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MySQL 8.0 first impressions

MySQL 8.0.0 was released today. It has been some time in the making, shrouded in a veil of secrecy for over one year. We knew, from listening to the gossip and looking at the few available previews, some of what was going to bring. So, for the observant users, its main features may not come as a surprise. For the rest of you, here's a quick roundup:

Notable features

  • No MyISAM tables anymore! The grant tables are now InnoDB, meaning that grant operations are now atomic.
  • A real data dictionary. This change is less visible than the previous one. The data dictionary tables are hidden and only a subset of the data is available through information_schema views. The reason for the hidden tables is to allow a stable interface through several versions. I am …
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The MySQL 8.0.0 Milestone Release is available

The MySQL Development team is happy to announce our 8.0.0 development milestone release (DMR), now available for download at dev.mysql.com.  The source code is available at GitHub. You can find the full list of changes and bug fixes in the 8.0.0 Release Notes. …

Percona Server Critical Update CVE-2016-6662

This blog is an announcement for a Percona Server update with regards to CVE-2016-6662.

We have added a fix for CVE-2016-6662 in the following releases:

From seclist.org:

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Speaking in September 2016

A few events, but mostly circling around London:

  • Open collaboration – an O’Reilly Online Conference, at 10am PT, Tuesday September 13 2016 – I’m going to be giving a new talk titled Forking Successfully. I’ve seen how the platform works, and I’m looking forward to trying this method out (its like a webminar but not quite!)
  • September MySQL London Meetup – I’m going to focus on MySQL, a branch, Percona Server and the fork MariaDB Server. This will be interesting because one of the reasons you don’t see a huge Emacs/XEmacs push after about 20 years? Feature parity. And the work that’s going into MySQL 8.0 is mighty interesting.
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ProxySQL – Percona Cluster (Galera) integration

ProxySQL is design to do not perform any specialized operation in relation to the servers it communicate with.

Instead it has scheduled events that can be used to extend functionalities and cover any special need.

Given that specialized product like PXC, are not managed by ProxySQL and require the design and implementation of good/efficient extensions.

In this article I will illustrate how PXC/Galera can be integrated with ProxySQL to get the best from both.

 

Brief digression

Before discussing the PXC integration, we need to review a couple of very important concept in ProxySQL.ProxySQL has a very important logical component, the Hostgroup(s) (HG).
An hostgroup as a relation of :

 

+-----------+       +------------------------+
|Host group +------>|Server (1:N)            |
+-----------+       +------------------------+

 

Not only, …

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ProxySQL and MHA integration

ProxySQL and MHA integration
MHA (Master High Availability Manager and tools for MySQL), is almost fully integrated with the ProxySQL process.


What it means is that you can count on the MHA standard feature to manage the failover, and on ProxySQL to manage the traffic and shift from one server.

This is one of the main difference between using MHA and VIP vs MHA and ProxySQL.

There is no need to move IPs or re-define DNS.

The following is an example of configuration file for MHA in case you use it with ProxySQL:

 

[server default]
    user=mha
    password=mha
    ssh_user=root
    repl_password=replica
    manager_log=/tmp/mha.log
    manager_workdir=/tmp
    remote_workdir=/tmp
    master_binlog_dir=/opt/mysql_instances/mha1/logs
    client_bindir=/opt/mysql_templates/mysql-57/bin
    client_libdir=/opt/mysql_templates/mysql-57/lib …
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ProxySQL and MHA integration

ProxySQL and MHA integration
MHA (Master High Availability Manager and tools for MySQL), is almost fully integrated with the ProxySQL process.


What it means is that you can count on the MHA standard feature to manage the failover, and on ProxySQL to manage the traffic and shift from one server.

This is one of the main difference between using MHA and VIP vs MHA and ProxySQL.

There is no need to move IPs or re-define DNS.

The following is an example of configuration file for MHA in case you use it with ProxySQL:

 

[server default]
    user=mha
    password=mha
    ssh_user=root
    repl_password=replica
    manager_log=/tmp/mha.log
    manager_workdir=/tmp
    remote_workdir=/tmp
    master_binlog_dir=/opt/mysql_instances/mha1/logs
    client_bindir=/opt/mysql_templates/mysql-57/bin
    client_libdir=/opt/mysql_templates/mysql-57/lib …
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Don’t Spin Your Data, Use SSDs!

This blog post discussed the advantages of SSDs over HDDs for database environments.

For years now, I’ve been telling audiences for my MySQL Performance talk the following: if you are running an I/O-intensive database on spinning disks you’re doing it wrong. But there are still a surprising number of laggards who aren’t embracing SSD storage (whether it’s for cost or reliability reasons).

Let’s look at cost first. As I write this now (September 2016), high-performance server-grade spinning hard drives run for about $240 for 600GB (or $0.40 per GB).  Of course, you can get an 8TB archive drive at about same price …

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Ansible Dependencies for Docker Containers

I recently had the opportunity to test out Ansible’s ability to interact with docker containers. Some might ask why we would want Ansible to connect to running containers. Afterall, we can build the containers to our liking using ansible-container, or even mundane tools such as Docker’s Dockerfile. Also, we can link configuration files at runtime to override the container’s settings where appropriate.

The point, though, is to leverage Ansible’s capability as an orchestration tool.

As a very basic example, assume that you have plays for your non-docker environment to ensure MySQL users exist. How do you do that with Docker containers?

You have a few options:

  1. Assume you have users with appropriate privileges that can connect remotely, you can execute the Ansible plays locally to connect to MySQL over the …
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Basic Housekeeping for MySQL Indexes

In this blog post, we’ll look at some of the basic housekeeping steps for MySQL indexes.

We all know that indexes can be the difference between a high-performance database and a bad/slow/painful query ride. It’s a critical part that needs deserves some housekeeping once in a while. So, what should you check? In no particular order, here are some things to look at:

1. Unused indexes

With sys schema, is pretty easy to find unused indexes: use the schema_unused_indexes view.

mysql> select * from sys.schema_unused_indexes;
+---------------+-----------------+-------------+
| object_schema | object_name     | index_name  |
+---------------+-----------------+-------------+
| world         | City …
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