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MySQL NDB Cluster is a
high-availability, high-redundancy version of MySQL adapted for the
distributed computing environment. Recent NDB Cluster release series
use version 7 of the NDB storage engine
(also known as NDBCLUSTER) to enable
running several computers with MySQL servers and other software in a
cluster. NDB Cluster 7.5, now available as a General Availability
(GA) release beginning with version 7.5.4, incorporates version 7.5
of the NDB storage engine. NDB Cluster 7.6, which
uses version 7.6 of the NDB storage engine, is
also now available as a developer preview. Previous GA releases
still available for production, NDB 7.3 and NDB Cluster 7.4,
incorporate NDB versions 7.3 and 7.4,
respectively.
Support for the NDB storage engine is
not included in standard MySQL Server 5.7 binaries built by Oracle.
Instead, users of NDB Cluster binaries from Oracle should upgrade to
the most recent binary release of NDB Cluster for supported
platforms—these include RPMs that should work with most Linux
distributions. NDB Cluster users who build from source should use
the sources provided for NDB Cluster. (Locations where the sources
can be obtained are listed later in this section.)
MySQL NDB Cluster does not support InnoDB cluster, which must be
deployed using MySQL Server 5.7 with the
InnoDB storage engine as well as
additional applications that are not included in the NDB Cluster
distribution. MySQL Server 5.7 binaries cannot be used with MySQL
NDB Cluster. For more information about deploying and using
InnoDB cluster, see
Chapter 20, InnoDB Cluster.
Section 21.1.5, “MySQL Server Using InnoDB Compared with NDB Cluster”, discusses differences
between the NDB and InnoDB
storage engines.
This chapter contains information about NDB Cluster 7.5 releases through 5.7.19-ndb-7.5.8 and NDB Cluster 7.6 releases through 5.7.19-ndb-7.6.4. NDB Cluster 7.5 is available as a General Availability release, and recommended for new deployments. NDB Cluster 7.6 is currently in development, and is available as a developer preview for pre-production evaluation and testing. The NDB Cluster 7.4 and NDB Cluster 7.3 release series are previous GA releases still supported in production. NDB Cluster 7.2 is a previous GA release series which is still supported. We currently recommend that new deployments for production use NDB Cluster 7.5. For more information about NDB Cluster 7.4 and NDB Cluster 7.3, see MySQL NDB Cluster 7.3 and NDB Cluster 7.4. For information about NDB Cluster 7.2, see MySQL NDB Cluster 7.2.
Supported Platforms. NDB Cluster is currently available and supported on a number of platforms. For exact levels of support available for on specific combinations of operating system versions, operating system distributions, and hardware platforms, please refer to http://www.mysql.com/support/supportedplatforms/cluster.html.
Availability. NDB Cluster binary and source packages are available for supported platforms from http://dev.mysql.com/downloads/cluster/.
NDB Cluster release numbers.
NDB Cluster follows a somewhat different release pattern from the
mainline MySQL Server 5.7 series of releases. In this
Manual and other MySQL documentation, we
identify these and later NDB Cluster releases employing a version
number that begins with “NDB”. This version number is
that of the NDBCLUSTER storage engine
used in the release, and not of the MySQL server version on which
the NDB Cluster release is based.
Version strings used in NDB Cluster software. The version string displayed by NDB Cluster programs uses this format:
mysql-mysql_server_version-ndb-ndb_engine_version
mysql_server_version represents the
version of the MySQL Server on which the NDB Cluster release is
based. For all NDB Cluster 7.5 and NDB Cluster 7.6 releases, this is
“5.7”. ndb_engine_version is
the version of the NDB storage engine
used by this release of the NDB Cluster software. You can see this
format used in the mysql client, as shown here:
shell> mysql
Welcome to the MySQL monitor. Commands end with ; or \g.
Your MySQL connection id is 2
Server version: 5.7.19-ndb-7.5.8 Source distribution
Type 'help;' or '\h' for help. Type '\c' to clear the buffer.
mysql> SELECT VERSION()\G
*************************** 1. row ***************************
VERSION(): 5.7.19-ndb-7.5.8
1 row in set (0.00 sec)
This version string is also displayed in the output of the
SHOW command in the ndb_mgm
client:
ndb_mgm> SHOW
Connected to Management Server at: localhost:1186
Cluster Configuration
---------------------
[ndbd(NDB)] 2 node(s)
id=1 @10.0.10.6 (5.7.19-ndb-7.5.8, Nodegroup: 0, *)
id=2 @10.0.10.8 (5.7.19-ndb-7.5.8, Nodegroup: 0)
[ndb_mgmd(MGM)] 1 node(s)
id=3 @10.0.10.2 (5.7.19-ndb-7.5.8)
[mysqld(API)] 2 node(s)
id=4 @10.0.10.10 (5.7.19-ndb-7.5.8)
id=5 (not connected, accepting connect from any host)
The version string identifies the mainline MySQL version from which
the NDB Cluster release was branched and the version of the
NDB storage engine used. For example,
the full version string for NDB 7.5.4 (the first NDB 7.5 GA release)
was mysql-5.7.16-ndb-7.5.4. From this we can
determine the following:
Since the portion of the version string preceding
-ndb-is the base MySQL Server version, this means that NDB 7.5.4 derived from MySQL 5.7.16, and contained all feature enhancements and bug fixes from MySQL 5.7 up to and including MySQL 5.7.16.Since the portion of the version string following
-ndb-represents the version number of theNDB(orNDBCLUSTER) storage engine, NDB 7.5.4 used version 7.5.4 of theNDBCLUSTERstorage engine.
New NDB Cluster releases are numbered according to updates in the
NDB storage engine, and do not necessarily
correspond in a one-to-one fashion with mainline MySQL Server
releases. For example, NDB 7.5.4 (as previously noted) was based on
MySQL 5.7.16, while NDB 7.5.3 was based on MySQL 5.7.13 (version
string: mysql-5.7.13-ndb-7.5.3).
Compatibility with standard MySQL 5.7 releases.
While many standard MySQL schemas and applications can work using
NDB Cluster, it is also true that unmodified applications and
database schemas may be slightly incompatible or have suboptimal
performance when run using NDB Cluster (see
Section 21.1.6, “Known Limitations of NDB Cluster”). Most of these issues
can be overcome, but this also means that you are very unlikely to
be able to switch an existing application datastore—that
currently uses, for example, MyISAM
or InnoDB—to use the
NDB storage engine without allowing
for the possibility of changes in schemas, queries, and
applications. In addition, the MySQL Server and NDB Cluster
codebases diverge considerably, so that the standard
mysqld cannot function as a drop-in replacement
for the version of mysqld supplied with NDB
Cluster.
NDB Cluster development source trees. NDB Cluster development trees can also be accessed from https://github.com/mysql/mysql-server.
The NDB Cluster development sources maintained at https://github.com/mysql/mysql-server are licensed under the GPL. For information about obtaining MySQL sources using Git and building them yourself, see Section 2.9.3, “Installing MySQL Using a Development Source Tree”.
As with MySQL Server 5.7, NDB Cluster 7.5 and NDB Cluster 7.6 releases are built using CMake.
NDB Cluster 7.5 is available as a General Availability (GA) release, and recommended for new deployments beginning with version 7.5.4. NDB Cluster 7.6, currently in developement, is available for evaluation as a Developer Milestone release. NDB Cluster 7.4 and NDB Cluster 7.3 are previous GA releases which are still supported in production. NDB 7.2 is a previous GA release series which is still supported, although it is no longer recommended for new deployments. We currently recommend that new deployments for production use NDB 7.5. For an overview of major features added in NDB 7.4, see What is New in NDB Cluster 7.4. For similar information about NDB Cluster 7.3, see What is New in NDB Cluster 7.3. For an overview of major features added in previous NDB Cluster releases, see What is New in MySQL NDB Cluster 7.2. NDB 7.1 and earlier versions of NDB Cluster are no longer being developed or maintained.
The contents of this chapter are subject to revision as NDB Cluster continues to evolve. Additional information regarding NDB Cluster can be found on the MySQL Web site at http://www.mysql.com/products/cluster/.
Additional Resources. More information about NDB Cluster can be found in the following places:
For answers to some commonly asked questions about NDB Cluster, see Section A.10, “MySQL 5.7 FAQ: NDB Cluster”.
The NDB Cluster mailing list: http://lists.mysql.com/cluster.
The NDB Cluster Forum: http://forums.mysql.com/list.php?25.
Many NDB Cluster users and developers blog about their experiences with NDB Cluster, and make feeds of these available through PlanetMySQL.