In this section, we list limits found in MySQL Cluster that either differ from limits found in, or that are not found in, standard MySQL.
Memory usage and recovery. 
          Memory comsumed when data is inserted into an
          NDB table is not automatically
          recovered when deleted, as it is with other storage engines.
          Instead, the following rules hold true:
        
            A DELETE statement on an
            NDB table makes the memory
            formerly used by the deleted rows available for re-use by
            inserts on the same table only. This memory cannot be used
            by other NDB tables.
          
            A DROP TABLE or
            TRUNCATE TABLE operation on
            an NDB table frees the memory
            that was used by this table for re-use by any
            NDB table, either by the same
            table or by another NDB table.
          
              Recall that TRUNCATE TABLE
              drops and re-creates the table. See
              Section 12.2.9, “TRUNCATE TABLE Syntax”.
            
            Memory freed by DELETE
            operations but still allocated to a specific table can also
            be made available for general re-use by performing a rolling
            restart of the cluster. See
            Section 15.2.6.1, “Performing a Rolling Restart of a MySQL Cluster”.
          
Limits imposed by the cluster's configuration. A number of hard limits exist which are configurable, but available main memory in the cluster sets limits. See the complete list of configuration parameters in Section 15.3.2, “MySQL Cluster Configuration Files”. Most configuration parameters can be upgraded online. These hard limits include:
                Database memory size and index memory size
                (DataMemory and
                IndexMemory, respectively).
              
                DataMemory is allocated as 32KB
                pages. As each DataMemory page is
                used, it is assigned to a specific table; once
                allocated, this memory cannot be freed except by
                dropping the table.
              
                See Section 15.3.2.5, “Defining MySQL Cluster Data Nodes”, for
                further information about DataMemory
                and IndexMemory.
              
                The maximum number of operations that can be performed
                per transaction is set using the configuration
                parameters
                MaxNoOfConcurrentOperations and
                MaxNoOfLocalOperations.
              
                  Bulk loading, TRUNCATE
                  TABLE, and ALTER
                  TABLE are handled as special cases by
                  running multiple transactions, and so are not subject
                  to this limitation.
                
                Different limits related to tables and indexes. For
                example, the maximum number of ordered indexes in the
                cluster is determined by
                MaxNoOfOrderedIndexes, and the
                maximum number of ordered inexes per table is 16.
              
Memory usage. 
              All Cluster table rows are of fixed length. This means
              (for example) that if a table has one or more
              VARCHAR fields containing
              only relatively small values, more memory and disk space
              is required when using the
              NDB storage engine than would
              be the case for the same table and data using the
              MyISAM engine. (In other words, in the
              case of a VARCHAR column,
              the column requires the same amount of storage as a
              CHAR column of the same
              size.)
            
Node and data object maximums. The following limits apply to numbers of cluster nodes and metadata objects:
The maximum number of data nodes is 48.
A data node must have a node ID in the range of 1‐49, inclusive. (Management and API nodes may use any integer in the range of 1‐63 inclusive as a node ID.)
The total maximum number of nodes in a MySQL Cluster is 63. This number includes all SQL nodes (MySQL Servers), API nodes (applications accessing the cluster other than MySQL servers), data nodes, and management servers.
                The maximum number of metadata objects is limited to
                1600, including database tables, system tables, indexes
                and BLOB columns.
              


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