The [ndbd] and [ndbd
default] sections are used to configure the behavior
of the cluster's data nodes.
[ndbd] and [ndbd default]
are always used as the section names whether you are using
ndbd or ndbmtd binaries
for the data node processes.
There are many parameters which control buffer sizes, pool
sizes, timeouts, and so forth. The only mandatory parameter is
either one of ExecuteOnComputer or
HostName; this must be defined in the local
[ndbd] section.
The parameter
NoOfReplicas should be
defined in the [ndbd default] section, as it
is common to all Cluster data nodes. It is not strictly
necessary to set
NoOfReplicas, but it is
good practice to set it explicitly.
Most data node parameters are set in the [ndbd
default] section. Only those parameters explicitly
stated as being able to set local values are permitted to be
changed in the [ndbd] section. Where present,
HostName, NodeId and
ExecuteOnComputer must
be defined in the local [ndbd] section, and
not in any other section of config.ini. In
other words, settings for these parameters are specific to one
data node.
For those parameters affecting memory usage or buffer sizes, it
is possible to use K, M,
or G as a suffix to indicate units of 1024,
1024×1024, or 1024×1024×1024. (For example,
100K means 100 × 1024 = 102400.)
Parameter names and values are currently case-sensitive.
Information about configuration parameters specific to MySQL Cluster Disk Data tables can be found later in this section (see Disk Data Configuration Parameters).
All of these parameters also apply to ndbmtd
(the multi-threaded version of ndbd). Three
additional data node configuration
parameters—MaxNoOfExecutionThreads,
ThreadConfig, and
NoOfFragmentLogParts—apply
to ndbmtd only; these have no effect when
used with ndbd. For more information, see
Multi-Threading Configuration Parameters (ndbmtd).
See also Section 19.4.3, “ndbmtd — The MySQL Cluster Data Node Daemon (Multi-Threaded)”.
Identifying data nodes.
The NodeId or Id value
(that is, the data node identifier) can be allocated on the
command line when the node is started or in the configuration
file.
-
Effective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 unsigned [none] 1 - 48 IS A unique node ID is used as the node's address for all cluster internal messages. For data nodes, this is an integer in the range 1 to 48 inclusive. Each node in the cluster must have a unique identifier.
NodeIdis the only supported parameter name to use when identifying data nodes. (Idwas removed in MySQL Cluster NDB 7.5.0.) -
Effective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 name [none] ... S This refers to the
Idset for one of the computers defined in a[computer]section.ImportantThis parameter is deprecated as of MySQL Cluster NDB 7.5.0, and is subject to removal in a future release. Use the
HostNameparameter instead. -
Effective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 name or IP address localhost ... N Specifying this parameter defines the hostname of the computer on which the data node is to reside. To specify a hostname other than
localhost, either this parameter orExecuteOnComputeris required. -
Effective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 unsigned [none] 1 - 64K S Each node in the cluster uses a port to connect to other nodes. By default, this port is allocated dynamically in such a way as to ensure that no two nodes on the same host computer receive the same port number, so it should normally not be necessary to specify a value for this parameter.
However, if you need to be able to open specific ports in a firewall to permit communication between data nodes and API nodes (including SQL nodes), you can set this parameter to the number of the desired port in an
[ndbd]section or (if you need to do this for multiple data nodes) the[ndbd default]section of theconfig.inifile, and then open the port having that number for incoming connections from SQL nodes, API nodes, or both.NoteConnections from data nodes to management nodes is done using the ndb_mgmd management port (the management server's
PortNumber) so outgoing connections to that port from any data nodes should always be permitted. Setting this parameter to
TRUEor1bindsIP_ADDR_ANYso that connections can be made from anywhere (for autogenerated connections). The default isFALSE(0).-
Effective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 [none] 0 - 65536 IS This parameter can be used to assign a data node to a specific node group. It is read only when the cluster is started for the first time, and cannot be used to reassign a data node to a different node group online. It is generally not desirable to use this parameter in the
[ndbd default]section of theconfig.inifile, and care must be taken not to assign nodes to node groups in such a way that an invalid numbers of nodes are assigned to any node groups.The
NodeGroupparameter is chiefly intended for use in adding a new node group to a running MySQL Cluster without having to perform a rolling restart. For this purpose, you should set it to 65536 (the maximum value). You are not required to set aNodeGroupvalue for all cluster data nodes, only for those nodes which are to be started and added to the cluster as a new node group at a later time. For more information, see Section 19.5.14.3, “Adding MySQL Cluster Data Nodes Online: Detailed Example”. -
Effective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 integer 2 1 - 4 IS This global parameter can be set only in the
[ndbd default]section, and defines the number of replicas for each table stored in the cluster. This parameter also specifies the size of node groups. A node group is a set of nodes all storing the same information.Node groups are formed implicitly. The first node group is formed by the set of data nodes with the lowest node IDs, the next node group by the set of the next lowest node identities, and so on. By way of example, assume that we have 4 data nodes and that
NoOfReplicasis set to 2. The four data nodes have node IDs 2, 3, 4 and 5. Then the first node group is formed from nodes 2 and 3, and the second node group by nodes 4 and 5. It is important to configure the cluster in such a manner that nodes in the same node groups are not placed on the same computer because a single hardware failure would cause the entire cluster to fail.If no node IDs are provided, the order of the data nodes will be the determining factor for the node group. Whether or not explicit assignments are made, they can be viewed in the output of the management client's
SHOWcommand.The default value for
NoOfReplicasis 2, which is the recommended setting in most common usage scenarios.The maximum possible value is 4; currently, only the values 1 and 2 are actually supported.
ImportantSetting
NoOfReplicasto 1 means that there is only a single copy of all Cluster data; in this case, the loss of a single data node causes the cluster to fail because there are no additional copies of the data stored by that node.The value for this parameter must divide evenly into the number of data nodes in the cluster. For example, if there are two data nodes, then
NoOfReplicasmust be equal to either 1 or 2, since 2/3 and 2/4 both yield fractional values; if there are four data nodes, thenNoOfReplicasmust be equal to 1, 2, or 4. -
Effective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 path . ... IN This parameter specifies the directory where trace files, log files, pid files and error logs are placed.
The default is the data node process working directory.
-
Effective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 path DataDir ... IN This parameter specifies the directory where all files created for metadata, REDO logs, UNDO logs (for Disk Data tables), and data files are placed. The default is the directory specified by
DataDir.NoteThis directory must exist before the ndbd process is initiated.
The recommended directory hierarchy for MySQL Cluster includes
/var/lib/mysql-cluster, under which a directory for the node's file system is created. The name of this subdirectory contains the node ID. For example, if the node ID is 2, this subdirectory is namedndb_2_fs. -
Effective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 path [see text] ... IN This parameter specifies the directory in which backups are placed.
ImportantThe string '
/BACKUP' is always appended to this value. For example, if you set the value ofBackupDataDirto/var/lib/cluster-data, then all backups are stored under/var/lib/cluster-data/BACKUP. This also means that the effective default backup location is the directory namedBACKUPunder the location specified by theFileSystemPathparameter.
Data Memory, Index Memory, and String Memory
DataMemory and
IndexMemory are
[ndbd] parameters specifying the size of
memory segments used to store the actual records and their
indexes. In setting values for these, it is important to
understand how
DataMemory and
IndexMemory are used, as
they usually need to be updated to reflect actual usage by the
cluster:
-
Effective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 bytes 80M 1M - 1024G N This parameter defines the amount of space (in bytes) available for storing database records. The entire amount specified by this value is allocated in memory, so it is extremely important that the machine has sufficient physical memory to accommodate it.
The memory allocated by
DataMemoryis used to store both the actual records and indexes. There is a 16-byte overhead on each record; an additional amount for each record is incurred because it is stored in a 32KB page with 128 byte page overhead (see below). There is also a small amount wasted per page due to the fact that each record is stored in only one page.For variable-size table attributes, the data is stored on separate data pages, allocated from
DataMemory. Variable-length records use a fixed-size part with an extra overhead of 4 bytes to reference the variable-size part. The variable-size part has 2 bytes overhead plus 2 bytes per attribute.The maximum record size is 14000 bytes.
The memory space defined by
DataMemoryis also used to store ordered indexes, which use about 10 bytes per record. Each table row is represented in the ordered index. A common error among users is to assume that all indexes are stored in the memory allocated byIndexMemory, but this is not the case: Only primary key and unique hash indexes use this memory; ordered indexes use the memory allocated byDataMemory. However, creating a primary key or unique hash index also creates an ordered index on the same keys, unless you specifyUSING HASHin the index creation statement. This can be verified by running ndb_desc -ddb_nametable_namein the management client.Currently, MySQL Cluster can use a maximum of 512 MB for hash indexes per partition, which means in some cases it is possible to get Table is full errors in MySQL client applications even when ndb_mgm -e "ALL REPORT MEMORYUSAGE" shows significant free
DataMemory. This can also pose a problem with data node restarts on nodes that are heavily loaded with data. You can forceNDBto create extra partitions for MySQL Cluster tables and thus have more memory available for hash indexes by using theMAX_ROWSoption forCREATE TABLE. In general, settingMAX_ROWSto twice the number of rows that you expect to store in the table should be sufficient. You can also use theMinFreePctconfiguration parameter to help avoid problems with node restarts. (Bug #13436216)The memory space allocated by
DataMemoryconsists of 32KB pages, which are allocated to table fragments. Each table is normally partitioned into the same number of fragments as there are data nodes in the cluster. Thus, for each node, there are the same number of fragments as are set inNoOfReplicas.Once a page has been allocated, it is currently not possible to return it to the pool of free pages, except by deleting the table. (This also means that
DataMemorypages, once allocated to a given table, cannot be used by other tables.) Performing a data node recovery also compresses the partition because all records are inserted into empty partitions from other live nodes.The
DataMemorymemory space also contains UNDO information: For each update, a copy of the unaltered record is allocated in theDataMemory. There is also a reference to each copy in the ordered table indexes. Unique hash indexes are updated only when the unique index columns are updated, in which case a new entry in the index table is inserted and the old entry is deleted upon commit. For this reason, it is also necessary to allocate enough memory to handle the largest transactions performed by applications using the cluster. In any case, performing a few large transactions holds no advantage over using many smaller ones, for the following reasons:Large transactions are not any faster than smaller ones
Large transactions increase the number of operations that are lost and must be repeated in event of transaction failure
Large transactions use more memory
The default value for
DataMemoryis 80MB; the minimum is 1MB. There is no maximum size, but in reality the maximum size has to be adapted so that the process does not start swapping when the limit is reached. This limit is determined by the amount of physical RAM available on the machine and by the amount of memory that the operating system may commit to any one process. 32-bit operating systems are generally limited to 2−4GB per process; 64-bit operating systems can use more. For large databases, it may be preferable to use a 64-bit operating system for this reason. -
Effective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 bytes 18M 1M - 1T N This parameter controls the amount of storage used for hash indexes in MySQL Cluster. Hash indexes are always used for primary key indexes, unique indexes, and unique constraints. When defining a primary key or a unique index, two indexes are created, one of which is a hash index used for all tuple accesses as well as lock handling. This index is also used to enforce unique constraints.
You can estimate the size of a hash index using this formula:
size = ( (fragments* 32K) + (rows* 18) ) *replicasfragmentsis the number of fragments,replicasis the number of replicas (normally 2), androwsis the number of rows. If a table has one million rows, 8 fragments, and 2 replicas, the expected index memory usage is calculated as shown here:((8 * 32K) + (1000000 * 18)) * 2 = ((8 * 32768) + (1000000 * 18)) * 2 = (262144 + 18000000) * 2 = 18262144 * 2 = 36524288 bytes = ~35MB
Index statistics for ordered indexes (when these are enabled) are stored in the
mysql.ndb_index_stat_sampletable. Since this table has a hash index, this adds to index memory usage. An upper bound to the number of rows for a given ordered index can be calculated as follows:sample_size= key_size + ((key_attributes + 1) * 4) sample_rows =
IndexStatSaveSize* ((0.01 *IndexStatSaveScale* log2(rows * sample_size)) + 1) / sample_sizeIn the preceding formula,
key_sizeis the size of the ordered index key in bytes,key_attributesis the number ot attributes in the ordered index key, androwsis the number of rows in the base table.Assume that table
t1has 1 million rows and an ordered index namedix1on two four-byte integers. Assume in addition thatIndexStatSaveSizeandIndexStatSaveScaleare set to their default values (32K and 100, respectively). Using the previous 2 formulas, we can calculate as follows:sample_size = 8 + ((1 + 2) * 4) = 20 bytes sample_rows = 32K * ((0.01 * 100 * log2(1000000*20)) + 1) / 20 = 32768 * ( (1 * ~16.811) +1) / 20 = 32768 * ~17.811 / 20 = ~29182 rowsThe expected index memory usage is thus 2 * 18 * 29182 = ~1050550 bytes.
The default value for
IndexMemoryis 18MB. The minimum is 1MB. -
Effective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 % or bytes 25 0 - 4294967039 (0xFFFFFEFF) S This parameter determines how much memory is allocated for strings such as table names, and is specified in an
[ndbd]or[ndbd default]section of theconfig.inifile. A value between0and100inclusive is interpreted as a percent of the maximum default value, which is calculated based on a number of factors including the number of tables, maximum table name size, maximum size of.FRMfiles,MaxNoOfTriggers, maximum column name size, and maximum default column value.A value greater than
100is interpreted as a number of bytes.The default value is 25—that is, 25 percent of the default maximum.
Under most circumstances, the default value should be sufficient, but when you have a great many Cluster tables (1000 or more), it is possible to get Error 773 Out of string memory, please modify StringMemory config parameter: Permanent error: Schema error, in which case you should increase this value.
25(25 percent) is not excessive, and should prevent this error from recurring in all but the most extreme conditions.
The following example illustrates how memory is used for a table. Consider this table definition:
CREATE TABLE example ( a INT NOT NULL, b INT NOT NULL, c INT NOT NULL, PRIMARY KEY(a), UNIQUE(b) ) ENGINE=NDBCLUSTER;
For each record, there are 12 bytes of data plus 12 bytes
overhead. Having no nullable columns saves 4 bytes of overhead.
In addition, we have two ordered indexes on columns
a and b consuming roughly
10 bytes each per record. There is a primary key hash index on
the base table using roughly 29 bytes per record. The unique
constraint is implemented by a separate table with
b as primary key and a as
a column. This other table consumes an additional 29 bytes of
index memory per record in the example table
as well 8 bytes of record data plus 12 bytes of overhead.
Thus, for one million records, we need 58MB for index memory to handle the hash indexes for the primary key and the unique constraint. We also need 64MB for the records of the base table and the unique index table, plus the two ordered index tables.
You can see that hash indexes takes up a fair amount of memory space; however, they provide very fast access to the data in return. They are also used in MySQL Cluster to handle uniqueness constraints.
Currently, the only partitioning algorithm is hashing and ordered indexes are local to each node. Thus, ordered indexes cannot be used to handle uniqueness constraints in the general case.
An important point for both
IndexMemory and
DataMemory is that the
total database size is the sum of all data memory and all index
memory for each node group. Each node group is used to store
replicated information, so if there are four nodes with two
replicas, there will be two node groups. Thus, the total data
memory available is 2 ×
DataMemory for each data
node.
It is highly recommended that
DataMemory and
IndexMemory be set to
the same values for all nodes. Data distribution is even over
all nodes in the cluster, so the maximum amount of space
available for any node can be no greater than that of the
smallest node in the cluster.
DataMemory and
IndexMemory can be
changed, but decreasing either of these can be risky; doing so
can easily lead to a node or even an entire MySQL Cluster that
is unable to restart due to there being insufficient memory
space. Increasing these values should be acceptable, but it is
recommended that such upgrades are performed in the same manner
as a software upgrade, beginning with an update of the
configuration file, and then restarting the management server
followed by restarting each data node in turn.
MinFreePct.
A proportion (5% by default) of data node resources including
DataMemory and
IndexMemory is kept in
reserve to insure that the data node does not exhaust its
memory when performing a restart. This can be adjusted using
the MinFreePct data
node configuration parameter (default 5).
| Effective Version | Type/Units | Default | Range/Values | Restart Type |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| NDB 7.4.0 | unsigned | 5 | 0 - 100 | N |
Updates do not increase the amount of index memory used. Inserts take effect immediately; however, rows are not actually deleted until the transaction is committed.
Transaction parameters.
The next few [ndbd] parameters that we
discuss are important because they affect the number of
parallel transactions and the sizes of transactions that can
be handled by the system.
MaxNoOfConcurrentTransactions
sets the number of parallel transactions possible in a node.
MaxNoOfConcurrentOperations
sets the number of records that can be in update phase or
locked simultaneously.
Both of these parameters (especially
MaxNoOfConcurrentOperations)
are likely targets for users setting specific values and not
using the default value. The default value is set for systems
using small transactions, to ensure that these do not use
excessive memory.
MaxDMLOperationsPerTransaction
sets the maximum number of DML operations that can be performed
in a given transaction.
-
Effective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 integer 4096 32 - 4294967039 (0xFFFFFEFF) N Each cluster data node requires a transaction record for each active transaction in the cluster. The task of coordinating transactions is distributed among all of the data nodes. The total number of transaction records in the cluster is the number of transactions in any given node times the number of nodes in the cluster.
Transaction records are allocated to individual MySQL servers. Each connection to a MySQL server requires at least one transaction record, plus an additional transaction object per table accessed by that connection. This means that a reasonable minimum for the total number of transactions in the cluster can be expressed as
MinTotalNoOfConcurrentTransactions = (maximum number of tables accessed in any single transaction + 1) * number of SQL nodesSuppose that there are 10 SQL nodes using the cluster. A single join involving 10 tables requires 11 transaction records; if there are 10 such joins in a transaction, then 10 * 11 = 110 transaction records are required for this transaction, per MySQL server, or 110 * 10 = 1100 transaction records total. Each data node can be expected to handle MinTotalNoOfConcurrentTransactions / number of data nodes. For a MySQL Cluster having 4 data nodes, this would mean setting
MaxNoOfConcurrentTransactionson each data node to 1100 / 4 = 275. In addition, you should provide for failure recovery by ensuring that a single node group can accommodate all concurrent transactions; in other words, that each data node's MaxNoOfConcurrentTransactions is sufficient to cover a number of transactions equal to MinTotalNoOfConcurrentTransactions / number of node groups. If this cluster has a single node group, thenMaxNoOfConcurrentTransactionsshould be set to 1100 (the same as the total number of concurrent transactions for the entire cluster).In addition, each transaction involves at least one operation; for this reason, the value set for
MaxNoOfConcurrentTransactionsshould always be no more than the value ofMaxNoOfConcurrentOperations.This parameter must be set to the same value for all cluster data nodes. This is due to the fact that, when a data node fails, the oldest surviving node re-creates the transaction state of all transactions that were ongoing in the failed node.
It is possible to change this value using a rolling restart, but the amount of traffic on the cluster must be such that no more transactions occur than the lower of the old and new levels while this is taking place.
The default value is 4096.
-
Effective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 integer 32K 32 - 4294967039 (0xFFFFFEFF) N It is a good idea to adjust the value of this parameter according to the size and number of transactions. When performing transactions which involve only a few operations and records, the default value for this parameter is usually sufficient. Performing large transactions involving many records usually requires that you increase its value.
Records are kept for each transaction updating cluster data, both in the transaction coordinator and in the nodes where the actual updates are performed. These records contain state information needed to find UNDO records for rollback, lock queues, and other purposes.
This parameter should be set at a minimum to the number of records to be updated simultaneously in transactions, divided by the number of cluster data nodes. For example, in a cluster which has four data nodes and which is expected to handle one million concurrent updates using transactions, you should set this value to 1000000 / 4 = 250000. To help provide resiliency against failures, it is suggested that you set this parameter to a value that is high enough to permit an individual data node to handle the load for its node group. In other words, you should set the value equal to
total number of concurrent operations / number of node groups. (In the case where there is a single node group, this is the same as the total number of concurrent operations for the entire cluster.)Because each transaction always involves at least one operation, the value of
MaxNoOfConcurrentOperationsshould always be greater than or equal to the value ofMaxNoOfConcurrentTransactions.Read queries which set locks also cause operation records to be created. Some extra space is allocated within individual nodes to accommodate cases where the distribution is not perfect over the nodes.
When queries make use of the unique hash index, there are actually two operation records used per record in the transaction. The first record represents the read in the index table and the second handles the operation on the base table.
The default value is 32768.
This parameter actually handles two values that can be configured separately. The first of these specifies how many operation records are to be placed with the transaction coordinator. The second part specifies how many operation records are to be local to the database.
A very large transaction performed on an eight-node cluster requires as many operation records in the transaction coordinator as there are reads, updates, and deletes involved in the transaction. However, the operation records of the are spread over all eight nodes. Thus, if it is necessary to configure the system for one very large transaction, it is a good idea to configure the two parts separately.
MaxNoOfConcurrentOperationswill always be used to calculate the number of operation records in the transaction coordinator portion of the node.It is also important to have an idea of the memory requirements for operation records. These consume about 1KB per record.
-
Effective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 integer UNDEFINED 32 - 4294967039 (0xFFFFFEFF) N By default, this parameter is calculated as 1.1 ×
MaxNoOfConcurrentOperations. This fits systems with many simultaneous transactions, none of them being very large. If there is a need to handle one very large transaction at a time and there are many nodes, it is a good idea to override the default value by explicitly specifying this parameter. MaxDMLOperationsPerTransactionEffective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 operations (DML) 4294967295 32 - 4294967295 N This parameter limits the size of a transaction. The transaction is aborted if it requires more than this many DML operations. The minimum number of operations per transaction is 32; however, you can set
MaxDMLOperationsPerTransactionto 0 to disable any limitation on the number of DML operations per transaction. The maximum (and default) is 4294967295.
Transaction temporary storage.
The next set of [ndbd] parameters is used
to determine temporary storage when executing a statement that
is part of a Cluster transaction. All records are released
when the statement is completed and the cluster is waiting for
the commit or rollback.
The default values for these parameters are adequate for most situations. However, users with a need to support transactions involving large numbers of rows or operations may need to increase these values to enable better parallelism in the system, whereas users whose applications require relatively small transactions can decrease the values to save memory.
MaxNoOfConcurrentIndexOperationsEffective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 integer 8K 0 - 4294967039 (0xFFFFFEFF) N For queries using a unique hash index, another temporary set of operation records is used during a query's execution phase. This parameter sets the size of that pool of records. Thus, this record is allocated only while executing a part of a query. As soon as this part has been executed, the record is released. The state needed to handle aborts and commits is handled by the normal operation records, where the pool size is set by the parameter
MaxNoOfConcurrentOperations.The default value of this parameter is 8192. Only in rare cases of extremely high parallelism using unique hash indexes should it be necessary to increase this value. Using a smaller value is possible and can save memory if the DBA is certain that a high degree of parallelism is not required for the cluster.
-
Effective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 integer 4000 0 - 4294967039 (0xFFFFFEFF) N The default value of
MaxNoOfFiredTriggersis 4000, which is sufficient for most situations. In some cases it can even be decreased if the DBA feels certain the need for parallelism in the cluster is not high.A record is created when an operation is performed that affects a unique hash index. Inserting or deleting a record in a table with unique hash indexes or updating a column that is part of a unique hash index fires an insert or a delete in the index table. The resulting record is used to represent this index table operation while waiting for the original operation that fired it to complete. This operation is short-lived but can still require a large number of records in its pool for situations with many parallel write operations on a base table containing a set of unique hash indexes.
-
Effective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 bytes 1M 1K - 4294967039 (0xFFFFFEFF) N The memory affected by this parameter is used for tracking operations fired when updating index tables and reading unique indexes. This memory is used to store the key and column information for these operations. It is only very rarely that the value for this parameter needs to be altered from the default.
The default value for
TransactionBufferMemoryis 1MB.Normal read and write operations use a similar buffer, whose usage is even more short-lived. The compile-time parameter
ZATTRBUF_FILESIZE(found inndb/src/kernel/blocks/Dbtc/Dbtc.hpp) set to 4000 × 128 bytes (500KB). A similar buffer for key information,ZDATABUF_FILESIZE(also inDbtc.hpp) contains 4000 × 16 = 62.5KB of buffer space.Dbtcis the module that handles transaction coordination.
Scans and buffering.
There are additional [ndbd] parameters in
the Dblqh module (in
ndb/src/kernel/blocks/Dblqh/Dblqh.hpp)
that affect reads and updates. These include
ZATTRINBUF_FILESIZE, set by default to
10000 × 128 bytes (1250KB) and
ZDATABUF_FILE_SIZE, set by default to
10000*16 bytes (roughly 156KB) of buffer space. To date, there
have been neither any reports from users nor any results from
our own extensive tests suggesting that either of these
compile-time limits should be increased.
-
Effective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 integer 256 2 - 500 N This parameter is used to control the number of parallel scans that can be performed in the cluster. Each transaction coordinator can handle the number of parallel scans defined for this parameter. Each scan query is performed by scanning all partitions in parallel. Each partition scan uses a scan record in the node where the partition is located, the number of records being the value of this parameter times the number of nodes. The cluster should be able to sustain
MaxNoOfConcurrentScansscans concurrently from all nodes in the cluster.Scans are actually performed in two cases. The first of these cases occurs when no hash or ordered indexes exists to handle the query, in which case the query is executed by performing a full table scan. The second case is encountered when there is no hash index to support the query but there is an ordered index. Using the ordered index means executing a parallel range scan. The order is kept on the local partitions only, so it is necessary to perform the index scan on all partitions.
The default value of
MaxNoOfConcurrentScansis 256. The maximum value is 500. -
Effective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 integer [see text] 32 - 4294967039 (0xFFFFFEFF) N Specifies the number of local scan records if many scans are not fully parallelized. When the number of local scan records is not provided, it is calculated as shown here:
4 *
MaxNoOfConcurrentScans* [# data nodes] + 2The minimum value is 32.
-
Effective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 integer 256 1 - 992 N This parameter is used to calculate the number of lock records used to handle concurrent scan operations.
BatchSizePerLocalScanhas a strong connection to theBatchSizedefined in the SQL nodes. -
Effective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 bytes 64M 512K - 4294967039 (0xFFFFFEFF) N This is an internal buffer used for passing messages within individual nodes and between nodes. The default is 64MB.
This parameter seldom needs to be changed from the default.
-
Effective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 integer 0 0 - 64 S This parameter sets the parallelization used in the copy phase of a node restart or system restart, when a node that is currently just starting is synchronised with a node that already has current data by copying over any changed records from the node that is up to date. Because full parallelism in such cases can lead to overload situations,
MaxParallelCopyInstancesprovides a means to decrease it. This parameter's default value 0. This value means that the effective parallelism is equal to the number of LDM instances in the node just starting as well as the node updating it. -
Effective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 bytes 256 1 - 4294967039 (0xFFFFFEFF) N It is possible to configure the maximum number of parallel scans (
TUPscans andTUXscans) allowed before they begin queuing for serial handling. You can increase this to take advantage of any unused CPU when performing large number of scans in parallel and improve their performance.The default value for this parameter is 256.
Memory Allocation
| Effective Version | Type/Units | Default | Range/Values | Restart Type |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| NDB 7.4.0 | unsigned | 32M | 1M - 1G | N |
This is the maximum size of the memory unit to use when
allocating memory for tables. In cases where
NDB gives Out of
memory errors, but it is evident by examining the
cluster logs or the output of DUMP
1000 that all available memory has not yet been used,
you can increase the value of this parameter (or
MaxNoOfTables, or both)
to cause NDB to make sufficient
memory available.
Hash Map Size
| Effective Version | Type/Units | Default | Range/Values | Restart Type |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| NDB 7.4.0 | LDM threads | 3840 | 0 - 3840 | N |
The size of the table hash maps used by
NDB is configurable using this
parameter. DefaultHashMapSize can take any of
three possible values (0, 240, 3840). These values and their
effects are described in the following table:
| Value | Description / Effect |
|---|---|
0 | Use the lowest value set, if any, for this parameter among all data nodes and API nodes in the cluster; if it is not set on any data or API node, use the default value. |
240 | Original hash map size (used by default in all MySQL Cluster releases prior to NDB 7.2.7) |
3840 | Larger hash map size (used by default beginning with NDB 7.2.7) |
The original intended use for this parameter was to facilitate upgrades and especially downgrades to and from very old releases with differing default hash map sizes. This is not an issue when upgrading from MySQL Cluster NDB 7.4 to MySQL Cluster NDB 7.5.
Logging and checkpointing.
The following [ndbd] parameters control log
and checkpoint behavior.
-
Effective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 integer 16 3 - 4294967039 (0xFFFFFEFF) IN This parameter sets the number of REDO log files for the node, and thus the amount of space allocated to REDO logging. Because the REDO log files are organized in a ring, it is extremely important that the first and last log files in the set (sometimes referred to as the “head” and “tail” log files, respectively) do not meet. When these approach one another too closely, the node begins aborting all transactions encompassing updates due to a lack of room for new log records.
A
REDOlog record is not removed until both required local checkpoints have been completed since that log record was inserted. Checkpointing frequency is determined by its own set of configuration parameters discussed elsewhere in this chapter.The default parameter value is 16, which by default means 16 sets of 4 16MB files for a total of 1024MB. The size of the individual log files is configurable using the
FragmentLogFileSizeparameter. In scenarios requiring a great many updates, the value forNoOfFragmentLogFilesmay need to be set as high as 300 or even higher to provide sufficient space for REDO logs.If the checkpointing is slow and there are so many writes to the database that the log files are full and the log tail cannot be cut without jeopardizing recovery, all updating transactions are aborted with internal error code 410 (
Out of log file space temporarily). This condition prevails until a checkpoint has completed and the log tail can be moved forward.ImportantThis parameter cannot be changed “on the fly”; you must restart the node using
--initial. If you wish to change this value for all data nodes in a running cluster, you can do so using a rolling node restart (using--initialwhen starting each data node). -
Effective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 bytes 16M 4M - 1G IN Setting this parameter enables you to control directly the size of redo log files. This can be useful in situations when MySQL Cluster is operating under a high load and it is unable to close fragment log files quickly enough before attempting to open new ones (only 2 fragment log files can be open at one time); increasing the size of the fragment log files gives the cluster more time before having to open each new fragment log file. The default value for this parameter is 16M.
For more information about fragment log files, see the description for
NoOfFragmentLogFiles. -
Effective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 [see values] SPARSE SPARSE, FULL IN By default, fragment log files are created sparsely when performing an initial start of a data node—that is, depending on the operating system and file system in use, not all bytes are necessarily written to disk. However, it is possible to override this behavior and force all bytes to be written, regardless of the platform and file system type being used, by means of this parameter.
InitFragmentLogFilestakes either of two values:SPARSE. Fragment log files are created sparsely. This is the default value.FULL. Force all bytes of the fragment log file to be written to disk.
Depending on your operating system and file system, setting
InitFragmentLogFiles=FULLmay help eliminate I/O errors on writes to the REDO log. -
Effective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 unsigned 0 20 - 4294967039 (0xFFFFFEFF) N This parameter sets a ceiling on how many internal threads to allocate for open files. Any situation requiring a change in this parameter should be reported as a bug.
The default value is 0. However, the minimum value to which this parameter can be set is 20.
-
Effective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 files 27 20 - 4294967039 (0xFFFFFEFF) N This parameter sets the initial number of internal threads to allocate for open files.
The default value is 27.
-
Effective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 integer 25 0 - 4294967039 (0xFFFFFEFF) N This parameter sets the maximum number of trace files that are kept before overwriting old ones. Trace files are generated when, for whatever reason, the node crashes.
The default is 25 trace files.
-
Effective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 seconds 0 0 - 600 N In parallel data node recovery, only table data is actually copied and synchronized in parallel; synchronization of metadata such as dictionary and checkpoint information is done in a serial fashion. In addition, recovery of dictionary and checkpoint information cannot be executed in parallel with performing of local checkpoints. This means that, when starting or restarting many data nodes concurrently, data nodes may be forced to wait while a local checkpoint is performed, which can result in longer node recovery times.
It is possible to force a delay in the local checkpoint to permit more (and possibly all) data nodes to complete metadata synchronization; once each data node's metadata synchronization is complete, all of the data nodes can recover table data in parallel, even while the local checkpoint is being executed. To force such a delay, set
MaxLCPStartDelay, which determines the number of seconds the cluster can wait to begin a local checkpoint while data nodes continue to synchronize metadata. This parameter should be set in the[ndbd default]section of theconfig.inifile, so that it is the same for all data nodes. The maximum value is 600; the default is 0. -
Effective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 second 60 0 - 4294967039 (0xFFFFFEFF) N A local checkpoint fragment scan watchdog checks periodically for no progress in each fragment scan performed as part of a local checkpoint, and shuts down the node if there is no progress after a given amount of time has elapsed. This interval can be set using the
LcpScanProgressTimeoutdata node configuration parameter, which sets the maximum time for which the local checkpoint can be stalled before the LCP fragment scan watchdog shuts down the node.The default value is 60 seconds (providing compatibility with previous releases). Setting this parameter to 0 disables the LCP fragment scan watchdog altogether.
Metadata objects.
The next set of [ndbd] parameters defines
pool sizes for metadata objects, used to define the maximum
number of attributes, tables, indexes, and trigger objects
used by indexes, events, and replication between clusters.
These act merely as “suggestions” to the cluster, and any that are not specified revert to the default values shown.
-
Effective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 integer 1000 32 - 4294967039 (0xFFFFFEFF) N This parameter sets a suggested maximum number of attributes that can be defined in the cluster; like
MaxNoOfTables, it is not intended to function as a hard upper limit.(In older MySQL Cluster releases, this parameter was sometimes treated as a hard limit for certain operations. This caused problems with MySQL Cluster Replication, when it was possible to create more tables than could be replicated, and sometimes led to confusion when it was possible [or not possible, depending on the circumstances] to create more than
MaxNoOfAttributesattributes.)The default value is 1000, with the minimum possible value being 32. The maximum is 4294967039. Each attribute consumes around 200 bytes of storage per node due to the fact that all metadata is fully replicated on the servers.
When setting
MaxNoOfAttributes, it is important to prepare in advance for anyALTER TABLEstatements that you might want to perform in the future. This is due to the fact, during the execution ofALTER TABLEon a Cluster table, 3 times the number of attributes as in the original table are used, and a good practice is to permit double this amount. For example, if the MySQL Cluster table having the greatest number of attributes (greatest_number_of_attributes) has 100 attributes, a good starting point for the value ofMaxNoOfAttributeswould be6 *.greatest_number_of_attributes= 600You should also estimate the average number of attributes per table and multiply this by
MaxNoOfTables. If this value is larger than the value obtained in the previous paragraph, you should use the larger value instead.Assuming that you can create all desired tables without any problems, you should also verify that this number is sufficient by trying an actual
ALTER TABLEafter configuring the parameter. If this is not successful, increaseMaxNoOfAttributesby another multiple ofMaxNoOfTablesand test it again. -
Effective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 integer 128 8 - 20320 N A table object is allocated for each table and for each unique hash index in the cluster. This parameter sets a suggested maximum number of table objects for the cluster as a whole; like
MaxNoOfAttributes, it is not intended to function as a hard upper limit.(In older MySQL Cluster releases, this parameter was sometimes treated as a hard limit for certain operations. This caused problems with MySQL Cluster Replication, when it was possible to create more tables than could be replicated, and sometimes led to confusion when it was possible [or not possible, depending on the circumstances] to create more than
MaxNoOfTablestables.)For each attribute that has a
BLOBdata type an extra table is used to store most of theBLOBdata. These tables also must be taken into account when defining the total number of tables.The default value of this parameter is 128. The minimum is 8 and the maximum is 20320. Each table object consumes approximately 20KB per node.
NoteThe sum of
MaxNoOfTablesandMaxNoOfOrderedIndexesmust not exceed232 − 2(4294967294). -
Effective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 integer 128 0 - 4294967039 (0xFFFFFEFF) N For each ordered index in the cluster, an object is allocated describing what is being indexed and its storage segments. By default, each index so defined also defines an ordered index. Each unique index and primary key has both an ordered index and a hash index.
MaxNoOfOrderedIndexessets the total number of ordered indexes that can be in use in the system at any one time.The default value of this parameter is 128. Each index object consumes approximately 10KB of data per node.
NoteThe sum of
MaxNoOfTablesandMaxNoOfOrderedIndexesmust not exceed232 − 2(4294967294). -
Effective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 integer 768 0 - 4294967039 (0xFFFFFEFF) N Internal update, insert, and delete triggers are allocated for each unique hash index. (This means that three triggers are created for each unique hash index.) However, an ordered index requires only a single trigger object. Backups also use three trigger objects for each normal table in the cluster.
Replication between clusters also makes use of internal triggers.
This parameter sets the maximum number of trigger objects in the cluster.
The default value is 768.
-
Effective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 unsigned 0 0 - 4294967039 (0xFFFFFEFF) N Each
NDBtable in a MySQL Cluster requires a subscription in the NDB kernel. For some NDB API applications, it may be necessary or desirable to change this parameter. However, for normal usage with MySQL servers acting as SQL nodes, there is not any need to do so.The default value for
MaxNoOfSubscriptionsis 0, which is treated as equal toMaxNoOfTables. Each subscription consumes 108 bytes. -
Effective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 unsigned 0 0 - 4294967039 (0xFFFFFEFF) N This parameter is of interest only when using MySQL Cluster Replication. The default value is 0, which is treated as
2 * MaxNoOfTables; that is, there is one subscription perNDBtable for each of two MySQL servers (one acting as the replication master and the other as the slave). Each subscriber uses 16 bytes of memory.When using circular replication, multi-master replication, and other replication setups involving more than 2 MySQL servers, you should increase this parameter to the number of mysqld processes included in replication (this is often, but not always, the same as the number of clusters). For example, if you have a circular replication setup using three MySQL Clusters, with one mysqld attached to each cluster, and each of these mysqld processes acts as a master and as a slave, you should set
MaxNoOfSubscribersequal to3 * MaxNoOfTables.For more information, see Section 19.6, “MySQL Cluster Replication”.
MaxNoOfConcurrentSubOperationsEffective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 unsigned 256 0 - 4294967039 (0xFFFFFEFF) N This parameter sets a ceiling on the number of operations that can be performed by all API nodes in the cluster at one time. The default value (256) is sufficient for normal operations, and might need to be adjusted only in scenarios where there are a great many API nodes each performing a high volume of operations concurrently.
Boolean parameters.
The behavior of data nodes is also affected by a set of
[ndbd] parameters taking on boolean values.
These parameters can each be specified as
TRUE by setting them equal to
1 or Y, and as
FALSE by setting them equal to
0 or N.
-
Effective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 numeric 1 0 - 1 N Allocate memory for this data node after a connection to the management server has been established. Enabled by default.
-
Effective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 numeric 0 0 - 2 N For a number of operating systems, including Solaris and Linux, it is possible to lock a process into memory and so avoid any swapping to disk. This can be used to help guarantee the cluster's real-time characteristics.
This parameter takes one of the integer values
0,1, or2, which act as shown in the following list:0: Disables locking. This is the default value.1: Performs the lock after allocating memory for the process.2: Performs the lock before memory for the process is allocated.
If the operating system is not configured to permit unprivileged users to lock pages, then the data node process making use of this parameter may have to be run as system root. (
LockPagesInMainMemoryuses themlockallfunction. From Linux kernel 2.6.9, unprivileged users can lock memory as limited bymax locked memory. For more information, see ulimit -l and http://linux.die.net/man/2/mlock).NoteIn older MySQL Cluster releases, this parameter was a Boolean.
0orfalsewas the default setting, and disabled locking.1ortrueenabled locking of the process after its memory was allocated. MySQL Cluster NDB 7.5 treatstrueorfalsefor the value of this parameter as an error.ImportantBeginning with
glibc2.10,glibcuses per-thread arenas to reduce lock contention on a shared pool, which consumes real memory. In general, a data node process does not need per-thread arenas, since it does not perform any memory allocation after startup. (This difference in allocators does not appear to affect performance significantly.)The
glibcbehavior is intended to be configurable via theMALLOC_ARENA_MAXenvironment variable, but a bug in this mechanism prior toglibc2.16 meant that this variable could not be set to less than 8, so that the wasted memory could not be reclaimed. (Bug #15907219; see also http://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=13137 for more information concerning this issue.)One possible workaround for this problem is to use the
LD_PRELOADenvironment variable to preload ajemallocmemory allocation library to take the place of that supplied withglibc. -
Effective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 boolean 1 0, 1 N This parameter specifies whether a data node process should exit or perform an automatic restart when an error condition is encountered.
This parameter's default value is
1; this means that, by default, an error causes the data node process to halt.Users of MySQL Cluster Manager should note that, when
StopOnErrorequals 1, this prevents the MySQL Cluster Manager agent from restarting any data nodes after it has performed its own restart and recovery. See Starting and Stopping the Agent on Linux, for more information. -
Effective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 boolean true true, false S When this parameter is enabled, it forces a data node to shut down whenever it encounters a corrupted tuple. In MySQL Cluster NDB 7.5, it is enabled by default.
-
Effective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 true|false (1|0) false true, false IS It is possible to specify MySQL Cluster tables as diskless, meaning that tables are not checkpointed to disk and that no logging occurs. Such tables exist only in main memory. A consequence of using diskless tables is that neither the tables nor the records in those tables survive a crash. However, when operating in diskless mode, it is possible to run ndbd on a diskless computer.
ImportantThis feature causes the entire cluster to operate in diskless mode.
When this feature is enabled, Cluster online backup is disabled. In addition, a partial start of the cluster is not possible.
Disklessis disabled by default. -
Effective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 boolean false true, false N Enabling this parameter causes
NDBto attempt usingO_DIRECTwrites for LCP, backups, and redo logs, often lowering kswapd and CPU usage. When using MySQL Cluster on Linux, enableODirectif you are using a 2.6 or later kernel.ODirectis disabled by default. -
Effective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 error code 2 0 - 4 N This feature is accessible only when building the debug version where it is possible to insert errors in the execution of individual blocks of code as part of testing.
This feature is disabled by default.
-
Effective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 boolean false true, false N Setting this parameter to
1causes backup files to be compressed. The compression used is equivalent to gzip --fast, and can save 50% or more of the space required on the data node to store uncompressed backup files. Compressed backups can be enabled for individual data nodes, or for all data nodes (by setting this parameter in the[ndbd default]section of theconfig.inifile).ImportantYou cannot restore a compressed backup to a cluster running a MySQL version that does not support this feature.
The default value is
0(disabled). -
Effective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 boolean false true, false N Setting this parameter to
1causes local checkpoint files to be compressed. The compression used is equivalent to gzip --fast, and can save 50% or more of the space required on the data node to store uncompressed checkpoint files. Compressed LCPs can be enabled for individual data nodes, or for all data nodes (by setting this parameter in the[ndbd default]section of theconfig.inifile).ImportantYou cannot restore a compressed local checkpoint to a cluster running a MySQL version that does not support this feature.
The default value is
0(disabled).
Controlling Timeouts, Intervals, and Disk Paging
There are a number of [ndbd] parameters
specifying timeouts and intervals between various actions in
Cluster data nodes. Most of the timeout values are specified in
milliseconds. Any exceptions to this are mentioned where
applicable.
-
Effective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 milliseconds 6000 70 - 4294967039 (0xFFFFFEFF) N To prevent the main thread from getting stuck in an endless loop at some point, a “watchdog” thread checks the main thread. This parameter specifies the number of milliseconds between checks. If the process remains in the same state after three checks, the watchdog thread terminates it.
This parameter can easily be changed for purposes of experimentation or to adapt to local conditions. It can be specified on a per-node basis although there seems to be little reason for doing so.
The default timeout is 6000 milliseconds (6 seconds).
TimeBetweenWatchDogCheckInitialEffective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 milliseconds 6000 70 - 4294967039 (0xFFFFFEFF) N This is similar to the
TimeBetweenWatchDogCheckparameter, except thatTimeBetweenWatchDogCheckInitialcontrols the amount of time that passes between execution checks inside a database node in the early start phases during which memory is allocated.The default timeout is 6000 milliseconds (6 seconds).
-
Effective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 milliseconds 30000 0 - 4294967039 (0xFFFFFEFF) N This parameter specifies how long the Cluster waits for all data nodes to come up before the cluster initialization routine is invoked. This timeout is used to avoid a partial Cluster startup whenever possible.
This parameter is overridden when performing an initial start or initial restart of the cluster.
The default value is 30000 milliseconds (30 seconds). 0 disables the timeout, in which case the cluster may start only if all nodes are available.
-
Effective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 milliseconds 60000 0 - 4294967039 (0xFFFFFEFF) N If the cluster is ready to start after waiting for
StartPartialTimeoutmilliseconds but is still possibly in a partitioned state, the cluster waits until this timeout has also passed. IfStartPartitionedTimeoutis set to 0, the cluster waits indefinitely.This parameter is overridden when performing an initial start or initial restart of the cluster.
The default timeout is 60000 milliseconds (60 seconds).
-
Effective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 milliseconds 0 0 - 4294967039 (0xFFFFFEFF) N If a data node has not completed its startup sequence within the time specified by this parameter, the node startup fails. Setting this parameter to 0 (the default value) means that no data node timeout is applied.
For nonzero values, this parameter is measured in milliseconds. For data nodes containing extremely large amounts of data, this parameter should be increased. For example, in the case of a data node containing several gigabytes of data, a period as long as 10−15 minutes (that is, 600000 to 1000000 milliseconds) might be required to perform a node restart.
-
Effective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 milliseconds 15000 0 - 4294967039 (0xFFFFFEFF) N When a data node is configured with
Nodegroup = 65536, is regarded as not being assigned to any node group. When that is done, the cluster waitsStartNoNodegroupTimeoutmilliseconds, then treats such nodes as though they had been added to the list passed to the--nowait-nodesoption, and starts. The default value is15000(that is, the management server waits 15 seconds). Setting this parameter equal to0means that the cluster waits indefinitely.StartNoNodegroupTimeoutmust be the same for all data nodes in the cluster; for this reason, you should always set it in the[ndbd default]section of theconfig.inifile, rather than for individual data nodes.See Section 19.5.14, “Adding MySQL Cluster Data Nodes Online”, for more information.
-
Effective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 milliseconds 5000 10 - 4294967039 (0xFFFFFEFF) N One of the primary methods of discovering failed nodes is by the use of heartbeats. This parameter states how often heartbeat signals are sent and how often to expect to receive them. After missing three heartbeat intervals in a row, the node is declared dead. Thus, the maximum time for discovering a failure through the heartbeat mechanism is four times the heartbeat interval.
The default heartbeat interval is 5000 milliseconds (5 seconds). This parameter must not be changed drastically and should not vary widely between nodes. If one node uses 5000 milliseconds and the node watching it uses 1000 milliseconds, obviously the node will be declared dead very quickly. This parameter can be changed during an online software upgrade, but only in small increments.
See also Network communication and latency.
-
Effective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 milliseconds 1500 100 - 4294967039 (0xFFFFFEFF) N Each data node sends heartbeat signals to each MySQL server (SQL node) to ensure that it remains in contact. If a MySQL server fails to send a heartbeat in time it is declared “dead,” in which case all ongoing transactions are completed and all resources released. The SQL node cannot reconnect until all activities initiated by the previous MySQL instance have been completed. The three-heartbeat criteria for this determination are the same as described for
HeartbeatIntervalDbDb.The default interval is 1500 milliseconds (1.5 seconds). This interval can vary between individual data nodes because each data node watches the MySQL servers connected to it, independently of all other data nodes.
For more information, see Network communication and latency.
-
Effective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 numeric 0 0 - 65535 S Data nodes send heartbeats to one another in a circular fashion whereby each data node monitors the previous one. If a heartbeat is not detected by a given data node, this node declares the previous data node in the circle “dead” (that is, no longer accessible by the cluster). The determination that a data node is dead is done globally; in other words; once a data node is declared dead, it is regarded as such by all nodes in the cluster.
It is possible for heartbeats between data nodes residing on different hosts to be too slow compared to heartbeats between other pairs of nodes (for example, due to a very low heartbeat interval or temporary connection problem), such that a data node is declared dead, even though the node can still function as part of the cluster. .
In this type of situation, it may be that the order in which heartbeats are transmitted between data nodes makes a difference as to whether or not a particular data node is declared dead. If this declaration occurs unnecessarily, this can in turn lead to the unnecessary loss of a node group and as thus to a failure of the cluster.
Consider a setup where there are 4 data nodes A, B, C, and D running on 2 host computers
host1andhost2, and that these data nodes make up 2 node groups, as shown in the following table:Node Group
Nodes Running on
host1Nodes Running on host2Node Group 0:
Node A
Node B Node Group 1:
Node C
Node D Suppose the heartbeats are transmitted in the order A->B->C->D->A. In this case, the loss of the heartbeat between the hosts causes node B to declare node A dead and node C to declare node B dead. This results in loss of Node Group 0, and so the cluster fails. On the other hand, if the order of transmission is A->B->D->C->A (and all other conditions remain as previously stated), the loss of the heartbeat causes nodes A and D to be declared dead; in this case, each node group has one surviving node, and the cluster survives.
The
HeartbeatOrderconfiguration parameter makes the order of heartbeat transmission user-configurable. The default value forHeartbeatOrderis zero; allowing the default value to be used on all data nodes causes the order of heartbeat transmission to be determined byNDB. If this parameter is used, it must be set to a nonzero value (maximum 65535) for every data node in the cluster, and this value must be unique for each data node; this causes the heartbeat transmission to proceed from data node to data node in the order of theirHeartbeatOrdervalues from lowest to highest (and then directly from the data node having the highestHeartbeatOrderto the data node having the lowest value, to complete the circle). The values need not be consecutive; for example, to force the heartbeat transmission order A->B->D->C->A in the scenario outlined previously, you could set theHeartbeatOrdervalues as shown here:Node HeartbeatOrderA 10 B 20 C 30 D 25 To use this parameter to change the heartbeat transmission order in a running MySQL Cluster, you must first set
HeartbeatOrderfor each data node in the cluster in the global configuration (config.ini) file (or files). To cause the change to take effect, you must perform either of the following:A complete shutdown and restart of the entire cluster.
2 rolling restarts of the cluster in succession. All nodes must be restarted in the same order in both rolling restarts.
You can use
DUMP 908to observe the effect of this parameter in the data node logs. -
Effective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 milliseconds 0 0 - 4294967039 (0xFFFFFEFF) N This parameter enables connection checking between data nodes. A data node that fails to respond within an interval of
ConnectCheckIntervalDelaymilliseconds is considered suspect, and is considered dead after two such intervals.The default value for this parameter is 0.
-
Effective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 number of 4-byte words, as a base-2 logarithm 20 0 - 31 N This parameter is an exception in that it does not specify a time to wait before starting a new local checkpoint; rather, it is used to ensure that local checkpoints are not performed in a cluster where relatively few updates are taking place. In most clusters with high update rates, it is likely that a new local checkpoint is started immediately after the previous one has been completed.
The size of all write operations executed since the start of the previous local checkpoints is added. This parameter is also exceptional in that it is specified as the base-2 logarithm of the number of 4-byte words, so that the default value 20 means 4MB (4 × 220) of write operations, 21 would mean 8MB, and so on up to a maximum value of 31, which equates to 8GB of write operations.
All the write operations in the cluster are added together. Setting
TimeBetweenLocalCheckpointsto 6 or less means that local checkpoints will be executed continuously without pause, independent of the cluster's workload. -
Effective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 milliseconds 2000 20 - 32000 N When a transaction is committed, it is committed in main memory in all nodes on which the data is mirrored. However, transaction log records are not flushed to disk as part of the commit. The reasoning behind this behavior is that having the transaction safely committed on at least two autonomous host machines should meet reasonable standards for durability.
It is also important to ensure that even the worst of cases—a complete crash of the cluster—is handled properly. To guarantee that this happens, all transactions taking place within a given interval are put into a global checkpoint, which can be thought of as a set of committed transactions that has been flushed to disk. In other words, as part of the commit process, a transaction is placed in a global checkpoint group. Later, this group's log records are flushed to disk, and then the entire group of transactions is safely committed to disk on all computers in the cluster.
This parameter defines the interval between global checkpoints. The default is 2000 milliseconds.
TimeBetweenGlobalCheckpointsTimeoutEffective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 milliseconds 120000 10 - 4294967039 (0xFFFFFEFF) N This parameter defines the minimum timeout between global checkpoints. The default is 120000 milliseconds.
-
Effective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 milliseconds 100 0 - 32000 N This parameter defines the interval between synchronization epochs for MySQL Cluster Replication. The default value is 100 milliseconds.
TimeBetweenEpochsis part of the implementation of “micro-GCPs”, which can be used to improve the performance of MySQL Cluster Replication. -
Effective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 milliseconds 0 0 - 256000 N This parameter defines a timeout for synchronization epochs for MySQL Cluster Replication. If a node fails to participate in a global checkpoint within the time determined by this parameter, the node is shut down. The default value is 0; in other words, the timeout is disabled.
TimeBetweenEpochsTimeoutis part of the implementation of “micro-GCPs”, which can be used to improve the performance of MySQL Cluster Replication.The current value of this parameter and a warning are written to the cluster log whenever a GCP save takes longer than 1 minute or a GCP save takes longer than 10 seconds.
Setting this parameter to zero has the effect of disabling GCP stops caused by save timeouts, commit timeouts, or both. The maximum possible value for this parameter is 256000 milliseconds.
-
Effective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 epochs 100 0 - 100000 N The number of unprocessed epochs by which a subscribing node can lag behind. Exceeding this number causes a lagging subscriber to be disconnected.
The default value of 100 is sufficient for most normal operations. If a subscribing node does lag enough to cause disconnections, it is usually due to network or scheduling issues with regard to processes or threads. (In rare circumstances, the problem may be due to a bug in the
NDBclient.) It may be desirable to set the value lower than the default when epochs are longer.Disconnection prevents client issues from affecting the data node service, running out of memory to buffer data, and eventually shutting down. Instead, only the client is affected as a result of the disconnect (by, for example gap events in the binary log), forcing the client to reconnect or restart the process.
-
Effective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 bytes 26214400 26214400 (0x01900000) - 4294967039 (0xFFFFFEFF) N The total number of bytes allocated for buffering epochs by this node.
TimeBetweenInactiveTransactionAbortCheckEffective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 milliseconds 1000 1000 - 4294967039 (0xFFFFFEFF) N Timeout handling is performed by checking a timer on each transaction once for every interval specified by this parameter. Thus, if this parameter is set to 1000 milliseconds, every transaction will be checked for timing out once per second.
The default value is 1000 milliseconds (1 second).
-
Effective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 milliseconds [see text] 0 - 4294967039 (0xFFFFFEFF) N This parameter states the maximum time that is permitted to lapse between operations in the same transaction before the transaction is aborted.
The default for this parameter is
4G(also the maximum). For a real-time database that needs to ensure that no transaction keeps locks for too long, this parameter should be set to a relatively small value. The unit is milliseconds. TransactionDeadlockDetectionTimeoutEffective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 milliseconds 1200 50 - 4294967039 (0xFFFFFEFF) N When a node executes a query involving a transaction, the node waits for the other nodes in the cluster to respond before continuing. A failure to respond can occur for any of the following reasons:
The node is “dead”
The operation has entered a lock queue
The node requested to perform the action could be heavily overloaded.
This timeout parameter states how long the transaction coordinator waits for query execution by another node before aborting the transaction, and is important for both node failure handling and deadlock detection.
The default timeout value is 1200 milliseconds (1.2 seconds).
The minimum for this parameter is 50 milliseconds.
-
Effective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 bytes 4M 32K - 4294967039 (0xFFFFFEFF) N This is the maximum number of bytes to store before flushing data to a local checkpoint file. This is done to prevent write buffering, which can impede performance significantly. This parameter is not intended to take the place of
TimeBetweenLocalCheckpoints.NoteWhen
ODirectis enabled, it is not necessary to setDiskSyncSize; in fact, in such cases its value is simply ignored.The default value is 4M (4 megabytes).
-
Effective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 numeric 20M 1M - 1024G S Set the maximum rate for writing to disk, in bytes per second, by local checkpoints and backup operations when no restarts (by this data node or any other data node) are taking place in this MySQL Cluster.
For setting the maximum rate of disk writes allowed while this data node is restarting, use
MaxDiskWriteSpeedOwnRestart. For setting the maximum rate of disk writes allowed while other data nodes are restarting, useMaxDiskWriteSpeedOtherNodeRestart. The minimum speed for disk writes by all LCPs and backup operations can be adjusted by settingMinDiskWriteSpeed. MaxDiskWriteSpeedOtherNodeRestartEffective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 numeric 50M 1M - 1024G S Set the maximum rate for writing to disk, in bytes per second, by local checkpoints and backup operations when one or more data nodes in this MySQL Cluster are restarting, other than this node.
For setting the maximum rate of disk writes allowed while this data node is restarting, use
MaxDiskWriteSpeedOwnRestart. For setting the maximum rate of disk writes allowed when no data nodes are restarting anywhere in the cluster, useMaxDiskWriteSpeed. The minimum speed for disk writes by all LCPs and backup operations can be adjusted by settingMinDiskWriteSpeed.-
Effective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 numeric 200M 1M - 1024G S Set the maximum rate for writing to disk, in bytes per second, by local checkpoints and backup operations while this data node is restarting.
For setting the maximum rate of disk writes allowed while other data nodes are restarting, use
MaxDiskWriteSpeedOtherNodeRestart. For setting the maximum rate of disk writes allowed when no data nodes are restarting anywhere in the cluster, useMaxDiskWriteSpeed. The minimum speed for disk writes by all LCPs and backup operations can be adjusted by settingMinDiskWriteSpeed. -
Effective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 numeric 10M 1M - 1024G S Set the minimum rate for writing to disk, in bytes per second, by local checkpoints and backup operations.
The maximum rates of disk writes allowed for LCPs and backups under various conditions are adjustable using the parameters
MaxDiskWriteSpeed,MaxDiskWriteSpeedOwnRestart, andMaxDiskWriteSpeedOtherNodeRestart. See the descriptions of these parameters for more information. -
Effective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 milliseconds 7500 10 - 4294967039 (0xFFFFFEFF) N This parameter specifies how long data nodes wait for a response from the arbitrator to an arbitration message. If this is exceeded, the network is assumed to have split.
The default value is 7500 milliseconds (7.5 seconds).
-
Effective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 enumeration Default Default, Disabled, WaitExternal N The
Arbitrationparameter enables a choice of arbitration schemes, corresponding to one of 3 possible values for this parameter:Default. This enables arbitration to proceed normally, as determined by the
ArbitrationRanksettings for the management and API nodes. This is the default value.Disabled. Setting
Arbitration = Disabledin the[ndbd default]section of theconfig.inifile to accomplishes the same task as settingArbitrationRankto 0 on all management and API nodes. WhenArbitrationis set in this way, anyArbitrationRanksettings are ignored.WaitExternal. The
Arbitrationparameter also makes it possible to configure arbitration in such a way that the cluster waits until after the time determined byArbitrationTimeouthas passed for an external cluster manager application to perform arbitration instead of handling arbitration internally. This can be done by settingArbitration = WaitExternalin the[ndbd default]section of theconfig.inifile. For best results with theWaitExternalsetting, it is recommended thatArbitrationTimeoutbe 2 times as long as the interval required by the external cluster manager to perform arbitration.
ImportantThis parameter should be used only in the
[ndbd default]section of the cluster configuration file. The behavior of the cluster is unspecified whenArbitrationis set to different values for individual data nodes. RestartSubscriberConnectTimeoutEffective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 ms 12000 0 - 4294967039 (0xFFFFFEFF) S This parameter determines the time that a data node waits for subscribing API nodes to connect. Once this timeout expires, any “missing” API nodes are disconnected from the cluster. To disable this timeout, set
RestartSubscriberConnectTimeoutto 0.While this parameter is specified in milliseconds, the timeout itself is resolved to the next-greatest whole second.
Buffering and logging.
Several [ndbd] configuration parameters
enable the advanced user to have more control over the
resources used by node processes and to adjust various buffer
sizes at need.
These buffers are used as front ends to the file system when
writing log records to disk. If the node is running in diskless
mode, these parameters can be set to their minimum values
without penalty due to the fact that disk writes are
“faked” by the NDB
storage engine's file system abstraction layer.
-
Effective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 unsigned 2M 1M - 4294967039 (0xFFFFFEFF) N The UNDO index buffer, whose size is set by this parameter, is used during local checkpoints. The
NDBstorage engine uses a recovery scheme based on checkpoint consistency in conjunction with an operational REDO log. To produce a consistent checkpoint without blocking the entire system for writes, UNDO logging is done while performing the local checkpoint. UNDO logging is activated on a single table fragment at a time. This optimization is possible because tables are stored entirely in main memory.The UNDO index buffer is used for the updates on the primary key hash index. Inserts and deletes rearrange the hash index; the NDB storage engine writes UNDO log records that map all physical changes to an index page so that they can be undone at system restart. It also logs all active insert operations for each fragment at the start of a local checkpoint.
Reads and updates set lock bits and update a header in the hash index entry. These changes are handled by the page-writing algorithm to ensure that these operations need no UNDO logging.
This buffer is 2MB by default. The minimum value is 1MB, which is sufficient for most applications. For applications doing extremely large or numerous inserts and deletes together with large transactions and large primary keys, it may be necessary to increase the size of this buffer. If this buffer is too small, the NDB storage engine issues internal error code 677 (
Index UNDO buffers overloaded).ImportantIt is not safe to decrease the value of this parameter during a rolling restart.
-
Effective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 unsigned 16M 1M - 4294967039 (0xFFFFFEFF) N This parameter sets the size of the UNDO data buffer, which performs a function similar to that of the UNDO index buffer, except the UNDO data buffer is used with regard to data memory rather than index memory. This buffer is used during the local checkpoint phase of a fragment for inserts, deletes, and updates.
Because UNDO log entries tend to grow larger as more operations are logged, this buffer is also larger than its index memory counterpart, with a default value of 16MB.
This amount of memory may be unnecessarily large for some applications. In such cases, it is possible to decrease this size to a minimum of 1MB.
It is rarely necessary to increase the size of this buffer. If there is such a need, it is a good idea to check whether the disks can actually handle the load caused by database update activity. A lack of sufficient disk space cannot be overcome by increasing the size of this buffer.
If this buffer is too small and gets congested, the NDB storage engine issues internal error code 891 (Data UNDO buffers overloaded).
ImportantIt is not safe to decrease the value of this parameter during a rolling restart.
-
Effective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 bytes 32M 1M - 4294967039 (0xFFFFFEFF) N All update activities also need to be logged. The REDO log makes it possible to replay these updates whenever the system is restarted. The NDB recovery algorithm uses a “fuzzy” checkpoint of the data together with the UNDO log, and then applies the REDO log to play back all changes up to the restoration point.
RedoBuffersets the size of the buffer in which the REDO log is written. The default value is 32MB; the minimum value is 1MB.If this buffer is too small, the
NDBstorage engine issues error code 1221 (REDO log buffers overloaded). For this reason, you should exercise care if you attempt to decrease the value ofRedoBufferas part of an online change in the cluster's configuration.ndbmtd allocates a separate buffer for each LDM thread (see
ThreadConfig). For example, with 4 LDM threads, an ndbmtd data node actually has 4 buffers and allocatesRedoBufferbytes to each one, for a total of4 * RedoBufferbytes. -
Effective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 bytes 8192 0 - 64K S Controls the size of the circular buffer used for NDB log events within data nodes.
Controlling log messages.
In managing the cluster, it is very important to be able to
control the number of log messages sent for various event
types to stdout. For each event category,
there are 16 possible event levels (numbered 0 through 15).
Setting event reporting for a given event category to level 15
means all event reports in that category are sent to
stdout; setting it to 0 means that there
will be no event reports made in that category.
By default, only the startup message is sent to
stdout, with the remaining event reporting
level defaults being set to 0. The reason for this is that these
messages are also sent to the management server's cluster log.
An analogous set of levels can be set for the management client to determine which event levels to record in the cluster log.
-
Effective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 integer 1 0 - 15 N The reporting level for events generated during startup of the process.
The default level is 1.
-
Effective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 integer 0 0 - 15 N The reporting level for events generated as part of graceful shutdown of a node.
The default level is 0.
-
Effective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 integer 0 0 - 15 N The reporting level for statistical events such as number of primary key reads, number of updates, number of inserts, information relating to buffer usage, and so on.
The default level is 0.
-
Effective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 log level 0 0 - 15 N The reporting level for events generated by local and global checkpoints.
The default level is 0.
-
Effective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 integer 0 0 - 15 N The reporting level for events generated during node restart.
The default level is 0.
-
Effective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 integer 0 0 - 15 N The reporting level for events generated by connections between cluster nodes.
The default level is 0.
-
Effective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 integer 0 0 - 15 N The reporting level for events generated by errors and warnings by the cluster as a whole. These errors do not cause any node failure but are still considered worth reporting.
The default level is 0.
-
Effective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 levelr 0 0 - 15 N The reporting level for events generated by congestion. These errors do not cause node failure but are still considered worth reporting.
The default level is 0.
-
Effective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 integer 0 0 - 15 N The reporting level for events generated for information about the general state of the cluster.
The default level is 0.
-
Effective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 unsigned 0 0 - 4294967039 (0xFFFFFEFF) N This parameter controls how often data node memory usage reports are recorded in the cluster log; it is an integer value representing the number of seconds between reports.
Each data node's data memory and index memory usage is logged as both a percentage and a number of 32 KB pages of the
DataMemoryandIndexMemory, respectively, set in theconfig.inifile. For example, ifDataMemoryis equal to 100 MB, and a given data node is using 50 MB for data memory storage, the corresponding line in the cluster log might look like this:2006-12-24 01:18:16 [MgmSrvr] INFO -- Node 2: Data usage is 50%(1280 32K pages of total 2560)
MemReportFrequencyis not a required parameter. If used, it can be set for all cluster data nodes in the[ndbd default]section ofconfig.ini, and can also be set or overridden for individual data nodes in the corresponding[ndbd]sections of the configuration file. The minimum value—which is also the default value—is 0, in which case memory reports are logged only when memory usage reaches certain percentages (80%, 90%, and 100%), as mentioned in the discussion of statistics events in Section 19.5.6.2, “MySQL Cluster Log Events”. -
Effective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 seconds 0 0 - 4294967039 (0xFFFFFEFF) N When a data node is started with the
--initial, it initializes the redo log file during Start Phase 4 (see Section 19.5.1, “Summary of MySQL Cluster Start Phases”). When very large values are set forNoOfFragmentLogFiles,FragmentLogFileSize, or both, this initialization can take a long time.You can force reports on the progress of this process to be logged periodically, by means of theStartupStatusReportFrequencyconfiguration parameter. In this case, progress is reported in the cluster log, in terms of both the number of files and the amount of space that have been initialized, as shown here:2009-06-20 16:39:23 [MgmSrvr] INFO -- Node 1: Local redo log file initialization status: #Total files: 80, Completed: 60 #Total MBytes: 20480, Completed: 15557 2009-06-20 16:39:23 [MgmSrvr] INFO -- Node 2: Local redo log file initialization status: #Total files: 80, Completed: 60 #Total MBytes: 20480, Completed: 15570
These reports are logged each
StartupStatusReportFrequencyseconds during Start Phase 4. IfStartupStatusReportFrequencyis 0 (the default), then reports are written to the cluster log only when at the beginning and at the completion of the redo log file initialization process.
Data Node Debugging Parameters.
It is also possible to cause logging of traces for events
generated by creating and dropping tables using
DictTrace. This
parameter is useful only in debugging NDB kernel code.
DictTrace takes an
integer value. 0 (default - no logging) and 1 (logging
enabled) are the only supported values prior to MySQL Cluster
NDB 7.5.2. In MySQL Cluster NDB 7.5.2 and later, setting this
parameter to 2 enables logging of additional
DBDICT debugging output (Bug #20368450).
Backup parameters.
The [ndbd] parameters discussed in this
section define memory buffers set aside for execution of
online backups.
-
Effective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 bytes 16M 512K - 4294967039 (0xFFFFFEFF) N NDB 7.5.0 bytes 16M 2M - 4294967039 (0xFFFFFEFF) N NDB 7.5.1 bytes 16M 512K - 4294967039 (0xFFFFFEFF) N In creating a backup, there are two buffers used for sending data to the disk. The backup data buffer is used to fill in data recorded by scanning a node's tables. Once this buffer has been filled to the level specified as
BackupWriteSize, the pages are sent to disk. While flushing data to disk, the backup process can continue filling this buffer until it runs out of space. When this happens, the backup process pauses the scan and waits until some disk writes have completed freeing up memory so that scanning may continue.The default value for this parameter is 16MB. The minimum was changed from 2M to 512K in MySQL Cluster NDB 7.5.1. (Bug #22749509)
-
Effective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 percent 50 0 - 90 N During normal operation, data nodes attempt to maximize the disk write speed used for local checkpoints and backups while remaining within the bounds set by
MinDiskWriteSpeedandMaxDiskWriteSpeed. Disk write throttling gives each LDM thread an equal share of the total budget. This allows parallel LCPs to take place without exceeding the disk I/O budget. Because a backup is executed by only one LDM thread, this effectively caused a budget cut, resulting in longer backup completion times, and—if the rate of change is sufficiently high—in failure to complete the backup when the backup log buffer fill rate is higher than the achievable write rate.This problem can be addressed by using the
BackupDiskWriteSpeedPctconfiguration parameter, which takes a value in the range 0-90 (inclusive) which is interpreted as the percentage of the node's maximum write rate budget that is reserved prior to sharing out the remainder of the budget among LDM threads for LCPs. The LDM thread running the backup receives the whole write rate budget for the backup, plus its (reduced) share of the write rate budget for local checkpoints. (This makes the disk write rate budget behave similarly to how it was handled in MySQL Cluster NDB 7.3 and earlier.)The default value for this parameter is 50 (interpreted as 50%).
-
Effective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 bytes 16M 2M - 4294967039 (0xFFFFFEFF) N The backup log buffer fulfills a role similar to that played by the backup data buffer, except that it is used for generating a log of all table writes made during execution of the backup. The same principles apply for writing these pages as with the backup data buffer, except that when there is no more space in the backup log buffer, the backup fails. For that reason, the size of the backup log buffer must be large enough to handle the load caused by write activities while the backup is being made. See Section 19.5.3.3, “Configuration for MySQL Cluster Backups”.
The default value for this parameter should be sufficient for most applications. In fact, it is more likely for a backup failure to be caused by insufficient disk write speed than it is for the backup log buffer to become full. If the disk subsystem is not configured for the write load caused by applications, the cluster is unlikely to be able to perform the desired operations.
It is preferable to configure cluster nodes in such a manner that the processor becomes the bottleneck rather than the disks or the network connections.
The default value for this parameter is 16MB.
-
Effective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 bytes 32M 0 - 4294967039 (0xFFFFFEFF) N This parameter is deprecated, and subject to removal in a future version of MySQL Cluster. Any setting made for it is ignored.
-
Effective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 seconds 0 0 - 4294967039 (0xFFFFFEFF) N This parameter controls how often backup status reports are issued in the management client during a backup, as well as how often such reports are written to the cluster log (provided cluster event logging is configured to permit it—see Logging and checkpointing).
BackupReportFrequencyrepresents the time in seconds between backup status reports.The default value is 0.
-
Effective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 bytes 256K 32K - 4294967039 (0xFFFFFEFF) N This parameter specifies the default size of messages written to disk by the backup log and backup data buffers.
The default value for this parameter is 256KB.
-
Effective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 bytes 1M 256K - 4294967039 (0xFFFFFEFF) N This parameter specifies the maximum size of messages written to disk by the backup log and backup data buffers.
The default value for this parameter is 1MB.
When specifying these parameters, the following relationships must hold true. Otherwise, the data node will be unable to start.
BackupDataBufferSize >= BackupWriteSize + 188KBBackupLogBufferSize >= BackupWriteSize + 16KBBackupMaxWriteSize >= BackupWriteSize
MySQL Cluster Realtime Performance Parameters
The [ndbd] parameters discussed in this
section are used in scheduling and locking of threads to
specific CPUs on multiprocessor data node hosts.
To make use of these parameters, the data node process must be run as system root.
-
Effective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 CPU ID 64K 0 - 64K N When used with ndbd, this parameter (now a string) specifies the ID of the CPU assigned to handle the
NDBCLUSTERexecution thread. When used with ndbmtd, the value of this parameter is a comma-separated list of CPU IDs assigned to handle execution threads. Each CPU ID in the list should be an integer in the range 0 to 65535 (inclusive).The number of IDs specified should match the number of execution threads determined by
MaxNoOfExecutionThreads. However, there is no guarantee that threads are assigned to CPUs in any given order when using this parameter. You can obtain more finely-grained control of this type usingThreadConfig.LockExecuteThreadToCPUhas no default value. -
Effective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 CPU ID [none] 0 - 64K N This parameter specifies the ID of the CPU assigned to handle
NDBCLUSTERmaintenance threads.The value of this parameter is an integer in the range 0 to 65535 (inclusive). There is no default value.
-
Effective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 boolean false true, false N Setting this parameter to 1 enables real-time scheduling of data node threads.
The default is 0 (scheduling disabled).
-
Effective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 µs 50 0 - 11000 N This parameter specifies the time in microseconds for threads to be executed in the scheduler before being sent. Setting it to 0 minimizes the response time; to achieve higher throughput, you can increase the value at the expense of longer response times.
The default is 50 μsec, which our testing shows to increase throughput slightly in high-load cases without materially delaying requests.
-
Effective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 integer 5 0 - 10 S Set the balance in the
NDBscheduler between speed and throughput. This parameter takes an integer whose value is in the range 0-10 inclusive, with 5 as the default. Higher values provide better response times relative to throughput. Lower values provide increased throughput at the expense of longer response times. -
Effective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 µs 0 0 - 500 N This parameter specifies the time in microseconds for threads to be executed in the scheduler before sleeping.
The default value is 0.
-
Effective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 numeric 0 0 - 128 S This parameter determines the number of threads to create when rebuilding ordered indexes during a system or node start, as well as when running ndb_restore
--rebuild-indexes. It is supported only when there is more than one fragment for the table per data node (for example, when theMAX_ROWSoption has been used withCREATE TABLE).Setting this parameter to 0 (the default) disables multi-threaded building of ordered indexes.
This parameter is supported when using ndbd or ndbmtd.
You can enable multi-threaded builds during data node initial restarts by setting the
TwoPassInitialNodeRestartCopydata node configuration parameter toTRUE. -
Effective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 boolean false true, false N Multi-threaded building of ordered indexes can be enabled for initial restarts of data nodes by setting this configuration parameter to
TRUE, which enables two-pass copying of data during initial node restarts.You must also set
BuildIndexThreadsto a nonzero value. -
Effective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 boolean 1 ... N This parameter determines whether Non-Uniform Memory Access (NUMA) is controlled by the operating or by the data node process, whether the data node uses ndbd or ndbmtd. By default,
NDBattempts to use an interleaved NUMA memory allocation policy on any data node where the host operating system provides NUMA support.Setting
Numa = 0means that the datanode process does not itself attempt to set a policy for memory allocation, and permits this behavior to be determined by the operating system, which may be further guided by the separate numactl tool. That is,Numa = 0yields the system default behavior, which can be customised by numactl. For many Linux systems, the system default behavior is to allocate socket-local memory to any given process at allocation time. This can be problematic when using ndbmtd; this is because nbdmtd allocates all memory at startup, leading to an imbalance, giving different access speeds for different sockets, especially when locking pages in main memory.Setting
Numa = 1means that the data node process useslibnumato request interleaved memory allocation. (This can also be accomplished manually, on the operating system level, using numactl.) Using interleaved allocation in effect tells the data node process to ignore non-uniform memory access but does not attempt to take any advantage of fast local memory; instead, the data node process tries to avoid imbalances due to slow remote memory. If interleaved allocation is not desired, setNumato 0 so that the desired behavior can be determined on the operating system level.The
Numaconfiguration parameter is supported only on Linux systems wherelibnuma.sois available.
Multi-Threading Configuration Parameters (ndbmtd).
ndbmtd runs by default as a single-threaded
process and must be configured to use multiple threads, using
either of two methods, both of which require setting
configuration parameters in the
config.ini file. The first method is
simply to set an appropriate value for the
MaxNoOfExecutionThreads
configuration parameter. A second method, makes it possible to
set up more complex rules for ndbmtd
multi-threading using
ThreadConfig. The
next few paragraphs provide information about these parameters
and their use with multi-threaded data nodes.
-
Effective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 integer 2 2 - 72 IS This parameter directly controls the number of execution threads used by ndbmtd, up to a maximum of 72. Although this parameter is set in
[ndbd]or[ndbd default]sections of theconfig.inifile, it is exclusive to ndbmtd and does not apply to ndbd.Setting
MaxNoOfExecutionThreadssets the number of threads for each type as determined by a matrix in the filestorage/ndb/src/kernel/vm/mt_thr_config.cpp. This table shows these numbers of threads for possible values ofMaxNoOfExecutionThreads.MaxNoOfExecutionThreadsValueLDM Threads TC Threads Send Threads Receive Threads 0 .. 3 1 1 0 1 4 .. 6 2 1 0 1 7 .. 8 4 1 0 1 9 4 2 0 1 10 4 2 1 1 11 4 3 1 1 12 6 3 1 2 13 6 2 1 2 14 6 3 1 2 15 6 3 2 2 16 8 3 1 2 17 8 4 1 2 18 8 4 2 2 19 8 5 2 2 20 10 4 2 2 21 10 5 2 2 22 10 5 2 3 23 10 6 2 3 24 12 5 2 3 25 12 6 2 3 26 12 6 3 3 27 12 7 3 3 28 12 7 3 4 29 12 8 3 4 30 12 8 4 4 31 12 9 4 4 32 16 8 3 3 33 16 8 3 4 34 16 8 4 4 35 16 9 4 4 36 16 10 4 4 37 16 10 4 5 38 16 11 4 5 39 16 11 5 5 40 20 10 4 4 41 20 10 4 5 42 20 11 4 5 43 20 11 5 5 44 20 12 5 5 45 20 12 5 6 46 20 13 5 6 47 20 13 6 6 48 24 12 5 5 49 24 12 5 6 50 24 13 5 6 51 24 13 6 6 52 24 14 6 6 53 24 14 6 7 54 24 15 6 7 55 24 15 7 7 56 24 16 7 7 57 24 16 7 8 58 24 17 7 8 59 24 17 8 8 60 24 18 8 8 61 24 18 8 9 62 24 19 8 9 63 24 19 9 9 64 32 16 7 7 65 32 16 7 8 66 32 17 7 8 67 32 17 8 8 68 32 18 8 8 69 32 18 8 9 70 32 19 8 9 71 32 20 8 9 72 32 20 8 10 There is always one SUMA (replication) thread.
The number of LDM threads must not exceed
NoOfFragmentLogParts. If this parameter's value is the default (4), this means that you must increase it as well, when settingMaxNoOfExecutionThreadsto 16 or greater; that is, you should setNoOfFragmentLogPartsto the corresponding number of LDM threads value shown for that value ofMaxNoOfExecutionThreadsin the preceding table.The thread types are described later in this section (see
ThreadConfig).Setting this parameter outside the permitted range of values causes the management server to abort on startup with the error Error line
number: Illegal valuevaluefor parameter MaxNoOfExecutionThreads.For
MaxNoOfExecutionThreads, a value of 0 or 1 is rounded up internally byNDBto 2, so that 2 is considered this parameter's default and minimum value.MaxNoOfExecutionThreadsis generally intended to be set equal to the number of CPU threads available, and to allocate a number of threads of each type suitable to typical workloads. It does not assign particular threads to specified CPUs. For cases where it is desirable to vary from the settings provided, or to bind threads to CPUs, you should useThreadConfiginstead, which allows you to allocate each thread directly to a desired type, CPU, or both.The multi-threaded data node process always spawns, at a minimum, the threads listed here:
1 local query handler (LDM) thread
1 transaction coordinator (TC) thread
1 receive thread
1 subscription manager (SUMA or replication) thread
Changing the number of LDM threads always requires a system restart, whether it is changed using this parameter or
ThreadConfig. If the cluster'sIndexMemoryusage is greater than 50%, changing this requires an initial restart of the cluster. (A maximum of 30-35%IndexMemoryusage is recommended in such cases.) Otherwise, resource usage and LDM thread allocation cannot be balanced between nodes, which can result in underutilized and overutilized LDM threads, and ultimately data node failures. -
Effective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 numeric 4 4, 8, 12, 16, 24, 32 IN Set the number of log file groups for redo logs belonging to this ndbmtd. The maximum value is 32; the value set must be an even multiple of 4.
The number of LQH threads used by ndbmtd must not exceed
NoOfFragmentLogParts, and this number may increase when increasingMaxNoOfExecutionThreads; see the description of this parameter for more information. -
Effective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 string '' ... IS This parameter is used with ndbmtd to assign threads of different types to different CPUs. Its value is a string whose format has the following syntax:
ThreadConfig :=
entry[,entry[,...]]entry:=type={param[,param[,...]]}type:= ldm | main | recv | send | rep | io | tc | watchdogparam:= count=number| cpubind=cpu_list| cpuset=cpu_list| spintime=number| realtime={0|1} | thread_prio={0..10} | cpubind_exclusive=cpu_list| cpuset_exclusive=cpu_listThe curly braces (
{...}) surrounding the list of parameters are required, even if there is only one parameter in the list.A
param(parameter) specifies any or all of the following information:The number of threads of the given type (
count).The set of CPUs to which the threads of the given type are to be nonexclusively bound. Thsi is determined by either one of
cpubindorcpuset).cpubindcauses each thread to be bound (nonexclusively) to a CPU in the set;cpusetmeans that each thread is bound (nonexclusively) to the set of CPUs specified.On Solaris, you can instead specify a set of CPUs to which the threads of the given type are to be bound exclusively.
cpubind_exclusivecauses each thread to be bound exclusively to a CPU in the set;cpuset_exclsuivemeans that each thread is bound exclusively to the set of CPUs specified.Only one of
cpubind,cpuset,cpubind_exclusive, orcpuset_exclusivecan be provided in a single configuration.spintimedetermines the wait time in microseconds the thread spins before going to sleep.The default value for
spintimeis the value of theSchedulerSpinTimerdata node configuration parameter.spintimedoes not apply to I/O threads or watchdog threads and so cannot be set for these thread types.realtimecan be set to 0 or 1. If it is set to 1, the threads run with real-time priority. This also means thatthread_priocannot be set.The
realtimeparameter is set by default to the value of theRealtimeSchedulerdata node configuration parameter.thread_priois a thread priority level that can be set from 0 to 10, with 10 representing the greatest priority. The default is 5. The precise effects of this parameter are platform-specific, and are described later in this section.
thread_prio settings and effects by platform. The implementation of
thread_priodiffers between Linux/FreeBSD, Solaris, and Windows. In the following list, we discuss its effects on each of these platforms in turn:Linux and FreeBSD: We map
thread_prioto a value to be supplied to thenicesystem call. Since a lower niceness value for a process indicates a higher process priority, increasingthread_priohas the effect of lowering thenicevalue.thread_priovaluenicevalue0 19 1 16 2 12 3 8 4 4 5 0 6 -4 7 -8 8 -12 9 -16 10 -20 Some operating systems may provide for a maximum process niceness level of 20, but this is not supported by all targeted versions; for this reason, we choose 19 as the maximum
nicevalue that can be set.Solaris: Setting
thread_prioon Solaris sets the Solaris FX priority, with mappings as shown in the following table:thread_priovalueSolaris FXpriority0 15 1 20 2 25 3 30 4 35 5 40 6 45 7 50 8 55 9 59 10 60 A
thread_priosetting of 9 is mapped on Solaris to the special FX priority value 59, which means that the operating system also attempts to force the thread to run alone on its own CPU core.Windows: We map
thread_prioto a Windows thread priority value passed to the Windows APISetThreadPriority()function. This mapping is shown in the following table:thread_priovalueWindows thread priority 0 - 1 THREAD_PRIORITY_LOWEST2 - 3 THREAD_PRIORITY_BELOW_NORMAL4 - 5 THREAD_PRIORITY_NORMAL6 - 7 THREAD_PRIORITY_ABOVE_NORMAL8 - 10 THREAD_PRIORITY_HIGHEST
The
typeattribute represents an NDB thread type. The thread types supported, and the range of permittedcountvalues for each, are provided in the following list:ldm: Local query handler (DBLQHkernel block) that handles data. The more LDM threads that are used, the more highly partitioned the data becomes. Each LDM thread maintains its own sets of data and index partitions, as well as its own redo log. The value set forldmmust be one of the values 1, 2, 4, 6, 8, 12, 16, 24, or 32.ImportantChanging the number of LDM threads requires a system restart to be effective and safe for cluster operations. (This is also true when this is done using
MaxNoOfExecutionThreads.) IfIndexMemoryusage is in excess of 50%, an initial restart of the cluster is required; a maximum of 30-35%IndexMemoryusage is recommended in such cases. Otherwise,IndexMemoryandDataMemoryusage as well as the allocation of LDM threads cannot be balanced between nodes, which can ultimately lead to data node failures.tc: Transaction coordinator thread (DBTCkernel block) containing the state of an ongoing transaction. The maximum number of TC threads is 32.Optimally, every new transaction can be assigned to a new TC thread. In most cases 1 TC thread per 2 LDM threads is sufficient to guarantee that this can happen. In cases where the number of writes is relatively small when compared to the number of reads, it is possible that only 1 TC thread per 4 LQH threads is required to maintain transaction states. Conversely, in applications that perform a great many updates, it may be necessary for the ratio of TC threads to LDM threads to approach 1 (for example, 3 TC threads to 4 LDM threads).
Range: 1 - 32
main: Data dictionary and transaction coordinator (DBDIHandDBTCkernel blocks), providing schema management. This is always handled by a single dedicated thread.Range: 1 only.
recv: Receive thread (CMVMIkernel block). Each receive thread handles one or more sockets for communicating with other nodes in a MySQL Cluster, with one socket per node. MySQL Cluster supports multiple receive threads; the maximum is 16 such threads.Range: 1 - 16
send: Send thread (CMVMIkernel block). To increase throughput, it is possible to perform sends from one or more separate, dedicated threads (maximum 8).Previously, all threads handled their own sending directly; this can still be made to happen by setting the number of send threads to 0 (this also happens when
MaxNoOfExecutionThreadsis set less than 10). While doing so can have an adeverse impact on throughput, it can also in some cases provide decreased latency.Range: 0 - 16
rep: Replication thread (SUMAkernel block). Asynchronous replication operations are always handled by a single, dedicated thread.Range: 1 only.
io: File system and other miscellaneous operations. These are not demanding tasks, and are always handled as a group by a single, dedicated I/O thread.Range: 1 only.
watchdog: Settings to this parameter are actually applied to several threads of this type having specific uses. These threads include theSocketServerthread which receives connection setups from other nodes, theSocketClientthread which attempts to set up connections to other nodes, and the thread watchdog thread that checks that threads are progressing.Range: 1 only.
Simple examples:
# Example 1.
ThreadConfig=ldm={count=2,cpubind=1,2},main={cpubind=12},rep={cpubind=11}
# Example 2.
Threadconfig=main={cpubind=0},ldm={count=4,cpubind=1,2,5,6},io={cpubind=3}
It is usually desirable when configuring thread usage for a data
node host to reserve one or more number of CPUs for operating
system and other tasks. Thus, for a host machine with 24 CPUs,
you might want to use 20 CPU threads (leaving 4 for other uses),
with 8 LDM threads, 4 TC threads (half the number of LDM
threads), 3 send threads, 3 receive threads, and 1 thread each
for schema management, asynchronous replication, and I/O
operations. (This is almost the same distribution of threads
used when
MaxNoOfExecutionThreads
is set equal to 20.) The following
ThreadConfig setting performs these
assignments, additionally binding all of these threads to
specific CPUs:
ThreadConfig=ldm{count=8,cpubind=1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8},main={cpubind=9},io={cpubind=9}, \
rep={cpubind=10},tc{count=4,cpubind=11,12,13,14},recv={count=3,cpubind=15,16,17}, \
send{count=3,cpubind=18,19,20}
It should be possible in most cases to bind the main (schema management) thread and the I/O thread to the same CPU, as we have done in the example just shown.
The following example incorporates groups of CPUs defined using
both cpuset and cpubind,
as well as use of thread prioritization.
ThreadConfig=ldm={count=4,cpuset=0-3,thread_prio=8,spintime=200}, \
ldm={count=4,cpubind=4-7,thread_prio=8,spintime=200}, \
tc={count=4,cpuset=8-9,thread_prio=6},send={count=2,thread_prio=10,cpubind=10-11}, \
main={count=1,cpubind=10},rep={count=1,cpubind=11}
In this case we create two LDM groups; the first uses
cpubind and the second uses
cpuset. thread_prio and
spintime are set to the same values for each
group. This means there are eight LDM threads in total. (You
should ensure that
NoOfFragmentLogParts
is also set to 8.) The four TC threads use only two CPUs; it is
possible when using cpuset to specify fewer
CPUs than threads in the group. (This is not true for
cpubind.) The send threads use two threads
using cpubind to bind these threads to CPUs
10 and 11. The main and rep threads can reuse these CPUs.
This example shows how ThreadConfig and
NoOfFragmentLogParts might be set up for a
24-CPU host with hyperthreading, leaving CPUs 10, 11, 22, and 23
available for operating system functions and interrupts:
NoOfFragmentLogParts=10
ThreadConfig=ldm={count=10,cpubind=0-4,12-16,thread_prio=9,spintime=200}, \
tc={count=4,cpuset=6-7,18-19,thread_prio=8},send={count=1,cpuset=8}, \
recv={count=1,cpuset=20},main={count=1,cpuset=9,21},rep={count=1,cpuset=9,21}, \
io={count=1,cpuset=9,21,thread_prio=8},watchdog={count=1,cpuset=9,21,thread_prio=9}
In order to take advantage of the enhanced stability that the
use of ThreadConfig offers, it is necessary
to insure that CPUs are isolated, and that they not subject to
interrupts, or to being scheduled for other tasks by the
operating system. On many Linux systems, you can do this by
setting IRQBALANCE_BANNED_CPUS in
/etc/sysconfig/irqbalance to
0xFFFFF0, and by using the
isolcpus boot option in
grub.conf. For specific information, see
your operating system or platform documentation.
Disk Data Configuration Parameters. Configuration parameters affecting Disk Data behavior include the following:
-
Effective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 32K pages 10 1 - 1000 N This is the number of page entries (page references) to allocate. It is specified as a number of 32K pages in
DiskPageBufferMemory. The default is sufficient for most cases but you may need to increase the value of this parameter if you encounter problems with very large transactions on Disk Data tables. Each page entry requires approximately 100 bytes. -
Effective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 bytes 64M 4M - 1T N This determines the amount of space used for caching pages on disk, and is set in the
[ndbd]or[ndbd default]section of theconfig.inifile. It is measured in bytes. Each page takes up 32 KB. This means that MySQL Cluster Disk Data storage always usesN* 32 KB memory whereNis some nonnegative integer.The default value for this parameter is
64M(2000 pages of 32 KB each).You can query the
ndbinfo.diskpagebuffertable to help determine whether the value for this parameter should be increased to minimize unnecessary disk seeks. See Section 19.5.10.17, “The ndbinfo diskpagebuffer Table”, for more information. -
Effective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 bytes 128M 0 - 64T N This parameter determines the amount of memory that is used for log buffers, disk operations (such as page requests and wait queues), and metadata for tablespaces, log file groups,
UNDOfiles, and data files. The shared global memory pool also provides memory used for satisfying the memory requirements of theUNDO_BUFFER_SIZEoption used withCREATE LOGFILE GROUPandALTER LOGFILE GROUPstatements, including any default value implied for this options by the setting of theInitialLogFileGroupdata node configuration parameter.SharedGlobalMemorycan be set in the[ndbd]or[ndbd default]section of theconfig.iniconfiguration file, and is measured in bytes.The default value is
128M. -
Effective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 threads 2 0 - 4294967039 (0xFFFFFEFF) N This parameter determines the number of unbound threads used for Disk Data file access. Before
DiskIOThreadPoolwas introduced, exactly one thread was spawned for each Disk Data file, which could lead to performance issues, particularly when using very large data files. WithDiskIOThreadPool, you can—for example—access a single large data file using several threads working in parallel.This parameter applies to Disk Data I/O threads only.
The optimum value for this parameter depends on your hardware and configuration, and includes these factors:
Physical distribution of Disk Data files. You can obtain better performance by placing data files, undo log files, and the data node file system on separate physical disks. If you do this with some or all of these sets of files, then you can set
DiskIOThreadPoolhigher to enable separate threads to handle the files on each disk.Disk performance and types. The number of threads that can be accommodated for Disk Data file handling is also dependent on the speed and throughput of the disks. Faster disks and higher throughput allow for more disk I/O threads. Our test results indicate that solid-state disk drives can handle many more disk I/O threads than conventional disks, and thus higher values for
DiskIOThreadPool.
The default value for this parameter is 2.
Disk Data file system parameters. The parameters in the following list make it possible to place MySQL Cluster Disk Data files in specific directories without the need for using symbolic links.
-
Effective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 filename [see text] ... IN If this parameter is specified, then MySQL Cluster Disk Data data files and undo log files are placed in the indicated directory. This can be overridden for data files, undo log files, or both, by specifying values for
FileSystemPathDataFiles,FileSystemPathUndoFiles, or both, as explained for these parameters. It can also be overridden for data files by specifying a path in theADD DATAFILEclause of aCREATE TABLESPACEorALTER TABLESPACEstatement, and for undo log files by specifying a path in theADD UNDOFILEclause of aCREATE LOGFILE GROUPorALTER LOGFILE GROUPstatement. IfFileSystemPathDDis not specified, thenFileSystemPathis used.If a
FileSystemPathDDdirectory is specified for a given data node (including the case where the parameter is specified in the[ndbd default]section of theconfig.inifile), then starting that data node with--initialcauses all files in the directory to be deleted. -
Effective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 filename [see text] ... IN If this parameter is specified, then MySQL Cluster Disk Data data files are placed in the indicated directory. This overrides any value set for
FileSystemPathDD. This parameter can be overridden for a given data file by specifying a path in theADD DATAFILEclause of aCREATE TABLESPACEorALTER TABLESPACEstatement used to create that data file. IfFileSystemPathDataFilesis not specified, thenFileSystemPathDDis used (orFileSystemPath, ifFileSystemPathDDhas also not been set).If a
FileSystemPathDataFilesdirectory is specified for a given data node (including the case where the parameter is specified in the[ndbd default]section of theconfig.inifile), then starting that data node with--initialcauses all files in the directory to be deleted. -
Effective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 filename [see text] ... IN If this parameter is specified, then MySQL Cluster Disk Data undo log files are placed in the indicated directory. This overrides any value set for
FileSystemPathDD. This parameter can be overridden for a given data file by specifying a path in theADD UNDOclause of aCREATE LOGFILE GROUPorALTER LOGFILE GROUPstatement used to create that data file. IfFileSystemPathUndoFilesis not specified, thenFileSystemPathDDis used (orFileSystemPath, ifFileSystemPathDDhas also not been set).If a
FileSystemPathUndoFilesdirectory is specified for a given data node (including the case where the parameter is specified in the[ndbd default]section of theconfig.inifile), then starting that data node with--initialcauses all files in the directory to be deleted.
For more information, see Section 19.5.13.1, “MySQL Cluster Disk Data Objects”.
-
Disk Data object creation parameters. The next two parameters enable you—when starting the cluster for the first time—to cause a Disk Data log file group, tablespace, or both, to be created without the use of SQL statements.
-
Effective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 string [see text] ... S This parameter can be used to specify a log file group that is created when performing an initial start of the cluster.
InitialLogFileGroupis specified as shown here:InitialLogFileGroup = [name=
name;] [undo_buffer_size=size;]file-specification-listfile-specification-list:file-specification[;file-specification[; ...]]file-specification:filename:sizeThe
nameof the log file group is optional and defaults toDEFAULT-LG. Theundo_buffer_sizeis also optional; if omitted, it defaults to64M. Eachfile-specificationcorresponds to an undo log file, and at least one must be specified in thefile-specification-list. Undo log files are placed according to any values that have been set forFileSystemPath,FileSystemPathDD, andFileSystemPathUndoFiles, just as if they had been created as the result of aCREATE LOGFILE GROUPorALTER LOGFILE GROUPstatement.Consider the following:
InitialLogFileGroup = name=LG1; undo_buffer_size=128M; undo1.log:250M; undo2.log:150M
This is equivalent to the following SQL statements:
CREATE LOGFILE GROUP LG1 ADD UNDOFILE 'undo1.log' INITIAL_SIZE 250M UNDO_BUFFER_SIZE 128M ENGINE NDBCLUSTER; ALTER LOGFILE GROUP LG1 ADD UNDOFILE 'undo2.log' INITIAL_SIZE 150M ENGINE NDBCLUSTER;This logfile group is created when the data nodes are started with
--initial.Resources for the initial log file group are added to the global memory pool along with those indicated by the value of
SharedGlobalMemory.This parameter, if used, should always be set in the
[ndbd default]section of theconfig.inifile. The behavior of a MySQL Cluster when different values are set on different data nodes is not defined. -
Effective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 string [see text] ... S This parameter can be used to specify a MySQL Cluster Disk Data tablespace that is created when performing an initial start of the cluster.
InitialTablespaceis specified as shown here:InitialTablespace = [name=
name;] [extent_size=size;]file-specification-listThe
nameof the tablespace is optional and defaults toDEFAULT-TS. Theextent_sizeis also optional; it defaults to1M. Thefile-specification-listuses the same syntax as shown with theInitialLogfileGroupparameter, the only difference being that eachfile-specificationused withInitialTablespacecorresponds to a data file. At least one must be specified in thefile-specification-list. Data files are placed according to any values that have been set forFileSystemPath,FileSystemPathDD, andFileSystemPathDataFiles, just as if they had been created as the result of aCREATE TABLESPACEorALTER TABLESPACEstatement.For example, consider the following line specifying
InitialTablespacein the[ndbd default]section of theconfig.inifile (as withInitialLogfileGroup, this parameter should always be set in the[ndbd default]section, as the behavior of a MySQL Cluster when different values are set on different data nodes is not defined):InitialTablespace = name=TS1; extent_size=8M; data1.dat:2G; data2.dat:4G
This is equivalent to the following SQL statements:
CREATE TABLESPACE TS1 ADD DATAFILE 'data1.dat' EXTENT_SIZE 8M INITIAL_SIZE 2G ENGINE NDBCLUSTER; ALTER TABLESPACE TS1 ADD DATAFILE 'data2.dat' INITIAL_SIZE 4G ENGINE NDBCLUSTER;This tablespace is created when the data nodes are started with
--initial, and can be used whenever creating MySQL Cluster Disk Data tables thereafter.
-
Disk Data and GCP Stop errors.
Errors encountered when using Disk Data tables such as
Node nodeid killed this
node because GCP stop was detected (error 2303)
are often referred to as “GCP stop errors”. Such
errors occur when the redo log is not flushed to disk quickly
enough; this is usually due to slow disks and insufficient
disk throughput.
You can help prevent these errors from occurring by using faster
disks, and by placing Disk Data files on a separate disk from
the data node file system. Reducing the value of
TimeBetweenGlobalCheckpoints
tends to decrease the amount of data to be written for each
global checkpoint, and so may provide some protection against
redo log buffer overflows when trying to write a global
checkpoint; however, reducing this value also permits less time
in which to write the GCP, so this must be done with caution.
In addition to the considerations given for
DiskPageBufferMemory as
explained previously, it is also very important that the
DiskIOThreadPool
configuration parameter be set correctly; having
DiskIOThreadPool set too
high is very likely to cause GCP stop errors (Bug #37227).
GCP stops can be caused by save or commit timeouts; the
TimeBetweenEpochsTimeout
data node configuration parameter determines the timeout for
commits. However, it is possible to disable both types of
timeouts by setting this parameter to 0.
Parameters for configuring send buffer memory allocation.
Send buffer memory is allocated dynamically from a memory pool
shared between all transporters, which means that the size of
the send buffer can be adjusted as necessary. (Previously, the
NDB kernel used a fixed-size send buffer for every node in the
cluster, which was allocated when the node started and could
not be changed while the node was running.) The
TotalSendBufferMemory
and OverLoadLimit data
node configuration parameters permit the setting of limits on
this memory allocation. For more information about the use of
these parameters (as well as
SendBufferMemory), see
Section 19.3.3.13, “Configuring MySQL Cluster Send Buffer Parameters”.
This parameter specifies the amount of transporter send buffer memory to allocate in addition to any set using
TotalSendBufferMemory,SendBufferMemory, or both.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 19.3.3.13, “Configuring MySQL Cluster Send Buffer Parameters”.
See also Section 19.5.14, “Adding MySQL Cluster Data Nodes Online”.
Redo log over-commit handling.
It is possible to control a data node's handling of
operations when too much time is taken flushing redo logs to
disk. This occurs when a given redo log flush takes longer
than
RedoOverCommitLimit
seconds, more than
RedoOverCommitCounter
times, causing any pending transactions to be aborted. When
this happens, the API node that sent the transaction can
handle the operations that should have been committed either
by queuing the operations and re-trying them, or by aborting
them, as determined by
DefaultOperationRedoProblemAction.
The data node configuration parameters for setting the timeout
and number of times it may be exceeded before the API node
takes this action are described in the following list:
-
Effective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 numeric 3 0 - 4294967039 (0xFFFFFEFF) N When
RedoOverCommitLimitis exceeded when trying to write a given redo log to disk this many times or more, any transactions that were not committed as a result are aborted, and an API node where any of these transactions originated handles the operations making up those transactions according to its value forDefaultOperationRedoProblemAction(by either queuing the operations to be re-tried, or aborting them).RedoOverCommitCounterdefaults to 3. Set it to 0 to disable the limit. -
Effective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 seconds 20 0 - 4294967039 (0xFFFFFEFF) N This parameter sets an upper limit in seconds for trying to write a given redo log to disk before timing out. The number of times the data node tries to flush this redo log, but takes longer than
RedoOverCommitLimit, is kept and compared withRedoOverCommitCounter, and when flushing takes too long more times than the value of that parameter, any transactions that were not committed as a result of the flush timeout are aborted. When this occurs, the API node where any of these transactions originated handles the operations making up those transactions according to itsDefaultOperationRedoProblemActionsetting (it either queues the operations to be re-tried, or aborts them).By default,
RedoOverCommitLimitis 20 seconds. Set to 0 to disable checking for redo log flush timeouts.
Controlling restart attempts.
It is possible to exercise finely-grained control over restart
attempts by data nodes when they fail to start using the
MaxStartFailRetries
and
StartFailRetryDelay
data node configuration parameters.
MaxStartFailRetries
limits the total number of retries made before giving up on
starting the data node,
StartFailRetryDelay sets
the number of seconds between retry attempts. These parameters
are listed here:
-
Effective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 unsigned 0 0 - 4294967039 (0xFFFFFEFF) N Use this parameter to set the number of seconds between restart attempts by the data node in the event on failure on startup. The default is 0 (no delay).
Both this parameter and
MaxStartFailRetriesare ignored unlessStopOnErroris equal to 0. -
Effective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 unsigned 3 0 - 4294967039 (0xFFFFFEFF) N Use this parameter to limit the number restart attempts made by the data node in the event that it fails on startup. The default is 3 attempts.
Both this parameter and
StartFailRetryDelayare ignored unlessStopOnErroris equal to 0.
NDB index statistics parameters. The parameters in the following list relate to NDB index statistics generation.
-
Effective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 boolean false false, true S Enable or disable automatic statistics collection when indexes are created. Disabled by default.
-
Effective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 boolean false false, true S Enable or disable monitoring of indexes for changes and trigger automatic statistics updates these are detected. The amount and degree of change needed to trigger the updates are determined by the settings for the
IndexStatTriggerPctandIndexStatTriggerScaleoptions. -
Effective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 bytes 32768 0 - 4294967039 (0xFFFFFEFF) IN Maximum space in bytes allowed for the saved statistics of any given index in the
NDBsystem tables and in the mysqld memory cache. This consumesIndexMemory.At least one sample is always produced, regardless of any size limit. This size is scaled by
IndexStatSaveScale.The size specified by
IndexStatSaveSizeis scaled by the value ofIndexStatTriggerPctfor a large index, times 0.01. This is further multiplied by the logarithm to the base 2 of the index size. SettingIndexStatTriggerPctequal to 0 disables the scaling effect. -
Effective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 percentage 100 0 - 4294967039 (0xFFFFFEFF) IN The size specified by
IndexStatSaveSizeis scaled by the value ofIndexStatTriggerPctfor a large index, times 0.01. This is further multiplied by the logarithm to the base 2 of the index size. SettingIndexStatTriggerPctequal to 0 disables the scaling effect. -
Effective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 percentage 100 0 - 4294967039 (0xFFFFFEFF) IN Percentage change in updates that triggers an index statistics update. The value is scaled by
IndexStatTriggerScale. You can disable this trigger altogether by settingIndexStatTriggerPctto 0. -
Effective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 percentage 100 0 - 4294967039 (0xFFFFFEFF) IN Scale
IndexStatTriggerPctby this amount times 0.01 for a large index. A value of 0 disables scaling. -
Effective Version Type/Units Default Range/Values Restart Type NDB 7.4.0 seconds 60 0 - 4294967039 (0xFFFFFEFF) IN Minimum delay in seconds between automatic index statistics updates for a given index. Setting this variable to 0 disables any delay. The default is 60 seconds.