Early versions of InnoDB used an unnamed file format (now called
      “Antelope”) for database files. With that format, tables were
      defined with ROW_FORMAT=COMPACT (or ROW_FORMAT=REDUNDANT) and
      InnoDB stored up to the first 768 bytes of variable-length
      columns (such as BLOB and
      VARCHAR) in the index record within the B-tree
      node, with the remainder stored on the overflow page(s).
    
      To preserve compatibility with those prior versions, tables
      created with the InnoDB storage engine use the prefix format, unless one
      of ROW_FORMAT=DYNAMIC or ROW_FORMAT=COMPRESSED is specified
      (or implied) on the CREATE TABLE command.
    
      With the “Antelope” file format, if the value of a column is 768
      bytes or less, no overflow page is needed, and some savings in I/O
      may result, since the value is in the B-tree node. This works well
      for relatively short BLOBs, but may cause
      B-tree nodes to fill with data rather than key values, thereby
      reducing their efficiency. Tables with many
      BLOB columns could cause B-tree nodes to become
      too full of data, and contain too few rows, making the entire
      index less efficient than if the rows were shorter or if the
      column values were stored off-page.
    
This is the User’s Guide for InnoDB storage engine 1.1 for MySQL 5.5, generated on 2010-04-13 (revision: 19994) .

