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For storage engines such as MyISAM
that actually execute table-level locks when executing DML or DDL statements, such a statement in older versions
of MySQL (5.6.5 and earlier)that affected a partitioned table imposed a lock on the table as a whole; that is,
all partitions were locked until the statement was finished. In MySQL 5.7, partition lock
pruning eliminates unneeded locks in many cases, and most statements reading from or updating a
partitioned MyISAM
table cause only the effected partitions to be locked. For
example, a SELECT
from a partitioned MyISAM
table locks only those partitions actually containing
rows that satisfy the SELECT
statement's WHERE
condition are locked.
For statements effecting partitioned tables using storage engines such as InnoDB
, that employ row-level locking and do not actually perform (or need to
perform) the locks prior to partition pruning, this is not an issue.
The next few paragraphs discuss the effects of partition lock pruning for various MySQL statements on tables using storage engines that employ table-level locks.
SELECT
statements (including those containing unions or joins) lock only those
partitions that actually need to be read. This also applies to SELECT ... PARTITION
.
An UPDATE
prunes locks only for tables on which no partitioning columns are updated.
REPLACE
and INSERT
lock only those partitions having rows to be inserted or replaced. However, if an AUTO_INCREMENT
value is generated for any partitioning column then all partitions are locked.
INSERT ... ON DUPLICATE KEY
UPDATE
is pruned as long as no partitioning column is updated.
INSERT ... SELECT
locks only those partitions in the source table that need to be
read, although all partitions in the target table are locked.
Locks imposed by LOAD DATA
statements on partitioned tables cannot be pruned.
The presence of BEFORE INSERT
or BEFORE UPDATE
triggers using any partitioning column of a partitioned table means that locks on INSERT
and UPDATE
statements updating this table
cannot be pruned, since the trigger can alter its values: A BEFORE INSERT
trigger
on any of the table's partitioning columns means that locks set by INSERT
or REPLACE
cannot be pruned, since the BEFORE INSERT
trigger may change a row's partitioning columns before the row is inserted, forcing the row into a different
partition than it would be otherwise. A BEFORE UPDATE
trigger on a partitioning
column means that locks imposed by UPDATE
or INSERT ... ON
DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE
cannot be pruned.
CREATE
VIEW
does not cause any locks.
ALTER TABLE ... EXCHANGE
PARTITION
prunes locks; only the exchanged table and the exchanged partition are locked.
ALTER TABLE ... TRUNCATE
PARTITION
prunes locks; only the partitions to be emptied are locked.
In addition, ALTER TABLE
statements take metadata locks on the table level.
LOCK TABLES
cannot prune partition locks.
CALL
stored_procedure(
supports lock pruning, but
evaluating expr
)expr
does not.
DO
and SET
statements do not support partitioning lock pruning.