Hello all,
I hope you're doing well. After the successful event last year
it's a no brainer to arrange another community dinner when we're
all together again in London this November. We had a fantastic
turn-out for the meal last year, seating over 100 MySQLers in a
venue whom were expecting only 60. So this year join the MySQL
community again for a bite to eat and a beverage or two and
discuss life, love and data.
The When
Monday, November 3rd 2014
The Where
Masala Zone, Covent
Garden
The Why
We have a vibrant community surrounding the MySQL ecosystem.
Whether you want to talk about the meaning of life with Colin
Charles or find out how Facebook take their logical backups even
quiz Shlomi Noach about where thinks up his latest and greatest
MySQL tools; why not do it with a curry and a …
I have found myself using UNION in MySQL more and more lately. In this example, I am using it to speed up queries that are using IN clauses. MySQL handles the IN clause like a big OR operation. Recently, I created what looks like a very crazy query using UNION, that in fact helped our MySQL servers perform much better.
With any technology you use, you have to ask yourself, "What is this tech good at doing?" For me, MySQL has always been excelent at running lots of small queries that use primary, unique, or well defined covering indexes. I guess most databases are good at that. Perhaps that is the bare minimum for any database. MySQL seems to excel at doing this however. We had a query that looked like this:
select category_id, count(*) from some_table[Read more]
where
article_id in (1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9) and
category_id in (11,22,33,44,55,66,77,88,99) and
some_date_time > now() - interval 30 day
…
This comes from an issue that I worked on recently, wherein a customer reported that their application was working fine under stock MySQL 5.6 but producing erroneous results when they tried running it on Amazon RDS 5.6. They had a table which, on the working server, contained two TIMESTAMP columns, one which defaulted to CURRENT_TIMESTAMP and the other which defaulted to ’0000-00-00 00:00:00′, like so:
CREATE TABLE mysql56 ( id INT NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT PRIMARY KEY, ts1 TIMESTAMP NOT NULL DEFAULT CURRENT_TIMESTAMP ON UPDATE CURRENT_TIMESTAMP, ts2 TIMESTAMP NOT NULL DEFAULT '0000-00-00 00:00:00', );
However, under Amazon RDS, the same table looked like this:
CREATE TABLE rds56 ( id INT NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT PRIMARY KEY, ts1 TIMESTAMP NULL DEFAULT NULL, ts2 TIMESTAMP NULL DEFAULT NULL, );
They mentioned that their schema contains TIMESTAMP column definitions without any modifiers for nullability or …
[Read more]
A few weeks ago we announced the availability of the MySQL
Central @ OpenWorld content catalog.
We're now pleased to announce additional keynotes delivered by MySQL power users. They will follow the "State of The Dolphin" keynote address by Oracle's Chief Corporate Architect Edward Screven and VP of MySQL Engineering Tomas Ulin, and include:
High Speed Event Logging at Booking.com
Nicolai Plum, Senior Systems Architect, will provide an overview
of Booking.com's MySQL-based event logging application, recording
data from all customer interactions in order to develop the best
customer …
While there are many graphing tools out there and we’ve used Munin for a while now.
The MySQL plugin for Munin had fallen out of date and the show engine innodb status output changed in 5.5 making some bits of the plugin simply not work any more. Also the show global status has some extra variables so there was a need to create new graphs.
All of these are now in the 2.1.8+ development releases of Munin.
Here are samples of the new/updated graphs.
[Read more]
It was a year ago, on a nice Sunday night of the English Summer
(apologies for the oxymoron), that Mark
Riddoch came to see me and together we headed to the Vansittart
Arms, our local family pub round the corner. A pint of
London Pride on one side and a Honey
Dew on the other were the perfect add-on to Mark’s MacBook
Pro, on which Mark was showing me the 0.1 version of MaxScale. It
was the result of the joint efforts of Mark’s team, Massimiliano
and Vilho, who had worked hard to bring to life the first version
of something that I believe will be a natural addition to
clusters of MySQL/Percona/MariaDB servers in the near
future.
A year ago, Mark showed me a …
With an ear to the interwebs, you’ll hear a few things about Docker. Docker is an open platform for developers and sysadmins to build, ship, and run distributed applications. In this blog post, I’m going to outline a very basic example of how to use Sphinx from within a Docker container. What is Docker? This [...]
Yay! My first blog post! As long as at least 1 person finds it useful, I’ve done my job. Recently, one of my long-term clients was noticing that while their INSERTs were succeeding, a particular column counter was not incrementing. A quick investigation determined the column was of type int(11) and they had reached the maximum value of 2147483647. We fixed this by using pt-online-schema-change to change the column to int(10) unsigned, thus allowing values up to 4294967295.
My client was now concerned about all his other integer-based columns and wanted me to check them all. So I wrote a quick-n-dirty script in Go to check all integer-based columns on their current value compared to the maximum allowed for that column type.
You …
[Read more]MySQL Cluster enables high availability by storing data replicas on multiple hosts. MySQL Cluster maintains connections between data nodes by using high-speed interconnects over TCP/IP - standard or direct connections - or SCI (Scalable Coherent Interface) sockets.
To learn more about MySQL Cluster, take the MySQL Cluster training course.
This course is currently scheduled for the following locations:
|
Location |
Date |
Delivery Language |
|
Sao Paulo, Brazil |
… |
After MySQL 5.1 was released work started on MySQL 5.2, but then
this was renamed to MySQL 6.0. There were many new features
introduced in 6.0. But then stabilizing this branch became as
huge task. Eventually the decision was made to start of with a
stable branch and backport the new features from 6.0. This is how
many of the 6.0 features landed in 5.5 and 5.6.
So let's see which features 6.0 brought and were they landed.
I'll use the What Is New in MySQL 6.0 section of the
MySQL 6.0 Reference Manual for this.
- The Falcon storage engine. This never landed anywhere as far as I know. It's not even included in the …