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Percona is glad to announce the release of Percona XtraBackup 2.1.2 for MySQL on May 18, 2013. Downloads are available from our download site here and Percona Software Repositories.
This release fixes number of high-priority bugs since version 2.1 became GA. It’s advised to upgrade your latest 2.1 version to 2.1.2. This release is the latest stable release in the 2.1 series.
Bugs Fixed:
This week we explain performance_schema a bit deeper. In Ear Candy, we talk about max_binlog_cache_size and At the Movies presents Max Mether of SkySQL talking about "High Availability Solutions for MySQL".
Events
DB Hangops - every other Wednesay at noon Pacific time
Upcoming MySQL events (http://www.mysql.com/news-and-events/events/)
The red carpet has been laid down at this Log Buffer Edition, and you can witness and cheer the cat-walking blog posts from Oracle, SQL Server and MySQL. Every one of them is chic, elegant, sensual in its own right. Enjoy.
Oracle:
Create colored heat maps in SQL*Plus with Kyle Hailey.
Here’s a quick and dirty script to create a procedure (in the SYS schema – so be careful) to check the Hakan Factor for an object.
Connor has a good post about default null for collection parameter.
This is yet another blogpost on
[Read more...]This is the second part in a two-part series comparing Virident’s vCache to FlashCache. The first part was focused on usability and feature comparison; in this post, we’ll look at some sysbench test results.
Disclosure: The research and testing conducted for this post were sponsored by Virident.
First, some background information. All tests were conducted on Percona’s Cisco UCS C250 test machine, and both the vCache and FlashCache tests used the same 2.2TB Virident FlashMAX II as the cache storage device. EXT4 is the filesystem, and CentOS 6.4 the operating system, although the pre-release modules I received from Virident required the use of the CentOS 6.2 kernel, 2.6.32-220, so that was the kernel in use for all of the benchmarks on
[Read more...]Every so often you see something from the past and wonder “Why don’t we do that anymore?” Well, in this case it was a former co-worker wearing his MySQL Contributor shirt. 
This is Antony Curtis in one of the original MySQL Community Contributor shirt
So the MySQL Community Team had a quick meeting and the result is that we are reestablishing the tradition. So if you have a signed Oracle Contributor Agreement and have contributed to MySQL, you should have in your inbox a request for your shirt size and a shipping address. If you do not see an email and you qualify for a short, let us know (we probably have an old email on record for you). And if you are working on some [Read more...]
Thanks to Tim Callaghan for speaking Tuesday night at the Effective MySQL New York meetup on Fractal Tree Indexes : Theory and Practice (MySQL and MongoDB). There was a good turnout and a full room to learn how the TokuDB storage engine from Tokutek is changing how to handle big data in MySQL.
Also interesting is how the same technology has been applied for use in MongoDB including giving MongoDB transactions; a big change for NoSQL.
Related News: Tokutek Meets Big Data Demand With Open Source TokuDB
(This is part one of a two part series) Over the past few weeks I have been looking at a preview release of Virident’s vCache software, which is a kernel module and set of utilities designed to provide functionality similar to that of FlashCache. In particular, Virident engaged Percona to do a usability and feature-set comparison between vCache and FlashCache and also to conduct some benchmarks for the use case where the MySQL working set is significantly larger than the InnoDB buffer pool (thus leading to a lot of buffer pool disk reads) but still small enough to fit into the cache device. In this post and the next, I’ll present some of those
We are pleased to announce RethinkDB 1.5 (The Graduate), so go download it now!
This release includes the long-awaited support for secondary indexes, a new algorithm for batched inserts that results in an ~18x performance improvement, support for soft durability (don't worry -- off by default), and over 180 bug fixes, features, and enhancements.
Upgrading to 1.5? Make sure to migrate your data before upgrading to RethinkDB 1.5. →
MySQL has two great features which historical haven't played well together:
One common optimization we do to reduce IOP consumption on database servers is to add additional columns to indexes in order to allow more queries to be index-only. However, sometimes we have these large TEXT fields in order to allow for larger content -- even if the content is normally very small.
For example:
[Read more...]CREATE TABLE tbl
I finally posted a copy of the slides from my Percona Live presentation, “Creating a Benchmarking Infrastructure that Just Works”. The PDF is available via this link.
The content comes from my personal experiences over many years benchmarking and testing databases, usually focusing on performance. It was an opportunity to see how far my personal benchmark infrastructure has evolved, but even better has inspired me to improve it in several areas.
I never had a chance to to my own post-conference wrap-up regarding the Percona Live show. While waiting for my flight home at SFO airport I concluded that
[Read more...]mysql> SELECT CONCAT(T.TABLE_SCHEMA,'.',T.TABLE_NAME) AS TABLE_NAME,[Read more...]
-> P.PARTITION_NAME AS PART,IBT.SPACE,IBD.PATH,T.DATA_FREE AS T_DATA_FREE,
-> P.DATA_FREE AS P_DATA_FREE FROM
Percona is glad to announce the release of Percona XtraBackup 2.1.1 on May 15th 2013. Downloads are available from our download site here and Percona Software Repositories.
Percona XtraBackup enables backups without blocking user queries, making it ideal for companies with large data sets and mission-critical applications that cannot tolerate long periods of downtime. Offered free as an open source solution,
[Read more...]MySQL Community team is pleased to announce following events as the ones supported by us with a great MySQL staff attending. Find more details below (or at our Community wikis).
SELECT DATA_FREE FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.TABLES WHERE ENGINE='InnoDB' LIMIT 1;
Occasionally it is useful to know what a MySQL command is doing internally. Just looking into the MySQL source directory can be overwhelming. Knowing the basics of the handler interface and the sql parser can be a great start for reading the source code to understand what MySQL does under the hood. Here I will cover a little bit about how the SQL syntax is defined.
Everything starts with lex.h and sql_yacc.yy in the sql/ dir. lex.h contains all the functions and symbols used to make up the SQL syntax. The sql_yacc.yy file describes the relationships between these symbols and the C functions responsible for executing them. I’m not sure why some symbol definitions end in _SYM and others don’t. Looking in lex.h “FLUSH” is defined as FLUSH_SYM. To see all the places where flush is allowed in the SQL go back to sql_yacc.yy and grep for it.
The
[Read more...]The Example storage engine is meant to serve mainly as a code example of the stub of a storage engine for example purposes only (or so the code comment at the start of ha_example.cc reads). In reality however, it’s not very useful. It likely was back in 2004 when it could be used as a starting point for starting some simple new engines (my guess would be that more than a few of the simpler engines started from ha_example.cc).
The sad reality is the complexity of the non-obviousness of the bits o the storage engine API you actually care about are documented in ha_ndbcluster.cc, ha_myisam.cc and ha_innodb.cc. If you’re doing something that isn’t already done by one of those three engines: good luck.
Whenever I looked at ha_example.cc I always wished there was something
[Read more...]Starting with MySQL 5.6, MySQL commercial-license builds use OpenSSL. yaSSL – previously used as the default SSL library for all builds – remains the implementation for Community (GPL) builds, and users comfortable building from source can choose to build with OpenSSL instead. Daniel van Eeden recently requested a global variable to indicate which SSL library was used to compile the server (bug#69226), and it’s a good request. It’s something I’ve previously requested as well, having been fooled by the use of have_openssl as a synonym for
[Read more...]I would like to invite everyone who is around Trondheim, Norway to the "MySQL mini-seminar" taking place on June 19, 2013 in Oracle office. Do not miss this great opportunity to meet great MySQL engineers who are looking forward to meeting you and talking about MySQL!!!
Please see the official invitation in English and Norwegian below.
Invitation to MySQL mini-seminar
Many people are unaware that a great number of the MySQL developers are located in Trondheim, Norway, and that we have a lot of competence we would love to share.
We therefore invite anyone in Trondheim who's interested in MySQL to a mini-seminar located the Oracle's offices on Lade, June 19 at 3 pm.
The agenda will be:
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