This section discusses current restrictions and limitations on MySQL partitioning support.
Prohibited constructs. The following constructs are not permitted in partitioning expressions:
Stored procedures, stored functions, UDFs, or plugins.
Declared variables or user variables.
For a list of SQL functions which are permitted in partitioning expressions, see Section 19.6.3, “Partitioning Limitations Relating to Functions”.
Arithmetic and logical operators.
Use of the arithmetic operators
+,
-, and
* is permitted in
partitioning expressions. However, the result must be an integer
value or NULL (except in the case of
[LINEAR] KEY partitioning, as discussed
elsewhere in this chapter; see
Section 19.2, “Partitioning Types”, for more information).
The DIV operator is also supported,
and the / operator
is not permitted. (Bug #30188, Bug #33182)
The bit operators
|,
&,
^,
<<,
>>, and
~ are not
permitted in partitioning expressions.
HANDLER statements.
In MySQL 5.6, the
HANDLER statement is not
supported with partitioned tables.
Server SQL mode. Tables employing user-defined partitioning do not preserve the SQL mode in effect at the time that they were created. As discussed in Section 5.1.8, “Server SQL Modes”, the results of many MySQL functions and operators may change according to the server SQL mode. Therefore, a change in the SQL mode at any time after the creation of partitioned tables may lead to major changes in the behavior of such tables, and could easily lead to corruption or loss of data. For these reasons, it is strongly recommended that you never change the server SQL mode after creating partitioned tables.
Examples. The following examples illustrate some changes in behavior of partitioned tables due to a change in the server SQL mode:
Error handling.
Suppose that you create a partitioned table whose
partitioning expression is one such as
or column DIV 0, as shown here:
column MOD
0
mysql>CREATE TABLE tn (c1 INT)->PARTITION BY LIST(1 DIV c1) (->PARTITION p0 VALUES IN (NULL),->PARTITION p1 VALUES IN (1)->);Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.05 sec)
The default behavior for MySQL is to return
NULL for the result of a division by zero,
without producing any errors:
mysql>SELECT @@sql_mode;+------------+ | @@sql_mode | +------------+ | | +------------+ 1 row in set (0.00 sec) mysql>INSERT INTO tn VALUES (NULL), (0), (1);Query OK, 3 rows affected (0.00 sec) Records: 3 Duplicates: 0 Warnings: 0
However, changing the server SQL mode to treat division by
zero as an error and to enforce strict error handling causes
the same INSERT statement to
fail, as shown here:
mysql>SET sql_mode='STRICT_ALL_TABLES,ERROR_FOR_DIVISION_BY_ZERO';Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.00 sec) mysql>INSERT INTO tn VALUES (NULL), (0), (1);ERROR 1365 (22012): Division by 0
Table accessibility.
Sometimes a change in the server SQL mode can make
partitioned tables unusable. The following
CREATE TABLE statement can be
executed successfully only if the
NO_UNSIGNED_SUBTRACTION
mode is in effect:
mysql>SELECT @@sql_mode;+------------+ | @@sql_mode | +------------+ | | +------------+ 1 row in set (0.00 sec) mysql>CREATE TABLE tu (c1 BIGINT UNSIGNED)->PARTITION BY RANGE(c1 - 10) (->PARTITION p0 VALUES LESS THAN (-5),->PARTITION p1 VALUES LESS THAN (0),->PARTITION p2 VALUES LESS THAN (5),->PARTITION p3 VALUES LESS THAN (10),->PARTITION p4 VALUES LESS THAN (MAXVALUE)->);ERROR 1563 (HY000): Partition constant is out of partition function domain mysql>SET sql_mode='NO_UNSIGNED_SUBTRACTION';Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.00 sec) mysql>SELECT @@sql_mode;+-------------------------+ | @@sql_mode | +-------------------------+ | NO_UNSIGNED_SUBTRACTION | +-------------------------+ 1 row in set (0.00 sec) mysql>CREATE TABLE tu (c1 BIGINT UNSIGNED)->PARTITION BY RANGE(c1 - 10) (->PARTITION p0 VALUES LESS THAN (-5),->PARTITION p1 VALUES LESS THAN (0),->PARTITION p2 VALUES LESS THAN (5),->PARTITION p3 VALUES LESS THAN (10),->PARTITION p4 VALUES LESS THAN (MAXVALUE)->);Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.05 sec)
If you remove the
NO_UNSIGNED_SUBTRACTION
server SQL mode after creating tu, you may
no longer be able to access this table:
mysql>SET sql_mode='';Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.00 sec) mysql>SELECT * FROM tu;ERROR 1563 (HY000): Partition constant is out of partition function domain mysql>INSERT INTO tu VALUES (20);ERROR 1563 (HY000): Partition constant is out of partition function domain
Server SQL modes also impact replication of partitioned tables. Differing SQL modes on master and slave can lead to partitioning expressions being evaluated differently; this can cause the distribution of data among partitions to be different in the master's and slave's copies of a given table, and may even cause inserts into partitioned tables that succeed on the master to fail on the slave. For best results, you should always use the same server SQL mode on the master and on the slave.
Performance considerations. Some effects of partitioning operations on performance are given in the following list:
File system operations.
Partitioning and repartitioning operations (such as
ALTER
TABLE with PARTITION BY ...,
REORGANIZE PARTITION, or REMOVE
PARTITIONING) depend on file system operations for
their implementation. This means that the speed of these
operations is affected by such factors as file system type
and characteristics, disk speed, swap space, file handling
efficiency of the operating system, and MySQL server options
and variables that relate to file handling. In particular,
you should make sure that
large_files_support is
enabled and that
open_files_limit is set
properly. For partitioned tables using the
MyISAM storage engine, increasing
myisam_max_sort_file_size
may improve performance; partitioning and repartitioning
operations involving InnoDB tables may be
made more efficient by enabling
innodb_file_per_table.
See also Maximum number of partitions.
MyISAM and partition file descriptor usage.
For a partitioned MyISAM table,
MySQL uses 2 file descriptors for each partition, for each
such table that is open. This means that you need many more
file descriptors to perform operations on a partitioned
MyISAM table than on a table which is
identical to it except that the latter table is not
partitioned, particularly when performing
ALTER
TABLE operations.
Assume a MyISAM table t
with 100 partitions, such as the table created by this SQL
statement:
CREATE TABLE t (c1 VARCHAR(50)) PARTITION BY KEY (c1) PARTITIONS 100 ENGINE=MYISAM;
For brevity, we use KEY partitioning for
the table shown in this example, but file descriptor usage
as described here applies to all partitioned
MyISAM tables, regardless of the type of
partitioning that is employed. Partitioned tables using
other storage engines such as
InnoDB are not affected by this
issue.
Now assume that you wish to repartition t
so that it has 101 partitions, using the statement shown here:
ALTER TABLE t PARTITION BY KEY (c1) PARTITIONS 101;
To process this ALTER TABLE statement,
MySQL uses 402 file descriptors—that is, two for each of
the 100 original partitions, plus two for each of the 101 new
partitions. This is because all partitions (old and new) must
be opened concurrently during the reorganization of the table
data. It is recommended that, if you expect to perform such
operations, you should make sure that
--open-files-limit is not set
too low to accommodate them.
Table locks.
The process executing a partitioning operation on a table
takes a write lock on the table. Reads from such tables are
relatively unaffected; pending
INSERT and
UPDATE operations are
performed as soon as the partitioning operation has
completed.
Storage engine.
Partitioning operations, queries, and update operations
generally tend to be faster with MyISAM
tables than with InnoDB or
NDB tables.
Indexes; partition pruning. As with nonpartitioned tables, proper use of indexes can speed up queries on partitioned tables significantly. In addition, designing partitioned tables and queries on these tables to take advantage of partition pruning can improve performance dramatically. See Section 19.4, “Partition Pruning”, for more information.
Index condition pushdown is not supported for partitioned tables. See Section 8.2.1.6, “Index Condition Pushdown Optimization”.
Performance with LOAD DATA.
In MySQL 5.6, LOAD
DATA uses buffering to improve performance. You
should be aware that the buffer uses 130 KB memory per
partition to achieve this.
Maximum number of partitions.
Prior to MySQL 5.6.7, the maximum possible number of partitions
for a given table not using the NDB
storage engine was 1024. Beginning with MySQL 5.6.7, this limit
is increased to 8192 partitions. Regardless of the MySQL Server
version, this maximum includes subpartitions.
The maximum possible number of user-defined partitions for a table
using the NDB storage engine is
determined according to the version of the MySQL Cluster software
being used, the number of data nodes, and other factors. See
NDB and user-defined partitioning,
for more information.
If, when creating tables with a large number of partitions (but
less than the maximum), you encounter an error message such as
Got error ... from storage engine: Out of resources
when opening file, you may be able to address the
issue by increasing the value of the
open_files_limit system variable.
However, this is dependent on the operating system, and may not be
possible or advisable on all platforms; see
Section B.5.2.18, “File Not Found and Similar Errors”, for more information.
In some cases, using large numbers (hundreds) of partitions may
also not be advisable due to other concerns, so using more
partitions does not automatically lead to better results.
See also File system operations.
Query cache not supported. The query cache is not supported for partitioned tables. Beginning with MySQL 5.6.5, the query cache is automatically disabled for queries involving partitioned tables, and cannot be enabled for such queries. (Bug #53775)
Per-partition key caches.
In MySQL 5.6, key caches are supported for
partitioned MyISAM tables, using
the CACHE INDEX and
LOAD INDEX INTO
CACHE statements. Key caches may be defined for one,
several, or all partitions, and indexes for one, several, or all
partitions may be preloaded into key caches.
Foreign keys not supported for partitioned InnoDB tables.
Partitioned tables using the InnoDB
storage engine do not support foreign keys. More specifically,
this means that the following two statements are true:
No definition of an InnoDB table employing
user-defined partitioning may contain foreign key references;
no InnoDB table whose definition contains
foreign key references may be partitioned.
No InnoDB table definition may contain a
foreign key reference to a user-partitioned table; no
InnoDB table with user-defined partitioning
may contain columns referenced by foreign keys.
The scope of the restrictions just listed includes all tables that
use the InnoDB storage engine.
CREATE
TABLE and ALTER TABLE
statements that would result in tables violating these
restrictions are not allowed.
ALTER TABLE ... ORDER BY.
An ALTER TABLE ... ORDER BY
statement run
against a partitioned table causes ordering of rows only within
each partition.
column
Effects on REPLACE statements by modification of primary keys.
It can be desirable in some cases (see
Section 19.6.1, “Partitioning Keys, Primary Keys, and Unique Keys”)
to modify a table's primary key. Be aware that, if your
application uses REPLACE
statements and you do this, the results of these statements can
be drastically altered. See Section 13.2.8, “REPLACE Syntax”, for more
information and an example.
FULLTEXT indexes.
Partitioned tables do not support FULLTEXT
indexes or searches, even for partitioned tables employing the
InnoDB or
MyISAM storage engine.
Spatial columns.
Columns with spatial data types such as POINT
or GEOMETRY cannot be used in partitioned
tables.
Temporary tables. Temporary tables cannot be partitioned. (Bug #17497)
Log tables.
It is not possible to partition the log tables; an
ALTER
TABLE ... PARTITION BY ... statement on such a table
fails with an error.
Data type of partitioning key.
A partitioning key must be either an integer column or an
expression that resolves to an integer. Expressions employing
ENUM columns cannot be used. The
column or expression value may also be NULL.
(See Section 19.2.7, “How MySQL Partitioning Handles NULL”.)
There are two exceptions to this restriction:
When partitioning by [LINEAR] KEY, it is
possible to use columns of any valid MySQL data type other
than TEXT or
BLOB as partitioning keys,
because MySQL's internal key-hashing functions produce
the correct data type from these types. For example, the
following two CREATE TABLE
statements are valid:
CREATE TABLE tkc (c1 CHAR)
PARTITION BY KEY(c1)
PARTITIONS 4;
CREATE TABLE tke
( c1 ENUM('red', 'orange', 'yellow', 'green', 'blue', 'indigo', 'violet') )
PARTITION BY LINEAR KEY(c1)
PARTITIONS 6;
When partitioning by RANGE COLUMNS or
LIST COLUMNS, it is possible to use string,
DATE, and
DATETIME columns. For example,
each of the following CREATE
TABLE statements is valid:
CREATE TABLE rc (c1 INT, c2 DATE)
PARTITION BY RANGE COLUMNS(c2) (
PARTITION p0 VALUES LESS THAN('1990-01-01'),
PARTITION p1 VALUES LESS THAN('1995-01-01'),
PARTITION p2 VALUES LESS THAN('2000-01-01'),
PARTITION p3 VALUES LESS THAN('2005-01-01'),
PARTITION p4 VALUES LESS THAN(MAXVALUE)
);
CREATE TABLE lc (c1 INT, c2 CHAR(1))
PARTITION BY LIST COLUMNS(c2) (
PARTITION p0 VALUES IN('a', 'd', 'g', 'j', 'm', 'p', 's', 'v', 'y'),
PARTITION p1 VALUES IN('b', 'e', 'h', 'k', 'n', 'q', 't', 'w', 'z'),
PARTITION p2 VALUES IN('c', 'f', 'i', 'l', 'o', 'r', 'u', 'x', NULL)
);
Neither of the preceding exceptions applies to
BLOB or
TEXT column types.
Subqueries.
A partitioning key may not be a subquery, even if that subquery
resolves to an integer value or NULL.
Issues with subpartitions.
Subpartitions must use HASH or
KEY partitioning. Only
RANGE and LIST partitions
may be subpartitioned; HASH and
KEY partitions cannot be subpartitioned.
SUBPARTITION BY KEY requires that the
subpartitioning column or columns be specified explicitly, unlike
the case with PARTITION BY KEY, where it can be
omitted (in which case the table's primary key column is used
by default). Consider the table created by this statement:
CREATE TABLE ts (
id INT NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT PRIMARY KEY,
name VARCHAR(30)
);
You can create a table having the same columns, partitioned by
KEY, using a statement such as this one:
CREATE TABLE ts (
id INT NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT PRIMARY KEY,
name VARCHAR(30)
)
PARTITION BY KEY()
PARTITIONS 4;
The previous statement is treated as though it had been written like this, with the table's primary key column used as the partitioning column:
CREATE TABLE ts (
id INT NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT PRIMARY KEY,
name VARCHAR(30)
)
PARTITION BY KEY(id)
PARTITIONS 4;
However, the following statement that attempts to create a subpartitioned table using the default column as the subpartitioning column fails, and the column must be specified for the statement to succeed, as shown here:
mysql>CREATE TABLE ts (->id INT NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT PRIMARY KEY,->name VARCHAR(30)->)->PARTITION BY RANGE(id)->SUBPARTITION BY KEY()->SUBPARTITIONS 4->(->PARTITION p0 VALUES LESS THAN (100),->PARTITION p1 VALUES LESS THAN (MAXVALUE)->);ERROR 1064 (42000): You have an error in your SQL syntax; check the manual that corresponds to your MySQL server version for the right syntax to use near ') mysql>CREATE TABLE ts (->id INT NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT PRIMARY KEY,->name VARCHAR(30)->)->PARTITION BY RANGE(id)->SUBPARTITION BY KEY(id)->SUBPARTITIONS 4->(->PARTITION p0 VALUES LESS THAN (100),->PARTITION p1 VALUES LESS THAN (MAXVALUE)->);Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.07 sec)
This is a known issue (see Bug #51470).
DELAYED option not supported.
Use of INSERT DELAYED to insert
rows into a partitioned table is not supported. Attempting to do
so fails with an error.
DATA DIRECTORY and INDEX DIRECTORY options.
DATA DIRECTORY and INDEX
DIRECTORY are subject to the following restrictions
when used with partitioned tables:
Table-level DATA DIRECTORY and
INDEX DIRECTORY options are ignored (see
Bug #32091).
On Windows, the DATA DIRECTORY and
INDEX DIRECTORY options are not supported
for individual partitions or subpartitions of
MyISAM tables (Bug #30459).
However, you can use DATA DIRECTORY for
individual partitions or subpartitions of
InnoDB tables.
Repairing and rebuilding partitioned tables.
The statements CHECK TABLE,
OPTIMIZE TABLE,
ANALYZE TABLE, and
REPAIR TABLE are supported for
partitioned tables.
In addition, you can use ALTER TABLE ... REBUILD
PARTITION to rebuild one or more partitions of a
partitioned table; ALTER TABLE ... REORGANIZE
PARTITION also causes partitions to be rebuilt. See
Section 13.1.7, “ALTER TABLE Syntax”, for more information about these
two statements.
mysqlcheck, myisamchk, and myisampack are not supported with partitioned tables.
FOR EXPORT option (FLUSH TABLES).
The FLUSH
TABLES statement's FOR EXPORT
option is not supported for partitioned
InnoDB tables in MySQL 5.6.16 and earlier.
(Bug #16943907)