CACHE INDEXtbl_index_list[,tbl_index_list] ... [PARTITION (partition_list| ALL)] INkey_cache_nametbl_index_list:tbl_name[[INDEX|KEY] (index_name[,index_name] ...)]partition_list:partition_name[,partition_name][, ...]
        The CACHE INDEX statement assigns
        table indexes to a specific key cache. It is used only for
        MyISAM tables.
      
        The following statement assigns indexes from the tables
        t1, t2, and
        t3 to the key cache named
        hot_cache:
      
mysql> CACHE INDEX t1, t2, t3 IN hot_cache;
+---------+--------------------+----------+----------+
| Table   | Op                 | Msg_type | Msg_text |
+---------+--------------------+----------+----------+
| test.t1 | assign_to_keycache | status   | OK       |
| test.t2 | assign_to_keycache | status   | OK       |
| test.t3 | assign_to_keycache | status   | OK       |
+---------+--------------------+----------+----------+
        The syntax of CACHE INDEX enables
        you to specify that only particular indexes from a table should
        be assigned to the cache. The current implementation assigns all
        the table's indexes to the cache, so there is no reason to
        specify anything other than the table name.
      
        The key cache referred to in a CACHE
        INDEX statement can be created by setting its size
        with a parameter setting statement or in the server parameter
        settings. For example:
      
mysql> SET GLOBAL keycache1.key_buffer_size=128*1024;
Key cache parameters can be accessed as members of a structured system variable. See Section 5.1.6.1, “Structured System Variables”.
A key cache must exist before you can assign indexes to it:
mysql> CACHE INDEX t1 IN non_existent_cache;
ERROR 1284 (HY000): Unknown key cache 'non_existent_cache'
By default, table indexes are assigned to the main (default) key cache created at the server startup. When a key cache is destroyed, all indexes assigned to it become assigned to the default key cache again.
Index assignment affects the server globally: If one client assigns an index to a given cache, this cache is used for all queries involving the index, no matter which client issues the queries.
        Beginning with MySQL 5.5.0, this statement is also supported for
        partitioned MyISAM tables. You can assign one
        or more indexes for one, several, or all partitions to a given
        key cache. For example, you can do the following:
      
CREATE TABLE pt (c1 INT, c2 VARCHAR(50), INDEX i(c1))
    PARTITION BY HASH(c1)
    PARTITIONS 4;
SET GLOBAL kc_fast.key_buffer_size = 128 * 1024;
SET GLOBAL kc_slow.key_buffer_size = 128 * 1024;
CACHE INDEX pt PARTITION (p0) IN kc_fast;
CACHE INDEX pt PARTITION (p1, p3) IN kc_slow;
The previous set of statements performs the following actions:
            Creates a partitioned table with 4 partitions; these
            partitions are automatically named p0,
            ..., p3; this table has an index named
            i on column c1.
          
            Creates 2 key caches named kc_fast and
            kc_slow
          
            Assigns the index for partition p0 to the
            kc_fast key cache and the index for
            partitions p1 and p3
            to the kc_slow key cache; the index for
            the remaining partition (p2) uses the
            server's default key cache.
          
        If you wish instead to assign the indexes for all partitions in
        table pt to a single key cache named
        kc_all, you can use either one of the
        following 2 statements:
      
CACHE INDEX pt PARTITION (ALL) IN kc_all; CACHE INDEX pt IN kc_all;
        The two statements just shown are equivalent, and issuing either
        one of them has exactly the same effect. In other words, if you
        wish to assign indexes for all partitions of a partitioned table
        to the same key cache, then the PARTITION
        (ALL) clause is optional.
      
When assigning indexes for multiple partitions to a key cache, the partitions do not have to be contiguous, and you are not required to list their names in any particular order. Indexes for any partitions that are not explicitly assigned to a key cache automatically use the server's default key cache.
        Preloading of indexes is also supported for partitioned
        MyISAM tables in MySQL 5.5.0 and later. See
        Section 12.4.6.5, “LOAD INDEX INTO
        CACHE Syntax”, for more information.
      


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