This section discusses several SQL statements that can prove useful in managing and monitoring a MySQL server that is connected to a MySQL Cluster, and in some cases provide information about the cluster itself.
          SHOW ENGINE NDB
          STATUS,
          SHOW ENGINE
          NDBCLUSTER STATUS
        
The output of this statement contains information about the server's connection to the cluster, creation and usage of MySQL Cluster objects, and binary logging for MySQL Cluster replication.
          See Section 12.4.5.16, “SHOW ENGINE Syntax”, for a usage example and
          more detailed information.
        
This statement can be used to determine whether or not clustering support is enabled in the MySQL server, and if so, whether it is active.
          See Section 12.4.5.17, “SHOW ENGINES Syntax”, for more detailed
          information.
        
            In MySQL 5.1 and later, this statement does not support a
            LIKE clause. However, you can
            use LIKE to filter queries
            against the
            INFORMATION_SCHEMA.ENGINES, as
            discussed in the next item.
          
          SELECT * FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.ENGINES [WHERE
          ENGINE LIKE 'NDB%']
        
          This is the equivalent of SHOW
          ENGINES, but uses the
          ENGINES table of the
          INFORMATION_SCHEMA database (available
          beginning with MySQL 5.1.5). Unlike the case with the
          SHOW ENGINES statement, it is
          possible to filter the results using a
          LIKE clause, and to select
          specific columns to obtain information that may be of use in
          scripts. For example, the following query shows whether the
          server was built with NDB support
          and, if so, whether it is enabled:
mysql>SELECT SUPPORT FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.ENGINES->WHERE ENGINE LIKE 'NDB%';+---------+ | support | +---------+ | ENABLED | +---------+
          See Section 20.18, “The INFORMATION_SCHEMA ENGINES Table”, for more information.
        
          SHOW VARIABLES LIKE 'NDB%'
        
          This statement provides a list of most server system variables
          relating to the NDB storage
          engine, and their values, as shown here:
mysql> SHOW VARIABLES LIKE 'NDB%';
+-------------------------------------+-------+
| Variable_name                       | Value |
+-------------------------------------+-------+
| ndb_autoincrement_prefetch_sz       | 32    |
| ndb_cache_check_time                | 0     |
| ndb_extra_logging                   | 0     |
| ndb_force_send                      | ON    |
| ndb_index_stat_cache_entries        | 32    |
| ndb_index_stat_enable               | OFF   |
| ndb_index_stat_update_freq          | 20    |
| ndb_report_thresh_binlog_epoch_slip | 3     |
| ndb_report_thresh_binlog_mem_usage  | 10    |
| ndb_use_copying_alter_table         | OFF   |
| ndb_use_exact_count                 | ON    |
| ndb_use_transactions                | ON    |
+-------------------------------------+-------+
See Section 5.1.4, “Server System Variables”, for more information.
          SELECT * FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.GLOBAL_VARIABLES
          WHERE VARIABLE_NAME LIKE 'NDB%';
        
          This statement is the equivalent of the
          SHOW command described
          in the previous item, and provides almost identical output, as
          shown here:
mysql>SELECT * FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.GLOBAL_VARIABLES->WHERE VARIABLE_NAME LIKE 'NDB%';+-------------------------------------+----------------+ | VARIABLE_NAME | VARIABLE_VALUE | +-------------------------------------+----------------+ | NDB_AUTOINCREMENT_PREFETCH_SZ | 32 | | NDB_CACHE_CHECK_TIME | 0 | | NDB_EXTRA_LOGGING | 0 | | NDB_FORCE_SEND | ON | | NDB_INDEX_STAT_CACHE_ENTRIES | 32 | | NDB_INDEX_STAT_ENABLE | OFF | | NDB_INDEX_STAT_UPDATE_FREQ | 20 | | NDB_REPORT_THRESH_BINLOG_EPOCH_SLIP | 3 | | NDB_REPORT_THRESH_BINLOG_MEM_USAGE | 10 | | NDB_USE_COPYING_ALTER_TABLE | OFF | | NDB_USE_EXACT_COUNT | ON | | NDB_USE_TRANSACTIONS | ON | +-------------------------------------+----------------+
          Unlike the case with the
          SHOW command, it is
          possible to select individual columns. For example:
mysql>SELECT VARIABLE_VALUE->FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.GLOBAL_VARIABLES->WHERE VARIABLE_NAME = 'ndb_force_send';+----------------+ | VARIABLE_VALUE | +----------------+ | ON | +----------------+
          See Section 20.25, “The INFORMATION_SCHEMA GLOBAL_VARIABLES and
      SESSION_VARIABLES
      Tables”, and
          Section 5.1.4, “Server System Variables”, for more
          information.
        
          SHOW STATUS LIKE 'NDB%'
        
This statement shows at a glance whether or not the MySQL server is acting as a cluster SQL node, and if so, it provides the MySQL server's cluster node ID, the host name and port for the cluster management server to which it is connected, and the number of data nodes in the cluster, as shown here:
mysql> SHOW STATUS LIKE 'NDB%';
+--------------------------+---------------+
| Variable_name            | Value         |
+--------------------------+---------------+
| Ndb_cluster_node_id      | 10            |
| Ndb_config_from_host     | 192.168.0.103 |
| Ndb_config_from_port     | 1186          |
| Ndb_number_of_data_nodes | 4             |
+--------------------------+---------------+
If the MySQL server was built with clustering support, but it is not connected to a cluster, all rows in the output of this statement contain a zero or an empty string:
mysql> SHOW STATUS LIKE 'NDB%';
+--------------------------+-------+
| Variable_name            | Value |
+--------------------------+-------+
| Ndb_cluster_node_id      | 0     |
| Ndb_config_from_host     |       |
| Ndb_config_from_port     | 0     |
| Ndb_number_of_data_nodes | 0     |
+--------------------------+-------+
          See also Section 12.4.5.37, “SHOW STATUS Syntax”.
        
          SELECT * FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.GLOBAL_STATUS WHERE
          VARIABLE_NAME LIKE 'NDB%';
        
          Beginning with MySQL 5.1.12, this statement provides similar
          output to the SHOW
          command discussed in the previous item. However, unlike the
          case with SHOW STATUS, it is
          possible using the SELECT to
          extract values in SQL for use in scripts for monitoring and
          automation purposes.
        
          See Section 20.24, “The INFORMATION_SCHEMA GLOBAL_STATUS and
      SESSION_STATUS
      Tables”, for more information.
        
      Beginning with MySQL Cluster NDB 7.1.1, you can also query the
      tables in the ndbinfo information database for
      real-time data about many MySQL Cluster operations. See
      Section 17.5.8, “The ndbinfo MySQL Cluster Information Database”.
    


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