25.5.9 ndb_desc — Describe NDB Tables (original) (raw)
25.5.9 ndb_desc — Describe NDB Tables
ndb_desc provides a detailed description of one or more NDB tables.
Usage
ndb_desc -c connection_string tbl_name -d db_name [options]
ndb_desc -c connection_string index_name -d db_name -t tbl_name
Additional options that can be used withndb_desc are listed later in this section.
Sample Output
MySQL table creation and population statements:
USE test;
CREATE TABLE fish (
id INT NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT,
name VARCHAR(20) NOT NULL,
length_mm INT NOT NULL,
weight_gm INT NOT NULL,
PRIMARY KEY pk (id),
UNIQUE KEY uk (name)
) ENGINE=NDB;
INSERT INTO fish VALUES
(NULL, 'guppy', 35, 2), (NULL, 'tuna', 2500, 150000),
(NULL, 'shark', 3000, 110000), (NULL, 'manta ray', 1500, 50000),
(NULL, 'grouper', 900, 125000), (NULL ,'puffer', 250, 2500);
Output from ndb_desc:
$> ./ndb_desc -c localhost fish -d test -p
-- fish --
Version: 2
Fragment type: HashMapPartition
K Value: 6
Min load factor: 78
Max load factor: 80
Temporary table: no
Number of attributes: 4
Number of primary keys: 1
Length of frm data: 337
Max Rows: 0
Row Checksum: 1
Row GCI: 1
SingleUserMode: 0
ForceVarPart: 1
PartitionCount: 2
FragmentCount: 2
PartitionBalance: FOR_RP_BY_LDM
ExtraRowGciBits: 0
ExtraRowAuthorBits: 0
TableStatus: Retrieved
Table options:
HashMap: DEFAULT-HASHMAP-3840-2
-- Attributes --
id Int PRIMARY KEY DISTRIBUTION KEY AT=FIXED ST=MEMORY AUTO_INCR
name Varchar(20;latin1_swedish_ci) NOT NULL AT=SHORT_VAR ST=MEMORY DYNAMIC
length_mm Int NOT NULL AT=FIXED ST=MEMORY DYNAMIC
weight_gm Int NOT NULL AT=FIXED ST=MEMORY DYNAMIC
-- Indexes --
PRIMARY KEY(id) - UniqueHashIndex
PRIMARY(id) - OrderedIndex
uk(name) - OrderedIndex
uk$unique(name) - UniqueHashIndex
-- Per partition info --
Partition Row count Commit count Frag fixed memory Frag varsized memory Extent_space Free extent_space
0 2 2 32768 32768 0 0
1 4 4 32768 32768 0 0
Information about multiple tables can be obtained in a single invocation of ndb_desc by using their names, separated by spaces. All of the tables must be in the same database.
You can obtain additional information about a specific index using the --table
(short form:-t
) option and supplying the name of the index as the first argument to ndb_desc, as shown here:
$> ./ndb_desc uk -d test -t fish
-- uk --
Version: 2
Base table: fish
Number of attributes: 1
Logging: 0
Index type: OrderedIndex
Index status: Retrieved
-- Attributes --
name Varchar(20;latin1_swedish_ci) NOT NULL AT=SHORT_VAR ST=MEMORY
-- IndexTable 10/uk --
Version: 2
Fragment type: FragUndefined
K Value: 6
Min load factor: 78
Max load factor: 80
Temporary table: yes
Number of attributes: 2
Number of primary keys: 1
Length of frm data: 0
Max Rows: 0
Row Checksum: 1
Row GCI: 1
SingleUserMode: 2
ForceVarPart: 0
PartitionCount: 2
FragmentCount: 2
FragmentCountType: ONE_PER_LDM_PER_NODE
ExtraRowGciBits: 0
ExtraRowAuthorBits: 0
TableStatus: Retrieved
Table options:
-- Attributes --
name Varchar(20;latin1_swedish_ci) NOT NULL AT=SHORT_VAR ST=MEMORY
NDB$TNODE Unsigned [64] PRIMARY KEY DISTRIBUTION KEY AT=FIXED ST=MEMORY
-- Indexes --
PRIMARY KEY(NDB$TNODE) - UniqueHashIndex
When an index is specified in this way, the--extra-partition-info and--extra-node-info options have no effect.
The Version
column in the output contains the table's schema object version. For information about interpreting this value, seeNDB Schema Object Versions.
Three of the table properties that can be set usingNDB_TABLE
comments embedded inCREATE TABLE andALTER TABLE statements are also visible in ndb_desc output. The table'sFRAGMENT_COUNT_TYPE
is always shown in theFragmentCountType
column.READ_ONLY
andFULLY_REPLICATED
, if set to 1, are shown in the Table options
column. You can see this after executing the following ALTER TABLE statement in the mysql client:
mysql> ALTER TABLE fish COMMENT='NDB_TABLE=READ_ONLY=1,FULLY_REPLICATED=1';
1 row in set, 1 warning (0.00 sec)
mysql> SHOW WARNINGS\G
+---------+------+---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
| Level | Code | Message |
+---------+------+---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
| Warning | 1296 | Got error 4503 'Table property is FRAGMENT_COUNT_TYPE=ONE_PER_LDM_PER_NODE but not in comment' from NDB |
+---------+------+---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
1 row in set (0.00 sec)
The warning is issued because READ_ONLY=1
requires that the table's fragment count type is (or be set to) ONE_PER_LDM_PER_NODE_GROUP
;NDB
sets this automatically in such cases. You can check that the ALTER TABLE
statement has the desired effect using SHOW CREATE TABLE:
mysql> SHOW CREATE TABLE fish\G
*************************** 1. row ***************************
Table: fish
Create Table: CREATE TABLE `fish` (
`id` int(11) NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT,
`name` varchar(20) NOT NULL,
`length_mm` int(11) NOT NULL,
`weight_gm` int(11) NOT NULL,
PRIMARY KEY (`id`),
UNIQUE KEY `uk` (`name`)
) ENGINE=ndbcluster DEFAULT CHARSET=utf8mb4 COLLATE=utf8mb4_0900_ai_ci
COMMENT='NDB_TABLE=READ_BACKUP=1,FULLY_REPLICATED=1'
1 row in set (0.01 sec)
Because FRAGMENT_COUNT_TYPE
was not set explicitly, its value is not shown in the comment text printed by SHOW CREATE TABLE
.ndb_desc, however, displays the updated value for this attribute. The Table options
column shows the binary properties just enabled. You can see this in the output shown here (emphasized text):
$> ./ndb_desc -c localhost fish -d test -p
-- fish --
Version: 4
Fragment type: HashMapPartition
K Value: 6
Min load factor: 78
Max load factor: 80
Temporary table: no
Number of attributes: 4
Number of primary keys: 1
Length of frm data: 380
Max Rows: 0
Row Checksum: 1
Row GCI: 1
SingleUserMode: 0
ForceVarPart: 1
PartitionCount: 1
FragmentCount: 1
FragmentCountType: ONE_PER_LDM_PER_NODE_GROUP
ExtraRowGciBits: 0
ExtraRowAuthorBits: 0
TableStatus: Retrieved
Table options: readbackup, fullyreplicated
HashMap: DEFAULT-HASHMAP-3840-1
-- Attributes --
id Int PRIMARY KEY DISTRIBUTION KEY AT=FIXED ST=MEMORY AUTO_INCR
name Varchar(20;latin1_swedish_ci) NOT NULL AT=SHORT_VAR ST=MEMORY DYNAMIC
length_mm Int NOT NULL AT=FIXED ST=MEMORY DYNAMIC
weight_gm Int NOT NULL AT=FIXED ST=MEMORY DYNAMIC
-- Indexes --
PRIMARY KEY(id) - UniqueHashIndex
PRIMARY(id) - OrderedIndex
uk(name) - OrderedIndex
uk$unique(name) - UniqueHashIndex
-- Per partition info --
Partition Row count Commit count Frag fixed memory Frag varsized memory Extent_space Free extent_space
For more information about these table properties, seeSection 15.1.20.12, “Setting NDB Comment Options”.
The Extent_space
and Free extent_space
columns are applicable only toNDB
tables having columns on disk; for tables having only in-memory columns, these columns always contain the value 0
.
To illustrate their use, we modify the previous example. First, we must create the necessary Disk Data objects, as shown here:
CREATE LOGFILE GROUP lg_1
ADD UNDOFILE 'undo_1.log'
INITIAL_SIZE 16M
UNDO_BUFFER_SIZE 2M
ENGINE NDB;
ALTER LOGFILE GROUP lg_1
ADD UNDOFILE 'undo_2.log'
INITIAL_SIZE 12M
ENGINE NDB;
CREATE TABLESPACE ts_1
ADD DATAFILE 'data_1.dat'
USE LOGFILE GROUP lg_1
INITIAL_SIZE 32M
ENGINE NDB;
ALTER TABLESPACE ts_1
ADD DATAFILE 'data_2.dat'
INITIAL_SIZE 48M
ENGINE NDB;
(For more information on the statements just shown and the objects created by them, seeSection 25.6.11.1, “NDB Cluster Disk Data Objects”, as well asSection 15.1.16, “CREATE LOGFILE GROUP Statement”, andSection 15.1.21, “CREATE TABLESPACE Statement”.)
Now we can create and populate a version of thefish
table that stores 2 of its columns on disk (deleting the previous version of the table first, if it already exists):
DROP TABLE IF EXISTS fish;
CREATE TABLE fish (
id INT NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT,
name VARCHAR(20) NOT NULL,
length_mm INT NOT NULL,
weight_gm INT NOT NULL,
PRIMARY KEY pk (id),
UNIQUE KEY uk (name)
) TABLESPACE ts_1 STORAGE DISK
ENGINE=NDB;
INSERT INTO fish VALUES
(NULL, 'guppy', 35, 2), (NULL, 'tuna', 2500, 150000),
(NULL, 'shark', 3000, 110000), (NULL, 'manta ray', 1500, 50000),
(NULL, 'grouper', 900, 125000), (NULL ,'puffer', 250, 2500);
When run against this version of the table,ndb_desc displays the following output:
$> ./ndb_desc -c localhost fish -d test -p
-- fish --
Version: 1
Fragment type: HashMapPartition
K Value: 6
Min load factor: 78
Max load factor: 80
Temporary table: no
Number of attributes: 4
Number of primary keys: 1
Length of frm data: 1001
Max Rows: 0
Row Checksum: 1
Row GCI: 1
SingleUserMode: 0
ForceVarPart: 1
PartitionCount: 2
FragmentCount: 2
PartitionBalance: FOR_RP_BY_LDM
ExtraRowGciBits: 0
ExtraRowAuthorBits: 0
TableStatus: Retrieved
Table options: readbackup
HashMap: DEFAULT-HASHMAP-3840-2
Tablespace id: 16
Tablespace: ts_1
-- Attributes --
id Int PRIMARY KEY DISTRIBUTION KEY AT=FIXED ST=MEMORY AUTO_INCR
name Varchar(80;utf8mb4_0900_ai_ci) NOT NULL AT=SHORT_VAR ST=MEMORY
length_mm Int NOT NULL AT=FIXED ST=DISK
weight_gm Int NOT NULL AT=FIXED ST=DISK
-- Indexes --
PRIMARY KEY(id) - UniqueHashIndex
PRIMARY(id) - OrderedIndex
uk(name) - OrderedIndex
uk$unique(name) - UniqueHashIndex
-- Per partition info --
Partition Row count Commit count Frag fixed memory Frag varsized memory Extent_space Free extent_space
0 2 2 32768 32768 1048576 1044440
1 4 4 32768 32768 1048576 1044400
This means that 1048576 bytes are allocated from the tablespace for this table on each partition, of which 1044440 bytes remain free for additional storage. In other words, 1048576 - 1044440 = 4136 bytes per partition is currently being used to store the data from this table's disk-based columns. The number of bytes shown as Free extent_space
is available for storing on-disk column data from the fish
table only; for this reason, it is not visible when selecting from the Information Schema FILES table.
Tablespace id
andTablespace
are also displayed for Disk Data tables.
For fully replicated tables, ndb_desc shows only the nodes holding primary partition fragment replicas; nodes with copy fragment replicas (only) are ignored. You can obtain such information, using the mysql client, from thetable_distribution_status,table_fragments,table_info, andtable_replicas tables in thendbinfo database.
All options that can be used with ndb_desc are shown in the following table. Additional descriptions follow the table.
- --auto-inc,
-a
Show the next value for a table'sAUTO_INCREMENT
column, if it has one. - --blob-info,
-b
Include information about subordinateBLOB andTEXT columns.
Use of this option also requires the use of the--extra-partition-info (-p
) option. - --character-sets-dir
Command-Line Format --character-sets-dir=path Directory containing character sets. - --connect-retries
Command-Line Format --connect-retries=# Type Integer Default Value 12 Minimum Value 0 Maximum Value 12 Number of times to retry connection before giving up. - --connect-retry-delay
Command-Line Format --connect-retry-delay=# Type Integer Default Value 5 Minimum Value 0 Maximum Value 5 Number of seconds to wait between attempts to contact management server. - --connect-string
Command-Line Format --connect-string=connection_string Type String Default Value [none] Same as--ndb-connectstring. - --context,
-x
Show additional contextual information for the table such as schema, database name, table name, and the table's internal ID. - --core-file
Command-Line Format --core-file Write core file on error; used in debugging. - --database=db_name,
-d
Specify the database in which the table should be found. - --defaults-extra-file
Command-Line Format --defaults-extra-file=path Type String Default Value [none] Read given file after global files are read. - --defaults-file
Command-Line Format --defaults-file=path Type String Default Value [none] Read default options from given file only. - --defaults-group-suffix
Command-Line Format --defaults-group-suffix=string Type String Default Value [none] Also read groups with concat(group, suffix). - --extra-node-info,
-n
Include information about the mappings between table partitions and the data nodes upon which they reside. This information can be useful for verifying distribution awareness mechanisms and supporting more efficient application access to the data stored in NDB Cluster.
Use of this option also requires the use of the--extra-partition-info (-p
) option. - --extra-partition-info,
-p
Print additional information about the table's partitions. - --help
Command-Line Format --help Display help text and exit. - --login-path
Command-Line Format --login-path=path Type String Default Value [none] Read given path from login file. - --no-login-paths
Command-Line Format --no-login-paths Skips reading options from the login path file. - --ndb-connectstring
Command-Line Format --ndb-connectstring=connection_string Type String Default Value [none] Set connect string for connecting tondb_mgmd. Syntax: [nodeid=_`id`_;][host=]_`hostname`_[:_`port`_]
. Overrides entries inNDB_CONNECTSTRING
andmy.cnf
. - --ndb-mgm-tls
Command-Line Format --ndb-mgm-tls=level Type Enumeration Default Value relaxed Valid Values relaxedstrict Sets the level of TLS support required to connect to the management server; one of relaxed
orstrict
.relaxed
(the default) means that a TLS connection is attempted, but success is not required;strict
means that TLS is required to connect. - --ndb-mgmd-host
Command-Line Format --ndb-mgmd-host=connection_string Type String Default Value [none] Same as--ndb-connectstring. - --ndb-nodeid
Command-Line Format --ndb-nodeid=# Type Integer Default Value [none] Set node ID for this node, overriding any ID set by--ndb-connectstring. - --ndb-optimized-node-selection
Command-Line Format --ndb-optimized-node-selection Enable optimizations for selection of nodes for transactions. Enabled by default; use --skip-ndb-optimized-node-selection
to disable. - --ndb-tls-search-path
Command-Line Format --ndb-tls-search-path=list Type Path name Default Value (Unix) $HOME/ndb-tls Default Value (Windows) $HOMEDIR/ndb-tls Specify a list of directories to search for a CA file. On Unix platforms, the directory names are separated by colons ( :
); on Windows systems, the semicolon character (;
) is used as the separator. A directory reference may be relative or absolute; it may contain one or more environment variables, each denoted by a prefixed dollar sign ($
), and expanded prior to use.Searching begins with the leftmost named directory and proceeds from left to right until a file is found. An empty string denotes an empty search path, which causes all searches to fail. A string consisting of a single dot ( .
) indicates that the search path limited to the current working directory.If no search path is supplied, the compiled-in default value is used. This value depends on the platform used: On Windows, this is \ndb-tls
; on other platforms (including Linux), it is$HOME/ndb-tls
. This can be overridden by compiling NDB Cluster using-DWITH_NDB_TLS_SEARCH_PATH. - --no-defaults
Command-Line Format --no-defaults Do not read default options from any option file other than login file. - --print-defaults
Command-Line Format --print-defaults Print program argument list and exit. - --retries=#,
-r
Try to connect this many times before giving up. One connect attempt is made per second. - --table=tbl_name,
-t
Specify the table in which to look for an index. - --unqualified,
-u
Use unqualified table names. - --usage
Command-Line Format --usage Display help text and exit; same as--help. - --version
Command-Line Format --version Display version information and exit.
Table indexes listed in the output are ordered by ID.