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InnoDB 1.1 incorporates several checks to guard against the possible crashes and data corruptions that might occur if you run an older release of the MySQL server on InnoDB data files using a newer file format. These checks take place when the server is started, and when you first access a table. This section describes these checks, how you can control them, and error and warning conditions that might arise.
Considerations of backward compatibility only apply when using a recent version of InnoDB (the InnoDB Plugin, or MySQL 5.5 and higher with InnoDB 1.1) alongside an older one (MySQL 5.1 or earlier, with the built-in InnoDB rather than the InnoDB Plugin). To minimize the chance of compatibility issues, you can standardize on the InnoDB Plugin for all your MySQL 5.1 and earlier database servers.
In general, a newer version of InnoDB may create a table or index that cannot safely be read or written with a prior version of InnoDB without risk of crashes, hangs, wrong results or corruptions. InnoDB 1.1 includes a mechanism to guard against these conditions, and to help preserve compatibility among database files and versions of InnoDB. This mechanism lets you take advantage of some new features of an InnoDB release (such as performance improvements and bug fixes), and still preserve the option of using your database with a prior version of InnoDB, by preventing accidental use of new features that create downward-incompatible disk files.
If a version of InnoDB supports a particular file format (whether or not that format is the default), you can query and update any table that requires that format or an earlier format. Only the creation of new tables using new features is limited based on the particular file format enabled. Conversely, if a tablespace contains a table or index that uses a file format that is not supported by the currently running software, it cannot be accessed at all, even for read access.
The only way to "downgrade" an InnoDB tablespace to an
earlier file format is to copy the data to a new table, in a tablespace that uses the earlier format. This can
be done with the ALTER TABLE
statement, as described in Section
5.4.7.4, "Downgrading the File Format".
The easiest way to determine the file format of an existing InnoDB tablespace is to examine the properties of
the table it contains, using the SHOW TABLE STATUS
command or querying the table
INFORMATION_SCHEMA.TABLES
. If the Row_format
of the
table is reported as 'Compressed'
or 'Dynamic'
, the
tablespace containing the table uses the Barracuda format. Otherwise, it uses the prior InnoDB file format,
Antelope.
Every InnoDB per-table tablespace (represented by a *.ibd
file) file is labeled
with a file format identifier. The system tablespace (represented by the ibdata
files) is tagged with the "highest" file format in use in
a group of InnoDB database files, and this tag is checked when the files are opened.
Creating a compressed table, or a table with ROW_FORMAT=DYNAMIC
, updates the file
header for the corresponding .ibd
file and the table type in the InnoDB data
dictionary with the identifier for the Barracuda file format. From that point forward, the table cannot be used
with a version of InnoDB that does not support this new file format. To protect against anomalous behavior,
InnoDB version 5.0.21 and later performs a compatibility check when the table is opened. (In many cases, the ALTER TABLE
statement recreates a table and thus changes its properties. The
special case of adding or dropping indexes without rebuilding the table is described in
To avoid confusion, for the purposes of this discussion we define the term "ib-file set" to mean the set of operating system files that InnoDB manages as a unit. The ib-file set includes the following files:
The system tablespace (one or more ibdata
files) that
contain internal system information (including internal catalogs and undo information) and may include
user data and indexes.
Zero or more single-table tablespaces (also called "file per table" files, named *.ibd
files).
InnoDB log files; usually two, ib_logfile0
and ib_logfile1
. Used for crash recovery and in backups.
An "ib-file set" does not include the corresponding .frm
files that contain metadata about InnoDB tables. The .frm
files are created and managed by MySQL, and can sometimes get out of sync with
the internal metadata in InnoDB.
Multiple tables, even from more than one database, can be stored in a single "ib-file set". (In MySQL, a "database" is a logical collection of tables, what other systems refer to as a "schema" or "catalog".)
To prevent possible crashes or data corruptions when InnoDB opens an ib-file set, it checks that it can
fully support the file formats in use within the ib-file set. If the system is restarted following a crash,
or a "fast shutdown" (i.e., innodb_fast_shutdown
is greater than zero), there may be on-disk data
structures (such as redo or undo entries, or doublewrite pages) that are in a "too-new" format for the current software. During the recovery process,
serious damage can be done to your data files if these data structures are accessed. The startup check of
the file format occurs before any recovery process begins, thereby preventing consistency issues with the
new tables or startup problems for the MySQL server.
Beginning with version InnoDB 1.0.1, the system tablespace records an identifier or tag for the "highest" file format used by any table in any of the
tablespaces that is part of the ib-file set. Checks against this file format tag are controlled by the
configuration parameter innodb_file_format_check
, which is ON
by
default.
If the file format tag in the system tablespace is newer or higher than the highest version supported by the
particular currently executing software and if innodb_file_format_check
is ON
, the
following error is issued when the server is started:
InnoDB: Error: the system tablespace is in afile format that this version doesn't support
You can also set innodb_file_format
to a file format name. Doing so prevents InnoDB from
starting if the current software does not support the file format specified. It also sets the "high water mark" to the value you specify. The
ability to set innodb_file_format_check
will be useful (with future releases of InnoDB)
if you manually "downgrade" all of the tables in an
ib-file set (as described in
In some limited circumstances, you might want to start the server and use an ib-file set that is in a "too new" format (one that is not supported by
the software you are using). If you set the configuration parameter innodb_file_format_check
to OFF
, InnoDB
opens the database, but issues this warning message in the error log:
InnoDB: Warning: the system tablespace is in afile format that this version doesn't support
This is a very dangerous setting, as it permits the recovery process to run, possibly
corrupting your database if the previous shutdown was a crash or "fast shutdown". You should only set innodb_file_format_check
to OFF
if you
are sure that the previous shutdown was done with innodb_fast_shutdown=0
,
so that essentially no recovery process occurs. In a future release, this parameter setting may be
renamed from OFF
to UNSAFE
. (However, until
there are newer releases of InnoDB that support additional file formats, even disabling the startup
checking is in fact "safe".)
The parameter innodb_file_format_check
affects only what happens when a database is opened,
not subsequently. Conversely, the parameter innodb_file_format
(which enables a specific format) only determines
whether or not a new table can be created in the enabled format and has no effect on whether or not a
database can be opened.
The file format tag is a "high water mark", and as
such it is increased after the server is started, if a table in a "higher"
format is created or an existing table is accessed for read or write (assuming its format is supported). If
you access an existing table in a format higher than the format the running software supports, the system
tablespace tag is not updated, but table-level compatibility checking applies (and an error is issued), as
described in Section 5.4.7.2.2,
"Compatibility Check When a Table Is Opened". Any time the high water mark is updated, the value of
innodb_file_format_check
is updated as well, so the command SELECT @@innodb_file_format_check;
displays
the name of the newest file format known to be used by tables in the currently open ib-file set and
supported by the currently executing software.
To best illustrate this behavior, consider the scenario described in Table 5.8, "InnoDB Data File Compatibility and Related InnoDB Parameters". Imagine that some future version of InnoDB supports the Cheetah format and that an ib-file set has been used with that version.
Table 5.8. InnoDB Data File Compatibility and Related InnoDB Parameters
innodb file format check | innodb file format | Highest file format used in ib-file set | Highest file format supported by InnoDB | Result |
---|---|---|---|---|
OFF |
Antelope or Barracuda |
Barracuda |
Barracuda |
Database can be opened; tables can be created which require Antelope or Barracuda file format |
OFF |
Antelope or Barracuda |
Cheetah |
Barracuda |
Database can be opened with a warning, since the database contains files in a "too new" format; tables can be created in Antelope or Barracuda file format; tables in Cheetah format cannot be accessed |
OFF |
Cheetah |
Barracuda |
Barracuda |
Database cannot be opened; innodb_file_format cannot be set to Cheetah
|
ON |
Antelope or Barracuda |
Barracuda |
Barracuda |
Database can be opened; tables can be created in Antelope or Barracuda file format |
ON |
Antelope or Barracuda |
Cheetah |
Barracuda |
Database cannot be opened, since the database contains files in a "too new" format (Cheetah) |
ON |
Cheetah |
Barracuda |
Barracuda |
Database cannot be opened; innodb_file_format cannot be set to Cheetah
|
When a table is first accessed, InnoDB (including some releases prior to InnoDB 1.0) checks that the file format of the tablespace in which the table is stored is fully supported. This check prevents crashes or corruptions that would otherwise occur when tables using a "too new" data structure are encountered.
All tables using any file format supported by a release can be read or written (assuming the user has
sufficient privileges). The setting of the system configuration parameter innodb_file_format
can prevent creating a new table that uses specific
file formats, even if they are supported by a given release. Such a setting might be used to preserve
backward compatibility, but it does not prevent accessing any table that uses any supported format.
As noted in Named File Formats, versions of MySQL older than 5.0.21 cannot reliably use database files created by newer versions if a new file format was used when a table was created. To prevent various error conditions or corruptions, InnoDB checks file format compatibility when it opens a file (for example, upon first access to a table). If the currently running version of InnoDB does not support the file format identified by the table type in the InnoDB data dictionary, MySQL reports the following error:
ERROR 1146 (42S02): Table 'test
.t1
' doesn't exist
InnoDB also writes a message to the error log:
InnoDB: tabletest
/t1
: unknown table type33
The table type should be equal to the tablespace flags, which contains the file format version as discussed in Section 5.4.7.3, "Identifying the File Format in Use".
Versions of InnoDB prior to MySQL 4.1 did not include table format identifiers in the database files, and versions prior to MySQL 5.0.21 did not include a table format compatibility check. Therefore, there is no way to ensure proper operations if a table in a "too new" format is used with versions of InnoDB prior to 5.0.21.
The file format management capability in InnoDB 1.0 and higher (tablespace tagging and run-time checks) allows InnoDB to verify as soon as possible that the running version of software can properly process the tables existing in the database.
If you permit InnoDB to open a database containing files in a format it does not support (by setting the
parameter innodb_file_format_check
to OFF
), the table-level checking described in this section still applies.
Users are strongly urged not to use database files that contain Barracuda file format tables with releases of InnoDB older than the MySQL 5.1 with the InnoDB Plugin. It is possible to "downgrade" such tables to the Antelope format with the procedure described in Section 5.4.7.4, "Downgrading the File Format".