[+/-]
If you do not want to use InnoDB
tables, start
the server with the
--skip-innodb
option to disable the InnoDB
startup engine.
InnoDB
is a transaction-safe (ACID compliant)
storage engine for MySQL that has commit, rollback, and
crash-recovery capabilities to protect user data.
However, it cannot do so if the
underlying operating system or hardware does not work as
advertised. Many operating systems or disk subsystems may delay
or reorder write operations to improve performance. On some
operating systems, the very fsync()
system
call that should wait until all unwritten data for a file has
been flushed might actually return before the data has been
flushed to stable storage. Because of this, an operating system
crash or a power outage may destroy recently committed data, or
in the worst case, even corrupt the database because of write
operations having been reordered. If data integrity is important
to you, you should perform some “pull-the-plug”
tests before using anything in production. On Mac OS X 10.3 and
up, InnoDB
uses a special
fcntl()
file flush method. Under Linux, it is
advisable to disable the write-back
cache.
On ATA/SATA disk drives, a command such hdparm -W0
/dev/hda
may work to disable the write-back cache.
Beware that some drives or disk
controllers may be unable to disable the write-back
cache.
Two important disk-based resources managed by the
InnoDB
storage engine are its tablespace data
files and its log files. If you specify no
InnoDB
configuration options, MySQL creates an
auto-extending 10MB data file named ibdata1
and two 5MB log files named ib_logfile0
and
ib_logfile1
in the MySQL data directory. To
get good performance, you should explicitly provide
InnoDB
parameters as discussed in the following
examples. Naturally, you should edit the settings to suit your
hardware and requirements.
It is not a good idea to configure InnoDB
to
use data files or log files on NFS volumes. Otherwise, the files
might be locked by other processes and become unavailable for
use by MySQL.
MySQL Enterprise. For advice on settings suitable to your specific circumstances, subscribe to the MySQL Enterprise Monitor. For more information, see http://www.mysql.com/products/enterprise/advisors.html.
The examples shown here are representative. See
Section 13.2.3, “InnoDB
Startup Options and System Variables” for additional information
about InnoDB
-related configuration parameters.
To set up the InnoDB
tablespace files, use the
innodb_data_file_path
option in
the [mysqld]
section of the
my.cnf
option file. On Windows, you can use
my.ini
instead. The value of
innodb_data_file_path
should be a
list of one or more data file specifications. If you name more
than one data file, separate them by semicolon
(“;
”) characters:
innodb_data_file_path=datafile_spec1
[;datafile_spec2
]...
For example, the following setting explicitly creates a tablespace having the same characteristics as the default:
[mysqld] innodb_data_file_path=ibdata1:10M:autoextend
This setting configures a single 10MB data file named
ibdata1
that is auto-extending. No location
for the file is given, so by default, InnoDB
creates it in the MySQL data directory.
Sizes are specified using K
,
M
, or G
suffix letters to
indicate units of KB, MB, or GB.
A tablespace containing a fixed-size 50MB data file named
ibdata1
and a 50MB auto-extending file named
ibdata2
in the data directory can be
configured like this:
[mysqld] innodb_data_file_path=ibdata1:50M;ibdata2:50M:autoextend
The full syntax for a data file specification includes the file name, its size, and several optional attributes:
file_name
:file_size
[:autoextend[:max:max_file_size
]]
The autoextend
and max
attributes can be used only for the last data file in the
innodb_data_file_path
line.
If you specify the autoextend
option for the
last data file, InnoDB
extends the data file if
it runs out of free space in the tablespace. The increment is 8MB
at a time by default. To modify the increment, change the
innodb_autoextend_increment
system variable.
If the disk becomes full, you might want to add another data file
on another disk. For tablespace reconfiguration instructions, see
Section 13.2.5, “Adding, Removing, or Resizing InnoDB
Data and Log
Files”.
InnoDB
is not aware of the file system maximum
file size, so be cautious on file systems where the maximum file
size is a small value such as 2GB. To specify a maximum size for
an auto-extending data file, use the max
attribute following the autoextend
attribute.
The following configuration allows ibdata1
to
grow up to a limit of 500MB:
[mysqld] innodb_data_file_path=ibdata1:10M:autoextend:max:500M
InnoDB
creates tablespace files in the MySQL
data directory by default. To specify a location explicitly, use
the innodb_data_home_dir
option.
For example, to use two files named ibdata1
and ibdata2
but create them in the
/ibdata
directory, configure
InnoDB
like this:
[mysqld] innodb_data_home_dir = /ibdata innodb_data_file_path=ibdata1:50M;ibdata2:50M:autoextend
InnoDB
does not create directories, so make
sure that the /ibdata
directory exists
before you start the server. This is also true of any log file
directories that you configure. Use the Unix or DOS
mkdir
command to create any necessary
directories.
Make sure that the MySQL server has the proper access rights to create files in the data directory. More generally, the server must have access rights in any directory where it needs to create data files or log files.
InnoDB
forms the directory path for each data
file by textually concatenating the value of
innodb_data_home_dir
to the data
file name, adding a path name separator (slash or backslash)
between values if necessary. If the
innodb_data_home_dir
option is
not mentioned in my.cnf
at all, the default
value is the “dot” directory ./
,
which means the MySQL data directory. (The MySQL server changes
its current working directory to its data directory when it begins
executing.)
If you specify
innodb_data_home_dir
as an empty
string, you can specify absolute paths for the data files listed
in the innodb_data_file_path
value. The following example is equivalent to the preceding one:
[mysqld] innodb_data_home_dir = innodb_data_file_path=/ibdata/ibdata1:50M;/ibdata/ibdata2:50M:autoextend
A simple my.cnf
example. Suppose that you have a computer with 512MB
RAM and one hard disk. The following example shows possible
configuration parameters in my.cnf
or
my.ini
for InnoDB
,
including the autoextend
attribute. The example
suits most users, both on Unix and Windows, who do not want to
distribute InnoDB
data files and log files onto
several disks. It creates an auto-extending data file
ibdata1
and two InnoDB
log
files ib_logfile0
and
ib_logfile1
in the MySQL data directory.
[mysqld] # You can write your other MySQL server options here # ... # Data files must be able to hold your data and indexes. # Make sure that you have enough free disk space. innodb_data_file_path = ibdata1:10M:autoextend # # Set buffer pool size to 50-80% of your computer's memory innodb_buffer_pool_size=256M innodb_additional_mem_pool_size=20M # # Set the log file size to about 25% of the buffer pool size innodb_log_file_size=64M innodb_log_buffer_size=8M # innodb_flush_log_at_trx_commit=1
Note that data files must be less than 2GB in some file systems. The combined size of the log files must be less than 4GB. The combined size of data files must be at least 10MB.
When you create an InnoDB
tablespace for the
first time, it is best that you start the MySQL server from the
command prompt. InnoDB
then prints the
information about the database creation to the screen, so you can
see what is happening. For example, on Windows, if
mysqld is located in C:\Program
Files\MySQL\MySQL Server 5.0\bin
, you can
start it like this:
C:\> "C:\Program Files\MySQL\MySQL Server 5.0\bin\mysqld" --console
If you do not send server output to the screen, check the server's
error log to see what InnoDB
prints during the
startup process.
For an example of what the information displayed by
InnoDB
should look like, see
Section 13.2.2.3, “Creating the InnoDB
Tablespace”.
You can place InnoDB
options in the
[mysqld]
group of any option file that your
server reads when it starts. The locations for option files are
described in Section 4.2.3.3, “Using Option Files”.
If you installed MySQL on Windows using the installation and
configuration wizards, the option file will be the
my.ini
file located in your MySQL
installation directory. See
Section 2.9.4.1, “Starting the MySQL Server Instance Configuration Wizard”.
If your PC uses a boot loader where the C:
drive is not the boot drive, your only option is to use the
my.ini
file in your Windows directory
(typically C:\WINDOWS
). You can use the
SET
command at the command prompt in a console
window to print the value of WINDIR
:
C:\> SET WINDIR
windir=C:\WINDOWS
To make sure that mysqld reads options only
from a specific file, use the
--defaults-file
option as the
first option on the command line when starting the server:
mysqld --defaults-file=your_path_to_my_cnf
An advanced my.cnf
example. Suppose that you have a Linux computer with
2GB RAM and three 60GB hard disks at directory paths
/
, /dr2
and
/dr3
. The following example shows possible
configuration parameters in my.cnf
for
InnoDB
.
[mysqld] # You can write your other MySQL server options here # ... innodb_data_home_dir = # # Data files must be able to hold your data and indexes innodb_data_file_path = /ibdata/ibdata1:2000M;/dr2/ibdata/ibdata2:2000M:autoextend # # Set buffer pool size to 50-80% of your computer's memory, # but make sure on Linux x86 total memory usage is < 2GB innodb_buffer_pool_size=1G innodb_additional_mem_pool_size=20M innodb_log_group_home_dir = /dr3/iblogs # # Set the log file size to about 25% of the buffer pool size innodb_log_file_size=250M innodb_log_buffer_size=8M # innodb_flush_log_at_trx_commit=1 innodb_lock_wait_timeout=50 # # Uncomment the next line if you want to use it #innodb_thread_concurrency=5
In some cases, database performance improves if the data is not
all placed on the same physical disk. Putting log files on a
different disk from data is very often beneficial for performance.
The example illustrates how to do this. It places the two data
files on different disks and places the log files on the third
disk. InnoDB
fills the tablespace beginning
with the first data file. You can also use raw disk partitions
(raw devices) as InnoDB
data files, which may
speed up I/O. See Section 13.2.2.2, “Using Raw Devices for the Shared Tablespace”.
On 32-bit GNU/Linux x86, you must be careful not to set memory
usage too high. glibc
may allow the process
heap to grow over thread stacks, which crashes your server. It
is a risk if the value of the following expression is close to
or exceeds 2GB:
innodb_buffer_pool_size + key_buffer_size + max_connections*(sort_buffer_size+read_buffer_size+binlog_cache_size) + max_connections*2MB
Each thread uses a stack (often 2MB, but only 256KB in MySQL
binaries provided by Oracle Corporation.) and in the worst case
also uses sort_buffer_size + read_buffer_size
additional memory.
By compiling MySQL yourself, you can use up to 64GB of physical
memory in 32-bit Windows. See the description for
innodb_buffer_pool_awe_mem_mb
in Section 13.2.3, “InnoDB
Startup Options and System Variables”.
Tuning other mysqld server parameters. The following values are typical and suit most users:
[mysqld]
skip-external-locking
max_connections=200
read_buffer_size=1M
sort_buffer_size=1M
#
# Set key_buffer to 5 - 50% of your RAM depending on how much
# you use MyISAM tables, but keep key_buffer_size + InnoDB
# buffer pool size < 80% of your RAM
key_buffer_size=value
On Linux, if the kernel is enabled for large page support,
InnoDB
can use large pages to allocate memory
for its buffer pool and additional memory pool. See
Section 7.5.9, “Enabling Large Page Support”.
User Comments
I've found quite a few people having issues initializing MySQL 4.0.x with InnoDB support under Suse 9.x Pro. Server startup will fail with a message like:
unknown variable 'innodb_data_home_dir=/var/lib/mysql'
If this happens, make sure you've installed the mySQL-Max package (after installing the base mySQL server). Then invoke the server like:
$ /usr/sbin/mysqld-max
You should then see your InnoDB tables initialize.
InnoDB on Gentoo is not enabled unless you specify the "innodb" USE flag. Knowing this may save you from having to do an extra compilation.
Hola, la forma de activar las tablas innodb en mysql 3.23.54 me funciono de esta forma usando Red Hat Linux 9:
Primero me fui a /etc/my.cnf, y agregue algunas lineas que me faltaban en ese archivo de modo que al final quedara de esta manera:
[mysqld]
datadir=/var/lib/mysql
socket=/var/lib/mysql/mysql.sock
# skip_innodb
innodb_data_file_path=idbdata1:200M:autoextend
set-variable = innodb_buffer_pool_size=80M
set-variable = innodb_additional_mem_pool_size=2M
set-variable = innodb_log_file_size=20M
set-variable = innodb_log_buffer_size=8M
innodb_flush_log_at_trx_commit=1
[mysql.server]
user=mysql
basedir=/var/lib
[safe_mysqld]
err-log=/var/log/mysqld.log
pid-file=/var/run/mysqld/mysqld.pid
Espero que les sirva y si tienen preguntas me escriben a jaimemontoya@gmail.com, adios.
Per Jose's comment on Gentoo above - on my Gentoo system, the USE flags depend on the version of MySQL you are installing:
mysql-3.23.58-r1 : 'innodb' flag enables InnoDB support
mysql-4.0.25-r2 through mysql-5.0.19 include InnoDB support by default. After 5.1 this was again made dependent on flag 'innodb'.
If installing 4.1.3 or later you can use the 'extraengine' flag to enable ARCHIVE, CSV (4.1.4+), BLACKHOLE (4.1.11+) and FEDERATED (5.0.3+). (Also see 'berkdb', 'cluster' and 'geometry' flags.)
Another thing to watch for with Gentoo is the way it configures the max file size to 128M:
[extract from /etc/mysql/my.cnf]
# you may wish to change this size to be more suitable for your system
# the max is there to avoid run-away growth on your machine
innodb_data_file_path = ibdata1:10M:autoextend:max:128M
If you start getting "Table 'foo' is full" errors, check your config file.
This is kind of a got ya and either isn't in the documentation or is as clear as mud. When you want to change the location of the innodb data files you have to set both the innodb_data_home_dir and innodb_data_file_path variables. So in my case, I was trying to move the data file location to /History/mysql. So I tried adding to my.cnf
innodb_data_file_path=/History/mysql/ibdata1:10M:autoextend:max:15G
Upon starting mysql, I got an error unable to open database. When I looked in syslog, the innodb_data_file_path looked like this
.//History/mysql/ibdata
I added to the my.cnf
innodb_data_home_dir=/History/mysql
and modified innodb_data_file_path to
innodb_data_file_path=ibdata:10M:autoextend:max:15G
and mysql started up using the correct file paths. Remember to change the permissions on the /History/mysql directory to chown mysql:mysql mysql. All is well and I was also able to change the log file locations as well.
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