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To avoid confusion, for the purposes of this discussion we define the term “ib-file set” to mean the set of operating system files that InnoDB manages as a unit. The ib-file set includes the following files:
The system tablespace (one or more ibdata
files)
that contain internal system information (including internal
catalogs and undo information) and may include user data and
indexes.
Zero or more single-table tablespaces (also called “file
per table” files, named *.ibd
files).
(Usually two) InnoDB log files (ib_logfile0
and ib_logfile1
), used for crash recovery and
in backups.
This collection of files is transactionally consistent, and
recoverable as a unit.
An “ib-file set” specifically does not include
the related MySQL .frm
files that contain
meta data about InnoDB tables.
The .frm
files are created and managed
exclusively by MySQL, and can sometimes get out of sync
with the internal meta data in InnoDB.
Instead of “ib-file set”, we might call such a collection a “database”. However, MySQL uses the word “database” to mean a logical collection of tables, what other systems term a “schema” or “catalog”. Given MySQL terminology, multiple tables (even from more than one database) can be stored in a single “ib-file set”.
The InnoDB Plugin incorporates several checks to guard against the possible crashes and data corruptions that might occur if you use an ib-file set in a file format that is not supported by the software release in use. These checks take place when the server is started, and when you first access a table. This section describes these checks, how you can control them, and error and warning conditions that may arise.
This is the User’s Guide for InnoDB Plugin 1.0.6 for MySQL 5.1, generated on March 4, 2010 (rev 673:680M).