NDB Cluster Disk Data storage is implemented using a number of Disk Data objects. These include the following:
Tablespaces act as containers for other Disk Data objects.
Undo log files undo information required for rolling back transactions.
One or more undo log files are assigned to a log file group, which is then assigned to a tablespace.
Data files store Disk Data table data. A data file is assigned directly to a tablespace.
Undo log files and data files are actual files in the file
system of each data node; by default they are placed in
ndb_ in
the node_id_fsDataDir specified in the NDB
Cluster config.ini file, and where
node_id is the data node's node
ID. It is possible to place these elsewhere by specifying either
an absolute or relative path as part of the filename when
creating the undo log or data file. Statements that create these
files are shown later in this section.
NDB Cluster tablespaces and log file groups are not implemented as files.
Although not all Disk Data objects are implemented as files,
they all share the same namespace. This means that
each Disk Data object must be uniquely
named (and not merely each Disk Data object of a given type).
For example, you cannot have a tablespace and a log file group
both named dd1.
Assuming that you have already set up an NDB Cluster with all nodes (including management and SQL nodes), the basic steps for creating an NDB Cluster table on disk are as follows:
Create a log file group, and assign one or more undo log files to it (an undo log file is also sometimes referred to as an undofile).
Undo log files are necessary only for Disk Data tables;
they are not used for
NDBCLUSTER tables that are
stored only in memory.
Create a tablespace; assign the log file group, as well as one or more data files, to the tablespace.
Create a Disk Data table that uses this tablespace for data storage.
Each of these tasks can be accomplished using SQL statements in the mysql client or other MySQL client application, as shown in the example that follows.
We create a log file group named lg_1
using CREATE LOGFILE GROUP.
This log file group is to be made up of two undo log files,
which we name undo_1.log and
undo_2.log, whose initial sizes are 16
MB and 12 MB, respectively. (The default initial size for an
undo log file is 128 MB.) Optionally, you can also specify a
size for the log file group's undo buffer, or permit it to
assume the default value of 8 MB. In this example, we set
the UNDO buffer's size at 2 MB. A log file group must be
created with an undo log file; so we add
undo_1.log to lg_1
in this CREATE LOGFILE GROUP
statement:
CREATE LOGFILE GROUP lg_1
ADD UNDOFILE 'undo_1.log'
INITIAL_SIZE 16M
UNDO_BUFFER_SIZE 2M
ENGINE NDBCLUSTER;
To add undo_2.log to the log file
group, use the following ALTER LOGFILE
GROUP statement:
ALTER LOGFILE GROUP lg_1
ADD UNDOFILE 'undo_2.log'
INITIAL_SIZE 12M
ENGINE NDBCLUSTER;
Some items of note:
The .log file extension used here
is not required. We use it merely to make the log files
easily recognisable.
Every CREATE LOGFILE
GROUP and ALTER LOGFILE
GROUP statement must include an
ENGINE clause. In NDB Cluster 7.3 and
later, the only permitted values for this clause are
NDBCLUSTER and
NDB.
There can exist at most one log file group in the same NDB Cluster at any given time.
When you add an undo log file to a log file group using
ADD UNDOFILE
', a file
with the name filename'filename is
created in the
ndb_
directory within the
node_id_fsDataDir of each
data node in the cluster, where
node_id is the node ID of the
data node. Each undo log file is of the size specified
in the SQL statement. For example, if an NDB Cluster has
4 data nodes, then the ALTER
LOGFILE GROUP statement just shown creates 4
undo log files, 1 each on in the data directory of each
of the 4 data nodes; each of these files is named
undo_2.log and each file is 12 MB
in size.
UNDO_BUFFER_SIZE is limited by the
amount of system memory available.
For more information about the
CREATE LOGFILE GROUP
statement, see Section 13.1.14, “CREATE LOGFILE GROUP Syntax”.
For more information about ALTER
LOGFILE GROUP, see
Section 13.1.4, “ALTER LOGFILE GROUP Syntax”.
Now we can create a tablespace, which contains files to be used by NDB Cluster Disk Data tables for storing their data. A tablespace is also associated with a particular log file group. When creating a new tablespace, you must specify the log file group which it is to use for undo logging; you must also specify a data file. You can add more data files to the tablespace after the tablespace is created; it is also possible to drop data files from a tablespace (an example of dropping data files is provided later in this section).
Assume that we wish to create a tablespace named
ts_1 which uses lg_1
as its log file group. This tablespace is to contain two
data files named data_1.dat and
data_2.dat, whose initial sizes are 32
MB and 48 MB, respectively. (The default value for
INITIAL_SIZE is 128 MB.) We can do this
using two SQL statements, as shown here:
CREATE TABLESPACE ts_1
ADD DATAFILE 'data_1.dat'
USE LOGFILE GROUP lg_1
INITIAL_SIZE 32M
ENGINE NDBCLUSTER;
ALTER TABLESPACE ts_1
ADD DATAFILE 'data_2.dat'
INITIAL_SIZE 48M
ENGINE NDBCLUSTER;
The CREATE TABLESPACE
statement creates a tablespace ts_1 with
the data file data_1.dat, and
associates ts_1 with log file group
lg_1. The ALTER
TABLESPACE adds the second data file
(data_2.dat).
Some items of note:
As is the case with the .log file
extension used in this example for undo log files, there
is no special significance for the
.dat file extension; it is used
merely for easy recognition of data files.
When you add a data file to a tablespace using
ADD DATAFILE
', a file
with the name filename'filename is
created in the
ndb_
directory within the
node_id_fsDataDir of each
data node in the cluster, where
node_id is the node ID of the
data node. Each data file is of the size specified in
the SQL statement. For example, if an NDB Cluster has 4
data nodes, then the ALTER
TABLESPACE statement just shown creates 4 data
files, 1 each in the data directory of each of the 4
data nodes; each of these files is named
data_2.dat and each file is 48 MB
in size.
All CREATE TABLESPACE and
ALTER TABLESPACE
statements must contain an ENGINE
clause; only tables using the same storage engine as the
tablespace can be created in the tablespace. In MySQL
NDB Cluster 7.3, the only permitted values for this
clause are NDBCLUSTER and
NDB.
For more information about the
CREATE TABLESPACE and
ALTER TABLESPACE
statements, see Section 13.1.18, “CREATE TABLESPACE Syntax”, and
Section 13.1.8, “ALTER TABLESPACE Syntax”.
Now it is possible to create a table whose nonindexed
columns are stored on disk in the tablespace
ts_1:
CREATE TABLE dt_1 (
member_id INT UNSIGNED NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT PRIMARY KEY,
last_name VARCHAR(50) NOT NULL,
first_name VARCHAR(50) NOT NULL,
dob DATE NOT NULL,
joined DATE NOT NULL,
INDEX(last_name, first_name)
)
TABLESPACE ts_1 STORAGE DISK
ENGINE NDBCLUSTER;
The TABLESPACE ... STORAGE DISK option
tells the NDBCLUSTER storage
engine to use tablespace ts_1 for disk
data storage.
It is also possible to specify whether an individual
column is stored on disk or in memory by using a
STORAGE clause as part of the column's
definition in a CREATE
TABLE or ALTER
TABLE statement. STORAGE DISK
causes the column to be stored on disk, and
STORAGE MEMORY causes in-memory storage
to be used. See Section 13.1.17, “CREATE TABLE Syntax”, for more
information.
Once table ts_1 has been created as
shown, you can perform
INSERT,
SELECT,
UPDATE, and
DELETE statements on it just
as you would with any other MySQL table.
For table dt_1 as it has been defined
here, only the dob and
joined columns are stored on disk. This
is because there are indexes on the id,
last_name, and
first_name columns, and so data belonging
to these columns is stored in RAM. In NDB Cluster 7.3 and
NDB Cluster 7.4, only nonindexed columns can be held on
disk; indexes and indexed column data continue to be stored
in memory. This tradeoff between the use of indexes and
conservation of RAM is something you must keep in mind as
you design Disk Data tables.
Performance note. The performance of a cluster using Disk Data storage is greatly improved if Disk Data files are kept on a separate physical disk from the data node file system. This must be done for each data node in the cluster to derive any noticeable benefit.
You may use absolute and relative file system paths with
ADD UNDOFILE and ADD
DATAFILE. Relative paths are calculated relative to
the data node's data directory. You may also use symbolic links;
see Section 18.5.12.2, “Using Symbolic Links with Disk Data Objects”, for more
information and examples.
A log file group, a tablespace, and any Disk Data tables using these must be created in a particular order. The same is true for dropping any of these objects:
A log file group cannot be dropped as long as any tablespaces are using it.
A tablespace cannot be dropped as long as it contains any data files.
You cannot drop any data files from a tablespace as long as there remain any tables which are using the tablespace.
It is not possible to drop files created in association with a different tablespace than the one with which the files were created. (Bug #20053)
For example, to drop all the objects created so far in this section, you would use the following statements:
mysql>DROP TABLE dt_1;mysql>ALTER TABLESPACE ts_1->DROP DATAFILE 'data_2.dat'->ENGINE NDBCLUSTER;mysql>ALTER TABLESPACE ts_1->DROP DATAFILE 'data_1.dat'->ENGINE NDBCLUSTER;mysql>DROP TABLESPACE ts_1->ENGINE NDBCLUSTER;mysql>DROP LOGFILE GROUP lg_1->ENGINE NDBCLUSTER;
These statements must be performed in the order shown, except
that the two ALTER TABLESPACE ... DROP
DATAFILE statements may be executed in either order.
You can obtain information about data files used by Disk Data
tables by querying the FILES table
in the INFORMATION_SCHEMA database. An extra
“NULL row” provides additional
information about undo log files. For more information and
examples, see Section 21.30.1, “The INFORMATION_SCHEMA FILES Table”.
It is also possible to view information about allocated and free disk space for each Disk Data table or table partition using the ndb_desc utility. For more information, see Section 18.4.10, “ndb_desc — Describe NDB Tables”.