replication with mysql 5.1

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. Replication with MySQL 5.1. Ligaya Turmelle Senior Technical Support Engineer - MySQL ligaya.turmelle@oracle.com http://joind.in/1573. . Agenda. What it is How it Works Types Use Cases Setting it up Filtering Rules Monitoring. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Replication with MySQL 5.1

Ligaya TurmelleSenior Technical Support Engineer - MySQLligaya.turmelle@oracle.com

http://joind.in/1573

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Agenda

• What it is • How it Works• Types• Use Cases• Setting it up• Filtering Rules• Monitoring

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What is it?

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How does it work?

At a high level

• On the master– makes a change to the data– writes it to the binary log

• On the slave– copies the masters binary logs to the relay logs– runs the relay logs applying the changes

Nitty Gritty of Master Side

• Master makes a change and writes the binlog entry– Details:

• it writes the the changes to the binary log• writes the transactions serially • After writing to the binary log, the master tells the storage

engine to commit the transaction.

Enter the Slave IO thread

• Slave creates an I/O thread which connects to the master

• Slave connects to the master just like any other client then starts a binlog dump process

• Master then creates a thread to send the binary log contents to a slave when the slave connects

• Slave IO thread writes the binary log events to the slaves relay log

• Once slave catches up with master, IO thread goes to sleep and waits for the master to signal it has new events

Slave SQL Thread

• Separates the actual execution of the binary log events from the retrieval of it on the master

• Read and replays the events from the relay log• updates the slaves data to match the masters• Has all privileges so it can run any query that is sent• potential bottleneck

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Types

Basic Info

• 3 binary log formats: – Statement Based Replication (SBR)– Row Based Replication (RBR)– Mixed

• The format of the binary log has no relevance to how the slave handles it. The SQL thread on the slave can and will handle any binary log format given to it

• controlled by setting the binlog_format• each format has its pros and cons

Statement Based Replication (SBR)

• Been used by all previous versions of replication• Pros:

– Proven– Less data written to log files.– Can be used for audit purposes

• Cons:– Some statements are unsafe

• Any nondeterministic behavior is difficult to replicate– More locking may be needed then Row Based– Complex statements will have to be evaluated and executed– Deterministic UDFs must be applied on the slaves– InnoDB: INSERT statement using AUTO_INCREMENT

blocks other nonconflicting INSERT statements.

Row Based Replication (RBR)

• Replicates only the changed rows• Pros:

– All changes can be replicated– Safest form– Same as most other RDBMS– Fewer locks required

• Cons:– Generally more data to be logged– Some problems with older versions but fixed now– large BLOBs can take longer to replicate

Mixed Replication

• Uses both SBR and RBR • Statement-based logging is used by default• Automatically switches to row-based logging in

particular cases– http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.1/en/binary-log-mixed.html

• Can provide best of both worlds - but requires testing

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Use Cases

ScaleOut

• Very common use case• Scale out load to multiple servers

– Reads can be sent to slaves– Writes are done on the Master

• Good for high read workloads• Some improvement to writes if Master only writes

Data Redundancy

• Another common usage• backups• Failover• Use as a testing system

– test queries– application interaction

• Use different storage engine abilities

Analytics

• Reporting– different queries– long running – locking– caches

• DBA can query to learn about their data– distribution– trends

Long Distance Data Distribution

• Geographically separate locations– disaster recovery– Office wants to work on a local copy

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Setting it up

Setting up Replication

• On the Master config file, need to add– log-bin=mysql_bin– server_id=1

• On the Slave config file, need to add– server_id=2

• Create the Replication User– requires REPLICATION SLAVE privilege

mysql> CREATE USER 'repl'@'%.mydomain.com' IDENTIFIED BY 'slavepass';

mysql> GRANT REPLICATION SLAVE ON *.* TO

'repl'@'%.mydomain.com';

Setting up Replication (con’t)

• Get from Master– Obtain master server binary log coordinates

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

– Copy the master (if not a new master)• mysqldump or binary copy

• Finally ready! Actual steps for a new setup:1. Configure Master; (re)start Master– Set up Replication User on Master– Get Master status– Release read locks on Master– Configure Slave; (re)start Slave– Execute CHANGE MASTER TO statement

mysql> CHANGE MASTER TO -> MASTER_HOST='master_host_name', -> MASTER_USER='replication_user_name', -> MASTER_PASSWORD='replication_password', -> [MASTER_PORT = port_num,] -> MASTER_LOG_FILE='recorded_log_file_name', -> MASTER_LOG_POS=recorded_log_position, -> [MASTER_SSL = {0|1},] -> [MASTER_SSL_CA = 'ca_file_name',] -> [MASTER_SSL_CAPATH = 'ca_directory_name',] -> [MASTER_SSL_CERT = 'cert_file_name',] -> [MASTER_SSL_KEY = 'key_file_name',] -> [MASTER_SSL_CIPHER = 'cipher_list',] -> [MASTER_SSL_VERIFY_SERVER_CERT = {0|1}];

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Filtering rules

Filtering Rule Basics

• 2 levels of filtering– On the Master

• Not recommended– On the slave

• preferred• Can be confusing

Filtering on the Master

• How it works:– binlog-do-db– binlog-ignore-db

• Not recommended - ever!– Reasons:

• audit• point in time recovery• crash recovery

Filtering on the Slave

• How it works:– replicate-do-db– replicate-ignore-db– replicate-do-table– replicate-ignore-table– replicate-wild-do-table– replicate-wild-ignore-table

• Avoid mixing “do” and “ignore” command• Avoid mixing wildcard and nonwildcard options• First checks DB level filtering and only if no matches

moves on to the table level matching

Database Filters

Table Filters 1

Start (Following DB options)

Any replicate-*-table

options?

execute UPDATE and

Exit

Which logging format?

Statement

Row

For each statement that performs an update..

For each update of a table row...

No

Yes

Table Filters 2 (do/ignore)

Any replicate-do-table options?

execute UPDATE and

Exit

Any replicate-ignore-table

options?

Does the table match any of

them?

Yes

No

Yes

No

ignore UPDATE and Exit

Does the table match any of

them?

Yes Yes

No

No

Table Filters 3 (wild do/wild ignore)

Any replicate-wild-do-table

options?

execute UPDATE and

Exit

Any replicate-wild-ignore-

table options?

Does the table match any of

them?

Yes

No

Yes

No

ignore UPDATE and Exit

Does the table match any of

them?

Yes Yes

No

No

Table Filters 4

Is there another table to be tested?

Any replicate-do-table or

replicate-wild-do-table options?

Yes

No

No

ignore UPDATE and Exit

Yes

execute UPDATE and

Exit

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Monitoring

On the Master

• Not much info here• Provides the File and Position • Shows any filtering being done on the master• Lists the binary logs on the server

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

mysql> SHOW BINARY LOGS;+---------------+-----------+| Log_name | File_size |+---------------+-----------+| binlog.000015 | 724935 || binlog.000016 | 733481 |+---------------+-----------+

mysql> SHOW SLAVE STATUS\G*************************** 1. row *************************** Slave_IO_State: Waiting for master to send event Master_Host: localhost Master_User: root Master_Port: 3306 Connect_Retry: 3 Master_Log_File: gbichot-bin.005 Read_Master_Log_Pos: 79 Relay_Log_File: gbichot-relay-bin.005 Relay_Log_Pos: 548 Relay_Master_Log_File: gbichot-bin.005 Slave_IO_Running: Yes Slave_SQL_Running: Yes Replicate_Do_DB: Replicate_Ignore_DB: Replicate_Do_Table: Replicate_Ignore_Table: Replicate_Wild_Do_Table: Replicate_Wild_Ignore_Table:

On the Slave

On the Slave Last_Errno: 0 Last_Error: Skip_Counter: 0 Exec_Master_Log_Pos: 79 Relay_Log_Space: 552 Until_Condition: None Until_Log_File: Last_SQL_Error: Until_Log_Pos: 0 Master_SSL_Allowed: No Master_SSL_CA_File: Master_SSL_CA_Path: Master_SSL_Cert: Master_SSL_Cipher: Master_SSL_Key: Seconds_Behind_Master: 8Master_SSL_Verify_Server_Cert: No Last_IO_Errno: 0 Last_IO_Error: Last_SQL_Errno: 0 Last_SQL_Error:

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Questions?

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