MySQL 9.3 Reference Manual Including MySQL NDB Cluster 9.3
Preparing the NDB Cluster for replication consists of the following steps:
Check all MySQL servers for version compatibility (see Section 25.7.2, “General Requirements for NDB Cluster Replication”).
Create a replication account on the source Cluster with the appropriate privileges, using the following two SQL statements:
mysqlS
>CREATE USER '
->replica_user
'@'replica_host
'IDENTIFIED BY '
mysqlreplica_password
';S
>GRANT REPLICATION SLAVE ON *.*
->TO '
replica_user
'@'replica_host
';
In the previous statement,
replica_user
is the replication
account user name, replica_host
is
the host name or IP address of the replica, and
replica_password
is the password to
assign to this account.
For example, to create a replica user account with the name
myreplica
, logging in from the host named
replica-host
, and using the password
53cr37
, use the following
CREATE USER
and
GRANT
statements:
mysqlS
>CREATE USER 'myreplica'@'replica-host'
->IDENTIFIED BY '53cr37';
mysqlS
>GRANT REPLICATION SLAVE ON *.*
->TO 'myreplica'@'replica-host';
For security reasons, it is preferable to use a unique user account—not employed for any other purpose—for the replication account.
Set up the replica to use the source. Using the
mysql client, this can be accomplished with
the CHANGE REPLICATION SOURCE
TO
statement:
mysqlR
>CHANGE REPLICATION SOURCE TO
->SOURCE_HOST='
->source_host
',SOURCE_PORT=
->source_port
,SOURCE_USER='
->replica_user
',SOURCE_PASSWORD='
replica_password
';
In the previous statement,
source_host
is the host name or IP
address of the replication source,
source_port
is the port for the
replica to use when connecting to the source,
replica_user
is the user name set
up for the replica on the source, and
replica_password
is the password
set for that user account in the previous step.
For example, to tell the replica to use the MySQL server whose
host name is rep-source
with the
replication account created in the previous step, use the
following statement:
mysqlR
>CHANGE REPLICATION SOURCE TO
->SOURCE_HOST='rep-source',
->SOURCE_PORT=3306,
->SOURCE_USER='myreplica',
->SOURCE_PASSWORD='53cr37';
For a complete list of options that can be used with this statement, see Section 15.4.2.2, “CHANGE REPLICATION SOURCE TO Statement”.
To provide replication backup capability, you also need to add
an --ndb-connectstring
option
to the replica's my.cnf
file prior
to starting the replication process. See
Section 25.7.9, “NDB Cluster Backups With NDB Cluster Replication”, for
details.
For additional options that can be set in
my.cnf
for replicas, see
Section 19.1.6, “Replication and Binary Logging Options and Variables”.
If the source cluster is already in use, you can create a backup of the source and load this onto the replica to cut down on the amount of time required for the replica to synchronize itself with the source. If the replica is also running NDB Cluster, this can be accomplished using the backup and restore procedure described in Section 25.7.9, “NDB Cluster Backups With NDB Cluster Replication”.
ndb-connectstring=management_host
[:port
]
In the event that you are not using NDB Cluster on the replica, you can create a backup with this command on the source:
shellS
>mysqldump --source-data=1
Then import the resulting data dump onto the replica by
copying the dump file over to it. After this, you can use the
mysql client to import the data from the
dumpfile into the replica database as shown here, where
dump_file
is the name of the file
that was generated using mysqldump on the
source, and db_name
is the name of
the database to be replicated:
shellR
>mysql -u root -p
db_name
<dump_file
For a complete list of options to use with mysqldump, see Section 6.5.4, “mysqldump — A Database Backup Program”.
If you copy the data to the replica in this fashion, make
sure that you stop the replica from trying to connect to the
source to begin replicating before all the data has been
loaded. You can do this by starting the replica with
--skip-replica-start
. Once
the data loading has completed, follow the additional steps
outlined in the next two sections.
Ensure that each MySQL server acting as a replication source
is assigned a unique server ID, and has binary logging
enabled, using the row-based format. (See
Section 19.2.1, “Replication Formats”.) In addition, we
strongly recommend enabling the
replica_allow_batching
system
variable (the default).
Use --ndb-replica-batch-size
to
set the batch size used for writes on the replica instead of
--ndb-batch-size
, and
--ndb-replica-blob-write-batch-bytes
rather than --ndb-blob-write-batch-bytes
to
determine the batch size used by the replication applier for
writing blob data. All of these options can be set either in
the source server's my.cnf
file, or
on the command line when starting the source
mysqld process. See
Section 25.7.6, “Starting NDB Cluster Replication (Single Replication Channel)”, for more
information.