InnoDB supports page-level compression for
      tables that reside in
      file-per-table
      tablespaces. This feature is referred to as Transparent
      Page Compression. Page compression is enabled by
      specifying the COMPRESSION attribute with
      CREATE TABLE or
      ALTER TABLE. Supported compression
      algorithms include Zlib and
      LZ4.
Supported Platforms
Page compression requires sparse file and hole punching support. Page compression is supported on Windows with NTFS, and on the following subset of MySQL-supported Linux platforms where the kernel level provides hole punching support:
- RHEL 7 and derived distributions that use kernel version 3.10.0-123 or higher 
- OEL 5.10 (UEK2) kernel version 2.6.39 or higher 
- OEL 6.5 (UEK3) kernel version 3.8.13 or higher 
- OEL 7.0 kernel version 3.8.13 or higher 
- SLE11 kernel version 3.0-x 
- SLE12 kernel version 3.12-x 
- OES11 kernel version 3.0-x 
- Ubuntu 14.0.4 LTS kernel version 3.13 or higher 
- Ubuntu 12.0.4 LTS kernel version 3.2 or higher 
- Debian 7 kernel version 3.2 or higher 
All of the available file systems for a given Linux distribution may not support hole punching.
How Page Compression Works
When a page is written, it is compressed using the specified compression algorithm. The compressed data is written to disk, where the hole punching mechanism releases empty blocks from the end of the page. If compression fails, data is written out as-is.
Hole Punch Size on Linux
      On Linux systems, the file system block size is the unit size used
      for hole punching. Therefore, page compression only works if page
      data can be compressed to a size that is less than or equal to the
      InnoDB page size minus the file system block
      size. For example, if
      innodb_page_size=16K and the file
      system block size is 4K, page data must compress to less than or
      equal to 12K to make hole punching possible.
Hole Punch Size on Windows
On Windows systems, the underlying infrastructure for sparse files is based on NTFS compression. Hole punching size is the NTFS compression unit, which is 16 times the NTFS cluster size. Cluster sizes and their compression units are shown in the following table:
Table 17.11 Windows NTFS Cluster Size and Compression Units
| Cluster Size | Compression Unit | 
|---|---|
| 512 Bytes | 8 KB | 
| 1 KB | 16 KB | 
| 2 KB | 32 KB | 
| 4 KB | 64 KB | 
      Page compression on Windows systems only works if page data can be
      compressed to a size that is less than or equal to the
      InnoDB page size minus the compression unit
      size.
    
      The default NTFS cluster size is 4KB, for which the compression
      unit size is 64KB. This means that page compression has no benefit
      for an out-of-the box Windows NTFS configuration, as the maximum
      innodb_page_size is also 64KB.
    
      For page compression to work on Windows, the file system must be
      created with a cluster size smaller than 4K, and the
      innodb_page_size must be at least
      twice the size of the compression unit. For example, for page
      compression to work on Windows, you could build the file system
      with a cluster size of 512 Bytes (which has a compression unit of
      8KB) and initialize InnoDB with an
      innodb_page_size value of 16K or
      greater.
Enabling Page Compression
      To enable page compression, specify the
      COMPRESSION attribute in the
      CREATE TABLE statement. For
      example:
    
CREATE TABLE t1 (c1 INT) COMPRESSION="zlib";
      You can also enable page compression in an
      ALTER TABLE statement. However,
      ALTER TABLE ...
      COMPRESSION only updates the tablespace compression
      attribute. Writes to the tablespace that occur after setting the
      new compression algorithm use the new setting, but to apply the
      new compression algorithm to existing pages, you must rebuild the
      table using OPTIMIZE TABLE.
    
ALTER TABLE t1 COMPRESSION="zlib";
OPTIMIZE TABLE t1;Disabling Page Compression
      To disable page compression, set
      COMPRESSION=None using
      ALTER TABLE. Writes to the
      tablespace that occur after setting
      COMPRESSION=None no longer use page
      compression. To uncompress existing pages, you must rebuild the
      table using OPTIMIZE TABLE after
      setting COMPRESSION=None.
    
ALTER TABLE t1 COMPRESSION="None";
OPTIMIZE TABLE t1;Page Compression Metadata
      Page compression metadata is found in the Information Schema
      INNODB_TABLESPACES table, in the
      following columns:
- FS_BLOCK_SIZE: The file system block size, which is the unit size used for hole punching.
- FILE_SIZE: The apparent size of the file, which represents the maximum size of the file, uncompressed.
- ALLOCATED_SIZE: The actual size of the file, which is the amount of space allocated on disk.
        On Unix-like systems, ls -l
         shows
        the apparent file size (equivalent to
        tablespace_name.ibdFILE_SIZE) in bytes. To view the actual
        amount of space allocated on disk (equivalent to
        ALLOCATED_SIZE), use du
        --block-size=1
        . The
        tablespace_name.ibd--block-size=1 option prints the allocated
        space in bytes instead of blocks, so that it can be compared to
        ls -l output.
      
        Use SHOW CREATE TABLE to view the
        current page compression setting (Zlib,
        Lz4, or None). A table may
        contain a mix of pages with different compression settings.
      In the following example, page compression metadata for the
      employees table is retrieved from the Information Schema
      INNODB_TABLESPACES table.
    
# Create the employees table with Zlib page compression
CREATE TABLE employees (
    emp_no      INT             NOT NULL,
    birth_date  DATE            NOT NULL,
    first_name  VARCHAR(14)     NOT NULL,
    last_name   VARCHAR(16)     NOT NULL,
    gender      ENUM ('M','F')  NOT NULL,
    hire_date   DATE            NOT NULL,
    PRIMARY KEY (emp_no)
) COMPRESSION="zlib";
# Insert data (not shown)
# Query page compression metadata in INFORMATION_SCHEMA.INNODB_TABLESPACES
mysql> SELECT SPACE, NAME, FS_BLOCK_SIZE, FILE_SIZE, ALLOCATED_SIZE FROM
       INFORMATION_SCHEMA.INNODB_TABLESPACES WHERE NAME='employees/employees'\G
*************************** 1. row ***************************
SPACE: 45
NAME: employees/employees
FS_BLOCK_SIZE: 4096
FILE_SIZE: 23068672
ALLOCATED_SIZE: 19415040Page compression metadata for the employees table shows that the apparent file size is 23068672 bytes while the actual file size (with page compression) is 19415040 bytes. The file system block size is 4096 bytes, which is the block size used for hole punching.
Identifying Tables Using Page Compression
      To identify tables for which page compression is enabled, you can
      check the Information Schema TABLES
      table's CREATE_OPTIONS column for tables
      defined with the COMPRESSION attribute:
    
mysql> SELECT TABLE_NAME, TABLE_SCHEMA, CREATE_OPTIONS FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.TABLES 
       WHERE CREATE_OPTIONS LIKE '%COMPRESSION=%';
+------------+--------------+--------------------+
| TABLE_NAME | TABLE_SCHEMA | CREATE_OPTIONS     |
+------------+--------------+--------------------+
| employees  | test         | COMPRESSION="zlib" |
+------------+--------------+--------------------+
      SHOW CREATE TABLE also shows the
      COMPRESSION attribute, if used.
Page Compression Limitations and Usage Notes
- Page compression is disabled if the file system block size (or compression unit size on Windows) * 2 > - innodb_page_size.
- Page compression is not supported for tables that reside in shared tablespaces, which include the system tablespace, temporary tablespaces, and general tablespaces. 
- Page compression is not supported for undo log tablespaces. 
- Page compression is not supported for redo log pages. 
- R-tree pages, which are used for spatial indexes, are not compressed. 
- Pages that belong to compressed tables ( - ROW_FORMAT=COMPRESSED) are left as-is.
- During recovery, updated pages are written out in an uncompressed form. 
- Loading a page-compressed tablespace on a server that does not support the compression algorithm that was used causes an I/O error. 
- Before downgrading to an earlier version of MySQL that does not support page compression, uncompress the tables that use the page compression feature. To uncompress a table, run - ALTER TABLE ... COMPRESSION=Noneand- OPTIMIZE TABLE.
- Page-compressed tablespaces can be copied between Linux and Windows servers if the compression algorithm that was used is available on both servers. 
- Preserving page compression when moving a page-compressed tablespace file from one host to another requires a utility that preserves sparse files. 
- Better page compression may be achieved on Fusion-io hardware with NVMFS than on other platforms, as NVMFS is designed to take advantage of punch hole functionality. 
- Using the page compression feature with a large - InnoDBpage size and relatively small file system block size could result in write amplification. For example, a maximum- InnoDBpage size of 64KB with a 4KB file system block size may improve compression but may also increase demand on the buffer pool, leading to increased I/O and potential write amplification.