Tuesday, November 28, 2017

Here is the CREATE TABLE of death

In a previous post, I talked about the existence of a CREATE TABLE that is crashing MySQL up to versions 5.5.58, 5.6.38 and 5.7.20, and MariaDB up to version 5.5.57, 10.0.32, 10.1.26 and 10.2.7.  I hope you upgraded (or can mitigate this problem in another way) as I am now publishing the CREATE TABLE of death.

Thursday, October 19, 2017

A crashing bug in MySQL: the CREATE TABLE of death (more fun with InnoDB Persistent Statistics)

I ended one of my last posts - Fun with InnoDB Persistent Statistics - with a cryptic sentence: there is more to say about this but I will stop here for now.  What I did not share at the time is the existence of a crashing bug somehow related to what I found.  But let's start with some context.

Wednesday, August 16, 2017

The danger of no Primary Key when replicating in RBR (and a partial protection with MariaDB 10.1)

TL;DR: unless you know what you are doing, you should always have a primary key on your tables when replicating in RBR (and maybe even all the time).

TL;DR2: MariaDB 10.1 has an interesting way to protect against missing a primary key (innodb_force_primary_key) but it could be improved.

A few weeks ago, I was called off hours because replication delay on all the slaves from a replication chain was high and growing.  It was not the first time this happened on that chain, so I thought right away that this was probably an UPDATE or DELETE of many rows on a table without a primary key.  Let's see what is the problem with this and to understand that, we have to talk about binary log formats.

Monday, August 14, 2017

More Details about InnoDB Compression Levels (innodb_compression_level)

In one of my previous posts, I shared InnoDB table compression statistics for a read-only dataset using the default value of innodb_compression_level (6).  In it, I claimed, without giving much detail, that using the maximum value for the compression level (9) would not make a big difference.  In this post, I will share more details about this claim.

TL;DR: tuning innodb_compression_level is not very useful for my dataset.

Thursday, August 10, 2017

Why we still need MyISAM (for read-only tables)

TL;DR: we still need MyISAM and myisampack because it uses less space on disk (half of compressed InnoDB) !

In the previous post, I shared my experience with InnoDB table compression on a read-only dataset.  In it, I claimed, without giving much detail, that using MyISAM and myisampack would result is a more compact storage on disk.  In this post, I will share more details about this claim.

Monday, August 7, 2017

An Adventure in InnoDB Table Compression (for read-only tables)

In my last post about big MySQL deployments, I am quickly mentioning that InnoDB compression is allowing dividing disk usage by about 4.3 on a 200+ TiB dataset.  In this post, I will give more information about this specific use case of InnoDB table compression and I will share some statistics and learnings on this system and subject.  Note that I am not covering InnoDB page compression which is a new feature of MySQL 5.7 (also known as hole punching).

Wednesday, July 19, 2017

InnoDB Basics - Compaction: when and when not

This is old news for MySQL/MariaDB expert but people that are starting using InnoDB do not always know that disk space is not automatically released when deleting data from a table.  To explain and demonstrate that, I will take two real-world examples: table1 and table2.

Wednesday, July 5, 2017

Fun with InnoDB Persistent Statistics

Something interesting happened to me in the last days, and it is worth sharing.  I was upgrading MariaDB (MySQL also impacted) to a new major version and mysql_upgrade showed something like this:
[...]
Phase 4/7: Running 'mysql_fix_privilege_tables'
ERROR 1062 (23000) at line 586: Duplicate entry 'schema-table_name#P#partition_name_truncated' for key 'PRIMARY'
ERROR 1062 (23000) at line 590: Duplicate entry 'schema-table_name#P#partition_name_truncated' for key 'PRIMARY'
ERROR 1062 (23000) at line 593: Duplicate entry 'schema-table_name#P#partition_name_truncated' for key 'PRIMARY'
FATAL ERROR: Upgrade failed

Monday, May 22, 2017

Better Replication when running both InnoDB and MyRocks (or other Storage-Engines)

Kristian Nielsen is working on a new feature for MariaDB 10.3 and he published very interesting results.  This feature is MDEV-12179: Per-engine mysql.gtid_slave_pos tables.  He writes about replicating twice as fast in the worst case when using two storage engines (InnoDB and MariaRocks in his tests, but could also be InnoDB and TokuDB or TokuDB and MyRocks).  I will let you read all the details on his blog about Improving replication with multiple storage engines.

Why am I posting this here ?  Mostly because I want to share with you that:
  • I am also involved in this project,
  • I am working closely with Kristian on this feature,
  • and that Booking.com is financing Kristian's time on this development.
If you are also interested in this, feel free to comment in the JIRA MDEV, to leave a comment below, or on Kristian's post.

Tuesday, April 18, 2017

Sunday, April 16, 2017

Booking.com talks at Percona Live Santa Clara 2017

In a week, me and some Booking.com colleagues will be in Santa Clara for Percona Live.

Booking.com is sponsoring the conference and we will be present at the Monday Evening Reception.  You do not need a tutorial pass to attend the dinner (even if it is on the tutorial day): any valid pass will do.  If you do not have your ticket yet, it is time to register (you can use the discount code “SeeMeSpeak” for a 10% discount on the registration fees).

Tuesday, April 11, 2017

Many thanks Oracle for implementing RESET MASTER TO

MySQL 8.0.1 is out and it includes an implementation of my feature request (Bug #77438).  This extension to RESET MASTER allows to simplify master promotion with Binlog Servers.  Let's see how it works:
# mysql -N <<< "SHOW MASTER STATUS"
binlog.027892   3006935
# mysql -N <<< "RESET MASTER TO 12345; DO sleep(rand()*10); SHOW MASTER STATUS"
binlog.012345   92773
# mysql -N <<< "RESET MASTER TO 12345678; DO sleep(rand()*10); SHOW MASTER STATUS"
binlog.12345678 24795
# mysql -N <<< "RESET MASTER TO 1234567890; DO sleep(rand()*10); SHOW MASTER STATUS"
binlog.1234567890       13987
# mysql -N <<< "RESET MASTER TO 12345678901; DO sleep(rand()*10); SHOW MASTER STATUS"
ERROR 3567 (HY000) at line 1: The requested value '12345678901' for the next
binary log index is out of range. Please use a value between '1' and '2147483647'.
# mysql -N <<< "RESET MASTER TO $RANDOM; DO sleep(rand()*10); SHOW MASTER STATUS"
binlog.013529   89880
# mysql -N <<< "RESET MASTER TO $RANDOM; DO sleep(rand()*10); SHOW MASTER STATUS"
binlog.000831   22961
# mysql -N <<< "RESET MASTER TO $RANDOM; DO sleep(rand()*10); SHOW MASTER STATUS"
binlog.023089   107764
# mysql -N <<< "RESET MASTER TO $RANDOM; DO sleep(rand()*10); SHOW MASTER STATUS"
binlog.003433   67903
Many thanks Oracle for implementing my feature request, and a special mention to Daniël van Eeden for providing a patch in the bug report.

Monday, March 6, 2017

Better InnoDB Crash Recovery in MariaDB 10.1


Recently, I had to go through crash recovery of a large MariaDB 10.1.21 instance.  After starting MariaDB, I started tailing the error logs expecting to wait many minutes while InnoDB was scanning ibd files.  I was surprised (and actually delighted) with this:

Wednesday, February 8, 2017

A Metric for Tuning Parallel Replication in MySQL 5.7

MySQL 5.7 introduced the LOGICAL_CLOCK type of multi-threaded slave (MTS).  When using this type of parallel replication (and when slave_parallel_workers is greater than zero), slaves use information from the binary logs (written by the master) to run transactions in parallel.  However, enabling parallel replication on slaves might not be enough to get a higher replication throughput (VividCortex blogged about such a situation recently in Solving MySQL Replication Lag with LOGICAL_CLOCK and Calibrated Delay).  To get a faster slave with parallel replication, some tuning is needed on the master.

Friday, January 20, 2017

How upgrading MariaDB Server failed because 50M warnings were ignored

This post is part of the series "please do not ignore warnings in MySQL/MariaDB".  The previous post of the series can be found here.

In this post, I will present why ignoring warnings made me lose time in upgrading MariaDB Server.  I think this war story is entertaining to read and it is also worth presenting to people claiming that ignoring warnings is no big deal.

Wednesday, January 18, 2017

Why I wrote "please do not ignore warnings" and "to always investigate/fix warnings" (in MySQL/MariaDB)

In a last post, I wrote the two following sentences:
  • please do not ignore warnings
  • always investigate/fix warnings
I realized that without context, this might be hard to understand.  In this post, I want to give more background about these two sentences.

Friday, January 13, 2017

Oracle MySQL and the funny replication breakage of Friday, January 13

In my previous post, I talked about a funny replication breakage that I experienced with MariaDB.  So what about different versions of MySQL...

Funny replication breakage of Friday, January 13

A funny replication breakage kept me at the office longer than expected today (Friday 13 is not kind with me).

So question of the day: can you guess what the below UPDATE statement does (or what is wrong with it) ?