ndbd is the process that is used to handle all the data in tables using the NDB Cluster storage engine. This is the process that empowers a data node to accomplish distributed transaction handling, node recovery, checkpointing to disk, online backup, and related tasks.
In a MySQL Cluster, a set of ndbd processes cooperate in handling data. These processes can execute on the same computer (host) or on different computers. The correspondences between data nodes and Cluster hosts is completely configurable.
The following table includes command options specific to the MySQL Cluster data node program ndbd. Additional descriptions follow the table. For options common to all MySQL Cluster programs, see Section 17.4.21, “Options Common to MySQL Cluster Programs”.
Table 17.9. ndbd Command Line Options
Format | Description | Introduction | Deprecated | Removed |
---|---|---|---|---|
--bind-address=name | Local bind address | 5.0.29 | ||
--daemon | Start ndbd as daemon (default); override with --nodaemon | |||
--foreground | Run ndbd in foreground, provided for debugging purposes (implies --nodaemon) | |||
--initial | Perform initial start of ndbd, including cleaning the file system. Consult the documentation before using this option | |||
--initial-start | Perform partial initial start (requires --nowait-nodes) | 5.0.21 | ||
--nodaemon | Do not start ndbd as daemon; provided for testing purposes | |||
--nostart | Don't start ndbd immediately; ndbd waits for command to start from ndb_mgmd | |||
--nowait-nodes=list | Do not wait for these data nodes to start (takes comma-separated list of node IDs). Also requires --ndb-nodeid to be used. | 5.0.21 |
Version Introduced | 5.0.29 | |
Command-Line Format | --bind-address=name |
|
Permitted Values | ||
Type | string |
|
Default |
|
Causes ndbd to bind to a specific network interface (host name or IP address). This option has no default value.
This option was added in MySQL 5.0.29.
Command-Line Format | --daemon |
|
Permitted Values | ||
Type | boolean |
|
Default | TRUE |
Instructs ndbd to execute as a daemon
process. This is the default behavior.
--nodaemon
can be used to prevent the
process from running as a daemon.
Command-Line Format | --initial |
|
Permitted Values | ||
Type | boolean |
|
Default | FALSE |
Instructs ndbd to perform an initial start. An initial start erases any files created for recovery purposes by earlier instances of ndbd. It also re-creates recovery log files. Note that on some operating systems this process can take a substantial amount of time.
An --initial
start is to be used
only when starting the
ndbd process under very special
circumstances; this is because this option causes all
files to be removed from the Cluster file system and all
redo log files to be re-created. These circumstances are
listed here:
When performing a software upgrade which has changed the contents of any files.
When restarting the node with a new version of ndbd.
As a measure of last resort when for some reason the node restart or system restart repeatedly fails. In this case, be aware that this node can no longer be used to restore data due to the destruction of the data files.
Use of this option prevents the
StartPartialTimeout
and
StartPartitionedTimeout
configuration
parameters from having any effect.
This option does not affect any backup files that have already been created by the affected node.
This option also has no effect on recovery of data by a data node that is just starting (or restarting) from data nodes that are already running. This recovery of data occurs automatically, and requires no user intervention in a MySQL Cluster that is running normally.
It is permissible to use this option when starting the cluster for the very first time (that is, before any data node files have been created); however, it is not necessary to do so.
Version Introduced | 5.0.21 | |
Command-Line Format | --initial-start |
|
Permitted Values | ||
Type | boolean |
|
Default | FALSE |
This option is used when performing a partial initial
start of the cluster. Each node should be started with
this option, as well as
--nowait-nodes
.
Suppose that you have a 4-node cluster whose data nodes have the IDs 2, 3, 4, and 5, and you wish to perform a partial initial start using only nodes 2, 4, and 5 — that is, omitting node 3:
shell>ndbd --ndb-nodeid=2 --nowait-nodes=3 --initial-start
shell>ndbd --ndb-nodeid=4 --nowait-nodes=3 --initial-start
shell>ndbd --ndb-nodeid=5 --nowait-nodes=3 --initial-start
This option was added in MySQL 5.0.21.
--nowait-nodes=
node_id_1
[,
node_id_2
[, ...]]
Version Introduced | 5.0.21 | |
Command-Line Format | --nowait-nodes=list |
|
Permitted Values | ||
Type | string |
|
Default |
|
This option takes a list of data nodes which for which the cluster will not wait for before starting.
This can be used to start the cluster in a partitioned
state. For example, to start the cluster with only half of
the data nodes (nodes 2, 3, 4, and 5) running in a 4-node
cluster, you can start each ndbd
process with --nowait-nodes=3,5
. In this
case, the cluster starts as soon as nodes 2 and 4 connect,
and does not wait
StartPartitionedTimeout
milliseconds
for nodes 3 and 5 to connect as it would otherwise.
If you wanted to start up the same cluster as in the
previous example without one ndbd
— say, for example, that the host machine for node 3
has suffered a hardware failure — then start nodes
2, 4, and 5 with --nowait-nodes=3
. Then
the cluster will start as soon as nodes 2, 4, and 5
connect and will not wait for node 3 to start.
When using this option, you must also specify the node ID
for the data node being started with the
--ndb-nodeid
option.
This option was added in MySQL 5.0.21.
Command-Line Format | --nodaemon |
|
Permitted Values | ||
Type | boolean |
|
Default | FALSE |
|
Permitted Values | ||
Type (windows) | boolean |
|
Default | TRUE |
Instructs ndbd not to start as a daemon process. This is useful when ndbd is being debugged and you want output to be redirected to the screen.
Command-Line Format | --nostart |
|
Permitted Values | ||
Type | boolean |
|
Default | FALSE |
Instructs ndbd not to start
automatically. When this option is used,
ndbd connects to the management server,
obtains configuration data from it, and initializes
communication objects. However, it does not actually start
the execution engine until specifically requested to do so
by the management server. This can be accomplished by
issuing the proper START
command in the
management client (see
Section 17.5.2, “Commands in the MySQL Cluster Management Client”).
ndbd generates a set of log files which are
placed in the directory specified by
DataDir
in the
config.ini
configuration file.
These log files are listed below.
node_id
is the node's unique
identifier. Note that node_id
represents the node's unique identifier. For example,
ndb_2_error.log
is the error log
generated by the data node whose node ID is
2
.
ndb_
is a file containing records of all crashes which the
referenced ndbd process has
encountered. Each record in this file contains a brief
error string and a reference to a trace file for this
crash. A typical entry in this file might appear as shown
here:
node_id
_error.log
Date/Time: Saturday 30 July 2004 - 00:20:01 Type of error: error Message: Internal program error (failed ndbrequire) Fault ID: 2341 Problem data: DbtupFixAlloc.cpp Object of reference: DBTUP (Line: 173) ProgramName: NDB Kernel ProcessID: 14909 TraceFile: ndb_2_trace.log.2 ***EOM***
Listings of possible ndbd exit codes
and messages generated when a data node process shuts down
prematurely can be found in
ndbd
Error Messages.
The last entry in the error log file is not
necessarily the newest one (nor is it likely
to be). Entries in the error log are
not listed in chronological order;
rather, they correspond to the order of the trace files
as determined in the
ndb_
file (see below). Error log entries are thus overwritten
in a cyclical and not sequential fashion.
node_id
_trace.log.next
ndb_
is a trace file describing exactly what happened just
before the error occurred. This information is useful for
analysis by the MySQL Cluster development team.
node_id
_trace.log.trace_id
It is possible to configure the number of these trace
files that will be created before old files are
overwritten. trace_id
is a
number which is incremented for each successive trace
file.
ndb_
is the file that keeps track of the next trace file number
to be assigned.
node_id
_trace.log.next
ndb_
is a file containing any data output by the
ndbd process. This file is created only
if ndbd is started as a daemon, which
is the default behavior.
node_id
_out.log
ndb_
is a file containing the process ID of the
ndbd process when started as a daemon.
It also functions as a lock file to avoid the starting of
nodes with the same identifier.
node_id
.pid
ndb_
is a file used only in debug versions of
ndbd, where it is possible to trace all
incoming, outgoing, and internal messages with their data
in the ndbd process.
node_id
_signal.log
It is recommended not to use a directory mounted through NFS
because in some environments this can cause problems whereby
the lock on the .pid
file remains in
effect even after the process has terminated.
To start ndbd, it may also be necessary to specify the host name of the management server and the port on which it is listening. Optionally, one may also specify the node ID that the process is to use.
shell> ndbd --connect-string="nodeid=2;host=ndb_mgmd.mysql.com:1186"
See Section 17.3.2.2, “The MySQL Cluster Connectstring”, for additional information about this issue. Section 17.4.2, “ndbd — The MySQL Cluster Data Node Daemon”, describes other options for ndbd.
When ndbd starts, it actually initiates two processes. The first of these is called the “angel process”; its only job is to discover when the execution process has been completed, and then to restart the ndbd process if it is configured to do so. Thus, if you attempt to kill ndbd via the Unix kill command, it is necessary to kill both processes, beginning with the angel process. The preferred method of terminating an ndbd process is to use the management client and stop the process from there.
The execution process uses one thread for reading, writing, and scanning data, as well as all other activities. This thread is implemented asynchronously so that it can easily handle thousands of concurrent actions. In addition, a watch-dog thread supervises the execution thread to make sure that it does not hang in an endless loop. A pool of threads handles file I/O, with each thread able to handle one open file. Threads can also be used for transporter connections by the transporters in the ndbd process. In a multi-processor system performing a large number of operations (including updates), the ndbd process can consume up to 2 CPUs if permitted to do so.
For a machine with many CPUs it is possible to use several ndbd processes which belong to different node groups; however, such a configuration is still considered experimental and is not supported for MySQL 5.0 in a production setting. See Section 17.1.5, “Known Limitations of MySQL Cluster”.
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