You can set up replication channels to assign a GTID to replicated transactions that do not already have one. This feature enables replication from a source server that does not have GTIDs enabled and does not use GTID-based replication, to a replica that has GTIDs enabled. If it is possible to enable GTIDs on the replication source server, as described in Section 19.1.4, “Changing GTID Mode on Online Servers”, use that approach instead. This feature is designed for replication source servers where you cannot enable GTIDs. Note that as is standard for MySQL replication, this feature does not support replication from MySQL source servers earlier than the previous release series, so MySQL 9.0 is the earliest supported source for a MySQL 9.1 replica.
You can enable GTID assignment on a replication channel using the
ASSIGN_GTIDS_TO_ANONYMOUS_TRANSACTIONS
option
of the CHANGE REPLICATION SOURCE TO
statement. LOCAL
assigns a GTID including the
replica's own UUID (the
server_uuid
setting).
assigns a GTID
including the specified UUID, such as the
uuid
server_uuid
setting for the
replication source server. Using a nonlocal UUID lets you
differentiate between transactions that originated on the replica
and transactions that originated on the source, and for a
multi-source replica, between transactions that originated on
different sources. If any of the transactions sent by the source
do have a GTID already, that GTID is retained.
A replica set up with
ASSIGN_GTIDS_TO_ANONYMOUS_TRANSACTIONS
on any
channel cannot be promoted to replace the replication source
server in the event that failover is required, and a backup
taken from the replica cannot be used to restore the replication
source server. The same restriction applies to replacing or
restoring other replicas that use
ASSIGN_GTIDS_TO_ANONYMOUS_TRANSACTIONS
on any
channel.
The replica must have
gtid_mode=ON
set, and this cannot
be changed afterwards, unless you set
ASSIGN_GTIDS_TO_ANONYMOUS_TRANSACTIONS=OFF
. If
the replica server is started without GTIDs enabled and with
ASSIGN_GTIDS_TO_ANONYMOUS_TRANSACTIONS
set for
any replication channels, the settings are not changed, but a
warning message is written to the error log explaining how to
change the situation.
For a multi-source replica, you can have a mix of channels that
use ASSIGN_GTIDS_TO_ANONYMOUS_TRANSACTIONS
, and
channels that do not. Channels specific to Group Replication
cannot use
ASSIGN_GTIDS_TO_ANONYMOUS_TRANSACTIONS
, but an
asynchronous replication channel for another source on a server
instance that is a Group Replication group member can do so. For a
channel on a Group Replication group member, do not specify the
Group Replication group name as the UUID for creating the GTIDs.
Using ASSIGN_GTIDS_TO_ANONYMOUS_TRANSACTIONS
on
a replication channel is not the same as introducing GTID-based
replication for the channel. The GTID set
(gtid_executed
) from a replica
set up with
ASSIGN_GTIDS_TO_ANONYMOUS_TRANSACTIONS
should
not be transferred to another server or compared with another
server's gtid_executed
set. The
GTIDs that are assigned to the anonymous transactions, and the
UUID you choose for them, only have significance for that
replica's own use. The exception to this is any downstream
replicas of the replica where you enabled
ASSIGN_GTIDS_TO_ANONYMOUS_TRANSACTIONS
, and any
servers that were created from a backup of that replica.
If you set up any downstream replicas, these servers do not have
ASSIGN_GTIDS_TO_ANONYMOUS_TRANSACTIONS
enabled.
Only the replica that is receiving transactions directly from the
non-GTID source server needs to have
ASSIGN_GTIDS_TO_ANONYMOUS_TRANSACTIONS
set on
the relevant replication channel. Among that replica and its
downstream replicas, you can compare GTID sets, fail over from one
replica to another, and use backups to create additional replicas,
as you would in any GTID-based replication topology.
ASSIGN_GTIDS_TO_ANONYMOUS_TRANSACTIONS
is used
where transactions are received from a non-GTID server outside
this group.
A replication channel using
ASSIGN_GTIDS_TO_ANONYMOUS_TRANSACTIONS
has the
following behavior differences to GTID-based replication:
GTIDs are assigned to the replicated transactions when they are applied (unless they already had a GTID). A GTID would normally be assigned on the replication source server when the transaction is committed, and sent to the replica along with the transaction. On a multi-threaded replica, this means the order of the GTIDs does not necessarily match the order of the transactions, even if
replica_preserve_commit_order
= 1.The
SOURCE_LOG_FILE
andSOURCE_LOG_POS
options of theCHANGE REPLICATION SOURCE TO
statement are used to position the replication I/O (receiver) thread, rather than theSOURCE_AUTO_POSITION
option.The
SET GLOBAL sql_replica_skip_counter
statement is used to skip transactions on a replication channel set up withASSIGN_GTIDS_TO_ANONYMOUS_TRANSACTIONS
, rather than the method of committing empty transactions. For instructions, see Section 19.1.7.3, “Skipping Transactions”.The
UNTIL SQL_BEFORE_GTIDS
andUNTIL_SQL_AFTER_GTIDS
options of theSTART REPLICA
statement cannot be used for the channel.The function
WAIT_FOR_EXECUTED_GTID_SET()
works across the server and can be used to wait for any downstream replicas of the server that haveASSIGN_GTIDS_TO_ANONYMOUS_TRANSACTIONS
enabled. To wait for the channel withASSIGN_GTIDS_TO_ANONYMOUS_TRANSACTIONS
enabled to catch up with the source, which does not use GTIDs, use theSOURCE_POS_WAIT()
function.
The Performance Schema
replication_applier_configuration
table shows whether GTIDs are assigned to anonymous transactions
on a replication channel, what the UUID is, and whether it is the
UUID of the replica server (LOCAL
) or a
user-specified UUID (UUID
). The information is
also recorded in the applier metadata repository. A
RESET REPLICA
ALL
statement resets the
ASSIGN_GTIDS_TO_ANONYMOUS_TRANSACTIONS
setting,
but a RESET REPLICA
statement does
not.