Each MyISAM
index file
(.MYI
file) has a counter in the header
that can be used to check whether a table has been closed
properly. If you get the following warning from
CHECK TABLE
or
myisamchk, it means that this counter has
gone out of sync:
clients are using or haven't closed the table properly
This warning doesn't necessarily mean that the table is corrupted, but you should at least check the table.
The counter works as follows:
The first time a table is updated in MySQL, a counter in the header of the index files is incremented.
The counter is not changed during further updates.
When the last instance of a table is closed (because a
FLUSH TABLES
operation was performed or because there is no room in the table cache), the counter is decremented if the table has been updated at any point.When you repair the table or check the table and it is found to be okay, the counter is reset to zero.
To avoid problems with interaction with other processes that might check the table, the counter is not decremented on close if it was zero.
In other words, the counter can become incorrect only under these conditions:
A
MyISAM
table is copied without first issuingLOCK TABLES
andFLUSH TABLES
.MySQL has crashed between an update and the final close. (The table may still be okay because MySQL always issues writes for everything between each statement.)
A table was modified by myisamchk --recover or myisamchk --update-state at the same time that it was in use by mysqld.
Multiple mysqld servers are using the table and one server performed a
REPAIR TABLE
orCHECK TABLE
on the table while it was in use by another server. In this setup, it is safe to useCHECK TABLE
, although you might get the warning from other servers. However,REPAIR TABLE
should be avoided because when one server replaces the data file with a new one, this is not known to the other servers.In general, it is a bad idea to share a data directory among multiple servers. See Section 7.8, “Running Multiple MySQL Instances on One Machine”, for additional discussion.