Spec-Zone .ru
спецификации, руководства, описания, API
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MyISAM
toInnoDB
AUTO_INCREMENT
Handling in InnoDB
InnoDB
and FOREIGN KEY
Constraints
InnoDB
Compressed TablesInnoDB
File-Format ManagementInnoDB
Stores Variable-Length Columns To create an InnoDB
table, use the CREATE TABLE
statement without any special clauses. Formerly, you needed the
ENGINE=InnoDB
clause, but not anymore now that InnoDB
is the default storage engine. (You might still use that clause if you plan to use mysqldump or replication to replay the CREATE TABLE
statement on a server running MySQL 5.1 or earlier, where the
default storage engine is MyISAM
.)
-- Default storage engine = InnoDB.CREATE TABLE t1 (a INT, b CHAR (20), PRIMARY KEY (a));-- Backwards-compatible with older MySQL.CREATE TABLE t2 (a INT, b CHAR (20), PRIMARY KEY (a)) ENGINE=InnoDB;
Depending on the file-per-table setting, InnoDB
creates each table and associated
primary key index either in the system tablespace, or in a separate tablespace
(represented by a .ibd file) for each
table. MySQL creates t1.frm
and t2.frm
files in the
test
directory under the MySQL database directory. Internally, InnoDB
adds an entry for the table to its own data dictionary. The entry includes
the database name. For example, if test
is the database in which the t1
table is created, the entry is for 'test/t1'
.
This means you can create a table of the same name t1
in some other database, and
the table names do not collide inside InnoDB
.
To see the properties of these tables, issue a SHOW TABLE STATUS
statement:
SHOW TABLE STATUS FROM test LIKE 't%';
In the status output, you see the row
format property of these first tables is Compact
. Although that setting is fine
for basic experimentation, to take advantage of the most powerful InnoDB
performance features, you will quickly graduate to using other row formats such as Dynamic
and Compressed
. Using those values requires a
little bit of setup first:
set global innodb_file_per_table=1;set global innodb_file_format=barracuda;CREATE TABLE t3 (a INT, b CHAR (20), PRIMARY KEY (a)) row_format=dynamic;CREATE TABLE t4 (a INT, b CHAR (20), PRIMARY KEY (a)) row_format=compressed;
Always set up a primary key for
each InnoDB
table, specifying the column or columns that:
Are referenced by the most important queries.
Are never left blank.
Never have duplicate values.
Rarely if ever change value once inserted.
For example, in a table containing information about people, you would not create a primary key on (firstname, lastname)
because more than one person can have the same name, some
people have blank last names, and sometimes people change their names. With so many constraints, often there is
not an obvious set of columns to use as a primary key, so you create a new column with a numeric ID to serve as
all or part of the primary key. You can declare an auto-increment column so that
ascending values are filled in automatically as rows are inserted:
-- The value of ID can act like a pointer between related items in different tables.CREATE TABLE t5 (id INT AUTO_INCREMENT, b CHAR (20), PRIMARY KEY (id));-- The primary key can consist of more than one column. Any autoinc column must come first.CREATE TABLE t6 (id INT AUTO_INCREMENT, a INT, b CHAR (20), PRIMARY KEY (id,a));
Although the table works correctly without you defining a primary key,
the primary key is involved with many aspects of performance and is a crucial design aspect for any large or
frequently used table. Make a habit of always specifying one in the CREATE TABLE
statement. (If you create the table, load data, and then do ALTER TABLE
to add a primary key later, that operation is much slower than
defining the primary key when creating the table.)