If you have MyISAM
tables that you want
to convert to InnoDB
for better
reliability and scalability, review the following guidelines and
tips before converting.
Partitioned MyISAM
tables created in previous
versions of MySQL are not compatible with MySQL 9.0.
Such tables must be prepared prior to upgrade, either by removing
the partitioning, or by converting them to
InnoDB
. See
Section 26.6.2, “Partitioning Limitations Relating to Storage Engines”, for
more information.
As you transition away from MyISAM
tables,
lower the value of the
key_buffer_size
configuration
option to free memory no longer needed for caching results.
Increase the value of the
innodb_buffer_pool_size
configuration option, which performs a similar role of allocating
cache memory for InnoDB
tables. The
InnoDB
buffer
pool caches both table data and index data, speeding up
lookups for queries and keeping query results in memory for reuse.
For guidance regarding buffer pool size configuration, see
Section 10.12.3.1, “How MySQL Uses Memory”.
Because MyISAM
tables do not support
transactions, you might
not have paid much attention to the
autocommit
configuration option
and the COMMIT
and
ROLLBACK
statements. These keywords are important to allow multiple
sessions to read and write InnoDB
tables
concurrently, providing substantial scalability benefits in
write-heavy workloads.
While a transaction is open, the system keeps a snapshot of the data as seen at the beginning of the transaction, which can cause substantial overhead if the system inserts, updates, and deletes millions of rows while a stray transaction keeps running. Thus, take care to avoid transactions that run for too long:
If you are using a mysql session for interactive experiments, always
COMMIT
(to finalize the changes) orROLLBACK
(to undo the changes) when finished. Close down interactive sessions rather than leave them open for long periods, to avoid keeping transactions open for long periods by accident.Make sure that any error handlers in your application also
ROLLBACK
incomplete changes orCOMMIT
completed changes.ROLLBACK
is a relatively expensive operation, becauseINSERT
,UPDATE
, andDELETE
operations are written toInnoDB
tables prior to theCOMMIT
, with the expectation that most changes are committed successfully and rollbacks are rare. When experimenting with large volumes of data, avoid making changes to large numbers of rows and then rolling back those changes.When loading large volumes of data with a sequence of
INSERT
statements, periodicallyCOMMIT
the results to avoid having transactions that last for hours. In typical load operations for data warehousing, if something goes wrong, you truncate the table (usingTRUNCATE TABLE
) and start over from the beginning rather than doing aROLLBACK
.
The preceding tips save memory and disk space that can be wasted
during too-long transactions. When transactions are shorter than
they should be, the problem is excessive I/O. With each
COMMIT
, MySQL makes sure each
change is safely recorded to disk, which involves some I/O.
For most operations on
InnoDB
tables, you should use the settingautocommit=0
. From an efficiency perspective, this avoids unnecessary I/O when you issue large numbers of consecutiveINSERT
,UPDATE
, orDELETE
statements. From a safety perspective, this allows you to issue aROLLBACK
statement to recover lost or garbled data if you make a mistake on the mysql command line, or in an exception handler in your application.autocommit=1
is suitable forInnoDB
tables when running a sequence of queries for generating reports or analyzing statistics. In this situation, there is no I/O penalty related toCOMMIT
orROLLBACK
, andInnoDB
can automatically optimize the read-only workload.If you make a series of related changes, finalize all the changes at once with a single
COMMIT
at the end. For example, if you insert related pieces of information into several tables, do a singleCOMMIT
after making all the changes. Or if you run many consecutiveINSERT
statements, do a singleCOMMIT
after all the data is loaded; if you are doing millions ofINSERT
statements, perhaps split up the huge transaction by issuing aCOMMIT
every ten thousand or hundred thousand records, so the transaction does not grow too large.Remember that even a
SELECT
statement opens a transaction, so after running some report or debugging queries in an interactive mysql session, either issue aCOMMIT
or close the mysql session.
For related information, see Section 17.7.2.2, “autocommit, Commit, and Rollback”.
You might see warning messages referring to
“deadlocks” in the MySQL error log, or the output of
SHOW ENGINE INNODB
STATUS
. A deadlock
is not a serious issue for InnoDB
tables, and
often does not require any corrective action. When two
transactions start modifying multiple tables, accessing the tables
in a different order, they can reach a state where each
transaction is waiting for the other and neither can proceed. When
deadlock detection
is enabled (the default), MySQL immediately detects this condition
and cancels (rolls back) the
“smaller” transaction, allowing the other to proceed.
If deadlock detection is disabled using the
innodb_deadlock_detect
configuration option, InnoDB
relies on the
innodb_lock_wait_timeout
setting
to roll back transactions in case of a deadlock.
Either way, your applications need error-handling logic to restart a transaction that is forcibly cancelled due to a deadlock. When you re-issue the same SQL statements as before, the original timing issue no longer applies. Either the other transaction has already finished and yours can proceed, or the other transaction is still in progress and your transaction waits until it finishes.
If deadlock warnings occur constantly, you might review the
application code to reorder the SQL operations in a consistent
way, or to shorten the transactions. You can test with the
innodb_print_all_deadlocks
option
enabled to see all deadlock warnings in the MySQL error log,
rather than only the last warning in the
SHOW ENGINE INNODB
STATUS
output.
For more information, see Section 17.7.5, “Deadlocks in InnoDB”.
To get the best performance from InnoDB
tables,
you can adjust a number of parameters related to storage layout.
When you convert MyISAM
tables that are large,
frequently accessed, and hold vital data, investigate and consider
the innodb_file_per_table
and
innodb_page_size
variables, and
the
ROW_FORMAT
and KEY_BLOCK_SIZE
clauses of the
CREATE TABLE
statement.
During your initial experiments, the most important setting is
innodb_file_per_table
. When this
setting is enabled, which is the default, new
InnoDB
tables are implicitly created in
file-per-table
tablespaces. In contrast with the InnoDB
system
tablespace, file-per-table tablespaces allow disk space to be
reclaimed by the operating system when a table is truncated or
dropped. File-per-table tablespaces also support
DYNAMIC and
COMPRESSED row
formats and associated features such as table compression,
efficient off-page storage for long variable-length columns, and
large index prefixes. For more information, see
Section 17.6.3.2, “File-Per-Table Tablespaces”.
You can also store InnoDB
tables in a shared
general tablespace, which support multiple tables and all row
formats. For more information, see
Section 17.6.3.3, “General Tablespaces”.
To convert a non-InnoDB
table to use
InnoDB
use ALTER
TABLE
:
ALTER TABLE table_name ENGINE=InnoDB;
You might make an InnoDB
table that is a clone
of a MyISAM table, rather than using ALTER
TABLE
to perform conversion, to test the old and new
table side-by-side before switching.
Create an empty InnoDB
table with identical
column and index definitions. Use SHOW CREATE TABLE
to see the full
table_name
\GCREATE TABLE
statement to use.
Change the ENGINE
clause to
ENGINE=INNODB
.
To transfer a large volume of data into an empty
InnoDB
table created as shown in the previous
section, insert the rows with INSERT INTO
.
innodb_table
SELECT * FROM
myisam_table
ORDER BY
primary_key_columns
You can also create the indexes for the InnoDB
table after inserting the data. Historically, creating new
secondary indexes was a slow operation for
InnoDB
, but now you can create the indexes
after the data is loaded with relatively little overhead from the
index creation step.
If you have UNIQUE
constraints on secondary
keys, you can speed up a table import by turning off the
uniqueness checks temporarily during the import operation:
SET unique_checks=0;
... import operation ...
SET unique_checks=1;
For big tables, this saves disk I/O because
InnoDB
can use its
change buffer to write
secondary index records as a batch. Be certain that the data
contains no duplicate keys.
unique_checks
permits but does
not require storage engines to ignore duplicate keys.
For better control over the insertion process, you can insert big tables in pieces:
INSERT INTO newtable SELECT * FROM oldtable
WHERE yourkey > something AND yourkey <= somethingelse;
After all records are inserted, you can rename the tables.
During the conversion of big tables, increase the size of the
InnoDB
buffer pool to reduce disk I/O.
Typically, the recommended buffer pool size is 50 to 75 percent of
system memory. You can also increase the size of
InnoDB
log files.
If you intend to make several temporary copies of your data in
InnoDB
tables during the conversion process, it
is recommended that you create the tables in file-per-table
tablespaces so that you can reclaim the disk space when you drop
the tables. When the
innodb_file_per_table
configuration option is enabled (the default), newly created
InnoDB
tables are implicitly created in
file-per-table tablespaces.
Whether you convert the MyISAM
table directly
or create a cloned InnoDB
table, make sure that
you have sufficient disk space to hold both the old and new tables
during the process.
InnoDB
tables require
more disk space than MyISAM
tables.
If an ALTER TABLE
operation runs
out of space, it starts a rollback, and that can take hours if it
is disk-bound. For inserts, InnoDB
uses the
insert buffer to merge secondary index records to indexes in
batches. That saves a lot of disk I/O. For rollback, no such
mechanism is used, and the rollback can take 30 times longer than
the insertion.
In the case of a runaway rollback, if you do not have valuable data in your database, it may be advisable to kill the database process rather than wait for millions of disk I/O operations to complete. For the complete procedure, see Section 17.20.3, “Forcing InnoDB Recovery”.
The PRIMARY KEY
clause is a critical factor
affecting the performance of MySQL queries and the space usage for
tables and indexes. The primary key uniquely identifies a row in a
table. Every row in the table should have a primary key value, and
no two rows can have the same primary key value.
These are guidelines for the primary key, followed by more detailed explanations.
Declare a
PRIMARY KEY
for each table. Typically, it is the most important column that you refer to inWHERE
clauses when looking up a single row.Declare the
PRIMARY KEY
clause in the originalCREATE TABLE
statement, rather than adding it later through anALTER TABLE
statement.Choose the column and its data type carefully. Prefer numeric columns over character or string ones.
Consider using an auto-increment column if there is not another stable, unique, non-null, numeric column to use.
An auto-increment column is also a good choice if there is any doubt whether the value of the primary key column could ever change. Changing the value of a primary key column is an expensive operation, possibly involving rearranging data within the table and within each secondary index.
Consider adding a primary key to any table that does not already have one. Use the smallest practical numeric type based on the maximum projected size of the table. This can make each row slightly more compact, which can yield substantial space savings for large tables. The space savings are multiplied if the table has any secondary indexes, because the primary key value is repeated in each secondary index entry. In addition to reducing data size on disk, a small primary key also lets more data fit into the buffer pool, speeding up all kinds of operations and improving concurrency.
If the table already has a primary key on some longer column, such
as a VARCHAR
, consider adding a new unsigned
AUTO_INCREMENT
column and switching the primary
key to that, even if that column is not referenced in queries.
This design change can produce substantial space savings in the
secondary indexes. You can designate the former primary key
columns as UNIQUE NOT NULL
to enforce the same
constraints as the PRIMARY KEY
clause, that is,
to prevent duplicate or null values across all those columns.
If you spread related information across multiple tables, typically each table uses the same column for its primary key. For example, a personnel database might have several tables, each with a primary key of employee number. A sales database might have some tables with a primary key of customer number, and other tables with a primary key of order number. Because lookups using the primary key are very fast, you can construct efficient join queries for such tables.
If you leave the PRIMARY KEY
clause out
entirely, MySQL creates an invisible one for you. It is a 6-byte
value that might be longer than you need, thus wasting space.
Because it is hidden, you cannot refer to it in queries.
The reliability and scalability features of
InnoDB
require more disk storage than
equivalent MyISAM
tables. You might change the
column and index definitions slightly, for better space
utilization, reduced I/O and memory consumption when processing
result sets, and better query optimization plans making efficient
use of index lookups.
If you set up a numeric ID column for the primary key, use that
value to cross-reference with related values in any other tables,
particularly for join queries.
For example, rather than accepting a country name as input and
doing queries searching for the same name, do one lookup to
determine the country ID, then do other queries (or a single join
query) to look up relevant information across several tables.
Rather than storing a customer or catalog item number as a string
of digits, potentially using up several bytes, convert it to a
numeric ID for storing and querying. A 4-byte unsigned
INT
column can index over 4 billion
items (with the US meaning of billion: 1000 million). For the
ranges of the different integer types, see
Section 13.1.2, “Integer Types (Exact Value) - INTEGER, INT, SMALLINT, TINYINT,
MEDIUMINT, BIGINT”.
InnoDB
files require more care and planning
than MyISAM
files do.
You must not delete the ibdata files that represent the
InnoDB
system tablespace.Methods of moving or copying
InnoDB
tables to a different server are described in Section 17.6.1.4, “Moving or Copying InnoDB Tables”.