Spec-Zone .ru
спецификации, руководства, описания, API
|
Each binary logging format has advantages and disadvantages. For most users, the mixed replication format should provide the best combination of data integrity and performance. If, however, you want to take advantage of the features specific to the statement-based or row-based replication format when performing certain tasks, you can use the information in this section, which provides a summary of their relative advantages and disadvantages, to determine which is best for your needs.
Proven technology that has existed in MySQL since 3.23.
Less data written to log files. When updates or deletes affect many rows, this results in much less storage space required for log files. This also means that taking and restoring from backups can be accomplished more quickly.
Log files contain all statements that made any changes, so they can be used to audit the database.
Statements that are unsafe for SBR. Not all statements which modify data (such as INSERT
DELETE
, UPDATE
,
and REPLACE
statements) can be replicated using statement-based
replication. Any nondeterministic behavior is difficult to replicate when using statement-based
replication. Examples of such DML (Data Modification Language) statements include the following:
A statement that depends on a UDF or stored program that is nondeterministic, since the value returned by such a UDF or stored program or depends on factors other than the parameters supplied to it. (Row-based replication, however, simply replicates the value returned by the UDF or stored program, so its effect on table rows and data is the same on both the master and slave.) See Section 16.4.1.11, "Replication of Invoked Features", for more information.
DELETE
and UPDATE
statements that use a LIMIT
clause without an ORDER BY
are nondeterministic. See Section 16.4.1.16,
"Replication and LIMIT
".
Statements using any of the following functions cannot be replicated properly using statement-based replication:
SYSDATE()
(unless both the master and the slave
are started with the --sysdate-is-now
option)
However, all other functions are replicated correctly using statement-based replication,
including NOW()
and so forth.
For more information, see Section 16.4.1.15, "Replication and System Functions".
Statements that cannot be replicated correctly using statement-based replication are logged with a warning like the one shown here:
090213 16:58:54 [Warning] Statement is not safe to log in statement format.
A similar warning is also issued to the client in such cases. The client can display it using SHOW WARNINGS
.
INSERT ... SELECT
requires a greater number of row-level locks than with
row-based replication.
UPDATE
statements that require a table scan (because no index is used in
the WHERE
clause) must lock a greater number of rows than with row-based
replication.
For InnoDB
:
An INSERT
statement that uses AUTO_INCREMENT
blocks other nonconflicting INSERT
statements.
For complex statements, the statement must be evaluated and executed on the slave before the rows are updated or inserted. With row-based replication, the slave only has to modify the affected rows, not execute the full statement.
If there is an error in evaluation on the slave, particularly when executing complex statements, statement-based replication may slowly increase the margin of error across the affected rows over time. See Section 16.4.1.26, "Slave Errors During Replication".
Stored functions execute with the same NOW()
value as the calling statement. However, this is not true of stored
procedures.
Deterministic UDFs must be applied on the slaves.
Table definitions must be (nearly) identical on master and slave. See Section 16.4.1.9, "Replication with Differing Table Definitions on Master and Slave", for more information.
All changes can be replicated. This is the safest form of replication.
The mysql
database is not replicated. The mysql
database is instead seen as a node-specific database. Row-based
replication is not supported on tables in this database. Instead, statements that would normally
update this information—such as GRANT
,
REVOKE
and the manipulation of triggers, stored routines (including stored procedures), and views—are all
replicated to slaves using statement-based replication.
For statements such as CREATE TABLE
... SELECT
, a CREATE
statement is generated from the table
definition and replicated using statement-based format, while the row insertions are replicated
using row-based format.
The technology is the same as in most other database management systems; knowledge about other systems transfers to MySQL.
Fewer row locks are required on the master, which thus achieves higher concurrency, for the following types of statements:
Fewer row locks are required on the slave for any INSERT
, UPDATE
, or DELETE
statement.
RBR tends to generate more data that must be logged. To replicate a DML statement
(such as an UPDATE
or DELETE
statement), statement-based replication writes only the statement to the binary log. By contrast,
row-based replication writes each changed row to the binary log. If the statement changes many rows,
row-based replication may write significantly more data to the binary log; this is true even for
statements that are rolled back. This also means that taking and restoring from backup can require more
time. In addition, the binary log is locked for a longer time to write the data, which may cause
concurrency problems.
Deterministic UDFs that generate large BLOB
values take longer to replicate with row-based replication than with
statement-based replication. This is because the BLOB
column value is logged, rather than the statement generating the
data.
You cannot examine the logs to see what statements were executed, nor can you see on the slave what statements were received from the master and executed.
However, you can see what data was changed using mysqlbinlog with the options --base64-output=DECODE-ROWS
and --verbose
.
For tables using the MyISAM
storage engine, a stronger lock is required on the slave for INSERT
statements when applying them as row-based events to the binary log than when applying them as
statements. This means that concurrent inserts on MyISAM
tables are not supported when using row-based replication.