[+/-]
ndbinfo blocks Tablendbinfo config_params Tablendbinfo counters Tablendbinfo logbuffers Tablendbinfo logspaces Tablendbinfo memoryusage Tablendbinfo nodes Tablendbinfo pools Tablendbinfo resources Tablendbinfo transporters Table
      ndbinfo is a database storing containing
      information specific to MySQL Cluster, available beginning with
      MySQL Cluster NDB 7.1.1.
    
This database contains a number of tables, each providing a different sort of data about MySQL Cluster node status, resource usage, and operations. You can find more detailed information about each of these tables in the next several sections.
      ndbinfo is included with MySQL Cluster support
      in the MySQL Server; no special compilation or configuration steps
      are required; the tables are created by the MySQL Server when it
      connects to the cluster. You can verify that
      ndbinfo support is active in a given MySQL
      Server instance using SHOW PLUGINS;
      if ndbinfo support is enabled, you should see a
      row containing ndbinfo in the
      Name column and ACTIVE in
      the Status column, as shown here (emphasized
      text):
    
mysql> SHOW PLUGINS;
+------------+----------+----------------+---------+---------+
| Name       | Status   | Type           | Library | License |
+------------+----------+----------------+---------+---------+
| binlog     | ACTIVE   | STORAGE ENGINE | NULL    | GPL     |
| partition  | ACTIVE   | STORAGE ENGINE | NULL    | GPL     |
| ARCHIVE    | ACTIVE   | STORAGE ENGINE | NULL    | GPL     |
| BLACKHOLE  | ACTIVE   | STORAGE ENGINE | NULL    | GPL     |
| CSV        | ACTIVE   | STORAGE ENGINE | NULL    | GPL     |
| FEDERATED  | DISABLED | STORAGE ENGINE | NULL    | GPL     |
| MEMORY     | ACTIVE   | STORAGE ENGINE | NULL    | GPL     |
| InnoDB     | ACTIVE   | STORAGE ENGINE | NULL    | GPL     |
| MyISAM     | ACTIVE   | STORAGE ENGINE | NULL    | GPL     |
| MRG_MYISAM | ACTIVE   | STORAGE ENGINE | NULL    | GPL     |
| ndbcluster | ACTIVE   | STORAGE ENGINE | NULL    | GPL     |
| ndbinfo    | ACTIVE   | STORAGE ENGINE | NULL    | GPL     |
+------------+----------+----------------+---------+---------+
12 rows in set (0.00 sec)
      You can also do this by checking the output of
      SHOW ENGINES for a line including
      ndbinfo in the Engine column
      and YES in the Support
      column, as shown here (emphasized text):
    
mysql> SHOW ENGINES;
+------------+---------+----------------------------------------------------------------+--------------+------+------------+
| Engine     | Support | Comment                                                        | Transactions | XA   | Savepoints |
+------------+---------+----------------------------------------------------------------+--------------+------+------------+
| ndbcluster | YES     | Clustered, fault-tolerant tables                               | YES          | NO   | NO         |
| MRG_MYISAM | YES     | Collection of identical MyISAM tables                          | NO           | NO   | NO         |
| ndbinfo    | YES     | MySQL Cluster system information storage engine                | NO           | NO   | NO         |
| CSV        | YES     | CSV storage engine                                             | NO           | NO   | NO         |
| MEMORY     | YES     | Hash based, stored in memory, useful for temporary tables      | NO           | NO   | NO         |
| FEDERATED  | NO      | Federated MySQL storage engine                                 | NULL         | NULL | NULL       |
| ARCHIVE    | YES     | Archive storage engine                                         | NO           | NO   | NO         |
| InnoDB     | YES     | Supports transactions, row-level locking, and foreign keys     | YES          | YES  | YES        |
| MyISAM     | DEFAULT | Default engine as of MySQL 3.23 with great performance         | NO           | NO   | NO         |
| BLACKHOLE  | YES     | /dev/null storage engine (anything you write to it disappears) | NO           | NO   | NO         |
+------------+---------+----------------------------------------------------------------+--------------+------+------------+
10 rows in set (0.00 sec)
      If ndbinfo support is enabled, then you can
      access ndbinfo via SQL statements in
      mysql or another MySQL client. For example, you
      can see ndbinfo listed in the output of
      SHOW DATABASES, as shown here:
    
mysql> SHOW DATABASES;
+--------------------+
| Database           |
+--------------------+
| information_schema |
| mysql              |
| ndbinfo            |
| test               |
+--------------------+
4 rows in set (0.00 sec)
      If the mysqld process was not started with the
      --ndbcluster option,
      ndbinfo is not available and is not displayed
      by SHOW DATABASES. If
      mysqld was formerly connected to a MySQL
      Cluster but the cluster becomes unavailable (due to events such as
      cluster shutdown, loss of network connectivity, and so forth),
      ndbinfo and its tables remain visible, but an
      attempt to access any tables (other than blocks
      or config_params) fails with Got
      error 157 'Connection to NDB failed' from NDBINFO.
    
        With the exception of the blocks and
        config_params tables, what we refer to as
        ndbinfo “tables” are actually
        views generated from internal NDB
        tables not visible to the MySQL Server.
      
        All ndbinfo tables are read-only.
      
      You can select the ndbinfo database with a
      USE statement, and then issue a
      SHOW TABLES statement to obtain a
      list of tables, just as for any other database, like this:
    
mysql>USE ndbinfo;Database changed mysql>SHOW TABLES;+-------------------+ | Tables_in_ndbinfo | +-------------------+ | blocks | | config_params | | counters | | logbuffers | | logspaces | | memoryusage | | nodes | | resources | | transporters | +-------------------+ 9 rows in set (0.00 sec)
        In early versions of MySQL Cluster NDB 7.1, there were 10 tables
        in the ndbinfo database; however, the
        pools table was removed in MySQL Cluster NDB
        7.1.3. See Section 17.5.8.8, “The ndbinfo pools Table”.
      
      You can execute SELECT statements
      against these tables, just as you would normally expect:
    
mysql> SELECT * FROM memoryusage;
+---------+--------------+------+-------+
| node_id | DATA_MEMORY  | used | max   |
+---------+--------------+------+-------+
|       1 | DATA_MEMORY  | 3230 |  6408 |
|       2 | DATA_MEMORY  | 3230 |  6408 |
|       1 | INDEX_MEMORY |   16 | 12832 |
|       2 | INDEX_MEMORY |   16 | 12832 |
+---------+--------------+------+-------+
4 rows in set (0.37 sec)
More complex queries are possible, as shown here:
mysql>SELECT SUM(used) as 'Data Memory Used, All Nodes'>FROM memoryusage>WHERE DATA_MEMORY = 'DATA_MEMORY';+-----------------------------+ | Data Memory Used, All Nodes | +-----------------------------+ | 6460 | +-----------------------------+ 1 row in set (0.37 sec) mysql>SELECT SUM(max) as 'Total IndexMemory Available'>FROM memoryusage>WHERE DATA_MEMORY = 'INDEX_MEMORY';+-----------------------------+ | Total IndexMemory Available | +-----------------------------+ | 25664 | +-----------------------------+ 1 row in set (0.33 sec)
      ndbinfo table and column names are case
      sensitive (as is the name of the ndbinfo
      database itself). These identifiers are in lower case. Trying to
      use the wrong lettercase results in an error, as shown in this
      example:
    
mysql>SELECT * FROM nodes;+---------+--------+---------+-------------+ | node_id | uptime | status | start_phase | +---------+--------+---------+-------------+ | 1 | 13602 | STARTED | 0 | | 2 | 16 | STARTED | 0 | +---------+--------+---------+-------------+ 2 rows in set (0.04 sec) mysql>SELECT * FROM Nodes;ERROR 1146 (42S02): Table 'ndbinfo.Nodes' doesn't exist


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