Spec-Zone .ru
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This table contains information on the status of data nodes. For each data node that is running in the cluster, a corresponding row in this table provides the node's node ID, status, and uptime. For nodes that are starting, it also shows the current start phase.
The following table provides information about the columns in the nodes
table. For
each column, the table shows the name, data type, and a brief description. Additional information can be found
in the notes following the table.
Column Name | Type | Remarks |
---|---|---|
node_id |
integer | The data node's unique node ID in the cluster. |
uptime |
integer | Time since the node was last started, in seconds. |
status |
string | Current status of the data node; see text for possible values. |
start_phase |
integer | If the data node is starting, the current start phase. |
config_generation |
integer | The version of the cluster configuration file in use on this data node. |
The uptime
column shows the time in seconds that this node has been running since
it was last started or restarted. This is a BIGINT
value. This figure includes the time actually needed to start the
node; in other words, this counter starts running the moment that ndbd or ndbmtd is first invoked; thus, even for a node that has not
yet finished starting, uptime
may show a non-zero value.
The status
column shows the node's current status. This is one of: NOTHING
, CMVMI
, STARTING
,
STARTED
, SINGLEUSER
, STOPPING_1
, STOPPING_2
, STOPPING_3
,
or STOPPING_4
. When the status is STARTING
, you can
see the current start phase in the start_phase
column (see later in this section).
SINGLEUSER
is displayed in the status
column for all
data nodes when the cluster is in single user mode (see Section
17.5.8, "MySQL Cluster Single User Mode"). Seeing one of the STOPPING
states does not necessarily mean that the node is shutting down but can mean rather that it is entering a new
state; for example, if you put the cluster in single user mode, you can sometimes see data nodes report their
state briefly as STOPPING_2
before the status changes to SINGLEUSER
.
The start_phase
column uses the same range of values as those used in the output of
the ndb_mgm client
command (see Section
17.5.2, "Commands in the MySQL Cluster Management Client"). If the node is not currently starting, then
this column shows node_id
STATUS0
. For a listing of MySQL Cluster start phases with descriptions,
see Section 17.5.1, "Summary of MySQL Cluster Start
Phases".
The config_generation
column shows which version of the cluster configuration is in
effect on each data node. This can be useful when performing a rolling restart of the cluster in order to make
changes in configuration parameters. For example, from the output of the following SELECT
statement, you can see that node 3 is not yet using the latest version
of the cluster configuration (6
) although nodes 1, 2, and 4 are doing so:
mysql>USE ndbinfo;
Database changedmysql>SELECT * FROM nodes;
+---------+--------+---------+-------------+-------------------+| node_id | uptime | status | start_phase | config_generation |+---------+--------+---------+-------------+-------------------+| 1 | 10462 | STARTED | 0 | 6 || 2 | 10460 | STARTED | 0 | 6 || 3 | 10457 | STARTED | 0 | 5 || 4 | 10455 | STARTED | 0 | 6 |+---------+--------+---------+-------------+-------------------+2 rows in set (0.04 sec)
Therefore, for the case just shown, you should restart node 3 to complete the rolling restart of the cluster.
Nodes that are stopped are not accounted for in this table. Suppose that you have a MySQL Cluster with 4 data nodes (node IDs 1, 2, 3 and 4), and all nodes are running normally, then this table contains 4 rows, 1 for each data node:
mysql>USE ndbinfo;
Database changedmysql>SELECT * FROM nodes;
+---------+--------+---------+-------------+-------------------+| node_id | uptime | status | start_phase | config_generation |+---------+--------+---------+-------------+-------------------+| 1 | 11776 | STARTED | 0 | 6 || 2 | 11774 | STARTED | 0 | 6 || 3 | 11771 | STARTED | 0 | 6 || 4 | 11769 | STARTED | 0 | 6 |+---------+--------+---------+-------------+-------------------+4 rows in set (0.04 sec)
If you shut down one of the nodes, only the nodes that are still running are represented in the output of this
SELECT
statement, as shown here:
ndb_mgm> 2 STOP
Node 2: Node shutdown initiatedNode 2: Node shutdown completed.Node 2 has shutdown.
mysql> SELECT * FROM nodes;
+---------+--------+---------+-------------+-------------------+| node_id | uptime | status | start_phase | config_generation |+---------+--------+---------+-------------+-------------------+| 1 | 11807 | STARTED | 0 | 6 || 3 | 11802 | STARTED | 0 | 6 || 4 | 11800 | STARTED | 0 | 6 |+---------+--------+---------+-------------+-------------------+3 rows in set (0.02 sec)