, but have no effect; expect them to be removed in a future MySQL release:
The
SQL_NO_CACHE
SELECT
modifier.The
ndb_cache_check_time
system variable.
The
have_query_cache
system variable remains deprecated, and always has a value ofNO
; expect it to be removed in a future MySQL release.The data dictionary provides information about database objects, so the server no longer checks directory names in the data directory to find databases. Consequently, the
--ignore-db-dir
option andignore_db_dirs
system variables are extraneous and are removed.The DDL log, also known as the metadata log, has been removed. Beginning with MySQL 8.0.3, this functionality is handled by the data dictionary
innodb_ddl_log
table. See Viewing DDL Logs.The
tx_isolation
andtx_read_only
system variables have been removed. Usetransaction_isolation
andtransaction_read_only
instead.The
sync_frm
system variable has been removed because.frm
files have become obsolete.The
secure_auth
system variable and--secure-auth
client option have been removed. TheMYSQL_SECURE_AUTH
option for themysql_options()
C API function was removed.The
multi_range_count
system variable is removed.The
log_warnings
system variable and--log-warnings
server option have been removed. Use thelog_error_verbosity
system variable instead.The global scope for the
sql_log_bin
system variable was removed.sql_log_bin
has session scope only, and applications that rely on accessing@@GLOBAL.sql_log_bin
should be adjusted.The
metadata_locks_cache_size
andmetadata_locks_hash_instances
system variables are removed.The unused
date_format
,datetime_format
,time_format
, andmax_tmp_tables
system variables are removed.These deprecated compatibility SQL modes are removed:
DB2
,MAXDB
,MSSQL
,MYSQL323
,MYSQL40
,ORACLE
,POSTGRESQL
,NO_FIELD_OPTIONS
,NO_KEY_OPTIONS
,NO_TABLE_OPTIONS
. They can no longer be assigned to thesql_mode
system variable or used as permitted values for the mysqldump--compatible
option.Removal of
MAXDB
means that theTIMESTAMP
data type forCREATE TABLE
orALTER TABLE
is treated asTIMESTAMP
, and is no longer treated asDATETIME
.The deprecated
ASC
orDESC
qualifiers forGROUP BY
clauses are removed. Queries that previously relied onGROUP BY
sorting may produce results that differ from previous MySQL versions. To produce a given sort order, provide anORDER BY
clause.The
EXTENDED
andPARTITIONS
keywords for theEXPLAIN
statement have been removed. These keywords are unnecessary because their effect is always enabled.These encryption-related items are removed:
The
ENCODE()
andDECODE()
functions.The
ENCRYPT()
function.The
DES_ENCRYPT()
, andDES_DECRYPT()
functions, the--des-key-file
option, thehave_crypt
system variable, theDES_KEY_FILE
option for theFLUSH
statement, and theHAVE_CRYPT
CMake option.
In place of the removed encryption functions: For
ENCRYPT()
, consider usingSHA2()
instead for one-way hashing. For the others, consider usingAES_ENCRYPT()
andAES_DECRYPT()
instead.In MySQL 5.7, several spatial functions available under multiple names were deprecated to move in the direction of making the spatial function namespace more consistent, the goal being that each spatial function name begin with
ST_
if it performs an exact operation, or withMBR
if it performs an operation based on minimum bounding rectangles. In MySQL 8.0, the deprecated functions are removed to leave only the correspondingST_
andMBR
functions:These functions are removed in favor of the
MBR
names:Contains()
,Disjoint()
,Equals()
,Intersects()
,Overlaps()
,Within()
.These functions are removed in favor of the
ST_
names:Area()
,AsBinary()
,AsText()
,AsWKB()
,AsWKT()
,Buffer()
,Centroid()
,ConvexHull()
,Crosses()
,Dimension()
,Distance()
,EndPoint()
,Envelope()
,ExteriorRing()
,GeomCollFromText()
,GeomCollFromWKB()
,GeomFromText()
,GeomFromWKB()
,GeometryCollectionFromText()
,GeometryCollectionFromWKB()
,GeometryFromText()
,GeometryFromWKB()
,GeometryN()
,GeometryType()
,InteriorRingN()
,IsClosed()
,IsEmpty()
,IsSimple()
,LineFromText()
,LineFromWKB()
,LineStringFromText()
,LineStringFromWKB()
,MLineFromText()
,MLineFromWKB()
,MPointFromText()
,MPointFromWKB()
,MPolyFromText()
,MPolyFromWKB()
,MultiLineStringFromText()
,MultiLineStringFromWKB()
,MultiPointFromText()
,MultiPointFromWKB()
,MultiPolygonFromText()
,MultiPolygonFromWKB()
,NumGeometries()
,NumInteriorRings()
,NumPoints()
,PointFromText()
,PointFromWKB()
,PointN()
,PolyFromText()
,PolyFromWKB()
,PolygonFromText()
,PolygonFromWKB()
,SRID()
,StartPoint()
,Touches()
,X()
,Y()
.GLength()
is removed in favor ofST_Length()
.
The functions described in Section 14.16.4, “Functions That Create Geometry Values from WKB Values” previously accepted either WKB strings or geometry arguments. Geometry arguments are no longer permitted and produce an error. See that section for guidelines for migrating queries away from using geometry arguments.
The parser no longer treats
\N
as a synonym forNULL
in SQL statements. UseNULL
instead.This change does not affect text file import or export operations performed with
LOAD DATA
orSELECT ... INTO OUTFILE
, for whichNULL
continues to be represented by\N
. See Section 15.2.9, “LOAD DATA Statement”.PROCEDURE ANALYSE()
syntax is removed.The client-side
--ssl
and--ssl-verify-server-cert
options have been removed. Use--ssl-mode=REQUIRED
instead of--ssl=1
or--enable-ssl
. Use--ssl-mode=DISABLED
instead of--ssl=0
,--skip-ssl
, or--disable-ssl
. Use--ssl-mode=VERIFY_IDENTITY
instead of--ssl-verify-server-cert
options. (The server-side--ssl
option is still available, but is deprecated as of MySQL 8.0.26 and subject to removal in a future MySQL version.)For the C API,
MYSQL_OPT_SSL_ENFORCE
andMYSQL_OPT_SSL_VERIFY_SERVER_CERT
options formysql_options()
correspond to the client-side--ssl
and--ssl-verify-server-cert
options and are removed. UseMYSQL_OPT_SSL_MODE
with an option value ofSSL_MODE_REQUIRED
orSSL_MODE_VERIFY_IDENTITY
instead.The
--temp-pool
server option was removed.The
ignore_builtin_innodb
system variable is removed.The server no longer performs conversion of pre-MySQL 5.1 database names containing special characters to 5.1 format with the addition of a
#mysql50#
prefix. Because these conversions are no longer performed, the--fix-db-names
and--fix-table-names
options for mysqlcheck, theUPGRADE DATA DIRECTORY NAME
clause for theALTER DATABASE
statement, and theCom_alter_db_upgrade
status variable are removed.Upgrades are supported only from one major version to another (for example, 5.0 to 5.1, or 5.1 to 5.5), so there should be little remaining need for conversion of older 5.0 database names to current versions of MySQL. As a workaround, upgrade a MySQL 5.0 installation to MySQL 5.1 before upgrading to a more recent release.
The mysql_install_db program has been removed from MySQL distributions. Data directory initialization should be performed by invoking mysqld with the
--initialize
or--initialize-insecure
option instead. In addition, the--bootstrap
option for mysqld that was used by mysql_install_db was removed, and theINSTALL_SCRIPTDIR
CMake
option that controlled the installation location for mysql_install_db was removed.The generic partitioning handler was removed from the MySQL server. In order to support partitioning of a given table, the storage engine used for the table must now provide its own (“native”) partitioning handler. The
--partition
and--skip-partition
options are removed from the MySQL Server, and partitioning-related entries are no longer shown in the output ofSHOW PLUGINS
or in the Information SchemaPLUGINS
table.Two MySQL storage engines currently provide native partitioning support:
InnoDB
andNDB
. Of these, onlyInnoDB
is supported in MySQL 8.0. Any attempt to create partitioned tables in MySQL 8.0 using any other storage engine fails.Ramifications for upgrades. The direct upgrade of a partitioned table using a storage engine other than
InnoDB
(such asMyISAM
) from MySQL 5.7 (or earlier) to MySQL 8.0 is not supported. There are two options for handling such a table:Remove the table's partitioning, using
ALTER TABLE ... REMOVE PARTITIONING
.Change the storage engine used for the table to
InnoDB
, withALTER TABLE ... ENGINE=INNODB
.
At least one of the two operations just listed must be performed for each partitioned non-
InnoDB
table prior to upgrading the server to MySQL 8.0. Otherwise, such a table cannot be used following the upgrade.Due to the fact that table creation statements that would result in a partitioned table using a storage engine without partitioning support now fail with an error (ER_CHECK_NOT_IMPLEMENTED), you must make sure that any statements in a dump file (such as that written by mysqldump) from an older version of MySQL that you wish to import into a MySQL 8.0 server that create partitioned tables do not also specify a storage engine such as
MyISAM
that has no native partitioning handler. You can do this by performing either of the following:Remove any references to partitioning from
CREATE TABLE
statements that use a value for theSTORAGE ENGINE
option other thanInnoDB
.Specifying the storage engine as
InnoDB
, or allowInnoDB
to be used as the table's storage engine by default.
For more information, see Section 26.6.2, “Partitioning Limitations Relating to Storage Engines”.
System and status variable information is no longer maintained in the
INFORMATION_SCHEMA
. These tables are removed:GLOBAL_VARIABLES
,SESSION_VARIABLES
,GLOBAL_STATUS
,SESSION_STATUS
. Use the corresponding Performance Schema tables instead. See Section 29.12.14, “Performance Schema System Variable Tables”, and Section 29.12.15, “Performance Schema Status Variable Tables”. In addition, theshow_compatibility_56
system variable was removed. It was used in the transition period during which system and status variable information inINFORMATION_SCHEMA
tables was moved to Performance Schema tables, and is no longer needed. These status variables are removed:Slave_heartbeat_period
,Slave_last_heartbeat
,Slave_received_heartbeats
,Slave_retried_transactions
,Slave_running
. The information they provided is available in Performance Schema tables; see Migrating to Performance Schema System and Status Variable Tables.The Performance Schema
setup_timers
table was removed, as was theTICK
row in theperformance_timers
table.The
libmysqld
embedded server library is removed, along with:The
mysql_options()
MYSQL_OPT_GUESS_CONNECTION
,MYSQL_OPT_USE_EMBEDDED_CONNECTION
,MYSQL_OPT_USE_REMOTE_CONNECTION
, andMYSQL_SET_CLIENT_IP
optionsThe mysql_config
--libmysqld-libs
,--embedded-libs
, and--embedded
optionsThe CMake
WITH_EMBEDDED_SERVER
,WITH_EMBEDDED_SHARED_LIBRARY
, andINSTALL_SECURE_FILE_PRIV_EMBEDDEDDIR
optionsThe (undocumented) mysql
--server-arg
optionThe mysqltest
--embedded-server
,--server-arg
, and--server-file
optionsThe mysqltest_embedded and mysql_client_test_embedded test programs
The mysql_plugin utility was removed. Alternatives include loading plugins at server startup using the
--plugin-load
or--plugin-load-add
option, or at runtime using theINSTALL PLUGIN
statement.The resolveip utility is removed. nslookup, host, or dig can be used instead.
The resolve_stack_dump utility is removed. Stack traces from official MySQL builds are always symbolized, so there is no need to use resolve_stack_dump.
The following server error codes are not used and have been removed. Applications that test specifically for any of these errors should be updated.
ER_BINLOG_READ_EVENT_CHECKSUM_FAILURE ER_BINLOG_ROW_RBR_TO_SBR ER_BINLOG_ROW_WRONG_TABLE_DEF ER_CANT_ACTIVATE_LOG ER_CANT_CHANGE_GTID_NEXT_IN_TRANSACTION ER_CANT_CREATE_FEDERATED_TABLE ER_CANT_CREATE_SROUTINE ER_CANT_DELETE_FILE ER_CANT_GET_WD ER_CANT_SET_GTID_PURGED_WHEN_GTID_MODE_IS_OFF ER_CANT_SET_WD ER_CANT_WRITE_LOCK_LOG_TABLE ER_CREATE_DB_WITH_READ_LOCK ER_CYCLIC_REFERENCE ER_DB_DROP_DELETE ER_DELAYED_NOT_SUPPORTED ER_DIFF_GROUPS_PROC ER_DISK_FULL ER_DROP_DB_WITH_READ_LOCK ER_DROP_USER ER_DUMP_NOT_IMPLEMENTED ER_ERROR_DURING_CHECKPOINT ER_ERROR_ON_CLOSE ER_EVENTS_DB_ERROR ER_EVENT_CANNOT_DELETE ER_EVENT_CANT_ALTER ER_EVENT_COMPILE_ERROR ER_EVENT_DATA_TOO_LONG ER_EVENT_DROP_FAILED ER_EVENT_MODIFY_QUEUE_ERROR ER_EVENT_NEITHER_M_EXPR_NOR_M_AT ER_EVENT_OPEN_TABLE_FAILED ER_EVENT_STORE_FAILED ER_EXEC_STMT_WITH_OPEN_CURSOR ER_FAILED_ROUTINE_BREAK_BINLOG ER_FLUSH_MASTER_BINLOG_CLOSED ER_FORM_NOT_FOUND ER_FOUND_GTID_EVENT_WHEN_GTID_MODE_IS_OFF__UNUSED ER_FRM_UNKNOWN_TYPE ER_GOT_SIGNAL ER_GRANT_PLUGIN_USER_EXISTS ER_GTID_MODE_REQUIRES_BINLOG ER_GTID_NEXT_IS_NOT_IN_GTID_NEXT_LIST ER_HASHCHK ER_INDEX_REBUILD ER_INNODB_NO_FT_USES_PARSER ER_LIST_OF_FIELDS_ONLY_IN_HASH_ERROR ER_LOAD_DATA_INVALID_COLUMN_UNUSED ER_LOGGING_PROHIBIT_CHANGING_OF ER_MALFORMED_DEFINER ER_MASTER_KEY_ROTATION_ERROR_BY_SE ER_NDB_CANT_SWITCH_BINLOG_FORMAT ER_NEVER_USED ER_NISAMCHK ER_NO_CONST_EXPR_IN_RANGE_OR_LIST_ERROR ER_NO_FILE_MAPPING ER_NO_GROUP_FOR_PROC ER_NO_RAID_COMPILED ER_NO_SUCH_KEY_VALUE ER_NO_SUCH_PARTITION__UNUSED ER_OBSOLETE_CANNOT_LOAD_FROM_TABLE ER_OBSOLETE_COL_COUNT_DOESNT_MATCH_CORRUPTED ER_ORDER_WITH_PROC ER_PARTITION_SUBPARTITION_ERROR ER_PARTITION_SUBPART_MIX_ERROR ER_PART_STATE_ERROR ER_PASSWD_LENGTH ER_QUERY_ON_MASTER ER_RBR_NOT_AVAILABLE ER_SKIPPING_LOGGED_TRANSACTION ER_SLAVE_CHANNEL_DELETE ER_SLAVE_MULTIPLE_CHANNELS_HOST_PORT ER_SLAVE_MUST_STOP ER_SLAVE_WAS_NOT_RUNNING ER_SLAVE_WAS_RUNNING ER_SP_GOTO_IN_HNDLR ER_SP_PROC_TABLE_CORRUPT ER_SQL_MODE_NO_EFFECT ER_SR_INVALID_CREATION_CTX ER_TABLE_NEEDS_UPG_PART ER_TOO_MUCH_AUTO_TIMESTAMP_COLS ER_UNEXPECTED_EOF ER_UNION_TABLES_IN_DIFFERENT_DIR ER_UNSUPPORTED_BY_REPLICATION_THREAD ER_UNUSED1 ER_UNUSED2 ER_UNUSED3 ER_UNUSED4 ER_UNUSED5 ER_UNUSED6 ER_VIEW_SELECT_DERIVED_UNUSED ER_WRONG_MAGIC ER_WSAS_FAILED
The deprecated
INFORMATION_SCHEMA
INNODB_LOCKS
andINNODB_LOCK_WAITS
tables are removed. Use the Performance Schemadata_locks
anddata_lock_waits
tables instead.NoteIn MySQL 5.7, the
LOCK_TABLE
column in theINNODB_LOCKS
table and thelocked_table
column in thesys
schemainnodb_lock_waits
andx$innodb_lock_waits
views contain combined schema/table name values. In MySQL 8.0, thedata_locks
table and thesys
schema views contain separate schema name and table name columns. See Section 30.4.3.9, “The innodb_lock_waits and x$innodb_lock_waits Views”.InnoDB
no longer supports compressed temporary tables. Wheninnodb_strict_mode
is enabled (the default),CREATE TEMPORARY TABLE
returns an error ifROW_FORMAT=COMPRESSED
orKEY_BLOCK_SIZE
is specified. Ifinnodb_strict_mode
is disabled, warnings are issued and the temporary table is created using a non-compressed row format.InnoDB
no longer creates.isl
files (InnoDB
Symbolic Link files) when creating tablespace data files outside of the MySQL data directory. Theinnodb_directories
option now supports locating tablespace files created outside of the data directory.With this change, moving a remote tablespace while the server is offline by manually modifying an
.isl
file is no longer supported. Moving remote tablespace files is now supported by theinnodb_directories
option. See Section 17.6.3.6, “Moving Tablespace Files While the Server is Offline”.The following
InnoDB
file format variables were removed:File format variables were necessary for creating tables compatible with earlier versions of
InnoDB
in MySQL 5.1. Now that MySQL 5.1 has reached the end of its product lifecycle, these options are no longer required.The
FILE_FORMAT
column was removed from theINNODB_TABLES
andINNODB_TABLESPACES
Information Schema tables.The
innodb_support_xa
system variable, which enables support for two-phase commit in XA transactions, was removed.InnoDB
support for two-phase commit in XA transactions is always enabled.Support for DTrace was removed.
The
JSON_APPEND()
function was removed. UseJSON_ARRAY_APPEND()
instead.Support for placing table partitions in shared
InnoDB
tablespaces was removed in MySQL 8.0.13. Shared tablespaces include theInnoDB
system tablespace and general tablespaces. For information about identifying partitions in shared tablespaces and moving them to file-per-table tablespaces, see Section 3.6, “Preparing Your Installation for Upgrade”.Support for setting user variables in statements other than
SET
was deprecated in MySQL 8.0.13. This functionality is subject to removal in MySQL 8.4.The
--ndb
perror option was removed. Use the ndb_perror utility instead.The
innodb_undo_logs
variable was removed. Theinnodb_rollback_segments
variables performs the same function and should be used instead.The
Innodb_available_undo_logs
status variable was removed. The number of available rollback segments per tablespace may be retrieved usingSHOW VARIABLES LIKE 'innodb_rollback_segments';
As of MySQL 8.0.14, the previously deprecated
innodb_undo_tablespaces
variable is no longer configurable. For more information, see Section 17.6.3.4, “Undo Tablespaces”.Support for the
ALTER TABLE ... UPGRADE PARTITIONING
statement has been removed.As of MySQL 8.0.16, support for the
internal_tmp_disk_storage_engine
system variable has been removed; internal temporary tables on disk now always use theInnoDB
storage engine. See Storage Engine for On-Disk Internal Temporary Tables,for more information.The
DISABLE_SHARED
CMake option was unused and has been removed.The
myisam_repair_threads
system variable is removed as of MySQL 8.0.30.