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This section outlines the procedure for starting MySQL Cluster replication using a single replication channel.
Start the MySQL replication master server by issuing this command:
shellM
>mysqld --ndbcluster --server-id=
id
\--log-bin &
In the previous statement, id
is this server's unique ID
(see Section 17.6.2, "General
Requirements for MySQL Cluster Replication"). This starts the server's mysqld process with binary logging enabled using
the proper logging format.
You can also start the master with --binlog-format=MIXED
, in which case row-based replication is used
automatically when replicating between clusters. STATEMENT
based
binary logging is not supported for MySQL Cluster Replication (see Section
17.6.2, "General Requirements for MySQL Cluster Replication").
Start the MySQL replication slave server as shown here:
shellS
>mysqld --ndbcluster --server-id=
id
&
In the command just shown, id
is the slave server's unique
ID. It is not necessary to enable logging on the replication slave.
You should use the --skip-slave-start
option with this command or else you should
include skip-slave-start
in the slave server's my.cnf
file, unless you want replication to begin immediately.
With the use of this option, the start of replication is delayed until the appropriate START SLAVE
statement has been issued, as explained in Step 4 below.
It is necessary to synchronize the slave server with the master server's replication binary log. If binary logging has not previously been running on the master, run the following statement on the slave:
mysqlS
>CHANGE MASTER TO
->MASTER_LOG_FILE='',
->MASTER_LOG_POS=4;
This instructs the slave to begin reading the master's binary log from the log's starting point.
Otherwise—that is, if you are loading data from the master using a backup—see Section
17.6.8, "Implementing Failover with MySQL Cluster Replication", for information on how to
obtain the correct values to use for MASTER_LOG_FILE
and MASTER_LOG_POS
in such cases.
Finally, you must instruct the slave to begin applying replication by issuing this command from the mysql client on the replication slave:
mysqlS
>START SLAVE;
This also initiates the transmission of replication data from the master to the slave.
It is also possible to use two replication channels, in a manner similar to the procedure described in the next section; the differences between this and using a single replication channel are covered in Section 17.6.7, "Using Two Replication Channels for MySQL Cluster Replication".
It is also possible to improve cluster replication performance by enabling batched
updates. This can be accomplished by setting the slave_allow_batching
system variable on the slave mysqld processes. Normally, updates are applied as soon as they
are received. However, the use of batching causes updates to be applied in 32 KB batches, which can result in
higher throughput and less CPU usage, particularly where individual updates are relatively small.
Slave batching works on a per-epoch basis; updates belonging to more than one transaction can be sent as part of the same batch.
All outstanding updates are applied when the end of an epoch is reached, even if the updates total less than 32 KB.
Batching can be turned on and off at runtime. To activate it at runtime, you can use either of these two statements:
SET GLOBAL slave_allow_batching = 1;SET GLOBAL slave_allow_batching = ON;
If a particular batch causes problems (such as a statement whose effects do not appear to be replicated correctly), slave batching can be deactivated using either of the following statements:
SET GLOBAL slave_allow_batching = 0;SET GLOBAL slave_allow_batching = OFF;
You can check whether slave batching is currently being used by means of an appropriate SHOW VARIABLES
statement, like this one:
mysql> SHOW VARIABLES LIKE 'slave%';
+---------------------------+-------+| Variable_name | Value |+---------------------------+-------+| slave_allow_batching | ON || slave_compressed_protocol | OFF || slave_load_tmpdir | /tmp || slave_net_timeout | 3600 || slave_skip_errors | OFF || slave_transaction_retries | 10 |+---------------------------+-------+6 rows in set (0.00 sec)