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8 MySQL table types

As of MySQL 3.23.6, you can choose between three basic table formats. When you create a new table, you can tell MySQL which table type it should use for the table. MySQL will always create a .frm file to hold the table and column definitions. Depending on the table type the index and data will be stored in other files.

The default table type in MySQL is MyISAM. If you are trying to use a table type that is not incompiled or activated, MySQL will instead create a table of type MyISAM.

You can convert tables between different types with the ALTER TABLE statement. See section 7.8 ALTER TABLE syntax.

Note that MySQL supports two different kind of tables. Transactions safe tables (BDB) and not transaction safe tables (ISAM,MyISAM and HEAP.

Advantages of transaction safe tables (TST)

Advantages of not transaction safe tables (NTST):

You can combine TST and NTST tables in the same statements to get the best of both worlds.

8.1 MyISAM tables

MyISAM is the default table type in MySQL 3.23. It's based on the ISAM code and has a lot of useful extensions.

The index is stored in a file with the .MYI (MYIndex) extension and the data is stored in file with the .MYD (MYData) extension. You can check/repair MyISAM tables with the myisamchk utility. See section 15.4 Using myisamchk for crash recovery.

The following is new in MyISAM:

MyISAM also supports the following things, which MySQL will be able to use in the near future.

8.1.1 Space needed for keys

MySQL can support different index types, but the normal type is ISAM or MyISAM. These use a B-tree index and you can roughly calculate the size for the index file as (key_length+4)/0.67, summed over all keys. (This is for the worst case when all keys are inserted in sorted order and we don't have any compressed keys.)

String indexes are space compressed. If the first index part is a string, it will also be prefix compressed. Space compression makes the index file smaller than the above figures if the string column has a lot of trailing space or is a VARCHAR column that is not always used to the full length. Prefix compression is used on keys that start with a string. Prefix compression helps if there are many strings with an identical prefix.

In MyISAM tables, you can also prefix compress numbers by specifying PACK_KEYS=1 when you create the table. This helps when you have many integer keys which have an identical prefix when the numbers are stored high-byte first.

8.1.2 MyISAM table formats

MyISAM supports 3 different table types. 2 of them are chosen automatically depending on the type of columns you are using. The third, compressed tables, can only be created with the myisampack tool.

8.1.2.1 Static (Fixed-length) table characteristics

This is the default format. It's used when the table contains no VARCHAR, BLOB or TEXT columns.

This format is the simplest and most secure format. It is also the fastest of the on-disk formats. The speed comes from the easy way data can be found on disk. When looking up something with an index and static format it is very simple, just multiply the row number by the row length.

Also when scanning a table it is very easy to read a constant number of records with each disk read.

The security comes from if your computer crashes when writing to a static MyISAM file, myisamchk can easily figure out where each row starts and ends. So it can usually reclaim all records except the partially written one. Note that in MySQL all indexes can always be reconstructed.

8.1.2.2 Dynamic table characteristics

This format is used if the table contains any VARCHAR, BLOB or TEXT columns or if the table was created with ROW_FORMAT=dynamic.

This format is a litte more complex because each row has to have a header that says how long it is. One record can also end up at more than one location when it is made longer at an update.

You can use OPTIMIZE table or myisamchk to defragment a table. If you have static data that you access/change a lot in the same table as some VARCHAR or BLOB columns, it might be a good idea to move the dynamic columns to other tables just to avoid fragmentation.

8.1.2.3 Compressed table characteristics

This is a read only type that is generated with the optional myisampack tool (pack_isam for ISAM tables).

8.2 ISAM tables

You can also use the deprecated ISAM table type. This will disappear rather soon because MyISAM is a better implementation of the same thing. ISAM uses a B-tree index. The index is stored in a file with the .ISM extension and the data is stored in file with the .ISD extension. You can check/repair ISAM tables with the isamchk utility. See section 15.4 Using myisamchk for crash recovery.

ISAM has the following features/properties:

Most of the things for MyISAM tables are also true for ISAM tables. See section 8.1 MyISAM tables. The major differences compared to MyISAM tables are:

8.3 HEAP tables

HEAP tables use a hashed index and are stored in memory. This makes them very fast, but if MySQL crashes you will lose all data stored in them. HEAP is very useful for temporary tables!

The MySQL internal HEAP tables uses 100% dynamic hashing without overflow areas. There is no extra space needed for free lists. HEAP tables also don't have problems with delete + inserts, which normally is common with hashed tables..

mysql> CREATE TABLE test TYPE=HEAP SELECT ip,SUM(downloads) as down
        FROM log_table GROUP BY ip;
mysql> SELECT COUNT(ip),AVG(down) FROM test;
mysql> DROP TABLE test;

Here are some things you should consider when you use HEAP tables:

Memory needed for one row in a HEAP table is:

SUM_OVER_ALL_KEYS(max_length_of_key + sizeof(char*)*2) + ALIGN(length_of_row+1,sizeof(char*))

sizeof(char*) is 4 on 32 bit machines and 8 on 64 bit machines.

8.4 BDB or Berkeley_db tables

Berkeley DB (http://www.sleepycat.com) has provided MySQL with a transaction safe table handler. This will survive crashes and also provides COMMIT and ROLLBACK on transactions. In order to build MySQL 3.23.x (BDB support first appeared in 3.23.15) with support for BDB tables, you will need Berkeley DB 3.1.11 or newer which can be downloaded from http://www.mysql.com/downloads/mysql-3.23.html; or also from Sleepycat's download page at http://www.sleepycat.com/download.html.

Even if Berkeley DB is in itself very tested and reliably, the MySQL interface is still very alpha, but we are actively improving and optimizing it to get it this stable real soon.

If you are running with AUTOCOMMIT=0 then your changes in BDB tables will not be updated until you execute COMMIT. Instead of commit you can execute ROLLBACK to forget your changes. See section 7.26 BEGIN/COMMIT/ROLLBACK syntax.

The following options to mysqld can be used to change the behavour of BDB tables:

--bdb-home= directory Berkeley home direcory
--bdb-lock-detect=# Berkeley lock detect. One of (DEFAULT, OLDEST, RANDOM or YOUNGEST)
--bdb-logdir=directory Berkeley DB log file directory
--bdb-nosync Don't synchronously flush logs
--bdb-recover Start Berkeley DB in recover mode
--bdb-tmpdir=directory Berkeley DB tempfile name
--skip-bdb Don't use berkeley db.

If you use --skip-bdb, MySQL will not initialize the Berkeley DB library and this will save a lot of memory. You can of course not use BDB tables if you are using this option.

Some characteristic of BDB tables:

Some things that we have to fix in the near future:


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