Chapter 6. Replication

Table of Contents

6.1. Introduction to Replication
6.2. Replication Implementation Overview
6.3. Replication Implementation Details
6.3.1. Replication Relay and Status Files
6.4. How to Set Up Replication
6.5. Replication Compatibility Between MySQL Versions
6.6. Upgrading a Replication Setup
6.6.1. Upgrading Replication to 4.0 or 4.1
6.7. Replication Features and Known Problems
6.8. Replication Startup Options
6.9. How Servers Evaluate Replication Rules
6.10. Replication FAQ
6.11. Troubleshooting Replication
6.12. How to Report Replication Bugs or Problems

Replication capabilities allowing the databases on one MySQL server to be duplicated on another were introduced in MySQL 3.23.15. This chapter describes the various replication features provided by MySQL. It introduces replication concepts, shows how to set up replication servers, and serves as a reference to the available replication options. It also provides a list of frequently asked questions (with answers), and troubleshooting advice for solving problems.

MySQL Enterprise The MySQL Enterprise Monitor provides numerous advisors that provide immediate feedback about replication-related problems. For more information see, http://www.mysql.com/products/enterprise/advisors.html.

For a description of the syntax of replication-related SQL statements, see Section 12.6, “Replication Statements”.

6.1. Introduction to Replication

MySQL 3.23.15 and up features support for one-way, asynchronous replication, in which one server acts as the master, while one or more other servers act as slaves. This is in contrast to the synchronous replication which is a characteristic of MySQL Cluster (see Chapter 14, MySQL Cluster).

In single-master replication, the master server writes updates to its binary log files and maintains an index of those files to keep track of log rotation. The binary log files serve as a record of updates to be sent to any slave servers. When a slave connects to its master, it informs the master of the position up to which the slave read the logs at its last successful update. The slave receives any updates that have taken place since that time, and then blocks and waits for the master to notify it of new updates.

A slave server can itself serve as a master if you want to set up chained replication servers.

When you are using replication, all updates to the tables that are replicated should be performed on the master server. Otherwise, you must always be careful to avoid conflicts between updates that users make to tables on the master and updates that they make to tables on the slave.

Replication offers benefits for robustness, speed, and system administration:

  • Robustness is increased with a master/slave setup. In the event of problems with the master, you can switch to the slave as a backup.

  • Better response time for clients can be achieved by splitting the load for processing client queries between the master and slave servers. SELECT queries may be sent to the slave to reduce the query processing load of the master. Statements that modify data should still be sent to the master so that the master and slave do not get out of synchrony. This load-balancing strategy is effective if non-updating queries dominate, but that is the normal case.

  • Another benefit of using replication is that you can perform database backups using a slave server without disturbing the master. The master continues to process updates while the backup is being made. See Section 5.7.1, “Database Backups”.

6.2. Replication Implementation Overview

MySQL replication is based on the master server keeping track of all changes to your databases (updates, deletes, and so on) in its binary logs. Therefore, to use replication, you must enable binary logging on the master server. See Section 5.3.4, “The Binary Log”.

Each slave server receives from the master the saved updates that the master has recorded in its binary log, so that the slave can execute the same updates on its copy of the data.

It is extremely important to realize that the binary log is simply a record starting from the fixed point in time at which you enable binary logging. Any slaves that you set up need copies of the databases on your master as they existed at the moment you enabled binary logging on the master. If you start your slaves with databases that are not in the same state as those on the master when the binary log was started, your slaves are quite likely to fail.

After the slave has been set up with a copy of the master's data, it connects to the master and waits for updates to process. If the master fails, or the slave loses connectivity with your master, the slave keeps trying to connect periodically until it is able to resume listening for updates. The --master-connect-retry option controls the retry interval. The default is 60 seconds.

Each slave keeps track of where it left off when it last read from its master server. The master has no knowledge of how many slaves it has or which ones are up to date at any given time.

6.3. Replication Implementation Details

MySQL replication capabilities are implemented using three threads (one on the master server and two on the slave). When a START SLAVE statement is issued on a slave server, the slave creates an I/O thread, which connects to the master and asks it to send the updates recorded in its binary logs. The master creates a thread to send the binary log contents to the slave. This thread can be identified as the Binlog Dump thread in the output of SHOW PROCESSLIST on the master. The slave I/O thread reads the updates that the master Binlog Dump thread sends and copies them to local files, known as relay logs, in the slave's data directory. The third thread is the SQL thread, which the slave creates to read the relay logs and to execute the updates they contain.

MySQL Enterprise For constant monitoring of the status of slaves subscribe to the MySQL Enterprise Monitor. For more information see http://www.mysql.com/products/enterprise/advisors.html.

In the preceding description, there are three threads per master/slave connection. A master that has multiple slaves creates one thread for each currently-connected slave, and each slave has its own I/O and SQL threads.

For versions of MySQL before 4.0.2, replication involves only two threads (one on the master and one on the slave). The slave I/O and SQL threads are combined as a single thread, and no relay log files are used.

The slave uses two threads so that reading updates from the master and executing them can be separated into two independent tasks. Thus, the task of reading statements is not slowed down if statement execution is slow. For example, if the slave server has not been running for a while, its I/O thread can quickly fetch all the binary log contents from the master when the slave starts, even if the SQL thread lags far behind. If the slave stops before the SQL thread has executed all the fetched statements, the I/O thread has at least fetched everything so that a safe copy of the statements is stored locally in the slave's relay logs, ready for execution the next time that the slave starts. This enables the master server to purge its binary logs sooner because it no longer needs to wait for the slave to fetch their contents.

The SHOW PROCESSLIST statement provides information that tells you what is happening on the master and on the slave regarding replication. See Section 7.5.4, “Examining Thread Information”, for descriptions of all replicated-related states.

The following example illustrates how the three threads show up in the output from SHOW PROCESSLIST. The output format is that used by SHOW PROCESSLIST as of MySQL version 4.0.15, when the content of the State column was changed to be more meaningful compared to earlier versions.

On the master server, the output from SHOW PROCESSLIST looks like this:

mysql> SHOW PROCESSLIST\G
*************************** 1. row ***************************
     Id: 2
   User: root
   Host: localhost:32931
     db: NULL
Command: Binlog Dump
   Time: 94
  State: Has sent all binlog to slave; waiting for binlog to
         be updated
   Info: NULL

Here, thread 2 is a Binlog Dump replication thread for a connected slave. The State information indicates that all outstanding updates have been sent to the slave and that the master is waiting for more updates to occur. If you see no Binlog Dump threads on a master server, this means that replication is not running — that is, that no slaves are currently connected.

On the slave server, the output from SHOW PROCESSLIST looks like this:

mysql> SHOW PROCESSLIST\G
*************************** 1. row ***************************
     Id: 10
   User: system user
   Host:
     db: NULL
Command: Connect
   Time: 11
  State: Waiting for master to send event
   Info: NULL
*************************** 2. row ***************************
     Id: 11
   User: system user
   Host:
     db: NULL
Command: Connect
   Time: 11
  State: Has read all relay log; waiting for the slave I/O
         thread to update it
   Info: NULL

This information indicates that thread 10 is the I/O thread that is communicating with the master server, and thread 11 is the SQL thread that is processing the updates stored in the relay logs. At the time that the SHOW PROCESSLIST was run, both threads were idle, waiting for further updates.

The value in the Time column can show how late the slave is compared to the master. See Section 6.10, “Replication FAQ”.

6.3.1. Replication Relay and Status Files

By default, relay logs filenames have the form host_name-relay-bin.nnnnnn, where host_name is the name of the slave server host and nnnnnn is a sequence number. Successive relay log files are created using successive sequence numbers, beginning with 000001 (001 in MySQL 4.0 or older). The slave uses an index file to track the relay log files currently in use. The default relay log index filename is host_name-relay-bin.index. By default, the slave server creates relay log files in its data directory. The default filenames can be overridden with the --relay-log and --relay-log-index server options. See Section 6.8, “Replication Startup Options”.

Relay logs have the same format as binary logs and can be read using mysqlbinlog. The SQL thread automatically deletes each relay log file as soon as it has executed all events in the file and no longer needs it. There is no explicit mechanism for deleting relay logs because the SQL thread takes care of doing so. However, as of MySQL 4.0.14, FLUSH LOGS rotates relay logs, which influences when the SQL thread deletes them.

A slave server creates a new relay log file under the following conditions:

  • Each time the I/O thread starts.

  • When the logs are flushed; for example, with FLUSH LOGS or mysqladmin flush-logs. (This creates a new relay log only as of MySQL 4.0.14.)

  • When the size of the current relay log file becomes too large. The meaning of “too large” is determined as follows:

    • If the value of max_relay_log_size is greater than 0, that is the maximum relay log file size.

    • If the value of max_relay_log_size is 0, max_binlog_size determines the maximum relay log file size. max_binlog_size always determines the relay log size before MySQL 4.0.14, the first version in which max_relay_log_size appears.

A slave replication server creates two additional small files in the data directory. These status files are named master.info and relay-log.info by default. Their names can be changed by using the --master-info-file and --relay-log-info-file options. See Section 6.8, “Replication Startup Options”.

The two status files contain information like that shown in the output of the SHOW SLAVE STATUS statement, which is discussed in Section 12.6.2, “SQL Statements for Controlling Slave Servers”. Because the status files are stored on disk, they survive a slave server's shutdown. The next time the slave starts up, it reads the two files to determine how far it has proceeded in reading binary logs from the master and in processing its own relay logs.

The I/O thread updates the master.info file. Before MySQL 4.1, the following table shows the correspondence between the lines in the file and the columns displayed by SHOW SLAVE STATUS.

LineDescription
1Master_Log_File
2Read_Master_Log_Pos
3Master_Host
4Master_User
5Password (not shown by SHOW SLAVE STATUS)
6Master_Port
7Connect_Retry

As of MySQL 4.1, the file includes a line count and information about SSL options:

LineDescription
1Number of lines in the file
2Master_Log_File
3Read_Master_Log_Pos
4Master_Host
5Master_User
6Password (not shown by SHOW SLAVE STATUS)
7Master_Port
8Connect_Retry
9Master_SSL_Allowed
10Master_SSL_CA_File
11Master_SSL_CA_Path
12Master_SSL_Cert
13Master_SSL_Cipher
14Master_SSL_Key

The SQL thread updates the relay-log.info file. The following table shows the correspondence between the lines in the file and the columns displayed by SHOW SLAVE STATUS.

LineDescription
1Relay_Log_File
2Relay_Log_Pos
3Relay_Master_Log_File
4Exec_Master_Log_Pos

The contents of the relay-log.info file and the states shown by the SHOW SLAVE STATES command may not match if the relay-log.info file has not been flushed to disk. Ideally, you should only view relay-log.info on a slave that is offline (i.e. mysqld is not running). For a running system, SHOW SLAVE STATUS should be used.

When you back up the slave's data, you should back up these two status files as well, along with the relay log files. They are needed to resume replication after you restore the slave's data. If you lose the relay logs but still have the relay-log.info file, you can check it to determine how far the SQL thread has executed in the master binary logs. Then you can use CHANGE MASTER TO with the MASTER_LOG_FILE and MASTER_LOG_POS options to tell the slave to re-read the binary logs from that point. Of course, this requires that the binary logs still exist on the master server.

If your slave is subject to replicating LOAD DATA INFILE statements, you should also back up any SQL_LOAD-* files that exist in the directory that the slave uses for this purpose. The slave needs these files to resume replication of any interrupted LOAD DATA INFILE operations. The directory location is specified using the --slave-load-tmpdir option. If this option is not specified, the directory location is the value of the tmpdir system variable.

6.4. How to Set Up Replication

This section briefly describes how to set up complete replication of a MySQL server. It assumes that you want to replicate all databases on the master and have not previously configured replication. You must shut down your master server briefly to complete the steps outlined here.

This procedure is written in terms of setting up a single slave, but you can repeat it to set up multiple slaves.

Although this method is the most straightforward way to set up a slave, it is not the only one. For example, if you have a snapshot of the master's data, and the master already has its server ID set and binary logging enabled, you can set up a slave without shutting down the master or even blocking updates to it. For more details, please see Section 6.10, “Replication FAQ”.

If you want to administer a MySQL replication setup, we suggest that you read this entire chapter through and try all statements mentioned in Section 12.6.1, “SQL Statements for Controlling Master Servers”, and Section 12.6.2, “SQL Statements for Controlling Slave Servers”. You should also familiarize yourself with the replication startup options described in Section 6.8, “Replication Startup Options”.

Note

This procedure and some of the replication SQL statements shown in later sections refer to the SUPER privilege. Prior to MySQL 4.0.2, use the PROCESS privilege instead.

  1. Make sure that you have a recent version of MySQL installed on the master and slaves, and that these versions are compatible according to the table shown in Section 6.5, “Replication Compatibility Between MySQL Versions”.

    If you encounter a problem, please do not report it as a bug until you have verified that the problem is present in the latest MySQL release.

  2. Set up an account on the master server that the slave server can use to connect. This account must be given the REPLICATION SLAVE privilege. If the account is used only for replication (which is recommended), you don't need to grant any additional privileges.

    MySQL Enterprise Subscribers to the MySQL Enterprise Monitor are quickly notified if there is a replication master and no account with the REPLICATION SLAVE privilege. For more information see http://www.mysql.com/products/enterprise/advisors.html.

    Suppose that your domain is mydomain.com and that you want to create an account with a username of repl such that slave servers can use the account to access the master server from any host in your domain using a password of slavepass. To create the account, use this GRANT statement:

    mysql> GRANT REPLICATION SLAVE ON *.*
        -> TO 'repl'@'%.mydomain.com' IDENTIFIED BY 'slavepass';
    

    For MySQL versions older than 4.0.2, the REPLICATION SLAVE privilege does not exist. Grant the FILE privilege instead:

    mysql> GRANT FILE ON *.*
        -> TO 'repl'@'%.mydomain.com' IDENTIFIED BY 'slavepass';
    

    For additional information about setting up user accounts and privileges, see Section 5.6, “MySQL User Account Management”.

  3. Flush all the tables and block write statements by executing a FLUSH TABLES WITH READ LOCK statement:

    mysql> FLUSH TABLES WITH READ LOCK;
    

    For example, if you are using InnoDB tables, you should use the InnoDB Hot Backup tool to obtain a consistent snapshot. This tool records the log name and offset corresponding to the snapshot to be later used on the slave. Hot Backup is a non-free (commercial) tool that is not included in the standard MySQL distribution. See the InnoDB Hot Backup home page at http://www.innodb.com/hot-backup for detailed information.

    Otherwise, you can obtain a reliable binary snapshot of InnoDB tables only after shutting down the MySQL Server.

    An alternative that works for both MyISAM and InnoDB tables is to take an SQL dump of the master instead of a binary copy as described in the preceding discussion. For this, you can use mysqldump --master-data on your master and later load the SQL dump file into your slave. However, this is slower than doing a binary copy.

    Leave running the client from which you issue the FLUSH TABLES statement so that the read lock remains in effect. (If you exit the client, the lock is released.) Then take a snapshot of the data on your master server.

    The easiest way to create a snapshot is to use an archiving program to make a binary backup of the databases in your master's data directory. For example, use tar on Unix, or PowerArchiver, WinRAR, WinZip, or any similar software on Windows. To use tar to create an archive that includes all databases, change location into the master server's data directory, then execute this command:

    shell> tar -cvf /tmp/mysql-snapshot.tar .
    

    If you want the archive to include only a database called this_db, use this command instead:

    shell> tar -cvf /tmp/mysql-snapshot.tar ./this_db
    

    Then copy the archive file to the /tmp directory on the slave server host. On that machine, change location into the slave's data directory, and unpack the archive file using this command:

    shell> tar -xvf /tmp/mysql-snapshot.tar
    

    You may not want to replicate the mysql database if the slave server has a different set of user accounts from those that exist on the master. In this case, you should exclude it from the archive. You also need not include any log files in the archive, or the master.info or relay-log.info files.

    While the read lock placed by FLUSH TABLES WITH READ LOCK is in effect, read the value of the current binary log name and offset on the master:

    mysql > SHOW MASTER STATUS;
    +---------------+----------+--------------+------------------+
    | File          | Position | Binlog_Do_DB | Binlog_Ignore_DB |
    +---------------+----------+--------------+------------------+
    | mysql-bin.003 | 73       | test         | manual,mysql     |
    +---------------+----------+--------------+------------------+
    

    The File column shows the name of the log and Position shows the offset within the file. In this example, the binary log file is mysql-bin.003 and the offset is 73. Record these values. You need them later when you are setting up the slave. They represent the replication coordinates at which the slave should begin processing new updates from the master.

    If the master has been running previously without binary logging enabled, the log name and position values displayed by SHOW MASTER STATUS or mysqldump --master-data will be empty. In that case, the values that you need to use later when specifying the slave's log file and position are the empty string ('') and 4.

    After you have taken the snapshot and recorded the log name and offset, you can re-enable write activity on the master:

    mysql> UNLOCK TABLES;
    
  4. Make sure that the [mysqld] section of the my.cnf file on the master host includes a log-bin option. The section should also have a server-id=master_id option, where master_id must be a positive integer value from 1 to 232 – 1. For example:

    [mysqld]
    log-bin=mysql-bin
    server-id=1
    

    If those options are not present, add them and restart the server. The server cannot act as a replication master unless binary logging is enabled.

    Note

    For the greatest possible durability and consistency in a replication setup using InnoDB with transactions, you should use innodb_flush_log_at_trx_commit=1, sync_binlog=1, and innodb_safe_binlog in your master my.cnf file.

  5. Stop the server that is to be used as a slave and add the following lines to its my.cnf file:

    [mysqld]
    server-id=slave_id
    

    The slave_id value, like the master_id value, must be a positive integer value from 1 to 232 – 1. In addition, it is necessary that the ID of the slave be different from the ID of the master. For example:

    [mysqld]
    server-id=2
    

    If you are setting up multiple slaves, each one must have a unique server-id value that differs from that of the master and from each of the other slaves. Think of server-id values as something similar to IP addresses: These IDs uniquely identify each server instance in the community of replication partners.

    If you do not specify a server-id value, it is set to 1 if you have not defined master-host; otherwise it is set to 2. Note that in the case of server-id omission, a master refuses connections from all slaves, and a slave refuses to connect to a master. Thus, omitting server-id is good only for backup with a binary log.

  6. If you made a binary backup of the master server's data, copy it to the slave server's data directory before starting the slave. Make sure that the privileges on the files and directories are correct. The system account that you use to run the slave server must be able to read and write the files, just as on the master.

    If you made a backup using mysqldump, start the slave first. The dump file is loaded in a later step.

  7. Start the slave server. If it has been replicating previously, start the slave server with the --skip-slave-start option so that it doesn't immediately try to connect to its master. You also may want to start the slave server with the --log-warnings option to get more messages in the error log about problems (for example, network or connection problems). The option is enabled by default as of MySQL 4.0.19 and 4.1.2, but as of MySQL 4.0.21 and 4.1.3, aborted connections are not logged to the error log unless the value is greater than 1.

  8. If you made a backup of the master server's data using mysqldump, load the dump file into the slave server:

    shell> mysql -u root -p < dump_file.sql
    
  9. Execute the following statement on the slave, replacing the option values with the actual values relevant to your system:

    mysql> CHANGE MASTER TO
        ->     MASTER_HOST='master_host_name',
        ->     MASTER_USER='replication_user_name',
        ->     MASTER_PASSWORD='replication_password',
        ->     MASTER_LOG_FILE='recorded_log_file_name',
        ->     MASTER_LOG_POS=recorded_log_position;
    

    Note

    Replication cannot use Unix socket files. You must be able to connect to the master MySQL server using TCP/IP.

    The following table shows the maximum allowable length for the string-valued options:

    MASTER_HOST60
    MASTER_USER16
    MASTER_PASSWORD32
    MASTER_LOG_FILE255
  10. Start the slave threads:

    mysql> START SLAVE;
    

After you have performed this procedure, the slave should connect to the master and catch up on any updates that have occurred since the snapshot was taken.

If you have forgotten to set the server-id option for the master, slaves cannot connect to it.

If you have forgotten to set the server-id option for the slave, you get the following error in the slave's error log:

Warning: You should set server-id to a non-0 value if master_host
is set; we will force server id to 2, but this MySQL server will
not act as a slave.

You also find error messages in the slave's error log if it is not able to replicate for any other reason.

Once a slave is replicating, you can find in its data directory one file named master.info and another named relay-log.info. The slave uses these two files to keep track of how much of the master's binary log it has processed. Do not remove or edit these files unless you know exactly what you are doing and fully understand the implications. Even in that case, it is preferred that you use the CHANGE MASTER TO statement to change replication parameters. The slave will use the values specified in the statement to update the status files automatically.

Note

The content of master.info overrides some of the server options specified on the command line or in my.cnf. See Section 6.8, “Replication Startup Options”, for more details.

Once you have a snapshot of the master, you can use it to set up other slaves by following the slave portion of the procedure just described. You do not need to take another snapshot of the master; you can use the same one for each slave.

6.5. Replication Compatibility Between MySQL Versions

The original binary log format was developed in MySQL 3.23. It was changed in MySQL 4.0.

Note

You cannot replicate from a master that uses a newer binary log format to a slave that uses an older format (for example, from MySQL 4.1 to MySQL 3.23.) This has significant consequences for upgrading servers in a replication setup, as described in Section 6.6, “Upgrading a Replication Setup”.

As far as replication is concerned, the binary log format for any MySQL 4.1.x version and any 4.0.x version is identical. However, replication from a 4.1 master to a 4.0 slave is unsupported, has not been tested thoroughly, and no further development or bug fixing is planned for this master/slave combination. Although the binary log format is the same for 4.0 and 4.1, there are other constraints, such as SQL-level compatibility issues. For example, a 4.1 master cannot replicate to a 4.0 slave if the replicated statements use SQL features available in 4.1 but not 4.0. In addition, there are known issues with trying to replicate from a 4.0 master to a 5.1 slave (Bug#31240). These and other issues are discussed in Section 6.7, “Replication Features and Known Problems”.

As a general rule, we recommended using recent MySQL versions, because replication capabilities are continually being improved. We also recommend using the same version for both the master and the slave. We recommend upgrading masters and slaves running alpha or beta versions to new versions.

6.6. Upgrading a Replication Setup

When you upgrade servers that participate in a replication setup, the procedure for upgrading depends on the current server versions and the version to which you are upgrading.

6.6.1. Upgrading Replication to 4.0 or 4.1

This section applies to upgrading replication from MySQL 3.23 to 4.0 or 4.1. A 4.0 server should be 4.0.3 or newer, as mentioned in Section 6.5, “Replication Compatibility Between MySQL Versions”.

When you upgrade a master from MySQL 3.23 to MySQL 4.0 or 4.1, you should first ensure that all the slaves of this master are at 4.0 or 4.1. If that is not the case, you should first upgrade your slaves: Shut down each one, upgrade it, restart it, and restart replication.

The upgrade can safely be done using the following procedure, assuming that you have a 3.23 master to upgrade and the slaves are 4.0 or 4.1. Note that after the master has been upgraded, you should not restart replication using any old 3.23 binary logs, because this unfortunately confuses the 4.0 or 4.1 slaves.

  1. Block all updates on the master by issuing a FLUSH TABLES WITH READ LOCK statement.

  2. Wait until all the slaves have caught up with all changes from the master server. Use SHOW MASTER STATUS on the master to obtain its current binary log file and position. Then, for each slave, use those values with a SELECT MASTER_POS_WAIT() statement. The statement blocks on the slave and returns when the slave has caught up. Then run STOP SLAVE on the slave.

  3. Stop the master server and upgrade it to MySQL 4.0 or 4.1.

  4. Restart the master server and record the name of its newly created binary log. You can obtain the name of the file by issuing a SHOW MASTER STATUS statement on the master. Then issue these statements on each slave:

    mysql> CHANGE MASTER TO MASTER_LOG_FILE='binary_log_name',
        ->     MASTER_LOG_POS=4;
    mysql> START SLAVE;
    

6.7. Replication Features and Known Problems

In general, replication compatibility at the SQL level requires that any features used be supported by both the master and the slave servers. If you use a feature on a master server that is available only as of a given version of MySQL, you cannot replicate to a slave that is older than that version. Such incompatibilities are likely to occur between series, so that, for example, you cannot replicate from MySQL 4.1 to 4.0. However, these incompatibilities also can occur for within-series replication. For example, the CONVERT_TZ() function is available in MySQL 4.1.3 and up. If you use this function on the master server, you cannot replicate to a slave server that is older than MySQL 4.1.3.

Another compatibility problem can be encountered when you are attempting to replicate from an older master to a newer slave, and you make use of identifiers on the master that are reserved words in the newer MySQL version running on the slave. An example of this is using a table column named current_user on a 4.0 master that is replicating to a 4.1 or higher slave, because CURRENT_USER is a reserved word beginning in MySQL 4.1. Replication can fail in such cases with Error 1064 You have an error in your SQL syntax..., even if a database or table named using the reserved word or a table having a column named using the reserved word is excluded from replication. This is due to the fact that each SQL statement must be parsed by the slave prior to execution, so that the slave knows which database object or objects would be effected by the statement; only after the statement is parsed can the slave apply any filtering rules defined by --replicate-do-db, --replicate-do-table, --replicate-ignore-db, and --replicate-ignore-ignore.

To work around the problem of database, table, or column names on the master which would be regarded as reserved words by the slave, do one of the following:

  • Use one or more ALTER TABLE statements on the master to change the names of any database objects where these names would be considered reserved words on the slave, and change any SQL statements that use the old names to use the new names instead.

  • In any SQL statements using these database object names, set the names off using backtick characters (`).

For listings of reserved words by MySQL version, see Reserved Words,.in the MySQL Server Version Reference.

The following list provides details about what is supported and what is not. Additional InnoDB-specific information about replication is given in Section 13.2.7.5, “InnoDB and MySQL Replication”.

  • Replication of AUTO_INCREMENT, LAST_INSERT_ID(), and TIMESTAMP values is done correctly, subject to the following exceptions.

    INSERT DELAYED ... VALUES(LAST_INSERT_ID()) inserts a different value on the master and the slave. (Bug#20819)

    Adding an AUTO_INCREMENT column to a table with ALTER TABLE might not produce the same ordering of the rows on the slave and the master. This occurs because the order in which the rows are numbered depends on the specific storage engine used for the table and the order in which the rows were inserted. If it is important to have the same order on the master and slave, the rows must be ordered before assigning an AUTO_INCREMENT number. Assuming that you want to add an AUTO_INCREMENT column to the table t1, the following statements produce a new table t2 identical to t1 but with an AUTO_INCREMENT column:

    CREATE TABLE t2 LIKE t1;
    ALTER TABLE t2 ADD id INT AUTO_INCREMENT PRIMARY KEY;
    INSERT INTO t2 SELECT * FROM t1 ORDER BY col1, col2;
    

    This assumes that the table t1 has columns col1 and col2.

    Important

    To guarantee the same ordering on both master and slave, all columns of t1 must be referenced in the ORDER BY clause.

    The instructions just given are subject to the limitations of CREATE TABLE ... LIKE: Foreign key definitions are ignored, as are the DATA DIRECTORY and INDEX DIRECTORY table options. If a table definition includes any of those characteristics, create t2 using a CREATE TABLE statement that is identical to the one used to create t1, but with the addition of the AUTO_INCREMENT column.

    Regardless of the method used to create and populate the copy having the AUTO_INCREMENT column, the final step is to drop the original table and then rename the copy:

    DROP t1;
    ALTER TABLE t2 RENAME t1;
    

    See also Section A.1.7.1, “Problems with ALTER TABLE.

  • The USER(), CURRENT_USER(), UUID(), and LOAD_FILE() functions are replicated without change and thus do not work reliably on the slave. This is also true for CONNECTION_ID() in slave versions older than 4.1.1. The new PASSWORD() function in MySQL 4.1 is well replicated in masters from 4.1.1 and up; your slaves also must be 4.1.1 or above to replicate it. If you have older slaves and need to replicate PASSWORD() from your 4.1.x master, you must start your master with the --old-password option, so that it uses the old implementation of PASSWORD(). (Note that the PASSWORD() implementation in MySQL 4.1.0 differs from every other version of MySQL. It is best to avoid 4.1.0 in a replication scenario.)

  • The GET_LOCK(), RELEASE_LOCK(), IS_FREE_LOCK(), and IS_USED_LOCK() functions that handle user-level locks are replicated without the slave knowing the concurrency context on master. Therefore, these functions should not be used to insert into a master's table because the content on the slave would differ. (For example, do not issue a statement such as INSERT INTO mytable VALUES(GET_LOCK(...)).)

  • The FOUND_ROWS() function is also not replicated reliably. A workaround is to store the result of the function call in a user variable, and then use that in the INSERT statement. For example, if you wish to store the result in a table named mytable, you might normally do so like this:

              
    SELECT SQL_CALC_FOUND_ROWS FROM mytable LIMIT 1;
    INSERT INTO mytable VALUES( FOUND_ROWS() );
    

    However, if you are replicating mytable, then you should use SELECT INTO, and then store the variable in the table, like this:

              
    SELECT SQL_CALC_FOUND_ROWS INTO @found_rows FROM mytable LIMIT 1;
    INSERT INTO mytable VALUES(@found_rows);
    

    In this way, the user variable is replicated as part of the context, and applied on the slave correctly.

  • User privileges are replicated only if the mysql database is replicated. That is, the GRANT, REVOKE, SET PASSWORD, and DROP USER (available as of MySQL 4.1.1) statements take effect on the slave only if the replication setup includes the mysql database.

    If you're replicating all databases, but don't want statements that affect user privileges to be replicated, set up the slave to not replicate the mysql database, using the --replicate-wild-ignore-table=mysql.% option. That option is available as of MySQL 4.0.13. The slave will recognize that issuing privilege-related SQL statements won't have an effect, and thus not execute those statements.

  • The FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS variable is replicated as of MySQL 4.0.14. The SQL_MODE, UNIQUE_CHECKS, SQL_AUTO_IS_NULL, and storage_engine (also known as table_type) variables are not replicated in MySQL 4.1 or earlier versions.

  • The following applies to replication between MySQL servers that use different character sets:

    1. You must always use the same global character set and collation on the master and the slave. (These are controlled by the --character-set-server and --collation-server options.) Otherwise, you may get duplicate-key errors on the slave, because a key that is unique in the master character set might not be unique in the slave character set.

    2. If the master is older than MySQL 4.1.3, the character set of any client should never be made different from its global value because this character set change is not known to the slave. In other words, clients should not use SET NAMES, SET CHARACTER SET, and so forth. If both the master and the slave are 4.1.3 or newer, clients can freely set session values for character set variables because these settings are written to the binary log and so are known to the slave. That is, clients can use SET NAMES or SET CHARACTER SET or can set variables such as collation_client or collation_server. However, clients are prevented from changing the global value of these variables; as stated previously, the master and slave must always have identical global character set values.

    3. If on the master you have databases with different character sets from the global collation_server value, you should design your CREATE TABLE statements so that they do not implicitly rely on the default database's character set, because there currently is a bug (Bug#2326); a good workaround is to state the character set and collation explicitly in CREATE TABLE.

  • The same system time zone should be set for both master and slave. Otherwise some statements will not be replicated properly, such as statements that use the NOW() or FROM_UNIXTIME() functions. You can set the time zone in which MySQL server runs by using the --timezone=timezone_name option of the mysqld_safe script or by setting the TZ environment variable. Also starting from version 4.1.3 both master and slave should have the same default connection time zone set, that is the --default-time-zone parameter should have the same value for both master and slave.

  • CONVERT_TZ(...,...,@@global.time_zone) is not properly replicated.

  • Session variables are not replicated properly when used in statements which update tables; for example: SET MAX_JOIN_SIZE=1000; INSERT INTO mytable VALUES(@@MAX_JOIN_SIZE); will not insert the same data on the master and on the slave.

  • It is possible to replicate transactional tables on the master using non-transactional tables on the slave. For example, you can replicate an InnoDB master table as a MyISAM slave table. However, there are issues that you should consider before you do this:

    • There are problems if the slave is stopped in the middle of a BEGIN/COMMIT block because the slave restarts at the beginning of the BEGIN block.

    • When the storage engine type of the slave is non-transactional, transactions on the master that mix updates of transactional and non-transactional tables should be avoided because they can cause inconsistency of the data between the master's transactional table and the slave's non-transactional table. That is, such transactions can lead to master storage engine-specific behavior with the possible effect of replication going out of synchrony. MySQL does not issue a warning about this currently, so extra care should be taken when replicating transactional tables from the master to non-transactional ones on the slaves.

  • Update statements that refer to user-defined variables (that is, variables of the form @var_name) are badly replicated in 3.23 and 4.0. This is fixed in 4.1.

  • The slave can connect to the master using SSL if both are 4.1.1 or newer.

  • Starting from MySQL 4.1.11, there is a global system variable slave_transaction_retries: If the replication slave SQL thread fails to execute a transaction because of an InnoDB deadlock or because it exceeded the InnoDB innodb_lock_wait_timeout or the NDBCluster TransactionDeadlockDetectionTimeout or TransactionInactiveTimeout value, the transaction automatically retries slave_transaction_retries times before stopping with an error. The default value is 0 in MySQL 4.1. Starting from MySQL 4.1.11, the total retry count can be seen in SHOW STATUS; see Section 5.1.5, “Status Variables”.

  • If a DATA DIRECTORY or INDEX DIRECTORY table option is used in a CREATE TABLE statement on the master server, the table option is also used on the slave. This can cause problems if no corresponding directory exists in the slave host filesystem or if it exists but is not accessible to the slave server. As of MySQL 4.0.15, there is an sql_mode option called NO_DIR_IN_CREATE. If the slave server is run with this SQL mode enabled, it ignores the DATA DIRECTORY and INDEX DIRECTORY table options when replicating CREATE TABLE statements. The result is that MyISAM data and index files are created in the table's database directory.

  • It is possible for the data on the master and slave to become different if a statement is designed in such a way that the data modification is non-deterministic; that is, left to the will of the query optimizer. (This is in general not a good practice, even outside of replication.) For a detailed explanation of this issue, see Section A.1.8.4, “Open Issues in MySQL”.

  • If on the master a LOAD DATA INFILE is interrupted (for example, by a integrity constraint violation or a killed connection), the slave skips this LOAD DATA INFILE entirely. This means that if this command permanently inserted or updated table records before being interrupted, these modifications are not replicated to the slave.

    In addition, LOAD DATA INFILE does not replicate correctly when --binlog-do-db is used. (Bug#19662)

    LOAD DATA INFILE also does not replicate well from 4.0 and earlier masters to 5.1 or later slaves. In such cases, it is best to upgrade the master to 5.0 or later. (Bug#31240)

  • Before MySQL 4.1.1, the FLUSH, ANALYZE TABLE, OPTIMIZE TABLE, and REPAIR TABLE statements are not written to the binary log and thus are not replicated to the slaves. This is not normally a problem because these statements do not modify table data. However, it can cause difficulties under certain circumstances. If you replicate the privilege tables in the mysql database and update those tables directly without using the GRANT statement, you must issue a FLUSH PRIVILEGES statement on your slaves to put the new privileges into effect. Also if you use FLUSH TABLES when renaming a MyISAM table that is part of a MERGE table, you have to issue FLUSH TABLES manually on the slaves. As of MySQL 4.1.1, these statements are written to the binary log (unless you specify NO_WRITE_TO_BINLOG, or its alias LOCAL). Exceptions are that FLUSH LOGS, FLUSH MASTER, FLUSH SLAVE, and FLUSH TABLES WITH READ LOCK are not logged in any case. (Any of these may cause problems if replicated to a slave.) For a syntax example, see Section 12.5.5.2, “FLUSH Syntax”.

  • MySQL 4.1 and earlier support only replication scenarios involving one master and many slaves.

  • When a server shuts down and restarts, its MEMORY (HEAP) tables become empty. As of MySQL 4.0.18, the master replicates this effect to slaves as follows: The first time that the master uses each MEMORY table after startup, it logs an event that notifies the slaves that the table needs to be emptied by writing a DELETE statement for that table to the binary log. See Section 13.4, “The MEMORY (HEAP) Storage Engine”, for more information about MEMORY tables.

  • Temporary tables are replicated except in the case where you shut down the slave server (not just the slave threads) and you have replicated temporary tables that are used in updates that have not yet been executed on the slave. If you shut down the slave server, the temporary tables needed by those updates are no longer available when the slave is restarted. To avoid this problem, do not shut down the slave while it has temporary tables open. Instead, use the following procedure:

    1. Issue a STOP SLAVE statement.

    2. Use SHOW STATUS to check the value of the Slave_open_temp_tables variable.

    3. If the value is 0, issue a mysqladmin shutdown command to stop the slave.

    4. If the value is not 0, restart the slave threads with START SLAVE.

    5. Repeat the procedure later until the Slave_open_temp_tables variable is 0 and you can stop the slave.

  • The syntax for multiple-table DELETE statements that use table aliases changed between MySQL 4.0 and 4.1. In MySQL 4.0, you should use the true table name to refer to any table from which rows should be deleted:

    DELETE test FROM test AS t1, test2 WHERE ...
    

    In MySQL 4.1, you must use the alias:

    DELETE t1 FROM test AS t1, test2 WHERE ...
    

    If you use such DELETE statements, the change in syntax means that a 4.0 master cannot replicate to 4.1 (or higher) slaves.

  • It is safe to connect servers in a circular master/slave relationship if you use the --log-slave-updates option. That means that you can create a setup such as this:

    A -> B -> C -> A
    

    However, many statements do not work correctly in this kind of setup unless your client code is written to take care of the potential problems that can occur from updates that occur in different sequence on different servers.

    Server IDs are encoded in binary log events, so server A knows when an event that it reads was originally created by itself and does not execute the event (unless server A was started with the --replicate-same-server-id option, which is meaningful only in rare cases). Thus, there are no infinite loops. This type of circular setup works only if you perform no conflicting updates between the tables. In other words, if you insert data in both A and C, you should never insert a row in A that may have a key that conflicts with a row inserted in C. You should also not update the same rows on two servers if the order in which the updates are applied is significant.

  • If a statement on a slave produces an error, the slave SQL thread terminates, and the slave writes a message to its error log. You should then connect to the slave manually and determine the cause of the problem. (SHOW SLAVE STATUS is useful for this.) Then fix the problem (for example, you might need to create a non-existent table) and run START SLAVE.

  • It is safe to shut down a master server and restart it later. When a slave loses its connection to the master, the slave tries to reconnect immediately and retries periodically if that fails. The default is to retry every 60 seconds. This may be changed with the --master-connect-retry option. A slave also is able to deal with network connectivity outages. However, the slave notices the network outage only after receiving no data from the master for slave_net_timeout seconds. If your outages are short, you may want to decrease slave_net_timeout. See Section 5.1.3, “System Variables”.

  • Shutting down the slave (cleanly) is also safe because it keeps track of where it left off. Unclean shutdowns might produce problems, especially if the disk cache was not flushed to disk before the system went down. Your system fault tolerance is greatly increased if you have a good uninterruptible power supply. Unclean shutdowns of the master may cause inconsistencies between the content of tables and the binary log in master; this can be avoided by using InnoDB tables and the --innodb-safe-binlog option on the master. See Section 5.3.4, “The Binary Log”.

  • A crash on the master side can result in the master's binary log having a final position less than the most recent position read by the slave, due to the master's binary log file not being flushed. This can cause the slave not to be able to replicate when the master comes back up. Setting sync_binlog=1 in the master my.cnf file helps to minimize this problem because it causes the master to flush its binary log more frequently.

  • Due to the non-transactional nature of MyISAM tables, it is possible to have a statement that only partially updates a table and returns an error code. This can happen, for example, on a multiple-row insert that has one row violating a key constraint, or if a long update statement is killed after updating some of the rows. If that happens on the master, the slave thread exits and waits for the database administrator to decide what to do about it unless the error code is legitimate and execution of the statement results in the same error code on the slave. If this error code validation behavior is not desirable, some or all errors can be masked out (ignored) with the --slave-skip-errors option. This option is available starting with MySQL 3.23.47.

  • If you update transactional tables from non-transactional tables inside a BEGIN/COMMIT sequence, updates to the binary log may be out of synchrony with table states if the non-transactional table is updated before the transaction commits. This occurs because the transaction is written to the binary log only when it is committed.

    Caution

    You should not use transactions in a replication environment that update both transactional and non-transactional tables.

  • Before version 4.0.15, any update to a non-transactional table is written to the binary log at once when the update is made, whereas transactional updates are written on COMMIT or not written at all if you use ROLLBACK. You must take this into account when updating both transactional tables and non-transactional tables within the same transaction. (This is true not only for replication, but also if you are using binary logging for backups.)

    As of version 4.0.15, we changed the logging behavior for transactions that mix updates to transactional and non-transactional tables, which solves the problems (order of statements is good in the binary log, and all needed statements are written to the binary log even in case of ROLLBACK). The problem that remains is that when a second connection updates the non-transactional table while the first connection's transaction is not finished yet, incorrect ordering can still occur because the second connection's update is written immediately after it is done.

  • When a 4.x slave replicates a LOAD DATA INFILE from a 3.23 master, the values of the Exec_Master_Log_Pos and Relay_Log_Space columns of SHOW SLAVE STATUS become incorrect. The inaccuracy in Exec_Master_Log_Pos causes problems when you stop and restart replication; so it is a good idea to correct the value before this, by doing FLUSH LOGS on the master.

The following table lists replication problems in MySQL 3.23 that are fixed in MySQL 4.0:

  • LOAD DATA INFILE is handled properly, as long as the data file still resides on the master server at the time of update propagation.

  • LOAD DATA LOCAL INFILE is no longer skipped on the slave as it was in 3.23.

  • In 3.23, RAND() in updates does not replicate properly. Use RAND(some_non_rand_expr) if you are replicating updates with RAND(). You can, for example, use UNIX_TIMESTAMP() as the argument to RAND().

  • Floating-point values are approximate, so comparisons involving them are inexact. This is true for operations that use floating-point values explicitly, or values that are converted to floating-point implicitly. Comparisons of floating-point values might yield different results on master and slave servers due to differences in computer architecture, the compiler used to build MySQL, and so forth. See Section 11.2.2, “Type Conversion in Expression Evaluation”, and Section A.1.5.8, “Problems with Floating-Point Comparisons”.

6.8. Replication Startup Options

This section describes the options that you can use on slave replication servers. You can specify these options either on the command line or in an option file.

On the master and each slave, you must use the server-id option to establish a unique replication ID. For each server, you should pick a unique positive integer in the range from 1 to 232 – 1, and each ID must be different from every other ID. Example: server-id=3

Options that you can use on the master server for controlling binary logging are described in Section 5.3.4, “The Binary Log”.

Some slave server replication options are handled in a special way, in the sense that each is ignored if a master.info file exists when the slave starts and contains a value for the option. The following options are handled this way:

  • --master-host

  • --master-user

  • --master-password

  • --master-port

  • --master-connect-retry

As of MySQL 4.1.1, the following options also are handled specially:

  • --master-ssl

  • --master-ssl-ca

  • --master-ssl-capath

  • --master-ssl-cert

  • --master-ssl-cipher

  • --master-ssl-key

The master.info file format in 4.1.1 changed to include values corresponding to the SSL options. In addition, the 4.1.1 file format includes as its first line the number of lines in the file. (See Section 6.3.1, “Replication Relay and Status Files”.) If you upgrade an older server to 4.1.1, the new server upgrades the master.info file to the new format automatically when it starts. However, if you downgrade a 4.1.1 or newer server to a version older than 4.1.1, you should manually remove the first line before starting the older server for the first time. Note that, in this case, the downgraded server no longer can use an SSL connection to communicate with the master.

If no master.info file exists when the slave server starts, it uses the values for those options that are specified in option files or on the command line. This occurs when you start the server as a replication slave for the very first time, or when you have run RESET SLAVE and then have shut down and restarted the slave.

If the master.info file exists when the slave server starts, the server uses its contents and ignores any options that correspond to the values listed in the file. Thus, if you start the slave server with different values of the startup options that correspond to values in the master.info file, the different values have no effect, because the server continues to use the master.info file. To use different values, you must either restart after removing the master.info file or (preferably) use the CHANGE MASTER TO statement to reset the values while the slave is running.

Suppose that you specify this option in your my.cnf file:

[mysqld]
master-host=some_host

The first time you start the server as a replication slave, it reads and uses that option from the my.cnf file. The server then records the value in the master.info file. The next time you start the server, it reads the master host value from the master.info file only and ignores the value in the option file. If you modify the my.cnf file to specify a different master host of some_other_host, the change still has no effect. You should use CHANGE MASTER TO instead.

MySQL Enterprise For expert advice regarding slave startup options subscribe to the MySQL Enterprise Monitor. For more information see http://www.mysql.com/products/enterprise/advisors.html.

Because the server gives an existing master.info file precedence over the startup options just described, you might prefer not to use startup options for these values at all, and instead specify them by using the CHANGE MASTER TO statement. See Section 12.6.2.1, “CHANGE MASTER TO Syntax”.

This example shows a more extensive use of startup options to configure a slave server:

[mysqld]
server-id=2
master-host=db-master.mycompany.com
master-port=3306
master-user=pertinax
master-password=freitag
master-connect-retry=60
report-host=db-slave.mycompany.com

The following list describes startup options for controlling replication. Many of these options can be reset while the server is running by using the CHANGE MASTER TO statement. Others, such as the --replicate-* options, can be set only when the slave server starts.

  • --log-slave-updates

    Normally, a slave does not log to its own binary log any updates that are received from a master server. This option tells the slave to log the updates performed by its SQL thread to its own binary log. For this option to have any effect, the slave must also be started with the --log-bin option to enable binary logging. --log-slave-updates is used when you want to chain replication servers. For example, you might want to set up replication servers using this arrangement:

    A -> B -> C
    

    Here, A serves as the master for the slave B, and B serves as the master for the slave C. For this to work, B must be both a master and a slave. You must start both A and B with --log-bin to enable binary logging, and B with the --log-slave-updates option so that updates received from A are logged by B to its binary log.

  • --log-warnings[=level]

    This option causes a server to print more messages to the error log about what it is doing. With respect to replication, the server generates warnings that it succeeded in reconnecting after a network/connection failure, and informs you as to how each slave thread started. This option is enabled by default as of MySQL 4.0.19 and 4.1.2; to disable it, use --skip-log-warnings. As of MySQL 4.0.21 and 4.1.3, aborted connections are not logged to the error log unless the value is greater than 1.

    Note that the effects of this option are not limited to replication. It produces warnings across a spectrum of server activities.

  • --master-connect-retry=seconds

    The number of seconds that the slave thread sleeps before trying to reconnect to the master in case the master goes down or the connection is lost. The value in the master.info file takes precedence if it can be read. If not set, the default is 60. Connection retries are not invoked until the slave times out reading data from the master according to the value of --slave-net-timeout. The number of reconnection attempts is limited by the --master-retry-count option.

  • --master-host=host_name

    The hostname or IP number of the master replication server. The value in master.info takes precedence if it can be read. If no master host is specified, the slave thread does not start.

  • --master-info-file=file_name

    The name to use for the file in which the slave records information about the master. The default name is master.info in the data directory.

  • --master-password=password

    The password of the account that the slave thread uses for authentication when it connects to the master. The value in the master.info file takes precedence if it can be read. If not set, an empty password is assumed.

  • --master-port=port_number

    The TCP/IP port number that the master is listening on. The value in the master.info file takes precedence if it can be read. If not set, the compiled-in setting is assumed (normally 3306).

  • --master-retry-count=count

    The number of times that the slave tries to connect to the master before giving up. Reconnects are attempted at intervals set by --master-connect-retry and reconnects are triggered when data reads by the slave time out according to the --slave-net-timeout option. The default value is 86400.

  • --master-ssl, --master-ssl-ca=file_name, --master-ssl-capath=directory_name, --master-ssl-cert=file_name, --master-ssl-cipher=cipher_list, --master-ssl-key=file_name

    These options are used for setting up a secure replication connection to the master server using SSL. Their meanings are the same as the corresponding --ssl, --ssl-ca, --ssl-capath, --ssl-cert, --ssl-cipher, --ssl-key options that are described in Section 5.6.7.3, “SSL Command Options”. The values in the master.info file take precedence if they can be read.

    These options are operational as of MySQL 4.1.1.

  • --master-user=user_name

    The username of the account that the slave thread uses for authentication when it connects to the master. This account must have the REPLICATION SLAVE privilege. FILE privilege instead.) The value in the master.info file takes precedence if it can be read. If the master username is not set, the name test is assumed.

  • --max-relay-log-size=size

    The size at which the server rotates relay log files automatically. For more information, see Section 6.3.1, “Replication Relay and Status Files”. Default is 1GB.

    This option is available as of MySQL 4.0.14.

  • --read-only

    When this option is given, the server allows no updates except from users that have the SUPER privilege or (on a slave server) from updates performed by slave threads. On a slave server, this can be useful to ensure that the slave accepts updates only from its master server and not from clients. TEMPORARY tables.

    This option is available as of MySQL 4.0.14.

  • --relay-log=file_name

    The basename for the relay log. The default basename is host_name-relay-bin. The server creates relay log files in sequence by adding a numeric suffix to the basename. You can specify the option to create hostname-independent relay log names, or if your relay logs tend to be big (and you don't want to decrease max_relay_log_size) and you need to put them in some area different from the data directory, or if you want to increase speed by balancing load between disks.

  • --relay-log-index=file_name

    The name to use for the relay log index file. The default name is host_name-relay-bin.index in the data directory, where host_name is the name of the slave server.

  • --relay-log-info-file=file_name

    The name to use for the file in which the slave records information about the relay logs. The default name is relay-log.info in the data directory.

  • --relay-log-purge={0|1}

    Disable or enable automatic purging of relay logs as soon as they are not needed any more. The default value is 1 (enabled). This is a global variable that can be changed dynamically with SET GLOBAL relay_log_purge = N.

    This option is available as of MySQL 4.1.1.

  • --relay-log-space-limit=size

    This option places an upper limit on the total size in bytes of all relay logs on the slave. A value of 0 means “no limit.” This is useful for a slave server host that has limited disk space. When the limit is reached, the I/O thread stops reading binary log events from the master server until the SQL thread has caught up and deleted some unused relay logs. Note that this limit is not absolute: There are cases where the SQL thread needs more events before it can delete relay logs. In that case, the I/O thread exceeds the limit until it becomes possible for the SQL thread to delete some relay logs, because not doing so would cause a deadlock (which is what happens before MySQL 4.0.13). You should not set --relay-log-space-limit to less than twice the value of --max-relay-log-size (or --max-binlog-size if --max-relay-log-size is 0). In that case, there is a chance that the I/O thread waits for free space because --relay-log-space-limit is exceeded, but the SQL thread has no relay log to purge and is unable to satisfy the I/O thread. This forces the I/O thread to temporarily ignore --relay-log-space-limit.

  • --replicate-do-db=db_name

    Tell the slave to restrict replication to statements where the default database (that is, the one selected by USE) is db_name. To specify more than one database, use this option multiple times, once for each database. Note that this does not replicate cross-database statements such as UPDATE some_db.some_table SET foo='bar' while having selected a different database or no database.

    Warning

    To specify multiple databases you must use multiple instances of this option. Because database names can contain commas, if you supply a comma separated list then the list will be treated as the name of a single database.

    An example of what does not work as you might expect: If the slave is started with --replicate-do-db=sales and you issue the following statements on the master, the UPDATE statement is not replicated:

    USE prices;
    UPDATE sales.january SET amount=amount+1000;
    

    The main reason for this “check-just-the-default-database” behavior is that it's difficult from the statement alone to know whether it should be replicated (for example, if you are using multiple-table DELETE or multiple-table UPDATE statements that go across multiple databases). It is also faster to check only the default database rather than all databases if there is no need.

    If you need cross-database updates to work, make sure that you have MySQL 3.23.28 or later, and use --replicate-wild-do-table=db_name.% instead. See Section 6.9, “How Servers Evaluate Replication Rules”.

  • --replicate-do-table=db_name.tbl_name

    Tell the slave thread to restrict replication to the specified table. To specify more than one table, use this option multiple times, once for each table. This works for cross-database updates, in contrast to --replicate-do-db. See Section 6.9, “How Servers Evaluate Replication Rules”.

  • --replicate-ignore-db=db_name

    Tells the slave to not replicate any statement where the default database (that is, the one selected by USE) is db_name. To specify more than one database to ignore, use this option multiple times, once for each database. You should not use this option if you are using cross-database updates and you do not want these updates to be replicated. See Section 6.9, “How Servers Evaluate Replication Rules”.

    An example of what does not work as you might expect: If the slave is started with --replicate-ignore-db=sales and you issue the following statements on the master, the UPDATE statement is replicated:

    USE prices;
    UPDATE sales.january SET amount=amount+1000;
    

    Note

    In the preceding example the statement is replicated because --replicate-ignore-db only applies to the default database (set through the USE statement). Because the sales database was specified explicitly in the statement, the statement has not been filtered.

    If you need cross-database updates to work, use --replicate-wild-ignore-table=db_name.% instead. See Section 6.9, “How Servers Evaluate Replication Rules”.

  • --replicate-ignore-table=db_name.tbl_name

    Tells the slave thread to not replicate any statement that updates the specified table, even if any other tables might be updated by the same statement. To specify more than one table to ignore, use this option multiple times, once for each table. This works for cross-database updates, in contrast to --replicate-ignore-db. See Section 6.9, “How Servers Evaluate Replication Rules”.

  • --replicate-rewrite-db=from_name->to_name

    Tells the slave to translate the default database (that is, the one selected by USE) to to_name if it was from_name on the master. Only statements involving tables are affected (not statements such as CREATE DATABASE, DROP DATABASE, and ALTER DATABASE), and only if from_name is the default database on the master. This does not work for cross-database updates. The database name translation is done before the --replicate-* rules are tested.

    If you use this option on the command line and the “>” character is special to your command interpreter, quote the option value. For example:

    shell> mysqld --replicate-rewrite-db="olddb->newdb"
    
  • --replicate-same-server-id

    To be used on slave servers. Usually you should use the default setting of 0, to prevent infinite loops caused by circular replication. If set to 1, the slave does not skip events having its own server ID. Normally, this is useful only in rare configurations. Cannot be set to 1 if --log-slave-updates is used. Be careful that starting from MySQL 4.1, by default the slave I/O thread does not even write binary log events to the relay log if they have the slave's server id (this optimization helps save disk usage compared to 4.0). So if you want to use --replicate-same-server-id in 4.1 versions, be sure to start the slave with this option before you make the slave read its own events that you want the slave SQL thread to execute.

  • --replicate-wild-do-table=db_name.tbl_name

    Tells the slave thread to restrict replication to statements where any of the updated tables match the specified database and table name patterns. Patterns can contain the “%” and “_” wildcard characters, which have the same meaning as for the LIKE pattern-matching operator. To specify more than one table, use this option multiple times, once for each table. This works for cross-database updates. See Section 6.9, “How Servers Evaluate Replication Rules”.

    Example: --replicate-wild-do-table=foo%.bar% replicates only updates that use a table where the database name starts with foo and the table name starts with bar.

    If the table name pattern is %, it matches any table name and the option also applies to database-level statements (CREATE DATABASE, DROP DATABASE, and ALTER DATABASE). For example, if you use --replicate-wild-do-table=foo%.%, database-level statements are replicated if the database name matches the pattern foo%.

    To include literal wildcard characters in the database or table name patterns, escape them with a backslash. For example, to replicate all tables of a database that is named my_own%db, but not replicate tables from the my1ownAABCdb database, you should escape the “_” and “%” characters like this: --replicate-wild-do-table=my\_own\%db. If you're using the option on the command line, you might need to double the backslashes or quote the option value, depending on your command interpreter. For example, with the bash shell, you would need to type --replicate-wild-do-table=my\\_own\\%db.

  • --replicate-wild-ignore-table=db_name.tbl_name

    Tells the slave thread not to replicate a statement where any table matches the given wildcard pattern. To specify more than one table to ignore, use this option multiple times, once for each table. This works for cross-database updates. See Section 6.9, “How Servers Evaluate Replication Rules”.

    Example: --replicate-wild-ignore-table=foo%.bar% does not replicate updates that use a table where the database name starts with foo and the table name starts with bar.

    For information about how matching works, see the description of the --replicate-wild-do-table option. The rules for including literal wildcard characters in the option value are the same as for --replicate-wild-ignore-table as well.

  • --report-host=slave_name

    The hostname or IP number of the slave to be reported to the master during slave registration. This value appears in the output of SHOW SLAVE HOSTS on the master server. Leave the value unset if you do not want the slave to register itself with the master. Note that it is not sufficient for the master to simply read the IP number of the slave from the TCP/IP socket after the slave connects. Due to NAT and other routing issues, that IP may not be valid for connecting to the slave from the master or other hosts.

    This option is available as of MySQL 4.0.0.

  • --report-password=password

    The account password of the slave to be reported to the master during slave registration. This value appears in the output of SHOW SLAVE HOSTS on the master server if the --show-slave-auth-info option is given.

  • --report-port=slave_port_num

    The TCP/IP port number for connecting to the slave, to be reported to the master during slave registration. Set this only if the slave is listening on a non-default port or if you have a special tunnel from the master or other clients to the slave. If you are not sure, do not use this option.

    This option is available as of MySQL 4.0.0.

  • --report-user=user_name

    The account username of the slave to be reported to the master during slave registration. This value appears in the output of SHOW SLAVE HOSTS on the master server if the --show-slave-auth-info option is given.

  • --show-slave-auth-info

    Display slave usernames and passwords in the output of SHOW SLAVE HOSTS on the master server for slaves started with the --report-user and --report-password options.

  • --skip-slave-start

    Tells the slave server not to start the slave threads when the server starts. To start the threads later, use a START SLAVE statement.

  • --slave_compressed_protocol={0|1}

    If this option is set to 1, use compression for the slave/master protocol if both the slave and the master support it. Default is 0 (no compression).

  • --slave-load-tmpdir=file_name

    The name of the directory where the slave creates temporary files. This option is by default equal to the value of the tmpdir system variable. When the slave SQL thread replicates a LOAD DATA INFILE statement, it extracts the file to be loaded from the relay log into temporary files, and then loads these into the table. If the file loaded on the master is huge, the temporary files on the slave are huge, too. Therefore, it might be advisable to use this option to tell the slave to put temporary files in a directory located in some filesystem that has a lot of available space. In that case, the relay logs are huge as well, so you might also want to use the --relay-log option to place the relay logs in that filesystem.

    The directory specified by this option should be located in a disk-based filesystem (not a memory-based filesystem) because the temporary files used to replicate LOAD DATA INFILE must survive machine restarts. The directory also should not be one that is cleared by the operating system during the system startup process.

  • --slave-net-timeout=seconds

    The number of seconds to wait for more data from the master before the slave considers the connection broken, aborts the read, and tries to reconnect. The first retry occurs immediately after the timeout. The interval between retries is controlled by the --master-connect-retry option and the numger of reconnection attempts is limited by the --master-retry-count option. The default is 3600 seconds (one hour).

  • --slave-skip-errors=[err_code1,err_code2,...|all]

    Normally, replication stops when an error occurs on the slave. This gives you the opportunity to resolve the inconsistency in the data manually. This option tells the slave SQL thread to continue replication when a statement returns any of the errors listed in the option value.

    Do not use this option unless you fully understand why you are getting errors. If there are no bugs in your replication setup and client programs, and no bugs in MySQL itself, an error that stops replication should never occur. Indiscriminate use of this option results in slaves becoming hopelessly out of synchrony with the master, with you having no idea why this has occurred.

    For error codes, you should use the numbers provided by the error message in your slave error log and in the output of SHOW SLAVE STATUS. Appendix A, Errors, Error Codes, and Common Problems, lists server error codes.

    You can also (but should not) use the very non-recommended value of all to cause the slave to ignore all error messages and keeps going regardless of what happens. Needless to say, if you use all, there are no guarantees regarding the integrity of your data. Please do not complain (or file bug reports) in this case if the slave's data is not anywhere close to what it is on the master. You have been warned.

    Examples:

    --slave-skip-errors=1062,1053
    --slave-skip-errors=all
    

6.9. How Servers Evaluate Replication Rules

If a master server does not write a statement to its binary log, the statement is not replicated. If the server does log the statement, the statement is sent to all slaves and each slave determines whether to execute it or ignore it.

On the master side, decisions about which statements to log are based on the --binlog-do-db and --binlog-ignore-db options that control binary logging. For a description of the rules that servers use in evaluating these options, see Section 5.3.4, “The Binary Log”.

On the slave side, decisions about whether to execute or ignore statements received from the master are made according to the --replicate-* options that the slave was started with. (See Section 6.8, “Replication Startup Options”.) The slave evaluates these options using the following procedure, which first checks the database-level options and then the table-level options.

In the simplest case, when there are no --replicate-* options, the procedure yields the result that the slave executes all statements that it receives from the master. Otherwise, the result depends on the particular options given. In general, to make it easier to determine what effect an option set will have, it is recommended that you avoid mixing “do” and “ignore” options, or wildcard and non-wildcard options.

Stage 1. Check the database options.

At this stage, the slave checks whether there are any --replicate-do-db or --replicate-ignore-db options that specify database-specific conditions:

  • No: Permit the statement and proceed to the table-checking stage.

  • Yes: Test the options using the same rules as for the --binlog-do-db and --binlog-ignore-db options to determine whether to permit or ignore the statement. What is the result of the test?

    • Permit: Do not execute the statement immediately. Defer the decision and proceed to the table-checking stage.

    • Ignore: Ignore the statement and exit.

This stage can permit a statement for further option-checking, or cause it to be ignored. However, statements that are permitted at this stage are not actually executed yet. Instead, they pass to the following stage that checks the table options.

Stage 2. Check the table options.

If the slave reaches this point, it executes all statements if there are no table options. If there are “do” table options, the statement must match one of them if it is to be executed; otherwise, it is ignored. If there are any “ignore” options, all statements are executed except those that match any ignore option. The following steps describe how this evaluation occurs in more detail.

  1. Are there any --replicate-*-table options?

    • No: There are no table restrictions, so all statements match. Execute the statement and exit.

    • Yes: There are table restrictions. Evaluate the tables to be updated against them. There might be multiple tables to update, so loop through the following steps for each table looking for a matching option (first the non-wild options, and then the wild options). Only tables that are to be updated are compared to the options. For example, if the statement is INSERT INTO sales SELECT * FROM prices, only sales is compared to the options). If several tables are to be updated (multiple-table statement), the first table that matches “do” or “ignore” wins. That is, the server checks the first table against the options. If no decision could be made, it checks the second table against the options, and so on.

  2. Are there any --replicate-do-table options?

    • No: Proceed to the next step.

    • Yes: Does the table match any of them?

      • No: Proceed to the next step.

      • Yes: Execute the statement and exit.

  3. Are there any --replicate-ignore-table options?

    • No: Proceed to the next step.

    • Yes: Does the table match any of them?

      • No: Proceed to the next step.

      • Yes: Ignore the statement and exit.

  4. Are there any --replicate-wild-do-table options?

    • No: Proceed to the next step.

    • Yes: Does the table match any of them?

      • No: Proceed to the next step.

      • Yes: Execute the statement and exit.

  5. Are there any --replicate-wild-ignore-table options?

    • No: Proceed to the next step.

    • Yes: Does the table match any of them?

      • No: Proceed to the next step.

      • Yes: Ignore the statement and exit.

  6. No --replicate-*-table option was matched. Is there another table to test against these options?

    • No: We have now tested all tables to be updated and could not match any option. Are there --replicate-do-table or --replicate-wild-do-table options?

      • No: There were no “do” table options, so no explicit “do” match is required. Execute the statement and exit.

      • Yes: There were “do” table options, so the statement is executed only with an explicit match to one of them. Ignore the statement and exit.

    • Yes: Loop.

Examples:

  • No --replicate-* options at all

    The slave executes all statements that it receives from the master.

  • --replicate-*-db options, but no table options

    The slave permits or ignores statements using the database options. Then it executes all statements permitted by those options because there are no table restrictions.

  • --replicate-*-table options, but no database options

    All statements are permitted at the database-checking stage because there are no database conditions. The slave executes or ignores statements based on the table options.

  • A mix of database and table options

    The slave permits or ignores statements using the database options. Then it evaluates all statements permitted by those options according to the table options. In some cases, this process can yield what might seem a counterintuitive result. Consider the following set of options:

    [mysqld]
    replicate-do-db    = db1
    replicate-do-table = db2.mytbl2
    

    Suppose that db1 is the default database and the slave receives this statement:

    INSERT INTO mytbl1 VALUES(1,2,3);
    

    The database is db1, which matches the --replicate-do-db option at the database-checking stage. The algorithm then proceeds to the table-checking stage. If there were no table options, the statement would be executed. However, because the options include a “do” table option, the statement must match if it is to be executed. The statement does not match, so it is ignored. (The same would happen for any table in db1.)

6.10. Replication FAQ

Q: How do I configure a slave if the master is running and I do not want to stop it?

A: There are several possibilities. If you have taken a snapshot backup of the master at some point and recorded the binary log filename and offset (from the output of SHOW MASTER STATUS) corresponding to the snapshot, use the following procedure:

  1. Make sure that the slave is assigned a unique server ID.

  2. Execute the following statement on the slave, filling in appropriate values for each option:

    mysql> CHANGE MASTER TO
        ->     MASTER_HOST='master_host_name',
        ->     MASTER_USER='master_user_name',
        ->     MASTER_PASSWORD='master_pass',
        ->     MASTER_LOG_FILE='recorded_log_file_name',
        ->     MASTER_LOG_POS=recorded_log_position;
    
  3. Execute START SLAVE on the slave.

If you do not have a backup of the master server, here is a quick procedure for creating one. All steps should be performed on the master host.

  1. Issue this statement to acquire a global read lock:

    mysql> FLUSH TABLES WITH READ LOCK;
    
  2. With the lock still in place, execute this command (or a variation of it):

    shell> tar zcf /tmp/backup.tar.gz /var/lib/mysql
    
  3. Issue this statement and record the output, which you will need later:

    mysql> SHOW MASTER STATUS;
    
  4. Release the lock:

    mysql> UNLOCK TABLES;
    

An alternative to using the preceding procedure to make a binary copy is to make an SQL dump of the master. To do this, you can use mysqldump --master-data on your master and later load the SQL dump into your slave. However, this is slower than making a binary copy.

Regardless of which of the two methods you use, afterward follow the instructions for the case when you have a snapshot and have recorded the log filename and offset. You can use the same snapshot to set up several slaves. Once you have the snapshot of the master, you can wait to set up a slave as long as the binary logs of the master are left intact. The two practical limitations on the length of time you can wait are the amount of disk space available to retain binary logs on the master and the length of time it takes the slave to catch up.

Q: Does the slave need to be connected to the master all the time?

A: No, it does not. The slave can go down or stay disconnected for hours or even days, and then reconnect and catch up on updates. For example, you can set up a master/slave relationship over a dial-up link where the link is up only sporadically and for short periods of time. The implication of this is that, at any given time, the slave is not guaranteed to be in synchrony with the master unless you take some special measures.

Q: How do I know how late a slave is compared to the master? In other words, how do I know the date of the last statement replicated by the slave?

A: If the slave is 4.1.1 or newer, read the Seconds_Behind_Master column in SHOW SLAVE STATUS, which shows the number of seconds that the slave SQL thread is behind processing the master binary log. A high number (or an increasing one) can indicate that the slave is unable to cope with the large number of queries from the master.

A value of 0 for Seconds_Behind_Master can usually be interpreted as meaning that the slave has caught up with the master, but there are some cases where this is not strictly true. For example, this can occur if the network connection between master and slave is broken but the slave I/O thread has not yet noticed this — that is, slave_net_timeout has not yet elapsed.

It is also possible that transient values for Seconds_Behind_Master may not reflect the situation accurately. When the slave SQL thread has caught up on I/O, Seconds_Behind_Master displays 0; but when the slave I/O thread is still queuing up a new event, Seconds_Behind_Master may show a large value until the SQL thread finishes executing the new event. This is especially likely when the events have old timestamps; in such cases, if you execute SHOW SLAVE STATUS several times in a relatively short peiod, you may see this value change back and forth repeatedly between 0 and a relatively large value.

For versions of MySQL prior to 4.1.1, it is possible to determine how far behind the slave is only if SHOW SLAVE STATUS on the slave shows that the SQL thread is running (or for MySQL 3.23, that the slave thread is running), and that the thread has executed at least one event from the master. See Section 6.3, “Replication Implementation Details”.

When the slave SQL thread executes an event read from the master, it modifies its own time to the event timestamp. (This is why TIMESTAMP is well replicated.) In the Time column in the output of SHOW PROCESSLIST, the number of seconds displayed for the slave SQL thread is the number of seconds between the timestamp of the last replicated event and the real time of the slave machine. You can use this to determine the date of the last replicated event. Note that if your slave has been disconnected from the master for one hour, and then reconnects, you may immediately see Time values like 3600 for the slave SQL thread in SHOW PROCESSLIST. This is because the slave is executing statements that are one hour old.

Q: How do I force the master to block updates until the slave catches up?

A: Use the following procedure:

  1. On the master, execute these statements:

    mysql> FLUSH TABLES WITH READ LOCK;
    mysql> SHOW MASTER STATUS;
    

    Record the replication coordinates (the log filename and offset) from the output of the SHOW statement.

  2. On the slave, issue the following statement, where the arguments to the MASTER_POS_WAIT() function are the replication coordinate values obtained in the previous step:

    mysql> SELECT MASTER_POS_WAIT('log_name', log_offset);
    

    The SELECT statement blocks until the slave reaches the specified log file and offset. At that point, the slave is in synchrony with the master and the statement returns.

  3. On the master, issue the following statement to allow the master to begin processing updates again:

    mysql> UNLOCK TABLES;
    

Q: What issues should I be aware of when setting up two-way replication?

A: MySQL replication currently does not support any locking protocol between master and slave to guarantee the atomicity of a distributed (cross-server) update. In other words, it is possible for client A to make an update to co-master 1, and in the meantime, before it propagates to co-master 2, client B could make an update to co-master 2 that makes the update of client A work differently than it did on co-master 1. Thus, when the update of client A makes it to co-master 2, it produces tables that are different from what you have on co-master 1, even after all the updates from co-master 2 have also propagated. This means that you should not chain two servers together in a two-way replication relationship unless you are sure that your updates can safely happen in any order, or unless you take care of mis-ordered updates somehow in the client code.

You should also realize that two-way replication actually does not improve performance very much (if at all) as far as updates are concerned. Each server must do the same number of updates, just as you would have a single server do. The only difference is that there is a little less lock contention, because the updates originating on another server are serialized in one slave thread. Even this benefit might be offset by network delays.

Q: How can I use replication to improve performance of my system?

A: You should set up one server as the master and direct all writes to it. Then configure as many slaves as you have the budget and rackspace for, and distribute the reads among the master and the slaves. You can also start the slaves with the --skip-innodb, --skip-bdb, --low-priority-updates, and --delay-key-write=ALL options to get speed improvements on the slave end. In this case, the slave uses non-transactional MyISAM tables instead of InnoDB and BDB tables to get more speed by eliminating transactional overhead.

Q: What should I do to prepare client code in my own applications to use performance-enhancing replication?

A: If the part of your code that is responsible for database access has been properly abstracted/modularized, converting it to run with a replicated setup should be very smooth and easy. Change the implementation of your database access to send all writes to the master, and to send reads to either the master or a slave. If your code does not have this level of abstraction, setting up a replicated system gives you the opportunity and motivation to it clean up. Start by creating a wrapper library or module that implements the following functions:

  • safe_writer_connect()

  • safe_reader_connect()

  • safe_reader_statement()

  • safe_writer_statement()

safe_ in each function name means that the function takes care of handling all error conditions. You can use different names for the functions. The important thing is to have a unified interface for connecting for reads, connecting for writes, doing a read, and doing a write.

Then convert your client code to use the wrapper library. This may be a painful and scary process at first, but it pays off in the long run. All applications that use the approach just described are able to take advantage of a master/slave configuration, even one involving multiple slaves. The code is much easier to maintain, and adding troubleshooting options is trivial. You need modify only one or two functions; for example, to log how long each statement took, or which statement among those issued gave you an error.

If you have written a lot of code, you may want to automate the conversion task by using the replace utility that comes with standard MySQL distributions, or just write your own conversion script. Ideally, your code uses consistent programming style conventions. If not, then you are probably better off rewriting it anyway, or at least going through and manually regularizing it to use a consistent style.

Q: When and how much can MySQL replication improve the performance of my system?

A: MySQL replication is most beneficial for a system that processes frequent reads and infrequent writes. In theory, by using a single-master/multiple-slave setup, you can scale the system by adding more slaves until you either run out of network bandwidth, or your update load grows to the point that the master cannot handle it.

To determine how many slaves you can use before the added benefits begin to level out, and how much you can improve performance of your site, you need to know your query patterns, and to determine empirically by benchmarking the relationship between the throughput for reads (reads per second, or reads) and for writes (writes) on a typical master and a typical slave. The example here shows a rather simplified calculation of what you can get with replication for a hypothetical system.

Let's say that system load consists of 10% writes and 90% reads, and we have determined by benchmarking that reads is 1200 – 2 × writes. In other words, the system can do 1,200 reads per second with no writes, the average write is twice as slow as the average read, and the relationship is linear. Let us suppose that the master and each slave have the same capacity, and that we have one master and N slaves. Then we have for each server (master or slave):

reads = 1200 – 2 × writes

reads = 9 × writes / (N + 1) (reads are split, but writes go to all servers)

9 × writes / (N + 1) + 2 × writes = 1200

writes = 1200 / (2 + 9/(N+1))

The last equation indicates the maximum number of writes for N slaves, given a maximum possible read rate of 1,200 per minute and a ratio of nine reads per write.

This analysis yields the following conclusions:

  • If N = 0 (which means we have no replication), our system can handle about 1200/11 = 109 writes per second.

  • If N = 1, we get up to 184 writes per second.

  • If N = 8, we get up to 400 writes per second.

  • If N = 17, we get up to 480 writes per second.

  • Eventually, as N approaches infinity (and our budget negative infinity), we can get very close to 600 writes per second, increasing system throughput about 5.5 times. However, with only eight servers, we increase it nearly four times.

Note that these computations assume infinite network bandwidth and neglect several other factors that could be significant on your system. In many cases, you may not be able to perform a computation similar to the one just shown that accurately predicts what will happen on your system if you add N replication slaves. However, answering the following questions should help you decide whether and by how much replication will improve the performance of your system:

  • What is the read/write ratio on your system?

  • How much more write load can one server handle if you reduce the reads?

  • For how many slaves do you have bandwidth available on your network?

Q: How can I use replication to provide redundancy or high availability?

A: With the currently available features, you would have to set up a master and a slave (or several slaves), and to write a script that monitors the master to check whether it is up. Then instruct your applications and the slaves to change master in case of failure. Some suggestions:

  • To tell a slave to change its master, use the CHANGE MASTER TO statement.

  • A good way to keep your applications informed as to the location of the master is by having a dynamic DNS entry for the master. With bind you can use nsupdate to dynamically update your DNS.

  • Run your slaves with the --log-bin option and without --log-slave-updates. In this way, the slave is ready to become a master as soon as you issue STOP SLAVE; RESET MASTER, and CHANGE MASTER TO statement on the other slaves. For example, assume that you have the following setup:

           WC
            \
             v
     WC----> M
           / | \
          /  |  \
         v   v   v
        S1   S2  S3
    

    In this diagram, M means the master, S the slaves, WC the clients issuing database writes and reads; clients that issue only database reads are not represented, because they need not switch. S1, S2, and S3 are slaves running with --log-bin and without --log-slave-updates. Because updates received by a slave from the master are not logged in the binary log unless --log-slave-updates is specified, the binary log on each slave is empty initially. If for some reason M becomes unavailable, you can pick one of the slaves to become the new master. For example, if you pick S1, all WC should be redirected to S1, which will log updates to its binary log. S2 and S3 should then replicate from S1.

    The reason for running the slave without --log-slave-updates is to prevent slaves from receiving updates twice in case you cause one of the slaves to become the new master. Suppose that S1 has --log-slave-updates enabled. Then it will write updates that it receives from M to its own binary log. When S2 changes from M to S1 as its master, it may receive updates from S1 that it has already received from M

    Make sure that all slaves have processed any statements in their relay log. On each slave, issue STOP SLAVE IO_THREAD, then check the output of SHOW PROCESSLIST until you see Has read all relay log. When this is true for all slaves, they can be reconfigured to the new setup. On the slave S1 being promoted to become the master, issue STOP SLAVE and RESET MASTER.

    On the other slaves S2 and S3, use STOP SLAVE and CHANGE MASTER TO MASTER_HOST='S1' (where 'S1' represents the real hostname of S1). To CHANGE MASTER, add all information about how to connect to S1 from S2 or S3 (user, password, port). In CHANGE MASTER, there is no need to specify the name of S1's binary log or binary log position to read from: We know it is the first binary log and position 4, which are the defaults for CHANGE MASTER. Finally, use START SLAVE on S2 and S3.

    Then instruct all WC to direct their statements to S1. From that point on, all updates statements sent by WC to S1 are written to the binary log of S1, which then contains every update statement sent to S1 since M died.

    The result is this configuration:

           WC
          /
          |
     WC   |  M(unavailable)
      \   |
       \  |
        v v
         S1<--S2  S3
          ^       |
          +-------+
    

    When M is up again, you must issue on it the same CHANGE MASTER as that issued on S2 and S3, so that M becomes a slave of S1 and picks up all the WC writes that it missed while it was down. To make M a master again (because it is the most powerful machine, for example), use the preceding procedure as if S1 was unavailable and M was to be the new master. During this procedure, do not forget to run RESET MASTER on M before making S1, S2, and S3 slaves of M. Otherwise, they may pick up old WC writes from before the point at which M became unavailable.

    Note that there is no synchronization between the different slaves to a master. Some slaves might be ahead of others. This means that the concept outlined in the previous example might not work. In practice, however, the relay logs of different slaves will most likely not be far behind the master, so it would work, anyway (but there is no guarantee).

Q: How do I prevent GRANT and REVOKE statements from replicating to slave machines?

A: Start the server with the --replicate-wild-ignore-table=mysql.% option.

Q: Does replication work on mixed operating systems (for example, the master runs on Linux while slaves run on Mac OS X and Windows)?

A: Yes.

Q: Does replication work on mixed hardware architectures (for example, the master runs on a 64-bit machine while slaves run on 32-bit machines)?

A: Yes.

6.11. Troubleshooting Replication

If you have followed the instructions, and your replication setup is not working, the first thing to do is check the error log for messages. Many users have lost time by not doing this soon enough after encountering problems.

If you cannot tell from the error log what the problem was, try the following techniques:

  • Verify that the master has binary logging enabled by issuing a SHOW MASTER STATUS statement. If logging is enabled, Position is non-zero. If binary logging is not enabled, verify that you are running the master with the --log-bin and --server-id options.

  • Verify that the slave is running. Use SHOW SLAVE STATUS to check whether the Slave_IO_Running and Slave_SQL_Running values are both Yes. If not, verify the options that were used when starting the slave server. For example, --skip-slave-start prevents the slave threads from starting until you issue a START SLAVE statement.

  • If the slave is running, check whether it established a connection to the master. Use SHOW PROCESSLIST, find the I/O and SQL threads and check their State column to see what they display. See Section 6.3, “Replication Implementation Details”. If the I/O thread state says Connecting to master, verify the privileges for the replication user on the master, the master hostname, your DNS setup, whether the master is actually running, and whether it is reachable from the slave.

  • If the slave was running previously but has stopped, the reason usually is that some statement that succeeded on the master failed on the slave. This should never happen if you have taken a proper snapshot of the master, and never modified the data on the slave outside of the slave thread. If the slave stops unexpectedly, it is a bug or you have encountered one of the known replication limitations described in Section 6.7, “Replication Features and Known Problems”. If it is a bug, see Section 6.12, “How to Report Replication Bugs or Problems”, for instructions on how to report it.

    MySQL Enterprise For immediate notification whenever a slave stops, subscribe to the MySQL Enterprise Monitor. For more information see, http://www.mysql.com/products/enterprise/advisors.html.

  • If a statement that succeeded on the master refuses to run on the slave, try the following procedure if it is not feasible to do a full database resynchronization by deleting the slave's databases and copying a new snapshot from the master:

    1. Determine whether the affected table on the slave is different from the master table. Try to understand how this happened. Then make the slave's table identical to the master's and run START SLAVE.

    2. If the preceding step does not work or does not apply, try to understand whether it would be safe to make the update manually (if needed) and then ignore the next statement from the master.

    3. If you decide that you can skip the next statement from the master, issue the following statements:

      mysql> SET GLOBAL SQL_SLAVE_SKIP_COUNTER = N;
      mysql> START SLAVE;
      

      The value of N should be 1 if the next statement from the master does not use AUTO_INCREMENT or LAST_INSERT_ID(). Otherwise, the value should be 2. The reason for using a value of 2 for statements that use AUTO_INCREMENT or LAST_INSERT_ID() is that they take two events in the binary log of the master.

    4. If you are sure that the slave started out perfectly synchronized with the master, and that no one has updated the tables involved outside of the slave thread, then presumably the discrepancy is the result of a bug. If you are running the most recent version of MySQL, please report the problem. If you are running an older version, try upgrading to the latest production release to determine whether the problem persists.

6.12. How to Report Replication Bugs or Problems

When you have determined that there is no user error involved, and replication still either does not work at all or is unstable, it is time to send us a bug report. We need to obtain as much information as possible from you to be able to track down the bug. Please spend some time and effort in preparing a good bug report.

If you have a repeatable test case that demonstrates the bug, please enter it into our bugs database using the instructions given in Section 1.7, “How to Report Bugs or Problems”. If you have a “phantom” problem (one that you cannot duplicate at will), use the following procedure:

  1. Verify that no user error is involved. For example, if you update the slave outside of the slave thread, the data goes out of synchrony, and you can have unique key violations on updates. In this case, the slave thread stops and waits for you to clean up the tables manually to bring them into synchrony. This is not a replication problem. It is a problem of outside interference causing replication to fail.

  2. Run the slave with the --log-slave-updates and --log-bin options. These options cause the slave to log the updates that it receives from the master into its own binary logs.

  3. Save all evidence before resetting the replication state. If we have no information or only sketchy information, it becomes difficult or impossible for us to track down the problem. The evidence you should collect is:

    • All binary logs from the master

    • All binary logs from the slave

    • The output of SHOW MASTER STATUS from the master at the time you discovered the problem

    • The output of SHOW SLAVE STATUS from the slave at the time you discovered the problem

    • Error logs from the master and the slave

  4. Use mysqlbinlog to examine the binary logs. The following should be helpful to find the problem statement. log_pos and log_file are the Master_Log_File and Read_Master_Log_Pos values from SHOW SLAVE STATUS.

    shell> mysqlbinlog -j log_pos log_file | head
    

After you have collected the evidence for the problem, try to isolate it as a separate test case first. Then enter the problem with as much information as possible into our bugs database using the instructions at Section 1.7, “How to Report Bugs or Problems”.