When a replication source server shuts down and restarts, its
        MEMORY tables become empty. To
        replicate this effect to replicas, the first time that the
        source uses a given MEMORY table
        after startup, it logs an event that notifies replicas that the
        table must be emptied by writing a
        DELETE or
        TRUNCATE TABLE statement for that
        table to the binary log. This generated event is identifiable by
        a comment in the binary log, and if GTIDs are in use on the
        server, it has a GTID assigned. The statement is always logged
        in statement format, even if the binary logging format is set to
        ROW, and it is written even if
        read_only or
        super_read_only mode is set on the server.
        Note that the replica still has outdated data in a
        MEMORY table during the interval
        between the source's restart and its first use of the table. To
        avoid this interval when a direct query to the replica could
        return stale data, you can set the
        init_file system variable to
        name a file containing statements that populate the
        MEMORY table on the source at startup.
      
        When a replica server shuts down and restarts, its
        MEMORY tables become empty. This
        causes the replica to be out of synchrony with the source and
        may lead to other failures or cause the replica to stop:
- Row-format updates and deletes received from the source may fail with - Can't find record in '.- memory_table'
- Statements such as - INSERT INTO ... SELECT FROMmay insert a different set of rows on the source and replica.- memory_table
        The replica also writes a DELETE
        or TRUNCATE TABLE statement to
        its own binary log, which is passed on to any downstream
        replicas, causing them to empty their own
        MEMORY tables.
      
        The safe way to restart a replica that is replicating
        MEMORY tables is to first drop or
        delete all rows from the MEMORY
        tables on the source and wait until those changes have
        replicated to the replica. Then it is safe to restart the
        replica.
      
        An alternative restart method may apply in some cases. When
        binlog_format=ROW, you can
        prevent the replica from stopping if you set
        replica_exec_mode=IDEMPOTENT
        before you start the replica again. This allows the replica to
        continue to replicate, but its
        MEMORY tables still differ from
        those on the source. This is acceptable if the application logic
        is such that the contents of MEMORY
        tables can be safely lost (for example, if the
        MEMORY tables are used for
        caching).
        replica_exec_mode=IDEMPOTENT
        applies globally to all tables, so it may hide other replication
        errors in non-MEMORY tables.
      
        (The method just described is not applicable in NDB Cluster,
        where replica_exec_mode is
        always IDEMPOTENT, and cannot be changed.)
      
        The size of MEMORY tables is
        limited by the value of the
        max_heap_table_size system
        variable, which is not replicated (see
        Section 19.5.1.40, “Replication and Variables”). A change in
        max_heap_table_size takes effect for
        MEMORY tables that are created or updated
        using ALTER TABLE
        ... ENGINE = MEMORY or TRUNCATE
        TABLE following the change, or for all
        MEMORY tables following a server
        restart. If you increase the value of this variable on the
        source without doing so on the replica, it becomes possible for
        a table on the source to grow larger than its counterpart on the
        replica, leading to inserts that succeed on the source but fail
        on the replica with Table is full errors.
        This is a known issue (Bug #48666). In such cases, you must set
        the global value of
        max_heap_table_size on the
        replica as well as on the source, then restart replication. It
        is also recommended that you restart both the source and replica
        MySQL servers, to ensure that the new value takes complete
        (global) effect on each of them.
      
        See Section 18.3, “The MEMORY Storage Engine”, for more
        information about MEMORY tables.