Today I helped one of our lead Cluster developers, Martin Skold,
finish up the editing on a article you should see posted on the
MySQL Developers Zone page next week. The article is titled,
"MySQL Cluster 5.0 ALTER TABLE In-Depth".
The article covers the MySQL ALTER TABLE syntax with code
examples, how it works behind the scenes, and using the
ndb_show_tables utility to verify results. He also gives us a
preview into some of the improvements made to the ALTER TABLE
functionality in 5.1.
ALTER TABLE enthusiasts should definitely check this article out.
I'll add a link to the article on this blog post once the Web
guys make it available.
- Jimmy
Please feel free to forward to interested parties.
Who: Jim Starkey at the Boston MySQL Meetup Group
What: Falcon, the new MySQL storage engine
When:
Monday, July 10, 2006 at 7:00 PM
Where:
MIT Building E51, Room 372
Wadsworth and Amherst Streets
Cambridge, MA 02117
Steps from the Red line, plenty of free parking.
The July Boston MySQL Meetup’s topic is Falcon, the new storage engine for MySQL. Creator Jim Starkey will speak. Jim Starkey has been writing database software for 20 years. He created BLOBs, multi-versioning concurrency for relational databases, cascading update triggers, event alerters, and more. Read more about him at http://tinyurl.com/lno4p and http://tinyurl.com/mym7d.
We will be meeting on MIT campus, close to the Kendall stop on the Red Line (subway). There is also plenty of free parking — you can park in ANY MIT lot after 3 pm, even if it says …
[Read more]YAMQ (yet another MySQL question) came up at work this past week. Some of our old data warehousing libraries work under the assumption that MySQL can only handle 16 indexes (built during the early 3.23.x days). So the question is how many indexes can a single table have these days?
This is similar to last week's questions on how many joins MySQL can handle. I don't see much in the way of official documentation, but dug around the forums and found good information in this thread.
Creating an index requires creating a key, and there's a limit placed on the number of keys allowed for a table. Thus the limit on indexes is governed by the number of keys you are allowed to create. The error message when you've created one too many keys looks like:
…[Read more]
PHP is different. Unlike Java for example, there is no formal
community, and no formal community process. PHP does not see
itself as controlled by a company, or even large corporate
players. PHP is not developed, it kind of grows. People using
other languages see this as a weakness, but I actually think of
it as a strength of the language, the platform and the
community.
PHP is used differently than for example Java. Successful PHP
projects use different strategies. If you have listened to what
Rasmus has been telling you in his speeches during the last two
years, you might get an idea of how PHP is different, and why. If
you are comparing the approach MySQL has been using in the Dell
DVD webshop benchmark uncontest with the other PHP approaches,
you can see some of these principles applied.
Unfortunately, for many of these principles and methodologies no
fancy names exist. So in my untalk on the PHP unconference at
…
Back in April MySQL had its yearly user's conference. Each year
there are more users and more people to talk to, which means I
get fewer chances to listen to any of the talks being presented.
I did though take time out to listen to the talk on Second Life. I've been playing with BBS'es, Talkers, and
other assorted digital online communities ever since I got my
first modem. What fascinated me about Second Life was the
prospect of it taking a shot at being the first "metaverse". I am
a big fan of "Snow Crash" and would love to see that sort of
environment spring to life. I work daily with friends and
colleagues using IM and IRC, and any depth that can be added to
those conversations is great as far as I am concerned.
I have also been fascinated with learning about how they are
scaling with MySQL. Their design is fairly classic with
replication, but what is interesting is to look and see how this
is applied to a virtual …
At the developers conference this year, held in Sorrento, Italy, I was fortunate enough to meet and have dinner with some Italian MySQL users?some of whom had travelled from Rome to be with us that evening at a lovely traditional Italian restaurant just off one of the main squares.
I?ve recently written about techniques for archiving, purging, and re-indexing huge database tables. These techniques exploit both data structure and usage patterns. In this article I?ll develop that theme further, and explain how to write more efficient non-backtracking maintenance jobs when the update and insertion patterns permit.
part of my focus for the next couple of weeks will be on rolling
out some improvements to the mysql bugs system. the first step in doing
that was to upgrade from mysql 4.1 to the latest mysql 5.1 beta, which turned out to be entirely
painless.
the next step is going to be some database normalization and code
refactoring. but because there are some other people who have
written ad-hoc tools against the existing schema, i?ll be hiding
the schema changes behind some views.
the first big schema change will be moving the categories from a
bunch of hard-coded strings in the source code (and a
varchar(32)
field) to a table organized using the
nested set model. that?s something i?ve been …
The Linux Professional Institute (LPI), (http://www.lpi.org), the world's premier Linux certification organization, and MySQL AB, developer of the world's most popular open source database, today announced a joint initiative to offer MySQL 5.0 certification exams through LPI's global proctor network, beginning with the C3 Expo, June 27th ? 29th, 2006 at the Javits Center in New York City. Prosoft Learning Corporation, LPI's affiliate in North America will be offering these exams at C3 Expo along with LPI Certification exams.