Table of Contents [+/-]
- 16.1 Setting the Storage Engine
- 16.2 The MyISAM Storage Engine [+/-]
- 16.3 The MEMORY Storage Engine
- 16.4 The CSV Storage Engine [+/-]
- 16.5 The ARCHIVE Storage Engine
- 16.6 The BLACKHOLE Storage Engine
- 16.7 The MERGE Storage Engine [+/-]
- 16.8 The FEDERATED Storage Engine [+/-]
- 16.9 The EXAMPLE Storage Engine
- 16.10 Other Storage Engines
- 16.11 Overview of MySQL Storage Engine Architecture [+/-]
Storage engines are MySQL components that handle the SQL operations
for different table types. InnoDB is
the default and most general-purpose storage engine, and Oracle
recommends using it for tables except for specialized use cases.
(The CREATE TABLE statement in MySQL
5.7 creates InnoDB tables by
default.)
MySQL Server uses a pluggable storage engine architecture that enables storage engines to be loaded into and unloaded from a running MySQL server.
To determine which storage engines your server supports, use the
SHOW ENGINES statement. The value in
the Support column indicates whether an engine
can be used. A value of YES,
NO, or DEFAULT indicates that
an engine is available, not available, or available and currently
set as the default storage engine.
mysql> SHOW ENGINES\G
*************************** 1. row ***************************
Engine: PERFORMANCE_SCHEMA
Support: YES
Comment: Performance Schema
Transactions: NO
XA: NO
Savepoints: NO
*************************** 2. row ***************************
Engine: InnoDB
Support: DEFAULT
Comment: Supports transactions, row-level locking, and foreign keys
Transactions: YES
XA: YES
Savepoints: YES
*************************** 3. row ***************************
Engine: MRG_MYISAM
Support: YES
Comment: Collection of identical MyISAM tables
Transactions: NO
XA: NO
Savepoints: NO
*************************** 4. row ***************************
Engine: BLACKHOLE
Support: YES
Comment: /dev/null storage engine (anything you write to it disappears)
Transactions: NO
XA: NO
Savepoints: NO
*************************** 5. row ***************************
Engine: MyISAM
Support: YES
Comment: MyISAM storage engine
Transactions: NO
XA: NO
Savepoints: NO
...
This chapter covers use cases for special-purpose MySQL storage
engines. It does not cover the default
InnoDB storage engine or the
NDB storage engine which are covered in
Chapter 15, The InnoDB Storage Engine, and
Chapter 19, MySQL Cluster NDB 7.5. For advanced users, this chapter
also contains a description of the pluggable storage engine
architecture (see Section 16.11, “Overview of MySQL Storage Engine Architecture”).
For information about storage engine support offered in commercial MySQL Server binaries, see MySQL Enterprise Server 5.7, on the MySQL Web site. The storage engines available might depend on which edition of Enterprise Server you are using.
For answers to commonly asked questions about MySQL storage engines, see Section A.2, “MySQL 5.7 FAQ: Storage Engines”.
MySQL 5.7 Supported Storage Engines
InnoDB: The default storage engine in MySQL 5.7.InnoDBis a transaction-safe (ACID compliant) storage engine for MySQL that has commit, rollback, and crash-recovery capabilities to protect user data.InnoDBrow-level locking (without escalation to coarser granularity locks) and Oracle-style consistent nonlocking reads increase multi-user concurrency and performance.InnoDBstores user data in clustered indexes to reduce I/O for common queries based on primary keys. To maintain data integrity,InnoDBalso supportsFOREIGN KEYreferential-integrity constraints. For more information aboutInnoDB, see Chapter 15, The InnoDB Storage Engine.MyISAM: These tables have a small footprint. Table-level locking limits the performance in read/write workloads, so it is often used in read-only or read-mostly workloads in Web and data warehousing configurations.Memory: Stores all data in RAM, for fast access in environments that require quick lookups of non-critical data. This engine was formerly known as theHEAPengine. Its use cases are decreasing;InnoDBwith its buffer pool memory area provides a general-purpose and durable way to keep most or all data in memory, andNDBCLUSTERprovides fast key-value lookups for huge distributed data sets.CSV: Its tables are really text files with comma-separated values. CSV tables let you import or dump data in CSV format, to exchange data with scripts and applications that read and write that same format. Because CSV tables are not indexed, you typically keep the data inInnoDBtables during normal operation, and only use CSV tables during the import or export stage.Archive: These compact, unindexed tables are intended for storing and retrieving large amounts of seldom-referenced historical, archived, or security audit information.Blackhole: The Blackhole storage engine accepts but does not store data, similar to the Unix/dev/nulldevice. Queries always return an empty set. These tables can be used in replication configurations where DML statements are sent to slave servers, but the master server does not keep its own copy of the data.NDB(also known asNDBCLUSTER): This clustered database engine is particularly suited for applications that require the highest possible degree of uptime and availability.Merge: Enables a MySQL DBA or developer to logically group a series of identicalMyISAMtables and reference them as one object. Good for VLDB environments such as data warehousing.Federated: Offers the ability to link separate MySQL servers to create one logical database from many physical servers. Very good for distributed or data mart environments.Example: This engine serves as an example in the MySQL source code that illustrates how to begin writing new storage engines. It is primarily of interest to developers. The storage engine is a “stub” that does nothing. You can create tables with this engine, but no data can be stored in them or retrieved from them.
You are not restricted to using the same storage engine for an
entire server or schema. You can specify the storage engine for any
table. For example, an application might use mostly
InnoDB tables, with one CSV
table for exporting data to a spreadsheet and a few
MEMORY tables for temporary workspaces.
Choosing a Storage Engine
The various storage engines provided with MySQL are designed with different use cases in mind. The following table provides an overview of some storage engines provided with MySQL:
Table 16.1 Storage Engines Feature Summary
| Feature | MyISAM | Memory | InnoDB | Archive | NDB |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Storage limits | 256TB | RAM | 64TB | None | 384EB |
| Transactions | No | No | Yes | No | Yes |
| Locking granularity | Table | Table | Row | Row | Row |
| MVCC | No | No | Yes | No | No |
| Geospatial data type support | Yes | No | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Geospatial indexing support | Yes | No | Yes[a] | No | No |
| B-tree indexes | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | No |
| T-tree indexes | No | No | No | No | Yes |
| Hash indexes | No | Yes | No[b] | No | Yes |
| Full-text search indexes | Yes | No | Yes[c] | No | No |
| Clustered indexes | No | No | Yes | No | No |
| Data caches | No | N/A | Yes | No | Yes |
| Index caches | Yes | N/A | Yes | No | Yes |
| Compressed data | Yes[d] | No | Yes[e] | Yes | No |
| Encrypted data[f] | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Cluster database support | No | No | No | No | Yes |
| Replication support[g] | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Foreign key support | No | No | Yes | No | No |
| Backup / point-in-time recovery[h] | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Query cache support | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Update statistics for data dictionary | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
|
[a] InnoDB support for geospatial indexing is available in MySQL 5.7.5 and higher. [b] InnoDB utilizes hash indexes internally for its Adaptive Hash Index feature. [c] InnoDB support for FULLTEXT indexes is available in MySQL 5.6.4 and higher. [d] Compressed MyISAM tables are supported only when using the compressed row format. Tables using the compressed row format with MyISAM are read only. [e] Compressed InnoDB tables require the InnoDB Barracuda file format. [f] Implemented in the server (via encryption functions). Data-at-rest tablespace encryption is available as in MySQL 5.7 and higher. [g] Implemented in the server, rather than in the storage engine. [h] Implemented in the server, rather than in the storage engine. | |||||
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