Spec-Zone .ru
спецификации, руководства, описания, API
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On Unix, MySQL uses the value of the TMPDIR
environment variable as the path name
of the directory in which to store temporary files. If TMPDIR
is not set, MySQL
uses the system default, which is usually /tmp
, /var/tmp
, or /usr/tmp
.
On Windows, MySQL checks in order the values of the TMPDIR
, TEMP
,
and TMP
environment variables. For the first one found to be set, MySQL uses it and
does not check those remaining. If none of TMPDIR
, TEMP
, or TMP
are set, MySQL uses the Windows system
default, which is usually C:\windows\temp\
.
If the file system containing your temporary file directory is too small, you can use the --tmpdir
option to mysqld to specify a directory in a file system where you have
enough space.
In MySQL 5.6, the --tmpdir
option can be set to a list of several paths that are used in round-robin fashion. Paths should be separated by
colon characters (":
") on
Unix and semicolon characters (";
") on Windows.
To spread the load effectively, these paths should be located on different physical disks, not different partitions of the same disk.
If the MySQL server is acting as a replication slave, you should not set --tmpdir
to point to a directory on a memory-based file system or to a directory
that is cleared when the server host restarts. A replication slave needs some of its temporary files to survive
a machine restart so that it can replicate temporary tables or LOAD DATA INFILE
operations. If files in the temporary file directory are
lost when the server restarts, replication fails.
MySQL arranges that temporary files are removed if mysqld is terminated. On platforms that support it (such as Unix), this is done by unlinking the file after opening it. The disadvantage of this is that the name does not appear in directory listings and you do not see a big temporary file that fills up the file system in which the temporary file directory is located. (In such cases, ls +L1 may be helpful in identifying large files associated with mysqld.)
When sorting (ORDER BY
or GROUP BY
), MySQL normally
uses one or two temporary files. The maximum disk space required is determined by the following expression:
(length of what is sorted + sizeof(row pointer))* number of matched rows* 2
The row pointer size is usually four bytes, but may grow in the future for really big tables.
For some SELECT
queries, MySQL also creates temporary SQL tables. These are not hidden and have names of the form SQL_*
.
ALTER
TABLE
creates a temporary table in the same directory as the original table.