To create a FEDERATED table you should follow
      these steps:
- Create the table on the remote server. Alternatively, make a note of the table definition of an existing table, perhaps using the - SHOW CREATE TABLEstatement.
- Create the table on the local server with an identical table definition, but adding the connection information that links the local table to the remote table. 
For example, you could create the following table on the remote server:
CREATE TABLE test_table (
    id     INT(20) NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT,
    name   VARCHAR(32) NOT NULL DEFAULT '',
    other  INT(20) NOT NULL DEFAULT '0',
    PRIMARY KEY  (id),
    INDEX name (name),
    INDEX other_key (other)
)
ENGINE=MyISAM
DEFAULT CHARSET=utf8mb4;
      To create the local table that is federated to the remote table,
      there are two options available. You can either create the local
      table and specify the connection string (containing the server
      name, login, password) to be used to connect to the remote table
      using the CONNECTION, or you can use an
      existing connection that you have previously created using the
      CREATE SERVER statement.
When you create the local table it must have an identical field definition to the remote table.
        You can improve the performance of a
        FEDERATED table by adding indexes to the
        table on the host. The optimization occurs because the query
        sent to the remote server includes the contents of the
        WHERE clause and is sent to the remote server
        and subsequently executed locally. This reduces the network
        traffic that would otherwise request the entire table from the
        server for local processing.