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MySQL 9.1 Reference Manual  /  ...  /  Defining an NDB Cluster Management Server

25.4.3.5 Defining an NDB Cluster Management Server

The [ndb_mgmd] section is used to configure the behavior of the management server. If multiple management servers are employed, you can specify parameters common to all of them in an [ndb_mgmd default] section. [mgm] and [mgm default] are older aliases for these, supported for backward compatibility.

All parameters in the following list are optional and assume their default values if omitted.

Note

If neither the ExecuteOnComputer nor the HostName parameter is present, the default value localhost is assumed for both.

  • Id

    Version (or later) NDB 9.1.0
    Type or units unsigned
    Default [...]
    Range 1 - 255
    Restart Type

    Initial System Restart: Requires a complete shutdown of the cluster, wiping and restoring the cluster file system from a backup, and then restarting the cluster. (NDB 9.1.0)

    Each node in the cluster has a unique identity. For a management node, this is represented by an integer value in the range 1 to 255, inclusive. This ID is used by all internal cluster messages for addressing the node, and so must be unique for each NDB Cluster node, regardless of the type of node.

    Note

    Data node IDs must be less than 145. If you plan to deploy a large number of data nodes, it is a good idea to limit the node IDs for management nodes (and API nodes) to values greater than 144.

    The use of the Id parameter for identifying management nodes is deprecated in favor of NodeId. Although Id continues to be supported for backward compatibility, it now generates a warning and is subject to removal in a future version of NDB Cluster.

  • NodeId

    Version (or later) NDB 9.1.0
    Type or units unsigned
    Default [...]
    Range 1 - 255
    Restart Type

    Initial System Restart: Requires a complete shutdown of the cluster, wiping and restoring the cluster file system from a backup, and then restarting the cluster. (NDB 9.1.0)

    Each node in the cluster has a unique identity. For a management node, this is represented by an integer value in the range 1 to 255 inclusive. This ID is used by all internal cluster messages for addressing the node, and so must be unique for each NDB Cluster node, regardless of the type of node.

    Note

    Data node IDs must be less than 145. If you plan to deploy a large number of data nodes, it is a good idea to limit the node IDs for management nodes (and API nodes) to values greater than 144.

    NodeId is the preferred parameter name to use when identifying management nodes. Although the older Id continues to be supported for backward compatibility, it is now deprecated and generates a warning when used; it is also subject to removal in a future NDB Cluster release.

  • ExecuteOnComputer

    Version (or later) NDB 9.1.0
    Type or units name
    Default [...]
    Range ...
    Deprecated Yes (in NDB 7.5)
    Restart Type

    System Restart: Requires a complete shutdown and restart of the cluster. (NDB 9.1.0)

    This refers to the Id set for one of the computers defined in a [computer] section of the config.ini file.

    Important

    This parameter is deprecated, and is subject to removal in a future release. Use the HostName parameter instead.

  • PortNumber

    Version (or later) NDB 9.1.0
    Type or units unsigned
    Default 1186
    Range 0 - 64K
    Restart Type

    System Restart: Requires a complete shutdown and restart of the cluster. (NDB 9.1.0)

    This is the port number on which the management server listens for configuration requests and management commands.

  • The node ID for this node can be given out only to connections that explicitly request it. A management server that requests any node ID cannot use this one. This parameter can be used when running multiple management servers on the same host, and HostName is not sufficient for distinguishing among processes.

  • HostName

    Version (or later) NDB 9.1.0
    Type or units name or IP address
    Default [...]
    Range ...
    Restart Type

    Node Restart: Requires a rolling restart of the cluster. (NDB 9.1.0)

    Specifying this parameter defines the hostname of the computer on which the management node is to reside. Use HostName to specify a host name other than localhost.

  • LocationDomainId

    Version (or later) NDB 9.1.0
    Type or units integer
    Default 0
    Range 0 - 16
    Restart Type

    System Restart: Requires a complete shutdown and restart of the cluster. (NDB 9.1.0)

    Assigns a management node to a specific availability domain (also known as an availability zone) within a cloud. By informing NDB which nodes are in which availability domains, performance can be improved in a cloud environment in the following ways:

    • If requested data is not found on the same node, reads can be directed to another node in the same availability domain.

    • Communication between nodes in different availability domains are guaranteed to use NDB transporters' WAN support without any further manual intervention.

    • The transporter's group number can be based on which availability domain is used, such that also SQL and other API nodes communicate with local data nodes in the same availability domain whenever possible.

    • The arbitrator can be selected from an availability domain in which no data nodes are present, or, if no such availability domain can be found, from a third availability domain.

    LocationDomainId takes an integer value between 0 and 16 inclusive, with 0 being the default; using 0 is the same as leaving the parameter unset.

  • LogDestination

    Version (or later) NDB 9.1.0
    Type or units {CONSOLE|SYSLOG|FILE}
    Default FILE: filename=ndb_nodeid_cluster.log, maxsize=1000000, maxfiles=6
    Range ...
    Restart Type

    Node Restart: Requires a rolling restart of the cluster. (NDB 9.1.0)

    This parameter specifies where to send cluster logging information. There are three options in this regard—CONSOLE, SYSLOG, and FILE—with FILE being the default:

    • CONSOLE outputs the log to stdout:

      CONSOLE
    • SYSLOG sends the log to a syslog facility, possible values being one of auth, authpriv, cron, daemon, ftp, kern, lpr, mail, news, syslog, user, uucp, local0, local1, local2, local3, local4, local5, local6, or local7.

      Note

      Not every facility is necessarily supported by every operating system.

      SYSLOG:facility=syslog
    • FILE pipes the cluster log output to a regular file on the same machine. The following values can be specified:

      • filename: The name of the log file.

        The default log file name used in such cases is ndb_nodeid_cluster.log.

      • maxsize: The maximum size (in bytes) to which the file can grow before logging rolls over to a new file. When this occurs, the old log file is renamed by appending .N to the file name, where N is the next number not yet used with this name.

      • maxfiles: The maximum number of log files.

      FILE:filename=cluster.log,maxsize=1000000,maxfiles=6

      The default value for the FILE parameter is FILE:filename=ndb_node_id_cluster.log,maxsize=1000000,maxfiles=6, where node_id is the ID of the node.

    It is possible to specify multiple log destinations separated by semicolons as shown here:

    CONSOLE;SYSLOG:facility=local0;FILE:filename=/var/log/mgmd
  • ArbitrationRank

    Version (or later) NDB 9.1.0
    Type or units 0-2
    Default 1
    Range 0 - 2
    Restart Type

    Node Restart: Requires a rolling restart of the cluster. (NDB 9.1.0)

    This parameter is used to define which nodes can act as arbitrators. Only management nodes and SQL nodes can be arbitrators. ArbitrationRank can take one of the following values:

    • 0: The node is never used as an arbitrator.

    • 1: The node has high priority; that is, it is preferred as an arbitrator over low-priority nodes.

    • 2: Indicates a low-priority node which is used as an arbitrator only if a node with a higher priority is not available for that purpose.

    Normally, the management server should be configured as an arbitrator by setting its ArbitrationRank to 1 (the default for management nodes) and those for all SQL nodes to 0 (the default for SQL nodes).

    You can disable arbitration completely either by setting ArbitrationRank to 0 on all management and SQL nodes, or by setting the Arbitration parameter in the [ndbd default] section of the config.ini global configuration file. Setting Arbitration causes any settings for ArbitrationRank to be disregarded.

  • ArbitrationDelay

    Version (or later) NDB 9.1.0
    Type or units milliseconds
    Default 0
    Range 0 - 4294967039 (0xFFFFFEFF)
    Restart Type

    Node Restart: Requires a rolling restart of the cluster. (NDB 9.1.0)

    An integer value which causes the management server's responses to arbitration requests to be delayed by that number of milliseconds. By default, this value is 0; it is normally not necessary to change it.

  • DataDir

    Version (or later) NDB 9.1.0
    Type or units path
    Default .
    Range ...
    Restart Type

    Node Restart: Requires a rolling restart of the cluster. (NDB 9.1.0)

    This specifies the directory where output files from the management server are placed. These files include cluster log files, process output files, and the daemon's process ID (PID) file. (For log files, this location can be overridden by setting the FILE parameter for LogDestination, as discussed previously in this section.)

    The default value for this parameter is the directory in which ndb_mgmd is located.

  • PortNumberStats

    Version (or later) NDB 9.1.0
    Type or units unsigned
    Default [...]
    Range 0 - 64K
    Restart Type

    Node Restart: Requires a rolling restart of the cluster. (NDB 9.1.0)

    This parameter specifies the port number used to obtain statistical information from an NDB Cluster management server. It has no default value.

  • Wan

    Version (or later) NDB 9.1.0
    Type or units boolean
    Default false
    Range true, false
    Restart Type

    Node Restart: Requires a rolling restart of the cluster. (NDB 9.1.0)

    Use WAN TCP setting as default.

  • HeartbeatThreadPriority

    Version (or later) NDB 9.1.0
    Type or units string
    Default [...]
    Range ...
    Restart Type

    Node Restart: Requires a rolling restart of the cluster. (NDB 9.1.0)

    Set the scheduling policy and priority of heartbeat threads for management and API nodes.

    The syntax for setting this parameter is shown here:

    HeartbeatThreadPriority = policy[, priority]
    
    policy:
      {FIFO | RR}

    When setting this parameter, you must specify a policy. This is one of FIFO (first in, first out) or RR (round robin). The policy value is followed optionally by the priority (an integer).

  • ExtraSendBufferMemory

    Version (or later) NDB 9.1.0
    Type or units bytes
    Default 0
    Range 0 - 32G
    Restart Type

    Node Restart: Requires a rolling restart of the cluster. (NDB 9.1.0)

    This parameter specifies the amount of transporter send buffer memory to allocate in addition to any that has been set using TotalSendBufferMemory, SendBufferMemory, or both.

  • RequireTls

    Version (or later) NDB 9.1.0
    Type or units boolean
    Default false
    Range ...
    Restart Type

    Node Restart: Requires a rolling restart of the cluster. (NDB 9.1.0)

    If this parameter is set to true, a client, once connected to this management node, must be authenticated using TLS before the connection can be used for anything else.

  • TotalSendBufferMemory

    Version (or later) NDB 9.1.0
    Type or units bytes
    Default 0
    Range 256K - 4294967039 (0xFFFFFEFF)
    Restart Type

    Node Restart: Requires a rolling restart of the cluster. (NDB 9.1.0)

    This parameter is used to determine the total amount of memory to allocate on this node for shared send buffer memory among all configured transporters.

    If this parameter is set, its minimum permitted value is 256KB; 0 indicates that the parameter has not been set. For more detailed information, see Section 25.4.3.14, “Configuring NDB Cluster Send Buffer Parameters”.

  • HeartbeatIntervalMgmdMgmd

    Version (or later) NDB 9.1.0
    Type or units milliseconds
    Default 1500
    Range 100 - 4294967039 (0xFFFFFEFF)
    Restart Type

    Node Restart: Requires a rolling restart of the cluster. (NDB 9.1.0)

    Specify the interval between heartbeat messages used to determine whether another management node is on contact with this one. The management node waits after 3 of these intervals to declare the connection dead; thus, the default setting of 1500 milliseconds causes the management node to wait for approximately 1600 ms before timing out.

Note

After making changes in a management node's configuration, it is necessary to perform a rolling restart of the cluster for the new configuration to take effect.

To add new management servers to a running NDB Cluster, it is also necessary to perform a rolling restart of all cluster nodes after modifying any existing config.ini files. For more information about issues arising when using multiple management nodes, see Section 25.2.7.10, “Limitations Relating to Multiple NDB Cluster Nodes”.

Restart types.  Information about the restart types used by the parameter descriptions in this section is shown in the following table:

Table 25.8 NDB Cluster restart types

Symbol Restart Type Description
N Node The parameter can be updated using a rolling restart (see Section 25.6.5, “Performing a Rolling Restart of an NDB Cluster”)
S System All cluster nodes must be shut down completely, then restarted, to effect a change in this parameter
I Initial Data nodes must be restarted using the --initial option