While a secondary index is being created or dropped, the table is locked in shared mode. That is, any writes to the table are blocked, but the data in the table may be read. When you alter the clustered index of a table, however, the table is locked in exclusive mode, because the data must be copied. Thus, during the creation of a new clustered index, all operations on the table are blocked.
Before it can start executing, a CREATE INDEX
or ALTER TABLE
command must
always wait for currently executing transactions that are
accessing the table to commit or rollback before it can proceed.
In addition, ALTER TABLE
commands that
create a new clustered index must wait for all
SELECT
statements that access the table to
complete (or their containing transactions to commit). Even
though the original index exists throughout the creation of
the new clustered index, no transactions whose execution spans the
creation of the index can be accessing the table, because the
original table must be dropped when clustered index is
restructured.
Once a CREATE INDEX
or ALTER TABLE
command that creates a
secondary index begins
executing, queries may access the table for read access, but may
not update the table. If an ALTER TABLE
command is changing the clustered index, all queries must wait
until the operation completes.
A newly-created secondary index contains only data that is
current in the table as of the time the CREATE INDEX
or ALTER TABLE
command begins to execute.
Specifically, a newly-created index
contains only the versions of data as of the most-recently committed
transactions prior to the creation of the index. The index thus does
not contain any rows that were deleted (and therefore marked for
deletion) by transactions that completed before the
CREATE INDEX
or
ALTER TABLE
began. Similarly, the index contains only current
versions of every row, and none of the old versions of rows that
were updated by transactions that ran before the index was
created.
Because a newly-created index contains only information about data current at the time the index was created, queries that need to see data that was deleted or changed before the index was created cannot use the index. The only queries that could be affected by this limitation are those executing in transactions that began before the creation of the index was begun. For such queries, unpredictable results could occur. Newer queries can use the index.
This is the User’s Guide for InnoDB Plugin 1.0.6 for MySQL 5.1, generated on March 4, 2010 (rev 673:680M).