A general tablespace is a shared InnoDB
      tablespace that is created using CREATE
      TABLESPACE syntax. General tablespace capabilities and
      features are described under the following topics in this section:
General tablespaces provide the following capabilities:
- Similar to the system tablespace, general tablespaces are shared tablespaces capable of storing data for multiple tables. 
- General tablespaces have a potential memory advantage over file-per-table tablespaces. The server keeps tablespace metadata in memory for the lifetime of a tablespace. Multiple tables in fewer general tablespaces consume less memory for tablespace metadata than the same number of tables in separate file-per-table tablespaces. 
- General tablespace data files can be placed in a directory relative to or independent of the MySQL data directory, which provides you with many of the data file and storage management capabilities of file-per-table tablespaces. As with file-per-table tablespaces, the ability to place data files outside of the MySQL data directory allows you to manage performance of critical tables separately, setup RAID or DRBD for specific tables, or bind tables to particular disks, for example. 
- General tablespaces support all table row formats and associated features. 
- The - TABLESPACEoption can be used with- CREATE TABLEto create tables in a general tablespaces, file-per-table tablespace, or in the system tablespace.
- The - TABLESPACEoption can be used with- ALTER TABLEto move tables between general tablespaces, file-per-table tablespaces, and the system tablespace.
        General tablespaces are created using
        CREATE TABLESPACE syntax.
      
CREATE TABLESPACE tablespace_name
    [ADD DATAFILE 'file_name']
    [FILE_BLOCK_SIZE = value]
        [ENGINE [=] engine_name]
        A general tablespace can be created in the data directory or
        outside of it. To avoid conflicts with implicitly created
        file-per-table tablespaces, creating a general tablespace in a
        subdirectory under the data directory is not supported. When
        creating a general tablespace outside of the data directory, the
        directory must exist and must be known to
        InnoDB prior to creating the tablespace. To
        make an unknown directory known to InnoDB,
        add the directory to the
        innodb_directories argument
        value. innodb_directories is a
        read-only startup option. Configuring it requires restarting the
        server.
      
Examples:
Creating a general tablespace in the data directory:
mysql> CREATE TABLESPACE `ts1` ADD DATAFILE 'ts1.ibd' Engine=InnoDB;or
mysql> CREATE TABLESPACE `ts1` Engine=InnoDB;
        The ADD DATAFILE clause is optional. If the
        ADD DATAFILE clause is not specified when
        creating a tablespace, a tablespace data file with a unique file
        name is created implicitly. The unique file name is a 128 bit
        UUID formatted into five groups of hexadecimal numbers separated
        by dashes
        (aaaaaaaa-bbbb-cccc-dddd-eeeeeeeeeeee).
        General tablespace data files include an
        .ibd file extension. In a replication
        environment, the data file name created on the source is not the
        same as the data file name created on the replica.
      
Creating a general tablespace in a directory outside of the data directory:
mysql> CREATE TABLESPACE `ts1` ADD DATAFILE '/my/tablespace/directory/ts1.ibd' Engine=InnoDB;
        You can specify a path that is relative to the data directory as
        long as the tablespace directory is not under the data
        directory. In this example, the
        my_tablespace directory is at the same
        level as the data directory:
      
mysql> CREATE TABLESPACE `ts1` ADD DATAFILE '../my_tablespace/ts1.ibd' Engine=InnoDB;
          The ENGINE = InnoDB clause must be defined
          as part of the CREATE
          TABLESPACE statement, or InnoDB
          must be defined as the default storage engine
          (default_storage_engine=InnoDB).
        After creating a general tablespace,
        CREATE TABLE
         or
        tbl_name ... TABLESPACE [=]
        tablespace_nameALTER TABLE
         statements
        can be used to add tables to the tablespace, as shown in the
        following examples:
      tbl_name TABLESPACE [=]
        tablespace_name
mysql> CREATE TABLE t1 (c1 INT PRIMARY KEY) TABLESPACE ts1;mysql> ALTER TABLE t2 TABLESPACE ts1;
        Adding table partitions to shared tablespaces is not supported.
        Shared tablespaces include the InnoDB system
        tablespace and general tablespaces.
      
        For detailed syntax information, see CREATE
        TABLE and ALTER TABLE.
        General tablespaces support all table row formats
        (REDUNDANT, COMPACT,
        DYNAMIC, COMPRESSED) with
        the caveat that compressed and uncompressed tables cannot
        coexist in the same general tablespace due to different physical
        page sizes.
      
        For a general tablespace to contain compressed tables
        (ROW_FORMAT=COMPRESSED), the
        FILE_BLOCK_SIZE option must be specified, and
        the FILE_BLOCK_SIZE value must be a valid
        compressed page size in relation to the
        innodb_page_size value. Also,
        the physical page size of the compressed table
        (KEY_BLOCK_SIZE) must be equal to
        FILE_BLOCK_SIZE/1024. For example, if
        innodb_page_size=16KB and
        FILE_BLOCK_SIZE=8K, the
        KEY_BLOCK_SIZE of the table must be 8.
      
        The following table shows permitted
        innodb_page_size,
        FILE_BLOCK_SIZE, and
        KEY_BLOCK_SIZE combinations.
        FILE_BLOCK_SIZE values may also be specified
        in bytes. To determine a valid KEY_BLOCK_SIZE
        value for a given FILE_BLOCK_SIZE, divide the
        FILE_BLOCK_SIZE value by 1024. Table
        compression is not support for 32K and 64K
        InnoDB page sizes. For more information about
        KEY_BLOCK_SIZE, see
        CREATE TABLE, and
        Section 17.9.1.2, “Creating Compressed Tables”.
Table 17.3 Permitted Page Size, FILE_BLOCK_SIZE, and KEY_BLOCK_SIZE Combinations for Compressed Tables
| InnoDB Page Size (innodb_page_size) | Permitted FILE_BLOCK_SIZE Value | Permitted KEY_BLOCK_SIZE Value | 
|---|---|---|
| 64KB | 64K (65536) | Compression is not supported | 
| 32KB | 32K (32768) | Compression is not supported | 
| 16KB | 16K (16384) | None. If innodb_page_sizeis equal toFILE_BLOCK_SIZE, the tablespace cannot
              contain a compressed table. | 
| 16KB | 8K (8192) | 8 | 
| 16KB | 4K (4096) | 4 | 
| 16KB | 2K (2048) | 2 | 
| 16KB | 1K (1024) | 1 | 
| 8KB | 8K (8192) | None. If innodb_page_sizeis equal toFILE_BLOCK_SIZE, the tablespace cannot
              contain a compressed table. | 
| 8KB | 4K (4096) | 4 | 
| 8KB | 2K (2048) | 2 | 
| 8KB | 1K (1024) | 1 | 
| 4KB | 4K (4096) | None. If innodb_page_sizeis equal toFILE_BLOCK_SIZE, the tablespace cannot
              contain a compressed table. | 
| 4KB | 2K (2048) | 2 | 
| 4KB | 1K (1024) | 1 | 
        This example demonstrates creating a general tablespace and
        adding a compressed table. The example assumes a default
        innodb_page_size of 16KB. The
        FILE_BLOCK_SIZE of 8192 requires that the
        compressed table have a KEY_BLOCK_SIZE of 8.
      
mysql> CREATE TABLESPACE `ts2` ADD DATAFILE 'ts2.ibd' FILE_BLOCK_SIZE = 8192 Engine=InnoDB;
mysql> CREATE TABLE t4 (c1 INT PRIMARY KEY) TABLESPACE ts2 ROW_FORMAT=COMPRESSED KEY_BLOCK_SIZE=8;
        If you do not specify FILE_BLOCK_SIZE when
        creating a general tablespace,
        FILE_BLOCK_SIZE defaults to
        innodb_page_size. When
        FILE_BLOCK_SIZE is equal to
        innodb_page_size, the
        tablespace may only contain tables with an uncompressed row
        format (COMPACT,
        REDUNDANT, and DYNAMIC row
        formats).
        ALTER TABLE with the
        TABLESPACE option can be used to move a table
        to an existing general tablespace, to a new file-per-table
        tablespace, or to the system tablespace.
      
        Adding table partitions to shared tablespaces is not supported.
        Shared tablespaces include the InnoDB system
        tablespace and general tablespaces.
      
        To move a table from a file-per-table tablespace or from the
        system tablespace to a general tablespace, specify the name of
        the general tablespace. The general tablespace must exist. See
        ALTER TABLESPACE for more
        information.
      
ALTER TABLE tbl_name TABLESPACE [=] tablespace_name;
        To move a table from a general tablespace or file-per-table
        tablespace to the system tablespace, specify
        innodb_system as the tablespace name.
      
ALTER TABLE tbl_name TABLESPACE [=] innodb_system;
        To move a table from the system tablespace or a general
        tablespace to a file-per-table tablespace, specify
        innodb_file_per_table as the tablespace name.
      
ALTER TABLE tbl_name TABLESPACE [=] innodb_file_per_table;
        ALTER TABLE ... TABLESPACE operations cause a
        full table rebuild, even if the TABLESPACE
        attribute has not changed from its previous value.
      
        ALTER TABLE ... TABLESPACE syntax does not
        support moving a table from a temporary tablespace to a
        persistent tablespace.
      
        The DATA DIRECTORY clause is permitted with
        CREATE TABLE ...
        TABLESPACE=innodb_file_per_table but is otherwise not
        supported for use in combination with the
        TABLESPACE option. The directory specified in
        a DATA DIRECTORY clause must be known to
        InnoDB. For more information, see
        Using the DATA DIRECTORY Clause.
      
Restrictions apply when moving tables from encrypted tablespaces. See Encryption Limitations.
        Renaming a general tablespace is supported using
        ALTER
        TABLESPACE ... RENAME TO syntax.
      
ALTER TABLESPACE s1 RENAME TO s2;
        The CREATE TABLESPACE privilege
        is required to rename a general tablespace.
      
        RENAME TO operations are implicitly performed
        in autocommit mode regardless
        of the autocommit setting.
      
        A RENAME TO operation cannot be performed
        while LOCK TABLES or
        FLUSH TABLES WITH READ
        LOCK is in effect for tables that reside in the
        tablespace.
      
Exclusive metadata locks are taken on tables within a general tablespace while the tablespace is renamed, which prevents concurrent DDL. Concurrent DML is supported.
        The DROP TABLESPACE statement is
        used to drop an InnoDB general tablespace.
      
        All tables must be dropped from the tablespace prior to a
        DROP TABLESPACE operation. If the
        tablespace is not empty, DROP
        TABLESPACE returns an error.
      
Use a query similar to the following to identify tables in a general tablespace.
mysql> SELECT a.NAME AS space_name, b.NAME AS table_name FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.INNODB_TABLESPACES a,
       INFORMATION_SCHEMA.INNODB_TABLES b WHERE a.SPACE=b.SPACE AND a.NAME LIKE 'ts1';
+------------+------------+
| space_name | table_name |
+------------+------------+
| ts1        | test/t1    |
| ts1        | test/t2    |
| ts1        | test/t3    |
+------------+------------+
        A general InnoDB tablespace is not deleted
        automatically when the last table in the tablespace is dropped.
        The tablespace must be dropped explicitly using
        DROP TABLESPACE
        .
      tablespace_name
        A general tablespace does not belong to any particular database.
        A DROP DATABASE operation can
        drop tables that belong to a general tablespace but it cannot
        drop the tablespace, even if the DROP
        DATABASE operation drops all tables that belong to the
        tablespace.
      
        Similar to the system tablespace, truncating or dropping tables
        stored in a general tablespace creates free space internally in
        the general tablespace .ibd data
        file which can only be used for new
        InnoDB data. Space is not released back to
        the operating system as it is when a file-per-table tablespace
        is deleted during a DROP TABLE
        operation.
      
        This example demonstrates how to drop an
        InnoDB general tablespace. The general
        tablespace ts1 is created with a single
        table. The table must be dropped before dropping the tablespace.
      
mysql> CREATE TABLESPACE `ts1` ADD DATAFILE 'ts1.ibd' Engine=InnoDB;
mysql> CREATE TABLE t1 (c1 INT PRIMARY KEY) TABLESPACE ts1 Engine=InnoDB;
mysql> DROP TABLE t1;
mysql> DROP TABLESPACE ts1;
          tablespace_name
- A generated or existing tablespace cannot be changed to a general tablespace. 
- Creation of temporary general tablespaces is not supported. 
- General tablespaces do not support temporary tables. 
- Similar to the system tablespace, truncating or dropping tables stored in a general tablespace creates free space internally in the general tablespace .ibd data file which can only be used for new - InnoDBdata. Space is not released back to the operating system as it is for file-per-table tablespaces.- Additionally, a table-copying - ALTER TABLEoperation on table that resides in a shared tablespace (a general tablespace or the system tablespace) can increase the amount of space used by the tablespace. Such operations require as much additional space as the data in the table plus indexes. The additional space required for the table-copying- ALTER TABLEoperation is not released back to the operating system as it is for file-per-table tablespaces.
- ALTER TABLE ... DISCARD TABLESPACEand- ALTER TABLE ...IMPORT TABLESPACEare not supported for tables that belong to a general tablespace.
- Placing table partitions in general tablespaces is not supported. 
- The - ADD DATAFILEclause is not supported in a replication environment where the source and replica reside on the same host, as it would cause the source and replica to create a tablespace of the same name in the same location, which is not supported. However, if the- ADD DATAFILEclause is omitted, the tablespace is created in the data directory with a generated file name that is unique, which is permitted.
- General tablespaces cannot be created in the undo tablespace directory ( - innodb_undo_directory) unless that directly is known to- InnoDB. Known directories are those defined by the- datadir,- innodb_data_home_dir, and- innodb_directoriesvariables.