MySQL 9.3 Reference Manual Including MySQL NDB Cluster 9.3
It does not matter for the replication process whether the
original table on the source and the replicated table on the
replica use different storage engine types. In fact, the
default_storage_engine
system
variable is not replicated.
This provides a number of benefits in the replication process in
that you can take advantage of different engine types for
different replication scenarios. For example, in a typical
scale-out scenario (see
Section 19.4.5, “Using Replication for Scale-Out”), you want to use
InnoDB
tables on the source to take advantage
of the transactional functionality, but use
MyISAM
on the replicas where transaction
support is not required because the data is only read. When using
replication in a data-logging environment you may want to use the
Archive
storage engine on the replica.
Configuring different engines on the source and replica depends on how you set up the initial replication process:
If you used mysqldump to create the database snapshot on your source, you could edit the dump file text to change the engine type used on each table.
Another alternative for mysqldump is to
disable engine types that you do not want to use on the
replica before using the dump to build the data on the
replica. For example, you can add the
--skip-federated
option on your replica to
disable the FEDERATED
engine. If
a specific engine does not exist for a table to be created,
MySQL uses the default engine type, usually
InnoDB
. (This requires that the
NO_ENGINE_SUBSTITUTION
SQL
mode is not enabled.) If you want to disable additional
engines in this way, you may want to consider building a
special binary to be used on the replica that supports only
the engines you want.
If you use raw data files (a binary backup) to set up the
replica, it is not possible to change the initial table
format. Instead, use ALTER
TABLE
to change the table types after the replica
has been started.
For new source/replica replication setups where there are currently no tables on the source, avoid specifying the engine type when creating new tables.
If you are already running a replication solution and want to convert your existing tables to another engine type, follow these steps:
Stop the replica from running replication updates:
mysql> STOP REPLICA;
This makes it possible to change engine types without interruption.
Execute an ALTER TABLE ...
ENGINE='
for
each table to be changed.
engine_type
'
Start the replication process again:
mysql> START REPLICA;
Although the
default_storage_engine
variable
is not replicated, be aware that CREATE
TABLE
and ALTER TABLE
statements that include the engine specification are replicated to
the replica correctly. If, in the case of a
CSV
table, you execute this
statement:
mysql> ALTER TABLE csvtable ENGINE='MyISAM';
This statement is replicated; the table's engine type on the
replica is converted to InnoDB
, even if you
have previously changed the table type on the replica to an engine
other than CSV
. If you want to retain engine
differences on the source and replica, you should be careful to
use the default_storage_engine
variable on the source when creating a new table. For example,
instead of:
mysql> CREATE TABLE tablea (columna int) Engine=MyISAM;
Use this format:
mysql>SET default_storage_engine=MyISAM;
mysql>CREATE TABLE tablea (columna int);
When replicated, the
default_storage_engine
variable
is ignored, and the CREATE TABLE
statement executes on the replica using the replica's default
engine.