The MySQL server maintains many system variables that indicate how
it is configured. Each system variable has a default value. System
variables can be set at server startup using options on the
command line or in an option file. Most of them can be changed
dynamically while the server is running by means of the
SET
statement, which enables you to modify operation of the server
without having to stop and restart it. You can refer to system
variable values in expressions.
There are several ways to see the names and values of system variables:
To see the values that a server will use based on its compiled-in defaults and any option files that it reads, use this command:
mysqld --verbose --help
To see the values that a server will use based on its compiled-in defaults, ignoring the settings in any option files, use this command:
mysqld --no-defaults --verbose --help
To see the current values used by a running server, use the
SHOW VARIABLES
statement.
This section provides a description of each system variable. Variables with no version indicated are present in all MySQL 5.6 releases. For historical information concerning their implementation, please see http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.0/en/, and http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/4.1/en/.
The following table lists all available system variables.
Table 5.3 System Variable Summary
For additional system variable information, see these sections:
Section 5.1.5, “Using System Variables”, discusses the syntax for setting and displaying system variable values.
Section 5.1.5.2, “Dynamic System Variables”, lists the variables that can be set at runtime.
Information on tuning system variables can be found in Section 8.11.2, “Tuning Server Parameters”.
Section 14.12, “InnoDB Startup Options and System Variables”, lists
InnoDB
system variables.
Section 18.3.4.3, “MySQL Cluster System Variables”, lists system variables which are specific to MySQL Cluster.
For information on server system variables specific to replication, see Section 17.1.4, “Replication and Binary Logging Options and Variables”.
Some of the following variable descriptions refer to
“enabling” or “disabling” a variable.
These variables can be enabled with the
SET
statement by setting them to ON
or
1
, or disabled by setting them to
OFF
or 0
. However, before
MySQL 5.6.2, to set such a variable on the command line or in an
option file, you must set it to 1
or
0
; setting it to ON
or
OFF
will not work. For example, on the
command line, --delay_key_write=1
works but --delay_key_write=ON
does not. As of MySQL 5.6.2, boolean variables can be set at
startup to the values ON
,
TRUE
, OFF
, and
FALSE
(not case sensitive). See
Section 4.2.5, “Program Option Modifiers”.
Some system variables control the size of buffers or caches. For a given buffer, the server might need to allocate internal data structures. These structures typically are allocated from the total memory allocated to the buffer, and the amount of space required might be platform dependent. This means that when you assign a value to a system variable that controls a buffer size, the amount of space actually available might differ from the value assigned. In some cases, the amount might be less than the value assigned. It is also possible that the server will adjust a value upward. For example, if you assign a value of 0 to a variable for which the minimal value is 1024, the server will set the value to 1024.
Values for buffer sizes, lengths, and stack sizes are given in bytes unless otherwise specified.
Some system variables take file name values. Unless otherwise
specified, the default file location is the data directory if the
value is a relative path name. To specify the location explicitly,
use an absolute path name. Suppose that the data directory is
/var/mysql/data
. If a file-valued variable is
given as a relative path name, it will be located under
/var/mysql/data
. If the value is an absolute
path name, its location is as given by the path name.
authentication_windows_log_level
Introduced | 5.6.10 | ||
Command-Line Format | --authentication_windows_log_level | ||
Permitted Values | Type | integer | |
Default | 0 | ||
Min Value | 0 | ||
Max Value | 4 |
This variable is available only if the
authentication_windows
Windows
authentication plugin is enabled and debugging code is
enabled. See Section 6.3.8.6, “The Windows Native Authentication Plugin”.
This variable sets the logging level for the Windows authentication plugin. The following table shows the permitted values.
Value | Description |
---|---|
0 | No logging |
1 | Log only error messages |
2 | Log level 1 messages and warning messages |
3 | Log level 2 messages and information notes |
4 | Log level 3 messages and debug messages |
This variable was added in MySQL 5.6.10.
authentication_windows_use_principal_name
Introduced | 5.6.10 | ||
Command-Line Format | --authentication_windows_use_principal_name | ||
Permitted Values | Type | boolean | |
Default | ON |
This variable is available only if the
authentication_windows
Windows
authentication plugin is enabled. See
Section 6.3.8.6, “The Windows Native Authentication Plugin”.
A client that authenticates using the
InitSecurityContext()
function should
provide a string identifying the service to which it connects
(targetName
). MySQL uses the
principal name (UPN) of the account under which the server is
running. The UPN has the form
and need not be registered anywhere to be used. This UPN is
sent by the server at the beginning of authentication
handshake.
user_id
@computer_name
This variable controls whether the server sends the UPN in the
initial challenge. By default, the variable is enabled. For
security reasons, it can be disabled to avoid sending the
server's account name to a client in clear text. If the
variable is disabled, the server always sends a
0x00
byte in the first challenge, the
client does not specify targetName
,
and as a result, NTLM authentication is used.
If the server fails to obtain its UPN (which will happen primarily in environments that do not support Kerberos authentication), the UPN is not sent by the server and NTLM authentication is used.
This variable was added in MySQL 5.6.10.
Command-Line Format | --autocommit[=#] | ||
System Variable | Name | autocommit | |
Variable Scope | Global, Session | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | Type | boolean | |
Default | ON |
The autocommit mode. If set to 1, all changes to a table take
effect immediately. If set to 0, you must use
COMMIT
to accept a transaction
or ROLLBACK
to cancel it. If autocommit
is 0 and you change it to 1, MySQL performs an automatic
COMMIT
of any open transaction.
Another way to begin a transaction is to use a
START
TRANSACTION
or
BEGIN
statement. See Section 13.3.1, “START TRANSACTION, COMMIT, and ROLLBACK Syntax”.
By default, client connections begin with
autocommit
set to 1. To cause
clients to begin with a default of 0, set the global
autocommit
value by starting
the server with the
--autocommit=0
option. To set
the variable using an option file, include these lines:
[mysqld] autocommit=0
System Variable | Name | automatic_sp_privileges | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | Type | boolean | |
Default | TRUE |
When this variable has a value of 1 (the default), the server
automatically grants the
EXECUTE
and
ALTER ROUTINE
privileges to the
creator of a stored routine, if the user cannot already
execute and alter or drop the routine. (The
ALTER ROUTINE
privilege is
required to drop the routine.) The server also automatically
drops those privileges from the creator when the routine is
dropped. If
automatic_sp_privileges
is 0,
the server does not automatically add or drop these
privileges.
The creator of a routine is the account used to execute the
CREATE
statement for it. This might not be
the same as the account named as the
DEFINER
in the routine definition.
See also Section 20.2.2, “Stored Routines and MySQL Privileges”.
Introduced | 5.6.24 | ||
Deprecated | 5.6.24 | ||
Command-Line Format | --avoid_temporal_upgrade={OFF|ON} | ||
System Variable | Name | avoid_temporal_upgrade | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | Type | boolean | |
Default | OFF |
This variable controls whether ALTER
TABLE
implicitly upgrades temporal columns found to
be in pre-5.6.4 format (TIME
,
DATETIME
, and
TIMESTAMP
columns without
support for fractional seconds precision). Upgrading such
columns requires a table rebuild, which prevents any use of
fast alterations that might otherwise apply to the operation
to be performed.
This variable is disabled by default. Enabling it causes
ALTER TABLE
not to rebuild
temporal columns and thereby be able to take advantage of
possible fast alterations.
This variable was added in MySQL 5.6.24. It is deprecated and will be removed in a future MySQL release.
System Variable | Name | back_log | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | No | ||
Permitted Values (<= 5.6.5) | Type | integer | |
Default | 50 | ||
Min Value | 1 | ||
Max Value | 65535 | ||
Permitted Values (>= 5.6.6) | Type | integer | |
Default | -1 (autosized) | ||
Min Value | 1 | ||
Max Value | 65535 |
The number of outstanding connection requests MySQL can have.
This comes into play when the main MySQL thread gets very many
connection requests in a very short time. It then takes some
time (although very little) for the main thread to check the
connection and start a new thread. The
back_log
value indicates how
many requests can be stacked during this short time before
MySQL momentarily stops answering new requests. You need to
increase this only if you expect a large number of connections
in a short period of time.
In other words, this value is the size of the listen queue for
incoming TCP/IP connections. Your operating system has its own
limit on the size of this queue. The manual page for the Unix
listen()
system call should have more
details. Check your OS documentation for the maximum value for
this variable. back_log
cannot be set higher than your operating system limit.
As of MySQL 5.6.6, the default value is based on the following formula, capped to a limit of 900:
50 + (max_connections / 5)
Before 5.6.6, the default is 50.
Command-Line Format | --basedir=path | ||
System Variable | Name | basedir | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | No | ||
Permitted Values | Type | directory name |
The MySQL installation base directory. This variable can be
set with the --basedir
option.
Relative path names for other variables usually are resolved
relative to the base directory.
Command-Line Format | --big-tables | ||
System Variable | Name | big_tables | |
Variable Scope | Global, Session | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | Type | boolean | |
Default | OFF |
If set to 1, all temporary tables are stored on disk rather
than in memory. This is a little slower, but the error
The table
does not occur for
tbl_name
is
fullSELECT
operations that require
a large temporary table. The default value for a new
connection is 0 (use in-memory temporary tables). Normally,
you should never need to set this variable, because in-memory
tables are automatically converted to disk-based tables as
required.
Command-Line Format | --bind-address=addr | ||
System Variable (>= 5.6.1) | Name | bind_address | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | No | ||
Permitted Values (<= 5.6.5) | Type | string | |
Default | 0.0.0.0 | ||
Permitted Values (>= 5.6.6) | Type | string | |
Default | * |
The value of the --bind-address
option. This variable was added in MySQL 5.6.1.
Introduced | 5.6.17 | ||
Command-Line Format | --block_encryption_mode=# | ||
System Variable | Name | block_encryption_mode | |
Variable Scope | Global, Session | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | Type | string | |
Default | aes-128-ecb |
This variable controls the block encryption mode for
block-based algorithms such as AES. It affects encryption for
AES_ENCRYPT()
and
AES_DECRYPT()
.
block_encryption_mode
takes a
value in
aes-
format, where keylen
-mode
keylen
is the key
length in bits and mode
is the
encryption mode. The value is not case sensitive. Permitted
keylen
values are 128, 192, and
256. Permitted encryption modes depend on whether MySQL was
built using OpenSSL or yaSSL:
For OpenSSL, permitted mode
values are: ECB
,
CBC
, CFB1
,
CFB8
, CFB128
,
OFB
For yaSSL, permitted mode
values are: ECB
, CBC
For example, this statement causes the AES encryption functions to use a key length of 256 bits and the CBC mode:
SET block_encryption_mode = 'aes-256-cbc';
An error occurs for attempts to set
block_encryption_mode
to a
value containing an unsupported key length or a mode that the
SSL library does not support.
This variable was added in MySQL 5.6.17.
Command-Line Format | --bulk_insert_buffer_size=# | ||
System Variable | Name | bulk_insert_buffer_size | |
Variable Scope | Global, Session | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values (32-bit platforms) | Type | integer | |
Default | 8388608 | ||
Min Value | 0 | ||
Max Value | 4294967295 | ||
Permitted Values (64-bit platforms) | Type | integer | |
Default | 8388608 | ||
Min Value | 0 | ||
Max Value | 18446744073709551615 |
MyISAM
uses a special tree-like cache to
make bulk inserts faster for
INSERT ...
SELECT
, INSERT ... VALUES (...), (...),
...
, and
LOAD DATA
INFILE
when adding data to nonempty tables. This
variable limits the size of the cache tree in bytes per
thread. Setting it to 0 disables this optimization. The
default value is 8MB.
System Variable | Name | character_set_client | |
Variable Scope | Global, Session | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | Type | string |
The character set for statements that arrive from the client.
The session value of this variable is set using the character
set requested by the client when the client connects to the
server. (Many clients support a
--default-character-set
option to enable this
character set to be specified explicitly. See also
Section 10.1.4, “Connection Character Sets and Collations”.) The global value of the
variable is used to set the session value in cases when the
client-requested value is unknown or not available, or the
server is configured to ignore client requests:
The client is from a version of MySQL older than MySQL 4.1, and thus does not request a character set.
The client requests a character set not known to the
server. For example, a Japanese-enabled client requests
sjis
when connecting to a server not
configured with sjis
support.
mysqld was started with the
--skip-character-set-client-handshake
option, which causes it to ignore client character set
configuration. This reproduces MySQL 4.0 behavior and is
useful should you wish to upgrade the server without
upgrading all the clients.
ucs2
, utf16
,
utf16le
, and utf32
cannot be used as a client character set, which means that
they also do not work for SET NAMES
or
SET CHARACTER SET
.
System Variable | Name | character_set_connection | |
Variable Scope | Global, Session | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | Type | string |
The character set used for literals that do not have a character set introducer and for number-to-string conversion.
System Variable | Name | character_set_database | |
Variable Scope | Global, Session | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Footnote | This option is dynamic, but only the server should set this information. You should not set the value of this variable manually. | ||
Permitted Values | Type | string |
The character set used by the default database. The server
sets this variable whenever the default database changes. If
there is no default database, the variable has the same value
as character_set_server
.
Command-Line Format | --character-set-filesystem=name | ||
System Variable | Name | character_set_filesystem | |
Variable Scope | Global, Session | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | Type | string | |
Default | binary |
The file system character set. This variable is used to
interpret string literals that refer to file names, such as in
the LOAD DATA
INFILE
and
SELECT ... INTO
OUTFILE
statements and the
LOAD_FILE()
function. Such file
names are converted from
character_set_client
to
character_set_filesystem
before the file opening attempt occurs. The default value is
binary
, which means that no conversion
occurs. For systems on which multibyte file names are
permitted, a different value may be more appropriate. For
example, if the system represents file names using UTF-8, set
character_set_filesystem
to
'utf8'
.
System Variable | Name | character_set_results | |
Variable Scope | Global, Session | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | Type | string |
The character set used for returning query results such as result sets or error messages to the client.
Command-Line Format | --character-set-server | ||
System Variable | Name | character_set_server | |
Variable Scope | Global, Session | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | Type | string | |
Default | latin1 |
The server's default character set.
System Variable | Name | character_set_system | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | No | ||
Permitted Values | Type | string | |
Default | utf8 |
The character set used by the server for storing identifiers.
The value is always utf8
.
Command-Line Format | --character-sets-dir=path | ||
System Variable | Name | character_sets_dir | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | No | ||
Permitted Values | Type | directory name |
The directory where character sets are installed.
System Variable | Name | collation_connection | |
Variable Scope | Global, Session | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | Type | string |
The collation of the connection character set.
System Variable | Name | collation_database | |
Variable Scope | Global, Session | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Footnote | This option is dynamic, but only the server should set this information. You should not set the value of this variable manually. | ||
Permitted Values | Type | string |
The collation used by the default database. The server sets
this variable whenever the default database changes. If there
is no default database, the variable has the same value as
collation_server
.
Command-Line Format | --collation-server | ||
System Variable | Name | collation_server | |
Variable Scope | Global, Session | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | Type | string | |
Default | latin1_swedish_ci |
The server's default collation.
Command-Line Format | --completion_type=# | ||
System Variable | Name | completion_type | |
Variable Scope | Global, Session | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | Type | enumeration | |
Default | NO_CHAIN | ||
Valid Values | NO_CHAIN | ||
CHAIN | |||
RELEASE | |||
0 | |||
1 | |||
2 |
The transaction completion type. This variable can take the values shown in the following table. The variable can be assigned using either the name values or corresponding integer values.
Value | Description |
---|---|
NO_CHAIN (or 0) | COMMIT and
ROLLBACK
are unaffected. This is the default value. |
CHAIN (or 1) | COMMIT and
ROLLBACK
are equivalent to COMMIT AND CHAIN
and ROLLBACK AND CHAIN ,
respectively. (A new transaction starts immediately
with the same isolation level as the just-terminated
transaction.) |
RELEASE (or 2) | COMMIT and
ROLLBACK
are equivalent to COMMIT RELEASE
and ROLLBACK RELEASE , respectively.
(The server disconnects after terminating the
transaction.) |
completion_type
affects
transactions that begin with
START
TRANSACTION
or
BEGIN
and
end with COMMIT
or
ROLLBACK
. It
does not apply to implicit commits resulting from execution of
the statements listed in Section 13.3.3, “Statements That Cause an Implicit Commit”. It
also does not apply for
XA
COMMIT
,
XA
ROLLBACK
, or when
autocommit=1
.
Command-Line Format | --concurrent_insert[=#] | ||
System Variable | Name | concurrent_insert | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | Type | enumeration | |
Default | AUTO | ||
Valid Values | NEVER | ||
AUTO | |||
ALWAYS | |||
0 | |||
1 | |||
2 |
If AUTO
(the default), MySQL permits
INSERT
and
SELECT
statements to run
concurrently for MyISAM
tables that have no
free blocks in the middle of the data file. If you start
mysqld with
--skip-new
,
this variable is set to NEVER
.
This variable can take the values shown in the following table. The variable can be assigned using either the name values or corresponding integer values.
Value | Description |
---|---|
NEVER (or 0) | Disables concurrent inserts |
AUTO (or 1) | (Default) Enables concurrent insert for MyISAM tables
that do not have holes |
ALWAYS (or 2) | Enables concurrent inserts for all MyISAM tables,
even those that have holes. For a table with a hole,
new rows are inserted at the end of the table if it is
in use by another thread. Otherwise, MySQL acquires a
normal write lock and inserts the row into the hole. |
See also Section 8.10.3, “Concurrent Inserts”.
Command-Line Format | --connect_timeout=# | ||
System Variable | Name | connect_timeout | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | Type | integer | |
Default | 10 | ||
Min Value | 2 | ||
Max Value | 31536000 |
The number of seconds that the mysqld
server waits for a connect packet before responding with
Bad handshake
. The default value is 10
seconds.
Increasing the
connect_timeout
value might
help if clients frequently encounter errors of the form
Lost connection to MySQL server at
'
.
XXX
', system error:
errno
Introduced | 5.6.2 | ||
System Variable | Name | core_file | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | No | ||
Permitted Values | Type | boolean | |
Default | OFF |
Whether to write a core file if the server crashes. This
variable is set by the
--core-file
option. It was
added in MySQL 5.6.2.
Command-Line Format | --datadir=path | ||
System Variable | Name | datadir | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | No | ||
Permitted Values | Type | directory name |
The MySQL data directory. This variable can be set with the
--datadir
option.
This variable is unused. It is deprecated as of MySQL 5.6.7 and will be removed in a future MySQL release.
This variable is unused. It is deprecated as of MySQL 5.6.7 and will be removed in a future MySQL release.
Command-Line Format | --debug[=debug_options] | ||
System Variable | Name | debug | |
Variable Scope | Global, Session | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values (Unix) | Type | string | |
Default | d:t:i:o,/tmp/mysqld.trace | ||
Permitted Values (Windows) | Type | string | |
Default | d:t:i:O,\mysqld.trace |
This variable indicates the current debugging settings. It is
available only for servers built with debugging support. The
initial value comes from the value of instances of the
--debug
option given at server
startup. The global and session values may be set at runtime;
the SUPER
privilege is
required, even for the session value.
Assigning a value that begins with +
or
-
cause the value to added to or subtracted
from the current value:
mysql>SET debug = 'T';
mysql>SELECT @@debug;
+---------+ | @@debug | +---------+ | T | +---------+ mysql>SET debug = '+P';
mysql>SELECT @@debug;
+---------+ | @@debug | +---------+ | P:T | +---------+ mysql>SET debug = '-P';
mysql>SELECT @@debug;
+---------+ | @@debug | +---------+ | T | +---------+
For more information, see Section 24.4.3, “The DBUG Package”.
System Variable | Name | debug_sync | |
Variable Scope | Session | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | Type | string |
This variable is the user interface to the Debug Sync
facility. Use of Debug Sync requires that MySQL be configured
with the -DENABLE_DEBUG_SYNC=1
CMake option (see
Section 2.9.4, “MySQL Source-Configuration Options”). If Debug Sync
is not compiled in, this system variable is not available.
The global variable value is read only and indicates whether
the facility is enabled. By default, Debug Sync is disabled
and the value of debug_sync
is OFF
. If the server is started with
--debug-sync-timeout=
,
where N
N
is a timeout value greater
than 0, Debug Sync is enabled and the value of
debug_sync
is ON -
current signal
followed by the signal name. Also,
N
becomes the default timeout for
individual synchronization points.
The session value can be read by any user and will have the
same value as the global variable. The session value can be
set by users that have the
SUPER
privilege to control
synchronization points.
For a description of the Debug Sync facility and how to use synchronization points, see MySQL Internals: Test Synchronization.
Command-Line Format | --default-storage-engine=name | ||
System Variable | Name | default_storage_engine | |
Variable Scope | Global, Session | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | Type | enumeration | |
Default | InnoDB |
The default storage engine. As of MySQL 5.6.3, this variable
sets the storage engine for permanent tables only. To set the
storage engine for TEMPORARY
tables, set
the
default_tmp_storage_engine
system variable.
To see which storage engines are available and enabled, use
the SHOW ENGINES
statement or
query the INFORMATION_SCHEMA
ENGINES
table.
default_storage_engine
should
be used in preference to
storage_engine
, which is
deprecated.
If you disable the default storage engine at server startup,
you must set the default engine for both permanent and
TEMPORARY
tables to a different engine or
the server will not start.
Introduced | 5.6.3 | ||
Command-Line Format | --default_tmp_storage_engine=name | ||
System Variable | Name | default_tmp_storage_engine | |
Variable Scope | Global, Session | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | Type | enumeration | |
Default | InnoDB |
The default storage engine for TEMPORARY
tables (created with
CREATE TEMPORARY
TABLE
). To set the storage engine for permanent
tables, set the
default_storage_engine
system
variable.
If you disable the default storage engine at server startup,
you must set the default engine for both permanent and
TEMPORARY
tables to a different engine or
the server will not start.
default_tmp_storage_engine
was added in MySQL 5.6.3.
Command-Line Format | --default_week_format=# | ||
System Variable | Name | default_week_format | |
Variable Scope | Global, Session | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | Type | integer | |
Default | 0 | ||
Min Value | 0 | ||
Max Value | 7 |
The default mode value to use for the
WEEK()
function. See
Section 12.7, “Date and Time Functions”.
Command-Line Format | --delay-key-write[=name] | ||
System Variable | Name | delay_key_write | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | Type | enumeration | |
Default | ON | ||
Valid Values | ON | ||
OFF | |||
ALL |
This option applies only to MyISAM
tables.
It can have one of the following values to affect handling of
the DELAY_KEY_WRITE
table option that can
be used in CREATE TABLE
statements.
Option | Description |
---|---|
OFF | DELAY_KEY_WRITE is ignored. |
ON | MySQL honors any DELAY_KEY_WRITE option specified in
CREATE TABLE
statements. This is the default value. |
ALL | All new opened tables are treated as if they were created with the
DELAY_KEY_WRITE option enabled. |
If DELAY_KEY_WRITE
is enabled for a table,
the key buffer is not flushed for the table on every index
update, but only when the table is closed. This speeds up
writes on keys a lot, but if you use this feature, you should
add automatic checking of all MyISAM
tables
by starting the server with the
--myisam-recover-options
option
(for example,
--myisam-recover-options=BACKUP,FORCE
).
See Section 5.1.3, “Server Command Options”, and
Section 15.2.1, “MyISAM Startup Options”.
If you enable external locking with
--external-locking
, there is
no protection against index corruption for tables that use
delayed key writes.
Deprecated | 5.6.7 | ||
Command-Line Format | --delayed_insert_limit=# | ||
System Variable | Name | delayed_insert_limit | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values (32-bit platforms) | Type | integer | |
Default | 100 | ||
Min Value | 1 | ||
Max Value | 4294967295 | ||
Permitted Values (64-bit platforms) | Type | integer | |
Default | 100 | ||
Min Value | 1 | ||
Max Value | 18446744073709551615 |
After inserting
delayed_insert_limit
delayed
rows into a nontransactional table, the
INSERT DELAYED
handler thread
checks whether there are any
SELECT
statements pending. If
so, it permits them to execute before continuing to insert
delayed rows.
As of MySQL 5.6.7, this system variable is deprecated (because
DELAYED
inserts are deprecated), and will
be removed in a future release.
Deprecated | 5.6.7 | ||
Command-Line Format | --delayed_insert_timeout=# | ||
System Variable | Name | delayed_insert_timeout | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | Type | integer | |
Default | 300 |
How many seconds an INSERT
DELAYED
handler thread should wait for
INSERT
statements before
terminating.
As of MySQL 5.6.7, this system variable is deprecated (because
DELAYED
inserts are deprecated), and will
be removed in a future release.
Deprecated | 5.6.7 | ||
Command-Line Format | --delayed_queue_size=# | ||
System Variable | Name | delayed_queue_size | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values (32-bit platforms) | Type | integer | |
Default | 1000 | ||
Min Value | 1 | ||
Max Value | 4294967295 | ||
Permitted Values (64-bit platforms) | Type | integer | |
Default | 1000 | ||
Min Value | 1 | ||
Max Value | 18446744073709551615 |
This is a per-table limit on the number of rows to queue when
handling INSERT DELAYED
statements for nontransactional tables. If the queue becomes
full, any client that issues an INSERT
DELAYED
statement waits until there is room in the
queue again.
As of MySQL 5.6.7, this system variable is deprecated (because
DELAYED
inserts are deprecated), and will
be removed in a future release.
disconnect_on_expired_password
Introduced | 5.6.10 | ||
Command-Line Format | --disconnect_on_expired_password=# | ||
System Variable | Name | disconnect_on_expired_password | |
Variable Scope | Session | ||
Dynamic Variable | No | ||
Permitted Values | Type | boolean | |
Default | ON |
This variable controls how the server handles clients with expired passwords:
If the client indicates that it can handle expires
passwords, the value of
disconnect_on_expired_password
is irrelevant. The server permits the client to connect
but puts it in sandbox mode.
If the client does not indicate that it can handle expires
passwords, the server handles the client according to the
value of
disconnect_on_expired_password
:
If
disconnect_on_expired_password
:
is enabled, the server disconnects the client.
If
disconnect_on_expired_password
:
is disabled, the server permits the client to connect
but puts it in sandbox mode.
For more information about the interaction of client and server settings relating to expired-password handling, see Section 6.3.6, “Password Expiration and Sandbox Mode”.
This variable was added in MySQL 5.6.10.
Command-Line Format | --div_precision_increment=# | ||
System Variable | Name | div_precision_increment | |
Variable Scope | Global, Session | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | Type | integer | |
Default | 4 | ||
Min Value | 0 | ||
Max Value | 30 |
This variable indicates the number of digits by which to
increase the scale of the result of division operations
performed with the
/
operator.
The default value is 4. The minimum and maximum values are 0
and 30, respectively. The following example illustrates the
effect of increasing the default value.
mysql>SELECT 1/7;
+--------+ | 1/7 | +--------+ | 0.1429 | +--------+ mysql>SET div_precision_increment = 12;
mysql>SELECT 1/7;
+----------------+ | 1/7 | +----------------+ | 0.142857142857 | +----------------+
Deprecated | 5.5.3, by optimizer_switch | ||
Removed | 5.6.1 | ||
Command-Line Format | --engine-condition-pushdown | ||
System Variable | Name | engine_condition_pushdown | |
Variable Scope | Global, Session | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | Type | boolean | |
Default | ON |
This variable was removed in MySQL 5.6.1. Use the
engine_condition_pushdown
flag of the
optimizer_switch
variable
instead. See Section 8.8.5.2, “Controlling Switchable Optimizations”.
Introduced | 5.6.5 | ||
System Variable | Name | end_markers_in_json | |
Variable Scope | Global, Session | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | Type | boolean | |
Default | OFF |
Whether optimizer JSON output should add end markers.
Introduced | 5.6.5 | ||
System Variable | Name | eq_range_index_dive_limit | |
Variable Scope | Global, Session | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | Type | integer | |
Default | 10 | ||
Min Value | 0 | ||
Max Value | 4294967295 |
This variable indicates the number of equality ranges in an
equality comparison condition when the optimizer should switch
from using index dives to index statistics in estimating the
number of qualifying rows. It applies to evaluation of
expressions that have either of these equivalent forms, where
the optimizer uses a nonunique index to look up
col_name
values:
col_name
IN(val1
, ...,valN
)col_name
=val1
OR ... ORcol_name
=valN
In both cases, the expression contains
N
equality ranges. The optimizer
can make row estimates using index dives or index statistics.
If eq_range_index_dive_limit
is greater than 0, the optimizer uses existing index
statistics instead of index dives if there are
eq_range_index_dive_limit
or
more equality ranges. Thus, to permit use of index dives for
up to N
equality ranges, set
eq_range_index_dive_limit
to
N
+ 1. Set
eq_range_index_dive_limit
to
0 to disable use of index statistics and always use index
dives regardless of N
.
For more information, see Section 8.2.1.3.3, “Equality Range Optimization of Many-Valued Comparisons”.
This variable was added in MySQL 5.6.5. Before 5.6.5, the optimizer makes row estimates using index dives in all cases.
To update table index statistics for best estimates, use
ANALYZE TABLE
.
The number of errors that resulted from the last statement that generated messages. This variable is read only. See Section 13.7.5.18, “SHOW ERRORS Syntax”.
Command-Line Format | --event-scheduler[=value] | ||
System Variable | Name | event_scheduler | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | Type | enumeration | |
Default | OFF | ||
Valid Values | ON | ||
OFF | |||
DISABLED |
This variable indicates the status of the Event Scheduler;
possible values are ON
,
OFF
, and DISABLED
, with
the default being OFF
. This variable and
its effects on the Event Scheduler's operation are discussed
in greater detail in the
Overview section
of the Events chapter.
Command-Line Format | --expire_logs_days=# | ||
System Variable | Name | expire_logs_days | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | Type | integer | |
Default | 0 | ||
Min Value | 0 | ||
Max Value | 99 |
The number of days for automatic binary log file removal. The default is 0, which means “no automatic removal.” Possible removals happen at startup and when the binary log is flushed. Log flushing occurs as indicated in Section 5.2, “MySQL Server Logs”.
To remove binary log files manually, use the
PURGE BINARY LOGS
statement.
See Section 13.4.1.1, “PURGE BINARY LOGS Syntax”.
explicit_defaults_for_timestamp
Introduced | 5.6.6 | ||
Deprecated | 5.6.6 | ||
Command-Line Format | --explicit_defaults_for_timestamp=# | ||
System Variable | Name | explicit_defaults_for_timestamp | |
Variable Scope | Session | ||
Dynamic Variable | No | ||
Permitted Values | Type | boolean | |
Default | FALSE |
In MySQL, the TIMESTAMP
data
type differs in nonstandard ways from other data types:
TIMESTAMP
columns not
explicitly declared with the NULL
attribute are assigned the NOT NULL
attribute. (Columns of other data types, if not explicitly
declared as NOT NULL
, permit
NULL
values.) Setting such a column to
NULL
sets it to the current timestamp.
The first TIMESTAMP
column
in a table, if not declared with the
NULL
attribute or an explicit
DEFAULT
or ON UPDATE
clause, is automatically assigned the DEFAULT
CURRENT_TIMESTAMP
and ON UPDATE
CURRENT_TIMESTAMP
attributes.
TIMESTAMP
columns following
the first one, if not declared with the
NULL
attribute or an explicit
DEFAULT
clause, are automatically
assigned DEFAULT '0000-00-00 00:00:00'
(the “zero” timestamp). For inserted rows
that specify no explicit value for such a column, the
column is assigned '0000-00-00
00:00:00'
and no warning occurs.
Those nonstandard behaviors remain the default for
TIMESTAMP
but as of MySQL 5.6.6
are deprecated and this warning appears at startup:
[Warning] TIMESTAMP with implicit DEFAULT value is deprecated. Please use --explicit_defaults_for_timestamp server option (see documentation for more details).
As indicated by the warning, to turn off the nonstandard
behaviors, enable the
explicit_defaults_for_timestamp
system variable at server startup. With this variable enabled,
the server handles TIMESTAMP
as
follows instead:
TIMESTAMP
columns not
explicitly declared as NOT NULL
permit
NULL
values. Setting such a column to
NULL
sets it to
NULL
, not the current timestamp.
No TIMESTAMP
column is
assigned the DEFAULT CURRENT_TIMESTAMP
or ON UPDATE CURRENT_TIMESTAMP
attributes automatically. Those attributes must be
explicitly specified.
TIMESTAMP
columns declared
as NOT NULL
and without an explicit
DEFAULT
clause are treated as having no
default value. For inserted rows that specify no explicit
value for such a column, the result depends on the SQL
mode. If strict SQL mode is enabled, an error occurs. If
strict SQL mode is not enabled, the column is assigned the
implicit default of '0000-00-00
00:00:00'
and a warning occurs. This is similar
to how MySQL treats other temporal types such as
DATETIME
.
explicit_defaults_for_timestamp
is itself deprecated because its only purpose is to permit
control over now-deprecated
TIMESTAMP
behaviors that will
be removed in a future MySQL release. When that removal
occurs,
explicit_defaults_for_timestamp
will have no purpose and will be removed as well.
This variable was added in MySQL 5.6.6.
System Variable | Name | external_user | |
Variable Scope | Session | ||
Dynamic Variable | No | ||
Permitted Values | Type | string |
The external user name used during the authentication process,
as set by the plugin used to authenticate the client. With
native (built-in) MySQL authentication, or if the plugin does
not set the value, this variable is NULL
.
See Section 6.3.9, “Proxy Users”.
Command-Line Format | --flush | ||
System Variable | Name | flush | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | Type | boolean | |
Default | OFF |
If ON
, the server flushes (synchronizes)
all changes to disk after each SQL statement. Normally, MySQL
does a write of all changes to disk only after each SQL
statement and lets the operating system handle the
synchronizing to disk. See Section B.5.4.2, “What to Do If MySQL Keeps Crashing”. This
variable is set to ON
if you start
mysqld with the
--flush
option.
Command-Line Format | --flush_time=# | ||
System Variable | Name | flush_time | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | Type | integer | |
Default | 0 | ||
Min Value | 0 | ||
Permitted Values (Windows, <= 5.6.5) | Type | integer | |
Default | 1800 | ||
Min Value | 0 | ||
Permitted Values (Windows, >= 5.6.6) | Type | integer | |
Default | 0 | ||
Min Value | 0 |
If this is set to a nonzero value, all tables are closed every
flush_time
seconds to free up
resources and synchronize unflushed data to disk. This option
is best used only on systems with minimal resources. The
default is 0 except that before MySQL 5.6.6, the default is
1800 on Windows.
If set to 1 (the default), foreign key constraints for
InnoDB
tables are checked. If set to 0,
foreign key constraints are ignored, with a couple of
exceptions. When re-creating a table that was dropped, an
error is returned if the table definition does not conform to
the foreign key constraints referencing the table. Likewise,
an ALTER TABLE
operation
returns an error if a foreign key definition is incorrectly
formed. For more information, see
Section 13.1.17.2, “Using FOREIGN KEY Constraints”.
Beginning with MySQL Cluster NDB 7.3.2, setting this variable
has the same effect on NDB
tables
as it does for InnoDB
tables—previously, the setting was ignored and all such
checks were enforced (Bug #14095855). Typically you leave this
setting enabled during normal operation, to enforce
referential
integrity.
Disabling foreign key checking can be useful for reloading such tables in an order different from that required by their parent/child relationships. See Section 14.6.6, “InnoDB and FOREIGN KEY Constraints”.
Setting foreign_key_checks
to 0 also
affects data definition statements:
DROP
SCHEMA
drops a schema even if it contains tables
that have foreign keys that are referred to by tables outside
the schema, and DROP TABLE
drops tables that have foreign keys that are referred to by
other tables.
Setting foreign_key_checks
to 1 does not
trigger a scan of the existing table data. Therefore, rows
added to the table while
foreign_key_checks = 0
will
not be verified for consistency.
Command-Line Format | --ft_boolean_syntax=name | ||
System Variable | Name | ft_boolean_syntax | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | Type | string | |
Default | + -><()~*:""&| |
The list of operators supported by boolean full-text searches
performed using IN BOOLEAN MODE
. See
Section 12.9.2, “Boolean Full-Text Searches”.
The default variable value is
'+ -><()~*:""&|'
. The rules
for changing the value are as follows:
Operator function is determined by position within the string.
The replacement value must be 14 characters.
Each character must be an ASCII nonalphanumeric character.
Either the first or second character must be a space.
No duplicates are permitted except the phrase quoting operators in positions 11 and 12. These two characters are not required to be the same, but they are the only two that may be.
Positions 10, 13, and 14 (which by default are set to
“:
”,
“&
”, and
“|
”) are reserved for
future extensions.
Command-Line Format | --ft_max_word_len=# | ||
System Variable | Name | ft_max_word_len | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | No | ||
Permitted Values | Type | integer | |
Min Value | 10 |
The maximum length of the word to be included in a
MyISAM
FULLTEXT
index.
FULLTEXT
indexes on
MyISAM
tables must be rebuilt after
changing this variable. Use REPAIR TABLE
.
tbl_name
QUICK
Command-Line Format | --ft_min_word_len=# | ||
System Variable | Name | ft_min_word_len | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | No | ||
Permitted Values | Type | integer | |
Default | 4 | ||
Min Value | 1 |
The minimum length of the word to be included in a
MyISAM
FULLTEXT
index.
FULLTEXT
indexes on
MyISAM
tables must be rebuilt after
changing this variable. Use REPAIR TABLE
.
tbl_name
QUICK
Command-Line Format | --ft_query_expansion_limit=# | ||
System Variable | Name | ft_query_expansion_limit | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | No | ||
Permitted Values | Type | integer | |
Default | 20 | ||
Min Value | 0 | ||
Max Value | 1000 |
The number of top matches to use for full-text searches
performed using WITH QUERY EXPANSION
.
Command-Line Format | --ft_stopword_file=file_name | ||
System Variable | Name | ft_stopword_file | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | No | ||
Permitted Values | Type | file name |
The file from which to read the list of stopwords for
full-text searches on MyISAM
tables. The
server looks for the file in the data directory unless an
absolute path name is given to specify a different directory.
All the words from the file are used; comments are
not honored. By default, a built-in list
of stopwords is used (as defined in the
storage/myisam/ft_static.c
file). Setting
this variable to the empty string (''
)
disables stopword filtering. See also
Section 12.9.4, “Full-Text Stopwords”.
FULLTEXT
indexes on
MyISAM
tables must be rebuilt after
changing this variable or the contents of the stopword file.
Use REPAIR TABLE
.
tbl_name
QUICK
Command-Line Format | --general-log | ||
System Variable | Name | general_log | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | Type | boolean | |
Default | OFF |
Whether the general query log is enabled. The value can be 0
(or OFF
) to disable the log or 1 (or
ON
) to enable the log. The default value
depends on whether the
--general_log
option is given.
The destination for log output is controlled by the
log_output
system variable;
if that value is NONE
, no log entries are
written even if the log is enabled.
Command-Line Format | --general-log-file=file_name | ||
System Variable | Name | general_log_file | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | Type | file name | |
Default | host_name.log |
The name of the general query log file. The default value is
,
but the initial value can be changed with the
host_name
.log--general_log_file
option.
Command-Line Format | --group_concat_max_len=# | ||
System Variable | Name | group_concat_max_len | |
Variable Scope | Global, Session | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values (32-bit platforms) | Type | integer | |
Default | 1024 | ||
Min Value | 4 | ||
Max Value | 4294967295 | ||
Permitted Values (64-bit platforms) | Type | integer | |
Default | 1024 | ||
Min Value | 4 | ||
Max Value | 18446744073709551615 |
The maximum permitted result length in bytes for the
GROUP_CONCAT()
function. The
default is 1024.
YES
if the zlib
compression library is available to the server,
NO
if not. If not, the
COMPRESS()
and
UNCOMPRESS()
functions cannot
be used.
YES
if the crypt()
system call is available to the server, NO
if not. If not, the ENCRYPT()
function cannot be used.
YES
if mysqld supports
CSV
tables, NO
if not.
This variable was removed in MySQL 5.6.1. Use
SHOW ENGINES
instead.
YES
if mysqld supports
dynamic loading of plugins, NO
if not.
YES
if the server supports spatial data
types, NO
if not.
YES
if mysqld supports
InnoDB
tables. DISABLED
if
--skip-innodb
is used.
This variable was removed in MySQL 5.6.1. Use
SHOW ENGINES
instead.
This variable is an alias for
have_ssl
.
YES
if mysqld supports
partitioning.
This variable was removed in MySQL 5.6.1. Use
SHOW PLUGINS
instead. For more
information, see Chapter 19, Partitioning.
YES
if statement profiling capability is
present, NO
if not. If present, the
profiling
system variable controls whether
this capability is enabled or disabled. See
Section 13.7.5.32, “SHOW PROFILES Syntax”.
This variable is deprecated in MySQL 5.6.8 and will be removed in a future MySQL release.
YES
if mysqld supports
the query cache, NO
if not.
YES
if RTREE
indexes are
available, NO
if not. (These are used for
spatial indexes in MyISAM
tables.)
YES
if mysqld supports
SSL connections, NO
if not.
DISABLED
indicates that the server was
compiled with SSL support, but was not started with the
appropriate
--ssl-
options.
For more information, see
Section 6.3.10.2, “Building MySQL with SSL Support”.
xxx
YES
if symbolic link support is enabled,
NO
if not. This is required on Unix for
support of the DATA DIRECTORY
and
INDEX DIRECTORY
table options, and on
Windows for support of data directory symlinks. If the server
is started with the
--skip-symbolic-links
option, the value is DISABLED
.
Introduced | 5.6.5 | ||
System Variable | Name | host_cache_size | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values (<= 5.6.7) | Type | integer | |
Default | 128 | ||
Min Value | 0 | ||
Max Value | 65536 | ||
Permitted Values (>= 5.6.8) | Type | integer | |
Default | -1 (autosized) | ||
Min Value | 0 | ||
Max Value | 65536 |
The size of the internal host cache (see
Section 8.11.5.2, “DNS Lookup Optimization and the Host Cache”). Setting the size to 0 disables
the host cache. Changing the cache size at runtime implicitly
causes a FLUSH
HOSTS
operation to clear the host cache and truncate
the host_cache
table.
The default value is 128, plus 1 for a value of
max_connections
up to 500,
plus 1 for every increment of 20 over 500 in the
max_connections
value, capped
to a limit of 2000. Before MySQL 5.6.8, the default is 128.
Use of --skip-host-cache
is
similar to setting the
host_cache_size
system
variable to 0, but
host_cache_size
is more
flexible because it can also be used to resize, enable, or
disable the host cache at runtime, not just at server startup.
If you start the server with
--skip-host-cache
, that does
not prevent changes to the value of
host_cache_size
, but such
changes have no effect and the cache is not re-enabled even if
host_cache_size
is set larger
than 0.
This variable was added in MySQL 5.6.5.
System Variable | Name | hostname | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | No | ||
Permitted Values | Type | string |
The server sets this variable to the server host name at startup.
This variable is a synonym for the
last_insert_id
variable. It
exists for compatibility with other database systems. You can
read its value with SELECT @@identity
, and
set it using SET identity
.
Introduced | 5.6.3 | ||
System Variable | Name | ignore_db_dirs | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | No | ||
Permitted Values | Type | string |
A comma-separated list of names that are not considered as
database directories in the data directory. The value is set
from any instances of
--ignore-db-dir
given at server
startup.
This variable was added in MySQL 5.6.3.
Command-Line Format | --init-connect=name | ||
System Variable | Name | init_connect | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | Type | string |
A string to be executed by the server for each client that
connects. The string consists of one or more SQL statements,
separated by semicolon characters. For example, each client
session begins by default with autocommit mode enabled. For
older servers (before MySQL 5.5.8), there is no global
autocommit
system variable to
specify that autocommit should be disabled by default, but as
a workaround init_connect
can
be used to achieve the same effect:
SET GLOBAL init_connect='SET autocommit=0';
The init_connect
variable can
also be set on the command line or in an option file. To set
the variable as just shown using an option file, include these
lines:
[mysqld] init_connect='SET autocommit=0'
The content of init_connect
is not executed for users that have the
SUPER
privilege. This is done
so that an erroneous value for
init_connect
does not prevent
all clients from connecting. For example, the value might
contain a statement that has a syntax error, thus causing
client connections to fail. Not executing
init_connect
for users that
have the SUPER
privilege
enables them to open a connection and fix the
init_connect
value.
Command-Line Format | --init-file=file_name | ||
System Variable | Name | init_file | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | No | ||
Permitted Values | Type | file name |
The name of the file specified with the
--init-file
option when you
start the server. This should be a file containing SQL
statements that you want the server to execute when it starts.
Each statement must be on a single line and should not include
comments. No statement terminator such as
;
, \g
, or
\G
should be given at the end of each
statement.
innodb_
xxx
InnoDB
system variables are
listed in Section 14.12, “InnoDB Startup Options and System Variables”. These variables
control many aspects of storage, memory use, and I/O patterns
for InnoDB
tables, and are especially
important now that InnoDB is
the default storage engine.
The value to be used by the following
INSERT
or
ALTER TABLE
statement when
inserting an AUTO_INCREMENT
value. This is
mainly used with the binary log.
Command-Line Format | --interactive_timeout=# | ||
System Variable | Name | interactive_timeout | |
Variable Scope | Global, Session | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | Type | integer | |
Default | 28800 | ||
Min Value | 1 |
The number of seconds the server waits for activity on an
interactive connection before closing it. An interactive
client is defined as a client that uses the
CLIENT_INTERACTIVE
option to
mysql_real_connect()
. See also
wait_timeout
.
Command-Line Format | --join_buffer_size=# | ||
System Variable | Name | join_buffer_size | |
Variable Scope | Global, Session | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values (Windows, <= 5.6.5) | Type | integer | |
Default | 131072 | ||
Min Value | 128 | ||
Max Value | 4294967295 | ||
Permitted Values (Other, 32-bit platforms, <= 5.6.5) | Type | integer | |
Default | 131072 | ||
Min Value | 128 | ||
Max Value | 4294967295 | ||
Permitted Values (Other, 64-bit platforms, <= 5.6.5) | Type | integer | |
Default | 131072 | ||
Min Value | 128 | ||
Max Value | 18446744073709547520 | ||
Permitted Values (Windows, >= 5.6.6) | Type | integer | |
Default | 262144 | ||
Min Value | 128 | ||
Max Value | 4294967295 | ||
Permitted Values (Other, 32-bit platforms, >= 5.6.6) | Type | integer | |
Default | 262144 | ||
Min Value | 128 | ||
Max Value | 4294967295 | ||
Permitted Values (Other, 64-bit platforms, >= 5.6.6) | Type | integer | |
Default | 262144 | ||
Min Value | 128 | ||
Max Value | 18446744073709547520 |
The minimum size of the buffer that is used for plain index
scans, range index scans, and joins that do not use indexes
and thus perform full table scans. Normally, the best way to
get fast joins is to add indexes. Increase the value of
join_buffer_size
to get a
faster full join when adding indexes is not possible. One join
buffer is allocated for each full join between two tables. For
a complex join between several tables for which indexes are
not used, multiple join buffers might be necessary.
Unless Batched Key Access (BKA) is used, there is no gain from setting the buffer larger than required to hold each matching row, and all joins allocate at least the minimum size, so use caution in setting this variable to a large value globally. It is better to keep the global setting small and change to a larger setting only in sessions that are doing large joins. Memory allocation time can cause substantial performance drops if the global size is larger than needed by most queries that use it.
When BKA is used, the value of
join_buffer_size
defines how
large the batch of keys is in each request to the storage
engine. The larger the buffer, the more sequential access will
be to the right hand table of a join operation, which can
significantly improve performance.
The default is 256KB as of MySQL 5.6.6, 128KB before that. The
maximum permissible setting for
join_buffer_size
is
4GB–1. Larger values are permitted for 64-bit platforms
(except 64-bit Windows, for which large values are truncated
to 4GB–1 with a warning).
For additional information about join buffering, see Section 8.2.1.10, “Nested-Loop Join Algorithms”. For information about Batched Key Access, see Section 8.2.1.14, “Block Nested-Loop and Batched Key Access Joins”.
Command-Line Format | --keep_files_on_create=# | ||
System Variable | Name | keep_files_on_create | |
Variable Scope | Global, Session | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | Type | boolean | |
Default | OFF |
If a MyISAM
table is created with no
DATA DIRECTORY
option, the
.MYD
file is created in the database
directory. By default, if MyISAM
finds an
existing .MYD
file in this case, it
overwrites it. The same applies to .MYI
files for tables created with no INDEX
DIRECTORY
option. To suppress this behavior, set the
keep_files_on_create
variable
to ON
(1), in which case
MyISAM
will not overwrite existing files
and returns an error instead. The default value is
OFF
(0).
If a MyISAM
table is created with a
DATA DIRECTORY
or INDEX
DIRECTORY
option and an existing
.MYD
or .MYI
file is
found, MyISAM always returns an error. It will not overwrite a
file in the specified directory.
Command-Line Format | --key_buffer_size=# | ||
System Variable | Name | key_buffer_size | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values (32-bit platforms) | Type | integer | |
Default | 8388608 | ||
Min Value | 8 | ||
Max Value | 4294967295 | ||
Permitted Values (64-bit platforms) | Type | integer | |
Default | 8388608 | ||
Min Value | 8 | ||
Max Value | OS_PER_PROCESS_LIMIT |
Index blocks for MyISAM
tables are buffered
and are shared by all threads.
key_buffer_size
is the size
of the buffer used for index blocks. The key buffer is also
known as the key cache.
The maximum permissible setting for
key_buffer_size
is
4GB–1 on 32-bit platforms. Larger values are permitted
for 64-bit platforms. The effective maximum size might be
less, depending on your available physical RAM and per-process
RAM limits imposed by your operating system or hardware
platform. The value of this variable indicates the amount of
memory requested. Internally, the server allocates as much
memory as possible up to this amount, but the actual
allocation might be less.
You can increase the value to get better index handling for
all reads and multiple writes; on a system whose primary
function is to run MySQL using the
MyISAM
storage engine, 25% of the
machine's total memory is an acceptable value for this
variable. However, you should be aware that, if you make the
value too large (for example, more than 50% of the
machine's total memory), your system might start to page
and become extremely slow. This is because MySQL relies on the
operating system to perform file system caching for data
reads, so you must leave some room for the file system cache.
You should also consider the memory requirements of any other
storage engines that you may be using in addition to
MyISAM
.
For even more speed when writing many rows at the same time,
use LOCK TABLES
. See
Section 8.2.2.1, “Speed of INSERT Statements”.
You can check the performance of the key buffer by issuing a
SHOW STATUS
statement and
examining the
Key_read_requests
,
Key_reads
,
Key_write_requests
, and
Key_writes
status variables.
(See Section 13.7.5, “SHOW Syntax”.) The
Key_reads/Key_read_requests
ratio should
normally be less than 0.01. The
Key_writes/Key_write_requests
ratio is
usually near 1 if you are using mostly updates and deletes,
but might be much smaller if you tend to do updates that
affect many rows at the same time or if you are using the
DELAY_KEY_WRITE
table option.
The fraction of the key buffer in use can be determined using
key_buffer_size
in
conjunction with the
Key_blocks_unused
status
variable and the buffer block size, which is available from
the key_cache_block_size
system variable:
1 - ((Key_blocks_unused * key_cache_block_size) / key_buffer_size)
This value is an approximation because some space in the key buffer is allocated internally for administrative structures. Factors that influence the amount of overhead for these structures include block size and pointer size. As block size increases, the percentage of the key buffer lost to overhead tends to decrease. Larger blocks results in a smaller number of read operations (because more keys are obtained per read), but conversely an increase in reads of keys that are not examined (if not all keys in a block are relevant to a query).
It is possible to create multiple MyISAM
key caches. The size limit of 4GB applies to each cache
individually, not as a group. See
Section 8.9.2, “The MyISAM Key Cache”.
Command-Line Format | --key_cache_age_threshold=# | ||
System Variable | Name | key_cache_age_threshold | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values (32-bit platforms) | Type | integer | |
Default | 300 | ||
Min Value | 100 | ||
Max Value | 4294967295 | ||
Permitted Values (64-bit platforms) | Type | integer | |
Default | 300 | ||
Min Value | 100 | ||
Max Value | 18446744073709551615 |
This value controls the demotion of buffers from the hot sublist of a key cache to the warm sublist. Lower values cause demotion to happen more quickly. The minimum value is 100. The default value is 300. See Section 8.9.2, “The MyISAM Key Cache”.
Command-Line Format | --key_cache_block_size=# | ||
System Variable | Name | key_cache_block_size | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | Type | integer | |
Default | 1024 | ||
Min Value | 512 | ||
Max Value | 16384 |
The size in bytes of blocks in the key cache. The default value is 1024. See Section 8.9.2, “The MyISAM Key Cache”.
Command-Line Format | --key_cache_division_limit=# | ||
System Variable | Name | key_cache_division_limit | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | Type | integer | |
Default | 100 | ||
Min Value | 1 | ||
Max Value | 100 |
The division point between the hot and warm sublists of the key cache buffer list. The value is the percentage of the buffer list to use for the warm sublist. Permissible values range from 1 to 100. The default value is 100. See Section 8.9.2, “The MyISAM Key Cache”.
System Variable | Name | large_files_support | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | No |
Whether mysqld was compiled with options for large file support.
Command-Line Format | --large-pages | ||
System Variable | Name | large_pages | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | No | ||
Platform Specific | Linux | ||
Permitted Values (Linux) | Type | boolean | |
Default | FALSE |
Whether large page support is enabled (via the
--large-pages
option). See
Section 8.11.4.2, “Enabling Large Page Support”.
System Variable | Name | large_page_size | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | No | ||
Permitted Values (Linux) | Type | integer | |
Default | 0 |
If large page support is enabled, this shows the size of memory pages. Currently, large memory pages are supported only on Linux; on other platforms, the value of this variable is always 0. See Section 8.11.4.2, “Enabling Large Page Support”.
The value to be returned from
LAST_INSERT_ID()
. This is
stored in the binary log when you use
LAST_INSERT_ID()
in a statement
that updates a table. Setting this variable does not update
the value returned by the
mysql_insert_id()
C API
function.
Command-Line Format | --lc-messages=name | ||
System Variable | Name | lc_messages | |
Variable Scope | Global, Session | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | Type | string | |
Default | en_US |
The locale to use for error messages. The default is
en_US
. The server converts the argument to
a language name and combines it with the value of
lc_messages_dir
to produce
the location for the error message file. See
Section 10.2, “Setting the Error Message Language”.
Command-Line Format | --lc-messages-dir=dir_name | ||
System Variable | Name | lc_messages_dir | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | No | ||
Permitted Values | Type | directory name |
The directory where error messages are located. The server
uses the value together with the value of
lc_messages
to produce the
location for the error message file. See
Section 10.2, “Setting the Error Message Language”.
System Variable | Name | lc_time_names | |
Variable Scope | Global, Session | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | Type | string |
This variable specifies the locale that controls the language
used to display day and month names and abbreviations. This
variable affects the output from the
DATE_FORMAT()
,
DAYNAME()
and
MONTHNAME()
functions. Locale
names are POSIX-style values such as
'ja_JP'
or 'pt_BR'
. The
default value is 'en_US'
regardless of your
system's locale setting. For further information, see
Section 10.7, “MySQL Server Locale Support”.
System Variable | Name | license | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | No | ||
Permitted Values | Type | string | |
Default | GPL |
The type of license the server has.
System Variable | Name | local_infile | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | Type | boolean |
Whether LOCAL
is supported for
LOAD DATA
INFILE
statements. If this variable is disabled,
clients cannot use LOCAL
in
LOAD DATA
statements. See
Section 6.1.6, “Security Issues with LOAD DATA LOCAL”.
Command-Line Format | --lock_wait_timeout=# | ||
System Variable | Name | lock_wait_timeout | |
Variable Scope | Global, Session | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | Type | integer | |
Default | 31536000 | ||
Min Value | 1 | ||
Max Value | 31536000 |
This variable specifies the timeout in seconds for attempts to acquire metadata locks. The permissible values range from 1 to 31536000 (1 year). The default is 31536000.
This timeout applies to all statements that use metadata
locks. These include DML and DDL operations on tables, views,
stored procedures, and stored functions, as well as
LOCK TABLES
,
FLUSH TABLES WITH READ
LOCK
, and HANDLER
statements.
This timeout does not apply to implicit accesses to system
tables in the mysql
database, such as grant
tables modified by GRANT
or
REVOKE
statements or table
logging statements. The timeout does apply to system tables
accessed directly, such as with
SELECT
or
UPDATE
.
The timeout value applies separately for each metadata lock
attempt. A given statement can require more than one lock, so
it is possible for the statement to block for longer than the
lock_wait_timeout
value
before reporting a timeout error. When lock timeout occurs,
ER_LOCK_WAIT_TIMEOUT
is
reported.
lock_wait_timeout
does not
apply to delayed inserts, which always execute with a timeout
of 1 year. This is done to avoid unnecessary timeouts because
a session that issues a delayed insert receives no
notification of delayed insert timeouts.
System Variable | Name | locked_in_memory | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | No |
Deprecated | 5.1.29, by general-log | ||
Removed | 5.6.1 | ||
Command-Line Format | --log[=file_name] | ||
System Variable | Name | log | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | Type | file name |
This variable removed in MySQL 5.6.1. Use
general_log
instead.
log_bin_trust_function_creators
Command-Line Format | --log-bin-trust-function-creators | ||
System Variable | Name | log_bin_trust_function_creators | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | Type | boolean | |
Default | FALSE |
This variable applies when binary logging is enabled. It
controls whether stored function creators can be trusted not
to create stored functions that will cause unsafe events to be
written to the binary log. If set to 0 (the default), users
are not permitted to create or alter stored functions unless
they have the SUPER
privilege
in addition to the CREATE
ROUTINE
or ALTER
ROUTINE
privilege. A setting of 0 also enforces the
restriction that a function must be declared with the
DETERMINISTIC
characteristic, or with the
READS SQL DATA
or NO SQL
characteristic. If the variable is set to 1, MySQL does not
enforce these restrictions on stored function creation. This
variable also applies to trigger creation. See
Section 20.7, “Binary Logging of Stored Programs”.
Command-Line Format | --log-error[=file_name] | ||
System Variable | Name | log_error | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | No | ||
Permitted Values | Type | file name |
The location of the error log, or empty if the server is writing error message to the standard error output. See Section 5.2.2, “The Error Log”.
Command-Line Format | --log-output=name | ||
System Variable | Name | log_output | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | Type | set | |
Default | FILE | ||
Valid Values | TABLE | ||
FILE | |||
NONE |
The destination for general query log and slow query log
output. The value can be a comma-separated list of one or more
of the words TABLE
(log to tables),
FILE
(log to files), or
NONE
(do not log to tables or files). The
default value is FILE
.
NONE
, if present, takes precedence over any
other specifiers. If the value is NONE
log
entries are not written even if the logs are enabled. If the
logs are not enabled, no logging occurs even if the value of
log_output
is not
NONE
. For more information, see
Section 5.2.1, “Selecting General Query and Slow Query Log Output Destinations”.
Command-Line Format | --log-queries-not-using-indexes | ||
System Variable | Name | log_queries_not_using_indexes | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | Type | boolean | |
Default | OFF |
Whether queries that do not use indexes are logged to the slow query log. See Section 5.2.5, “The Slow Query Log”.
Introduced | 5.6.11 | ||
System Variable | Name | log_slow_admin_statements | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | Type | boolean | |
Default | OFF |
Include slow administrative statements in the statements
written to the slow query log. Administrative statements
include ALTER TABLE
,
ANALYZE TABLE
,
CHECK TABLE
,
CREATE INDEX
,
DROP INDEX
,
OPTIMIZE TABLE
, and
REPAIR TABLE
.
This variable was added in MySQL 5.6.11 as a replacement for
the --log-slow-admin-statements
option. The system variable can be set on the command line or
in option files the same way as the option, so there is no
need for any changes at server startup, but the system
variable also makes it possible to examine or set the value at
runtime.
Deprecated | 5.1.29, by slow-query-log | ||
Removed | 5.6.1 | ||
Command-Line Format | --log-slow-queries[=name] | ||
System Variable | Name | log_slow_queries | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | Type | boolean |
This variable was removed in MySQL 5.6.1. Use
slow_query_log
instead.
log_throttle_queries_not_using_indexes
Introduced | 5.6.5 | ||
System Variable | Name | log_throttle_queries_not_using_indexes | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | Type | integer | |
Default | 0 |
If
log_queries_not_using_indexes
is enabled, the
log_throttle_queries_not_using_indexes
variable limits the number of such queries per minute that can
be written to the slow query log. A value of 0 (the default)
means “no limit”. For more information, see
Section 5.2.5, “The Slow Query Log”.
This variable was added in MySQL 5.6.5.
Command-Line Format | --log-warnings[=#] | ||
System Variable (<= 5.6.3) | Name | log_warnings | |
Variable Scope | Global, Session | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
System Variable (>= 5.6.4) | Name | log_warnings | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values (32-bit platforms) | Type | integer | |
Default | 1 | ||
Min Value | 0 | ||
Max Value | 4294967295 | ||
Permitted Values (64-bit platforms) | Type | integer | |
Default | 1 | ||
Min Value | 0 | ||
Max Value | 18446744073709551615 |
Whether to produce additional warning messages to the error log. This variable is enabled (1) by default and can be disabled by setting it to 0. The server logs messages about statements that are unsafe for statement-based logging if the value is greater than 0. Aborted connections and access-denied errors for new connection attempts are logged if the value is greater than 1.
Command-Line Format | --long_query_time=# | ||
System Variable | Name | long_query_time | |
Variable Scope | Global, Session | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | Type | numeric | |
Default | 10 | ||
Min Value | 0 |
If a query takes longer than this many seconds, the server
increments the Slow_queries
status variable. If the slow query log is enabled, the query
is logged to the slow query log file. This value is measured
in real time, not CPU time, so a query that is under the
threshold on a lightly loaded system might be above the
threshold on a heavily loaded one. The minimum and default
values of long_query_time
are
0 and 10, respectively. The value can be specified to a
resolution of microseconds. For logging to a file, times are
written including the microseconds part. For logging to
tables, only integer times are written; the microseconds part
is ignored. See Section 5.2.5, “The Slow Query Log”.
Command-Line Format | --low-priority-updates | ||
System Variable | Name | low_priority_updates | |
Variable Scope | Global, Session | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | Type | boolean | |
Default | FALSE |
If set to 1
, all
INSERT
,
UPDATE
,
DELETE
, and LOCK TABLE
WRITE
statements wait until there is no pending
SELECT
or LOCK TABLE
READ
on the affected table. This affects only
storage engines that use only table-level locking (such as
MyISAM
, MEMORY
, and
MERGE
).
System Variable | Name | lower_case_file_system | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | No | ||
Permitted Values | Type | boolean |
This variable describes the case sensitivity of file names on
the file system where the data directory is located.
OFF
means file names are case sensitive,
ON
means they are not case sensitive. This
variable is read only because it reflects a file system
attribute and setting it would have no effect on the file
system.
Command-Line Format | --lower_case_table_names[=#] | ||
System Variable | Name | lower_case_table_names | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | No | ||
Permitted Values | Type | integer | |
Default | 0 | ||
Min Value | 0 | ||
Max Value | 2 |
If set to 0, table names are stored as specified and comparisons are case sensitive. If set to 1, table names are stored in lowercase on disk and comparisons are not case sensitive. If set to 2, table names are stored as given but compared in lowercase. This option also applies to database names and table aliases. For additional information, see Section 9.2.2, “Identifier Case Sensitivity”.
You should not set this variable to 0 if
you are running MySQL on a system that has case-insensitive
file names (such as Windows or OS X). If you set this variable
to 0 on such a system and access MyISAM
tablenames using different lettercases, index corruption may
result. On Windows the default value is 1. On OS X, the
default value is 2.
If you are using InnoDB
tables, you should
set this variable to 1 on all platforms to force names to be
converted to lowercase.
The setting of this variable in MySQL 5.6 affects the behavior of replication filtering options with regard to case sensitivity. This is a change from previous versions of MySQL. (Bug #51639) See Section 17.2.3, “How Servers Evaluate Replication Filtering Rules”, for more information.
In previous versions of MySQL, using different settings for
lower_case_table_names
on replication
masters and slaves could cause replication to fail when the
slave used a case-sensitive file system. This issue is
resolved in MySQL 5.6.1. For more information, see
Section 17.4.1.34, “Replication and Variables”.
Command-Line Format | --max_allowed_packet=# | ||
System Variable | Name | max_allowed_packet | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values (<= 5.6.5) | Type | integer | |
Default | 1048576 | ||
Min Value | 1024 | ||
Max Value | 1073741824 | ||
Permitted Values (>= 5.6.6) | Type | integer | |
Default | 4194304 | ||
Min Value | 1024 | ||
Max Value | 1073741824 |
The maximum size of one packet or any generated/intermediate
string, or any parameter sent by the
mysql_stmt_send_long_data()
C
API function. The default is 4MB as of MySQL 5.6.6, 1MB before
that.
The packet message buffer is initialized to
net_buffer_length
bytes, but
can grow up to
max_allowed_packet
bytes when
needed. This value by default is small, to catch large
(possibly incorrect) packets.
You must increase this value if you are using large
BLOB
columns or long strings.
It should be as big as the largest
BLOB
you want to use. The
protocol limit for
max_allowed_packet
is 1GB.
The value should be a multiple of 1024; nonmultiples are
rounded down to the nearest multiple.
When you change the message buffer size by changing the value
of the max_allowed_packet
variable, you should also change the buffer size on the client
side if your client program permits it. The default
max_allowed_packet
value
built in to the client library is 1GB, but individual client
programs might override this. For example,
mysql and mysqldump have
defaults of 16MB and 24MB, respectively. They also enable you
to change the client-side value by setting
max_allowed_packet
on the
command line or in an option file.
The session value of this variable is read only.
Command-Line Format | --max_connect_errors=# | ||
System Variable | Name | max_connect_errors | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values (32-bit platforms, <= 5.6.5) | Type | integer | |
Default | 10 | ||
Min Value | 1 | ||
Max Value | 4294967295 | ||
Permitted Values (64-bit platforms, <= 5.6.5) | Type | integer | |
Default | 10 | ||
Min Value | 1 | ||
Max Value | 18446744073709551615 | ||
Permitted Values (32-bit platforms, >= 5.6.6) | Type | integer | |
Default | 100 | ||
Min Value | 1 | ||
Max Value | 4294967295 | ||
Permitted Values (64-bit platforms, >= 5.6.6) | Type | integer | |
Default | 100 | ||
Min Value | 1 | ||
Max Value | 18446744073709551615 |
If more than this many successive connection requests from a
host are interrupted without a successful connection, the
server blocks that host from further connections. You can
unblock blocked hosts by flushing the host cache. To do so,
issue a FLUSH
HOSTS
statement or execute a mysqladmin
flush-hosts command. If a connection is established
successfully within fewer than
max_connect_errors
attempts
after a previous connection was interrupted, the error count
for the host is cleared to zero. However, once a host is
blocked, flushing the host cache is the only way to unblock
it. The default is 100 as of MySQL 5.6.6, 10 before that.
Command-Line Format | --max_connections=# | ||
System Variable | Name | max_connections | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | Type | integer | |
Default | 151 | ||
Min Value | 1 | ||
Max Value | 100000 |
The maximum permitted number of simultaneous client connections. By default, this is 151. See Section B.5.2.7, “Too many connections”, for more information.
Increasing this value increases the number of file descriptors
that mysqld requires. If the required
number of descriptors are not available, the server reduces
the value of max_connections
.
See Section 8.4.3.1, “How MySQL Opens and Closes Tables”, for comments on file
descriptor limits.
Connections refused because the
max_connections
limit is
reached increment the
Connection_errors_max_connections
status variable.
Deprecated | 5.6.7 | ||
Command-Line Format | --max_delayed_threads=# | ||
System Variable | Name | max_delayed_threads | |
Variable Scope | Global, Session | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | Type | integer | |
Default | 20 | ||
Min Value | 0 | ||
Max Value | 16384 |
Do not start more than this number of threads to handle
INSERT DELAYED
statements for
nontransactional tables. If you try to insert data into a new
table after all INSERT DELAYED
threads are in use, the row is inserted as if the
DELAYED
attribute was not specified. If you
set this to 0, MySQL never creates a thread to handle
DELAYED
rows; in effect, this disables
DELAYED
entirely.
For the SESSION
value of this variable, the
only valid values are 0 or the GLOBAL
value.
As of MySQL 5.6.7, this system variable is deprecated (because
DELAYED
inserts are deprecated), and will
be removed in a future release.
Introduced | 5.6.24 | ||
Command-Line Format | --max_digest_length=# | ||
System Variable | Name | max_digest_length | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | No | ||
Permitted Values | Type | integer | |
Default | 1024 | ||
Min Value | 0 | ||
Max Value | 1048576 |
The maximum number of bytes available for computing statement digests (see Section 22.7, “Performance Schema Statement Digests”). When this amount of space is used for computing the digest for a statement, no further tokens from the parsed statement are collected or figure into the digest value. Statements differing only after that many bytes of parsed statement tokens produce the same digest and are aggregated for digest statistics.
Decreasing the
max_digest_length
value
reduces memory use but causes the digest value of more
statements to become indistinguishable if they differ only at
the end. Increasing the value permits longer statements to be
distinguished but increases memory use, particularly for
workloads that involve large numbers of simultaneous sessions
(max_digest_length
bytes are
allocated per session).
This variable was added in MySQL 5.6.24.
Command-Line Format | --max_error_count=# | ||
System Variable | Name | max_error_count | |
Variable Scope | Global, Session | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | Type | integer | |
Default | 64 | ||
Min Value | 0 | ||
Max Value | 65535 |
The maximum number of error, warning, and note messages to be
stored for display by the SHOW
ERRORS
and SHOW
WARNINGS
statements. This is the same as the number
of condition areas in the diagnostics area, and thus the
number of conditions that can be inspected by
GET DIAGNOSTICS
.
Command-Line Format | --max_heap_table_size=# | ||
System Variable | Name | max_heap_table_size | |
Variable Scope | Global, Session | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values (32-bit platforms) | Type | integer | |
Default | 16777216 | ||
Min Value | 16384 | ||
Max Value | 4294967295 | ||
Permitted Values (64-bit platforms) | Type | integer | |
Default | 16777216 | ||
Min Value | 16384 | ||
Max Value | 1844674407370954752 |
This variable sets the maximum size to which user-created
MEMORY
tables are permitted to grow. The
value of the variable is used to calculate
MEMORY
table MAX_ROWS
values. Setting this variable has no effect on any existing
MEMORY
table, unless the table is
re-created with a statement such as
CREATE TABLE
or altered with
ALTER TABLE
or
TRUNCATE TABLE
. A server
restart also sets the maximum size of existing
MEMORY
tables to the global
max_heap_table_size
value.
This variable is also used in conjunction with
tmp_table_size
to limit the
size of internal in-memory tables. See
Section 8.4.4, “How MySQL Uses Internal Temporary Tables”.
max_heap_table_size
is not replicated. See
Section 17.4.1.21, “Replication and MEMORY Tables”, and
Section 17.4.1.34, “Replication and Variables”, for more
information.
Deprecated | 5.6.7 | ||
System Variable | Name | max_insert_delayed_threads | |
Variable Scope | Global, Session | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | Type | integer |
This variable is a synonym for
max_delayed_threads
.
As of MySQL 5.6.7, this system variable is deprecated (because
DELAYED
inserts are deprecated), and will
be removed in a future release.
Command-Line Format | --max_join_size=# | ||
System Variable | Name | max_join_size | |
Variable Scope | Global, Session | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | Type | integer | |
Default | 18446744073709551615 | ||
Min Value | 1 | ||
Max Value | 18446744073709551615 |
Do not permit statements that probably need to examine more
than max_join_size
rows (for
single-table statements) or row combinations (for
multiple-table statements) or that are likely to do more than
max_join_size
disk seeks. By
setting this value, you can catch statements where keys are
not used properly and that would probably take a long time.
Set it if your users tend to perform joins that lack a
WHERE
clause, that take a long time, or
that return millions of rows.
Setting this variable to a value other than
DEFAULT
resets the value of
sql_big_selects
to
0
. If you set the
sql_big_selects
value again,
the max_join_size
variable is
ignored.
If a query result is in the query cache, no result size check is performed, because the result has previously been computed and it does not burden the server to send it to the client.
Command-Line Format | --max_length_for_sort_data=# | ||
System Variable | Name | max_length_for_sort_data | |
Variable Scope | Global, Session | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | Type | integer | |
Default | 1024 | ||
Min Value | 4 | ||
Max Value | 8388608 |
The cutoff on the size of index values that determines which
filesort
algorithm to use. See
Section 8.2.1.15, “ORDER BY Optimization”.
Command-Line Format | --max_prepared_stmt_count=# | ||
System Variable | Name | max_prepared_stmt_count | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | Type | integer | |
Default | 16382 | ||
Min Value | 0 | ||
Max Value | 1048576 |
This variable limits the total number of prepared statements in the server. (The sum of the number of prepared statements across all sessions.) It can be used in environments where there is the potential for denial-of-service attacks based on running the server out of memory by preparing huge numbers of statements. If the value is set lower than the current number of prepared statements, existing statements are not affected and can be used, but no new statements can be prepared until the current number drops below the limit. The default value is 16,382. The permissible range of values is from 0 to 1 million. Setting the value to 0 disables prepared statements.
Command-Line Format | --max_relay_log_size=# | ||
System Variable | Name | max_relay_log_size | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | Type | integer | |
Default | 0 | ||
Min Value | 0 | ||
Max Value | 1073741824 |
If a write by a replication slave to its relay log causes the
current log file size to exceed the value of this variable,
the slave rotates the relay logs (closes the current file and
opens the next one). If
max_relay_log_size
is 0, the
server uses max_binlog_size
for both the binary log and the relay log. If
max_relay_log_size
is greater
than 0, it constrains the size of the relay log, which enables
you to have different sizes for the two logs. You must set
max_relay_log_size
to between
4096 bytes and 1GB (inclusive), or to 0. The default value is
0. See Section 17.2.1, “Replication Implementation Details”.
Command-Line Format | --max_seeks_for_key=# | ||
System Variable | Name | max_seeks_for_key | |
Variable Scope | Global, Session | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values (32-bit platforms) | Type | integer | |
Default | 4294967295 | ||
Min Value | 1 | ||
Max Value | 4294967295 | ||
Permitted Values (64-bit platforms) | Type | integer | |
Default | 18446744073709551615 | ||
Min Value | 1 | ||
Max Value | 18446744073709551615 |
Limit the assumed maximum number of seeks when looking up rows based on a key. The MySQL optimizer assumes that no more than this number of key seeks are required when searching for matching rows in a table by scanning an index, regardless of the actual cardinality of the index (see Section 13.7.5.23, “SHOW INDEX Syntax”). By setting this to a low value (say, 100), you can force MySQL to prefer indexes instead of table scans.
Command-Line Format | --max_sort_length=# | ||
System Variable | Name | max_sort_length | |
Variable Scope | Global, Session | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | Type | integer | |
Default | 1024 | ||
Min Value | 4 | ||
Max Value | 8388608 |
The number of bytes to use when sorting data values. Only the
first max_sort_length
bytes
of each value are used; the rest are ignored.
As of MySQL 5.6.9,
max_sort_length
is ignored
for integer, decimal, floating-point, and temporal data types.
Command-Line Format | --max_sp_recursion_depth[=#] | ||
System Variable | Name | max_sp_recursion_depth | |
Variable Scope | Global, Session | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | Type | integer | |
Default | 0 | ||
Max Value | 255 |
The number of times that any given stored procedure may be called recursively. The default value for this option is 0, which completely disables recursion in stored procedures. The maximum value is 255.
Stored procedure recursion increases the demand on thread
stack space. If you increase the value of
max_sp_recursion_depth
, it
may be necessary to increase thread stack size by increasing
the value of thread_stack
at
server startup.
This variable is unused. It is deprecated as of MySQL 5.6.7 and will be removed in a future MySQL release.
Command-Line Format | --max_user_connections=# | ||
System Variable | Name | max_user_connections | |
Variable Scope | Global, Session | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | Type | integer | |
Default | 0 | ||
Min Value | 0 | ||
Max Value | 4294967295 |
The maximum number of simultaneous connections permitted to any given MySQL user account. A value of 0 (the default) means “no limit.”
This variable has a global value that can be set at server startup or runtime. It also has a read-only session value that indicates the effective simultaneous-connection limit that applies to the account associated with the current session. The session value is initialized as follows:
If the user account has a nonzero
MAX_USER_CONNECTIONS
resource limit,
the session
max_user_connections
value is set to that limit.
Otherwise, the session
max_user_connections
value is set to the global value.
Account resource limits are specified using the
GRANT
statement. See
Section 6.3.4, “Setting Account Resource Limits”, and Section 13.7.1.4, “GRANT Syntax”.
Command-Line Format | --max_write_lock_count=# | ||
System Variable | Name | max_write_lock_count | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values (32-bit platforms) | Type | integer | |
Default | 4294967295 | ||
Min Value | 1 | ||
Max Value | 4294967295 | ||
Permitted Values (64-bit platforms) | Type | integer | |
Default | 18446744073709551615 | ||
Min Value | 1 | ||
Max Value | 18446744073709551615 |
After this many write locks, permit some pending read lock requests to be processed in between.
Introduced | 5.6.4 | ||
System Variable | Name | metadata_locks_cache_size | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | No | ||
Permitted Values | Type | integer | |
Default | 1024 | ||
Min Value | 1 | ||
Max Value | 1048576 |
The size of the metadata locks cache. The server uses this cache to avoid creation and destruction of synchronization objects. This is particularly helpful on systems where such operations are expensive, such as Windows XP. This variable was added in MySQL 5.6.4.
Introduced | 5.6.8 | ||
System Variable | Name | metadata_locks_hash_instances | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | No | ||
Permitted Values | Type | integer | |
Default | 8 | ||
Min Value | 1 | ||
Max Value | 1024 |
The set of metadata locks can be partitioned into separate
hashes to permit connections accessing different objects to
use different locking hashes and reduce contention. The
metadata_locks_hash_instances
system variable specifies the number of hashes (default 8).
This variable was added in MySQL 5.6.8.
Command-Line Format | --min-examined-row-limit=# | ||
System Variable | Name | min_examined_row_limit | |
Variable Scope | Global, Session | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values (32-bit platforms) | Type | integer | |
Default | 0 | ||
Min Value | 0 | ||
Max Value | 4294967295 | ||
Permitted Values (64-bit platforms) | Type | integer | |
Default | 0 | ||
Min Value | 0 | ||
Max Value | 18446744073709551615 |
Queries that examine fewer than this number of rows are not logged to the slow query log.
Command-Line Format | --multi_range_count=# | ||
System Variable | Name | multi_range_count | |
Variable Scope | Global, Session | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | Type | integer | |
Default | 256 | ||
Min Value | 1 | ||
Max Value | 4294967295 |
The maximum number of ranges to send to a table handler at
once during range selects. The default value is 256. Sending
multiple ranges to a handler at once can improve the
performance of certain selects dramatically. This is
especially true for the
NDBCLUSTER
table handler, which
needs to send the range requests to all nodes. Sending a batch
of those requests at once reduces communication costs
significantly.
This variable was removed in MySQL 5.6.7.
Command-Line Format | --myisam_data_pointer_size=# | ||
System Variable | Name | myisam_data_pointer_size | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | Type | integer | |
Default | 6 | ||
Min Value | 2 | ||
Max Value | 7 |
The default pointer size in bytes, to be used by
CREATE TABLE
for
MyISAM
tables when no
MAX_ROWS
option is specified. This variable
cannot be less than 2 or larger than 7. The default value is
6. See Section B.5.2.12, “The table is full”.
Command-Line Format | --myisam_max_sort_file_size=# | ||
System Variable | Name | myisam_max_sort_file_size | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values (32-bit platforms) | Type | integer | |
Default | 2147483648 | ||
Permitted Values (64-bit platforms) | Type | integer | |
Default | 9223372036854775807 |
The maximum size of the temporary file that MySQL is permitted
to use while re-creating a MyISAM
index
(during REPAIR TABLE
,
ALTER TABLE
, or
LOAD DATA
INFILE
). If the file size would be larger than this
value, the index is created using the key cache instead, which
is slower. The value is given in bytes.
If MyISAM
index files exceed this size and
disk space is available, increasing the value may help
performance. The space must be available in the file system
containing the directory where the original index file is
located.
Command-Line Format | --myisam_mmap_size=# | ||
System Variable | Name | myisam_mmap_size | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | No | ||
Permitted Values (32-bit platforms) | Type | integer | |
Default | 4294967295 | ||
Min Value | 7 | ||
Max Value | 4294967295 | ||
Permitted Values (64-bit platforms) | Type | integer | |
Default | 18446744073709551615 | ||
Min Value | 7 | ||
Max Value | 18446744073709551615 |
The maximum amount of memory to use for memory mapping
compressed MyISAM
files. If many
compressed MyISAM
tables are used, the
value can be decreased to reduce the likelihood of
memory-swapping problems.
System Variable | Name | myisam_recover_options | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | No |
The value of the
--myisam-recover-options
option. See Section 5.1.3, “Server Command Options”.
Command-Line Format | --myisam_repair_threads=# | ||
System Variable | Name | myisam_repair_threads | |
Variable Scope | Global, Session | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values (32-bit platforms) | Type | integer | |
Default | 1 | ||
Min Value | 1 | ||
Max Value | 4294967295 | ||
Permitted Values (64-bit platforms) | Type | integer | |
Default | 1 | ||
Min Value | 1 | ||
Max Value | 18446744073709551615 |
If this value is greater than 1, MyISAM
table indexes are created in parallel (each index in its own
thread) during the Repair by sorting
process. The default value is 1.
Multi-threaded repair is still beta-quality code.
Command-Line Format | --myisam_sort_buffer_size=# | ||
System Variable | Name | myisam_sort_buffer_size | |
Variable Scope | Global, Session | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values (Windows) | Type | integer | |
Default | 8388608 | ||
Min Value | 4096 | ||
Max Value | 4294967295 | ||
Permitted Values (Other, 32-bit platforms) | Type | integer | |
Default | 8388608 | ||
Min Value | 4096 | ||
Max Value | 4294967295 | ||
Permitted Values (Other, 64-bit platforms) | Type | integer | |
Default | 8388608 | ||
Min Value | 4096 | ||
Max Value | 18446744073709551615 |
The size of the buffer that is allocated when sorting
MyISAM
indexes during a
REPAIR TABLE
or when creating
indexes with CREATE INDEX
or
ALTER TABLE
.
The maximum permissible setting for
myisam_sort_buffer_size
is
4GB–1. Larger values are permitted for 64-bit platforms
(except 64-bit Windows, for which large values are truncated
to 4GB–1 with a warning).
Command-Line Format | --myisam_stats_method=name | ||
System Variable | Name | myisam_stats_method | |
Variable Scope | Global, Session | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | Type | enumeration | |
Default | nulls_unequal | ||
Valid Values | nulls_equal | ||
nulls_unequal | |||
nulls_ignored |
How the server treats NULL
values when
collecting statistics about the distribution of index values
for MyISAM
tables. This variable has three
possible values, nulls_equal
,
nulls_unequal
, and
nulls_ignored
. For
nulls_equal
, all NULL
index values are considered equal and form a single value
group that has a size equal to the number of
NULL
values. For
nulls_unequal
, NULL
values are considered unequal, and each
NULL
forms a distinct value group of size
1. For nulls_ignored
,
NULL
values are ignored.
The method that is used for generating table statistics influences how the optimizer chooses indexes for query execution, as described in Section 8.3.7, “InnoDB and MyISAM Index Statistics Collection”.
Command-Line Format | --myisam_use_mmap | ||
System Variable | Name | myisam_use_mmap | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | Type | boolean | |
Default | OFF |
Use memory mapping for reading and writing
MyISAM
tables.
System Variable | Name | named_pipe | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | No | ||
Platform Specific | Windows | ||
Permitted Values (Windows) | Type | boolean | |
Default | OFF |
(Windows only.) Indicates whether the server supports connections over named pipes.
Command-Line Format | --net_buffer_length=# | ||
System Variable | Name | net_buffer_length | |
Variable Scope | Global, Session | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | Type | integer | |
Default | 16384 | ||
Min Value | 1024 | ||
Max Value | 1048576 |
Each client thread is associated with a connection buffer and
result buffer. Both begin with a size given by
net_buffer_length
but are
dynamically enlarged up to
max_allowed_packet
bytes as
needed. The result buffer shrinks to
net_buffer_length
after each
SQL statement.
This variable should not normally be changed, but if you have
very little memory, you can set it to the expected length of
statements sent by clients. If statements exceed this length,
the connection buffer is automatically enlarged. The maximum
value to which
net_buffer_length
can be set
is 1MB.
The session value of this variable is read only.
Command-Line Format | --net_read_timeout=# | ||
System Variable | Name | net_read_timeout | |
Variable Scope | Global, Session | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | Type | integer | |
Default | 30 | ||
Min Value | 1 |
The number of seconds to wait for more data from a connection
before aborting the read. When the server is reading from the
client, net_read_timeout
is
the timeout value controlling when to abort. When the server
is writing to the client,
net_write_timeout
is the
timeout value controlling when to abort. See also
slave_net_timeout
.
Command-Line Format | --net_retry_count=# | ||
System Variable | Name | net_retry_count | |
Variable Scope | Global, Session | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values (32-bit platforms) | Type | integer | |
Default | 10 | ||
Min Value | 1 | ||
Max Value | 4294967295 | ||
Permitted Values (64-bit platforms) | Type | integer | |
Default | 10 | ||
Min Value | 1 | ||
Max Value | 18446744073709551615 |
If a read or write on a communication port is interrupted, retry this many times before giving up. This value should be set quite high on FreeBSD because internal interrupts are sent to all threads.
Command-Line Format | --net_write_timeout=# | ||
System Variable | Name | net_write_timeout | |
Variable Scope | Global, Session | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | Type | integer | |
Default | 60 | ||
Min Value | 1 |
The number of seconds to wait for a block to be written to a
connection before aborting the write. See also
net_read_timeout
.
Command-Line Format | --new | ||
System Variable | Name | new | |
Variable Scope | Global, Session | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Disabled by | skip-new | ||
Permitted Values | Type | boolean | |
Default | FALSE |
This variable was used in MySQL 4.0 to turn on some 4.1
behaviors, and is retained for backward compatibility. In
MySQL 5.6, its value is always
OFF
.
Command-Line Format | --old | ||
System Variable | Name | old | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | No |
old
is a compatibility
variable. It is disabled by default, but can be enabled at
startup to revert the server to behaviors present in older
versions.
Currently, when old
is
enabled, it changes the default scope of index hints to that
used prior to MySQL 5.1.17. That is, index hints with no
FOR
clause apply only to how indexes are
used for row retrieval and not to resolution of ORDER
BY
or GROUP BY
clauses. (See
Section 13.2.9.3, “Index Hint Syntax”.) Take care about enabling this
in a replication setup. With statement-based binary logging,
having different modes for the master and slaves might lead to
replication errors.
Command-Line Format | --old-alter-table | ||
System Variable | Name | old_alter_table | |
Variable Scope | Global, Session | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | Type | boolean | |
Default | OFF |
When this variable is enabled, the server does not use the
optimized method of processing an ALTER
TABLE
operation. It reverts to using a temporary
table, copying over the data, and then renaming the temporary
table to the original, as used by MySQL 5.0 and earlier. For
more information on the operation of
ALTER TABLE
, see
Section 13.1.7, “ALTER TABLE Syntax”.
System Variable | Name | old_passwords | |
Variable Scope | Global, Session | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values (<= 5.6.5) | Type | boolean | |
Default | 0 | ||
Permitted Values (>= 5.6.6) | Type | enumeration | |
Default | 0 | ||
Valid Values | 0 | ||
1 | |||
2 |
This variable controls the password hashing method used by the
PASSWORD()
function. It also
influences password hashing performed by
CREATE USER
and
GRANT
statements that specify a
password using an IDENTIFIED BY
clause.
The following table shows the permitted values of
old_passwords
, the password
hashing method for each value, and which authentication
plugins use passwords hashed with each method. These values
are permitted as of MySQL 5.6.6. Before 5.6.6, the permitted
values are 0 (or OFF
) and 1 (or
ON
).
Value | Password Hashing Method | Associated Authentication Plugin |
---|---|---|
0 | MySQL 4.1 native hashing | mysql_native_password |
1 | Pre-4.1 (“old”) hashing | mysql_old_password |
2 | SHA-256 hashing | sha256_password |
Passwords that use the pre-4.1 hashing method are less
secure than passwords that use the native password hashing
method and should be avoided. Pre-4.1 passwords are
deprecated and support for them will be removed in a future
MySQL release. Consequently,
old_passwords=1
, which
causes PASSWORD()
to generate
pre-4.1 password hashes, is also deprecated. For account
upgrade instructions, see
Section 6.3.8.3, “Migrating Away from Pre-4.1 Password Hashing and the mysql_old_password
Plugin”.
If old_passwords=1
,
PASSWORD(
returns the same value as
str
)OLD_PASSWORD(
.
The latter function is not affected by the value of
str
)old_passwords
.
If you set old_passwords=2
,
follow the instructions for using the
sha256_password
plugin at
Section 6.3.8.4, “The SHA-256 Authentication Plugin”.
As of MySQL 5.6.6, the server sets the global
old_passwords
value during
startup to be consistent with the password hashing method
required by the default authentication plugin. The default
plugin is mysql_native_password
unless the
--default-authentication-plugin
option is set otherwise.
As of MySQL 5.6.10, when a client successfully connects to the
server, the server sets the session
old_passwords
value
appropriately for the account authentication method. For
example, if the account uses the
sha256_password
authentication plugin, the
server sets old_passwords=2
.
For additional information about authentication plugins and hashing formats, see Section 6.3.7, “Pluggable Authentication”, and Section 6.1.2.4, “Password Hashing in MySQL”.
Command-Line Format | --open-files-limit=# | ||
System Variable | Name | open_files_limit | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | No | ||
Permitted Values (<= 5.6.7) | Type | integer | |
Default | 0 | ||
Min Value | 0 | ||
Max Value | platform dependent | ||
Permitted Values (>= 5.6.8) | Type | integer | |
Default | 5000, with possible adjustment | ||
Min Value | 0 | ||
Max Value | platform dependent |
The number of files that the operating system permits mysqld to open. The value of this variable at runtime is the real value permitted by the system and might be different from the value you specify at server startup. The value is 0 on systems where MySQL cannot change the number of open files.
The effective
open_files_limit
value is
based on the value specified at system startup (if any) and
the values of max_connections
and table_open_cache
, using
these formulas:
1) 10 + max_connections + (table_open_cache * 2) 2) max_connections * 5 3) open_files_limit value specified at startup, 5000 if none
The server attempts to obtain the number of file descriptors using the maximum of those three values. If that many descriptors cannot be obtained, the server attempts to obtain as many as the system will permit.
Introduced | 5.6.1 | ||
Removed | 5.6.3 | ||
Command-Line Format | --optimizer_join_cache_level=# | ||
System Variable | Name | optimizer_join_cache_level | |
Variable Scope | Global, Session | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | Type | integer | |
Default | 4 | ||
Min Value | 0 | ||
Max Value | 4 |
Before MySQL 5.6.3, this variable is used for join buffer
management. It controls how join buffers are used for join
operations. As of MySQL 5.6.3, it is removed and the
optimizer_switch
variable is
used instead. See Section 8.2.1.14, “Block Nested-Loop and Batched Key Access Joins”.
The following table shows the permissible
optimizer_join_cache_level
values.
Option | Description |
---|---|
0 | No join buffer is used for any join operation. This setting can be useful for assessing baseline join performance in comparison to performance with nonzero values that enable use of join buffering. |
1 | This is the default value. Join buffers are employed only for inner joins that are executed by the original Block Nested-Loop (BNL) join algorithm. When this algorithm is applied, rows of the inner table are accessed through a table scan, a plain index scan, or a range index scan. |
2 | The server employs an incremental join buffer for a join operation if its first operand is produced by a join operation that uses a join buffer itself. |
3 | The BNL algorithm is used for outer join operations with one inner table and for inner joins. |
4 | The BNL algorithm uses incremental buffers for inner tables. In this case, the BNL algorithm can be used for nested outer joins (outer joins with several inner tables). Such an operation can be executed only if incremental join buffers are used to join all inner tables but the first one. |
Command-Line Format | --optimizer_prune_level[=#] | ||
System Variable | Name | optimizer_prune_level | |
Variable Scope | Global, Session | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | Type | boolean | |
Default | 1 |
Controls the heuristics applied during query optimization to prune less-promising partial plans from the optimizer search space. A value of 0 disables heuristics so that the optimizer performs an exhaustive search. A value of 1 causes the optimizer to prune plans based on the number of rows retrieved by intermediate plans.
Command-Line Format | --optimizer_search_depth[=#] | ||
System Variable | Name | optimizer_search_depth | |
Variable Scope | Global, Session | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | Type | integer | |
Default | 62 | ||
Min Value | 0 | ||
Max Value | 62 |
The maximum depth of search performed by the query optimizer. Values larger than the number of relations in a query result in better query plans, but take longer to generate an execution plan for a query. Values smaller than the number of relations in a query return an execution plan quicker, but the resulting plan may be far from being optimal. If set to 0, the system automatically picks a reasonable value.
Command-Line Format | --optimizer_switch=value | ||
System Variable | Name | optimizer_switch | |
Variable Scope | Global, Session | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values (<= 5.6.0) | Type | set | |
Valid Values | engine_condition_pushdown={on|off} | ||
index_merge={on|off} | |||
index_merge_intersection={on|off} | |||
index_merge_sort_union={on|off} | |||
index_merge_union={on|off} | |||
Permitted Values (>= 5.6.1, <= 5.6.2) | Type | set | |
Valid Values | engine_condition_pushdown={on|off} | ||
index_condition_pushdown={on|off} | |||
index_merge={on|off} | |||
index_merge_intersection={on|off} | |||
index_merge_sort_union={on|off} | |||
index_merge_union={on|off} | |||
mrr={on|off} | |||
mrr_cost_based={on|off} | |||
Permitted Values (>= 5.6.3, <= 5.6.4) | Type | set | |
Valid Values | batched_key_access={on|off} | ||
block_nested_loop={on|off} | |||
engine_condition_pushdown={on|off} | |||
index_condition_pushdown={on|off} | |||
index_merge={on|off} | |||
index_merge_intersection={on|off} | |||
index_merge_sort_union={on|off} | |||
index_merge_union={on|off} | |||
mrr={on|off} | |||
mrr_cost_based={on|off} | |||
Permitted Values (>= 5.6.5, <= 5.6.6) | Type | set | |
Valid Values | batched_key_access={on|off} | ||
block_nested_loop={on|off} | |||
engine_condition_pushdown={on|off} | |||
firstmatch={on|off} | |||
index_condition_pushdown={on|off} | |||
index_merge={on|off} | |||
index_merge_intersection={on|off} | |||
index_merge_sort_union={on|off} | |||
index_merge_union={on|off} | |||
loosescan={on|off} | |||
materialization={on|off} | |||
mrr={on|off} | |||
mrr_cost_based={on|off} | |||
semijoin={on|off} | |||
Permitted Values (>= 5.6.7, <= 5.6.8) | Type | set | |
Valid Values | batched_key_access={on|off} | ||
block_nested_loop={on|off} | |||
engine_condition_pushdown={on|off} | |||
firstmatch={on|off} | |||
index_condition_pushdown={on|off} | |||
index_merge={on|off} | |||
index_merge_intersection={on|off} | |||
index_merge_sort_union={on|off} | |||
index_merge_union={on|off} | |||
loosescan={on|off} | |||
materialization={on|off} | |||
mrr={on|off} | |||
mrr_cost_based={on|off} | |||
semijoin={on|off} | |||
subquery_materialization_cost_based={on|off} | |||
Permitted Values (>= 5.6.9) | Type | set | |
Valid Values | batched_key_access={on|off} | ||
block_nested_loop={on|off} | |||
engine_condition_pushdown={on|off} | |||
firstmatch={on|off} | |||
index_condition_pushdown={on|off} | |||
index_merge={on|off} | |||
index_merge_intersection={on|off} | |||
index_merge_sort_union={on|off} | |||
index_merge_union={on|off} | |||
loosescan={on|off} | |||
materialization={on|off} | |||
mrr={on|off} | |||
mrr_cost_based={on|off} | |||
semijoin={on|off} | |||
subquery_materialization_cost_based={on|off} | |||
use_index_extensions={on|off} |
The optimizer_switch
system
variable enables control over optimizer behavior. The value of
this variable is a set of flags, each of which has a value of
on
or off
to indicate
whether the corresponding optimizer behavior is enabled or
disabled. This variable has global and session values and can
be changed at runtime. The global default can be set at server
startup.
To see the current set of optimizer flags, select the variable value:
mysql> SELECT @@optimizer_switch\G
*************************** 1. row ***************************
@@optimizer_switch: index_merge=on,index_merge_union=on,
index_merge_sort_union=on,
index_merge_intersection=on,
engine_condition_pushdown=on,
index_condition_pushdown=on,
mrr=on,mrr_cost_based=on,
block_nested_loop=on,batched_key_access=off,
materialization=on,semijoin=on,loosescan=on,
firstmatch=on,
subquery_materialization_cost_based=on,
use_index_extensions=on
For more information about the syntax of this variable and the optimizer behaviors that it controls, see Section 8.8.5.2, “Controlling Switchable Optimizations”.
Introduced | 5.6.3 | ||
System Variable | Name | optimizer_trace | |
Variable Scope | Global, Session | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | Type | string |
This variable controls optimizer tracing. For details, see MySQL Internals: Tracing the Optimizer. This variable was added in MySQL 5.6.3.
Introduced | 5.6.3 | ||
System Variable | Name | optimizer_trace_features | |
Variable Scope | Global, Session | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | Type | string |
This variable enables or disables selected optimizer tracing features. For details, see MySQL Internals: Tracing the Optimizer. This variable was added in MySQL 5.6.3.
Introduced | 5.6.3 | ||
System Variable | Name | optimizer_trace_limit | |
Variable Scope | Global, Session | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | Type | integer | |
Default | 1 |
The maximum number of optimizer traces to display. For details, see MySQL Internals: Tracing the Optimizer. This variable was added in MySQL 5.6.3.
Introduced | 5.6.3 | ||
System Variable | Name | optimizer_trace_max_mem_size | |
Variable Scope | Global, Session | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | Type | integer | |
Default | 16384 |
The maximum cumulative size of stored optimizer traces. For details, see MySQL Internals: Tracing the Optimizer. This variable was added in MySQL 5.6.3.
Introduced | 5.6.3 | ||
System Variable | Name | optimizer_trace_offset | |
Variable Scope | Global, Session | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | Type | integer | |
Default | -1 |
The offset of optimizer traces to display. For details, see MySQL Internals: Tracing the Optimizer. This variable was added in MySQL 5.6.3.
performance_schema_
xxx
Performance Schema system variables are listed in Section 22.12, “Performance Schema System Variables”. These variables may be used to configure Performance Schema operation.
Command-Line Format | --pid-file=file_name | ||
System Variable | Name | pid_file | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | No | ||
Permitted Values | Type | file name |
The path name of the process ID (PID) file. This variable can
be set with the --pid-file
option.
Command-Line Format | --plugin_dir=path | ||
System Variable | Name | plugin_dir | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | No | ||
Permitted Values | Type | directory name | |
Default | BASEDIR/lib/plugin |
The path name of the plugin directory.
If the plugin directory is writable by the server, it may be
possible for a user to write executable code to a file in the
directory using SELECT
... INTO DUMPFILE
. This can be prevented by making
plugin_dir
read only to the
server or by setting
--secure-file-priv
to a
directory where SELECT
writes
can be made safely.
Command-Line Format | --port=# | ||
System Variable | Name | port | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | No | ||
Permitted Values | Type | integer | |
Default | 3306 | ||
Min Value | 0 | ||
Max Value | 65535 |
The number of the port on which the server listens for TCP/IP
connections. This variable can be set with the
--port
option.
Command-Line Format | --preload_buffer_size=# | ||
System Variable | Name | preload_buffer_size | |
Variable Scope | Global, Session | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | Type | integer | |
Default | 32768 | ||
Min Value | 1024 | ||
Max Value | 1073741824 |
The size of the buffer that is allocated when preloading indexes.
If set to 0 or OFF
(the default), statement
profiling is disabled. If set to 1 or ON
,
statement profiling is enabled and the
SHOW PROFILE
and
SHOW PROFILES
statements
provide access to profiling information. See
Section 13.7.5.32, “SHOW PROFILES Syntax”.
This variable is deprecated in MySQL 5.6.8 and will be removed in a future MySQL release.
The number of statements for which to maintain profiling
information if profiling
is
enabled. The default value is 15. The maximum value is 100.
Setting the value to 0 effectively disables profiling. See
Section 13.7.5.32, “SHOW PROFILES Syntax”.
This variable is deprecated in MySQL 5.6.8 and will be removed in a future MySQL release.
System Variable | Name | protocol_version | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | No | ||
Permitted Values | Type | integer |
The version of the client/server protocol used by the MySQL server.
System Variable | Name | proxy_user | |
Variable Scope | Session | ||
Dynamic Variable | No | ||
Permitted Values | Type | string |
If the current client is a proxy for another user, this
variable is the proxy user account name. Otherwise, this
variable is NULL
. See
Section 6.3.9, “Proxy Users”.
Introduced | 5.6.10 | ||
System Variable | Name | pseudo_slave_mode | |
Variable Scope | Session | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | Type | integer |
This variable is for internal server use. It was added in MySQL 5.6.10.
System Variable | Name | pseudo_thread_id | |
Variable Scope | Session | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | Type | integer |
This variable is for internal server use.
Command-Line Format | --query_alloc_block_size=# | ||
System Variable | Name | query_alloc_block_size | |
Variable Scope | Global, Session | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values (32-bit platforms) | Type | integer | |
Default | 8192 | ||
Min Value | 1024 | ||
Max Value | 4294967295 | ||
Block Size | 1024 | ||
Permitted Values (64-bit platforms) | Type | integer | |
Default | 8192 | ||
Min Value | 1024 | ||
Max Value | 18446744073709551615 | ||
Block Size | 1024 |
The allocation size of memory blocks that are allocated for objects created during statement parsing and execution. If you have problems with memory fragmentation, it might help to increase this parameter.
Command-Line Format | --query_cache_limit=# | ||
System Variable | Name | query_cache_limit | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values (32-bit platforms) | Type | integer | |
Default | 1048576 | ||
Min Value | 0 | ||
Max Value | 4294967295 | ||
Permitted Values (64-bit platforms) | Type | integer | |
Default | 1048576 | ||
Min Value | 0 | ||
Max Value | 18446744073709551615 |
Do not cache results that are larger than this number of bytes. The default value is 1MB.
Command-Line Format | --query_cache_min_res_unit=# | ||
System Variable | Name | query_cache_min_res_unit | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values (32-bit platforms) | Type | integer | |
Default | 4096 | ||
Min Value | 512 | ||
Max Value | 4294967295 | ||
Permitted Values (64-bit platforms) | Type | integer | |
Default | 4096 | ||
Min Value | 512 | ||
Max Value | 18446744073709551615 |
The minimum size (in bytes) for blocks allocated by the query cache. The default value is 4096 (4KB). Tuning information for this variable is given in Section 8.9.3.3, “Query Cache Configuration”.
Command-Line Format | --query_cache_size=# | ||
System Variable | Name | query_cache_size | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values (32-bit platforms, <= 5.6.7) | Type | integer | |
Default | 0 | ||
Min Value | 0 | ||
Max Value | 4294967295 | ||
Permitted Values (64-bit platforms, <= 5.6.7) | Type | integer | |
Default | 0 | ||
Min Value | 0 | ||
Max Value | 18446744073709551615 | ||
Permitted Values (32-bit platforms, >= 5.6.8) | Type | integer | |
Default | 1048576 | ||
Min Value | 0 | ||
Max Value | 4294967295 | ||
Permitted Values (64-bit platforms, >= 5.6.8) | Type | integer | |
Default | 1048576 | ||
Min Value | 0 | ||
Max Value | 18446744073709551615 |
The amount of memory allocated for caching query results. By
default, the query cache is disabled. This is achieved using a
default value of 1M, with a default for
query_cache_type
of 0. (Before MySQL 5.6.8,
the default size is 0, with a default
query_cache_type
of 1. To reduce overhead
significantly, you should also start the server with
query_cache_type=0
if you
will not be using the query cache.)
The permissible values are multiples of 1024; other values are rounded down to the nearest multiple.
query_cache_size
bytes of
memory are allocated even if
query_cache_type
is set to
0. See Section 8.9.3.3, “Query Cache Configuration”, for more
information.
The query cache needs a minimum size of about 40KB to allocate
its structures. (The exact size depends on system
architecture.) If you set the value of
query_cache_size
too small, a
warning will occur, as described in
Section 8.9.3.3, “Query Cache Configuration”.
Command-Line Format | --query_cache_type=# | ||
System Variable | Name | query_cache_type | |
Variable Scope | Global, Session | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values (<= 5.6.7) | Type | enumeration | |
Default | 1 | ||
Valid Values | 0 | ||
1 | |||
2 | |||
Permitted Values (>= 5.6.8) | Type | enumeration | |
Default | 0 | ||
Valid Values | 0 | ||
1 | |||
2 |
Set the query cache type. Setting the
GLOBAL
value sets the type for all clients
that connect thereafter. Individual clients can set the
SESSION
value to affect their own use of
the query cache. Possible values are shown in the following
table.
Option | Description |
---|---|
0 or OFF | Do not cache results in or retrieve results from the query cache. Note
that this does not deallocate the query cache buffer.
To do that, you should set
query_cache_size to
0. |
1 or ON | Cache all cacheable query results except for those that begin with
SELECT SQL_NO_CACHE . |
2 or DEMAND | Cache results only for cacheable queries that begin with SELECT
SQL_CACHE . |
This variable defaults to OFF
as of MySQL
5.6.8, ON
before that.
If the server is started with
query_cache_type
set to 0, it does not
acquire the query cache mutex at all, which means that the
query cache cannot be enabled at runtime and there is reduced
overhead in query execution.
Command-Line Format | --query_cache_wlock_invalidate | ||
System Variable | Name | query_cache_wlock_invalidate | |
Variable Scope | Global, Session | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | Type | boolean | |
Default | FALSE |
Normally, when one client acquires a WRITE
lock on a MyISAM
table, other clients are
not blocked from issuing statements that read from the table
if the query results are present in the query cache. Setting
this variable to 1 causes acquisition of a
WRITE
lock for a table to invalidate any
queries in the query cache that refer to the table. This
forces other clients that attempt to access the table to wait
while the lock is in effect.
Command-Line Format | --query_prealloc_size=# | ||
System Variable | Name | query_prealloc_size | |
Variable Scope | Global, Session | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values (32-bit platforms) | Type | integer | |
Default | 8192 | ||
Min Value | 8192 | ||
Max Value | 4294967295 | ||
Block Size | 1024 | ||
Permitted Values (64-bit platforms) | Type | integer | |
Default | 8192 | ||
Min Value | 8192 | ||
Max Value | 18446744073709551615 | ||
Block Size | 1024 |
The size of the persistent buffer used for statement parsing
and execution. This buffer is not freed between statements. If
you are running complex queries, a larger
query_prealloc_size
value
might be helpful in improving performance, because it can
reduce the need for the server to perform memory allocation
during query execution operations.
The rand_seed1
and
rand_seed2
variables exist as
session variables only, and can be set but not read. The
variables—but not their values—are shown in the
output of SHOW VARIABLES
.
The purpose of these variables is to support replication of
the RAND()
function. For
statements that invoke RAND()
,
the master passes two values to the slave, where they are used
to seed the random number generator. The slave uses these
values to set the session variables
rand_seed1
and
rand_seed2
so that
RAND()
on the slave generates
the same value as on the master.
See the description for
rand_seed1
.
Command-Line Format | --range_alloc_block_size=# | ||
System Variable | Name | range_alloc_block_size | |
Variable Scope | Global, Session | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values (32-bit platforms) | Type | integer | |
Default | 2048 | ||
Min Value | 2048 | ||
Max Value | 4294967295 | ||
Block Size | 1024 | ||
Permitted Values (32-bit platforms) | Type | integer | |
Default | 4096 | ||
Min Value | 4096 | ||
Max Value | 4294967295 | ||
Block Size | 1024 | ||
Permitted Values (64-bit platforms) | Type | integer | |
Default | 4096 | ||
Min Value | 4096 | ||
Max Value | 18446744073709547520 | ||
Block Size | 1024 | ||
Permitted Values (64-bit platforms) | Type | integer | |
Default | 2048 | ||
Min Value | 2048 | ||
Max Value | 18446744073709551615 | ||
Block Size | 1024 |
The size of blocks that are allocated when doing range optimization.
Command-Line Format | --read_buffer_size=# | ||
System Variable | Name | read_buffer_size | |
Variable Scope | Global, Session | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | Type | integer | |
Default | 131072 | ||
Min Value | 8200 | ||
Max Value | 2147479552 |
Each thread that does a sequential scan for a
MyISAM
table allocates a buffer of this
size (in bytes) for each table it scans. If you do many
sequential scans, you might want to increase this value, which
defaults to 131072. The value of this variable should be a
multiple of 4KB. If it is set to a value that is not a
multiple of 4KB, its value will be rounded down to the nearest
multiple of 4KB.
This option is also used in the following context for all search engines:
For caching the indexes in a temporary file (not a
temporary table), when sorting rows for ORDER
BY
.
For bulk insert into partitions.
For caching results of nested queries.
and in one other storage engine-specific way: to determine the
memory block size for MEMORY
tables.
The maximum permissible setting for
read_buffer_size
is 2GB.
For more information about memory use during different operations, see Section 8.11.4.1, “How MySQL Uses Memory”.
Command-Line Format | --read-only | ||
System Variable | Name | read_only | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | Type | boolean | |
Default | false |
This variable is off by default. When it is enabled, the
server permits no updates except from users that have the
SUPER
privilege or (on a slave
server) from updates performed by slave threads. In
replication setups, it can be useful to enable
read_only
on slave servers to
ensure that slaves accept updates only from the master server
and not from clients.
read_only
does not apply to
TEMPORARY
tables, nor does it prevent the
server from inserting rows into the log tables (see
Section 5.2.1, “Selecting General Query and Slow Query Log Output Destinations”). This variable does not
prevent the use of ANALYZE
TABLE
or OPTIMIZE
TABLE
statements because its purpose is to prevent
changes to table structure or contents. Analysis and
optimization do not qualify as such changes. This means, for
example, that consistency checks on read-only slaves can be
performed with mysqlcheck --all-databases
--analyze.
read_only
exists only as a
GLOBAL
variable, so changes to its value
require the SUPER
privilege.
Changes to read_only
on a
master server are not replicated to slave servers. The value
can be set on a slave server independent of the setting on the
master.
In MySQL 5.6, enabling
read_only
prevents the use of the
SET PASSWORD
statement by any
user not having the SUPER
privilege. This is not necessarily the case for all MySQL
release series. When replicating from one MySQL release
series to another (for example, from a MySQL 5.0 master to a
MySQL 5.1 or later slave), you should check the
documentation for the versions running on both master and
slave to determine whether the behavior of
read_only
in this regard is or is not the
same, and, if it is different, whether this has an impact on
your applications.
The following conditions apply:
If you attempt to enable
read_only
while you have
any explicit locks (acquired with
LOCK TABLES
) or have a
pending transaction, an error occurs.
If you attempt to enable
read_only
while other
clients hold explicit table locks or have pending
transactions, the attempt blocks until the locks are
released and the transactions end. While the attempt to
enable read_only
is
pending, requests by other clients for table locks or to
begin transactions also block until
read_only
has been set.
read_only
can be enabled
while you hold a global read lock (acquired with
FLUSH TABLES WITH
READ LOCK
) because that does not involve table
locks.
In MySQL 5.6, attempts to set
read_only
block for active
transactions that hold metadata locks until those transactions
end.
Command-Line Format | --read_rnd_buffer_size=# | ||
System Variable | Name | read_rnd_buffer_size | |
Variable Scope | Global, Session | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | Type | integer | |
Default | 262144 | ||
Min Value | 1 | ||
Max Value | 2147483647 |
This variable is used for reads from MyISAM
tables, and, for any storage engine, for Multi-Range Read
optimization.
When reading rows from a MyISAM
table in
sorted order following a key-sorting operation, the rows are
read through this buffer to avoid disk seeks. See
Section 8.2.1.15, “ORDER BY Optimization”. Setting the variable
to a large value can improve ORDER BY
performance by a lot. However, this is a buffer allocated for
each client, so you should not set the global variable to a
large value. Instead, change the session variable only from
within those clients that need to run large queries.
The maximum permissible setting for
read_rnd_buffer_size
is 2GB.
For more information about memory use during different operations, see Section 8.11.4.1, “How MySQL Uses Memory”. For information about Multi-Range Read optimization, see Section 8.2.1.13, “Multi-Range Read Optimization”.
Command-Line Format | --relay_log_purge | ||
System Variable | Name | relay_log_purge | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | Type | boolean | |
Default | TRUE |
Disables or enables automatic purging of relay log files as
soon as they are not needed any more. The default value is 1
(ON
).
Command-Line Format | --relay_log_space_limit=# | ||
System Variable | Name | relay_log_space_limit | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | No | ||
Permitted Values (32-bit platforms) | Type | integer | |
Default | 0 | ||
Min Value | 0 | ||
Max Value | 4294967295 | ||
Permitted Values (64-bit platforms) | Type | integer | |
Default | 0 | ||
Min Value | 0 | ||
Max Value | 18446744073709551615 |
The maximum amount of space to use for all relay logs.
Command-Line Format | --report-host=host_name | ||
System Variable | Name | report_host | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | No | ||
Permitted Values | Type | string |
The value of the --report-host
option.
Command-Line Format | --report-password=name | ||
System Variable | Name | report_password | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | No | ||
Permitted Values | Type | string |
The value of the
--report-password
option. Not
the same as the password used for the MySQL replication user
account.
Command-Line Format | --report-port=# | ||
System Variable | Name | report_port | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | No | ||
Permitted Values (<= 5.6.4) | Type | integer | |
Default | 0 | ||
Min Value | 0 | ||
Max Value | 65535 | ||
Permitted Values (>= 5.6.5) | Type | integer | |
Default | [slave_port] | ||
Min Value | 0 | ||
Max Value | 65535 |
The value of the --report-port
option.
Command-Line Format | --report-user=name | ||
System Variable | Name | report_user | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | No | ||
Permitted Values | Type | string |
The value of the --report-user
option. Not the same as the name for the MySQL replication
user account.
System Variable | Name | rpl_semi_sync_master_enabled | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | Type | boolean | |
Default | OFF |
Controls whether semisynchronous replication is enabled on the
master. To enable or disable the plugin, set this variable to
ON
or OFF
(or 1 or 0),
respectively. The default is OFF
.
This variable is available only if the master-side semisynchronous replication plugin is installed.
System Variable | Name | rpl_semi_sync_master_timeout | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | Type | integer | |
Default | 10000 |
A value in milliseconds that controls how long the master waits on a commit for acknowledgment from a slave before timing out and reverting to asynchronous replication. The default value is 10000 (10 seconds).
This variable is available only if the master-side semisynchronous replication plugin is installed.
rpl_semi_sync_master_trace_level
System Variable | Name | rpl_semi_sync_master_trace_level | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | Type | integer | |
Default | 32 |
The semisynchronous replication debug trace level on the master. Currently, four levels are defined:
1 = general level (for example, time function failures)
16 = detail level (more verbose information)
32 = net wait level (more information about network waits)
64 = function level (information about function entry and exit)
This variable is available only if the master-side semisynchronous replication plugin is installed.
rpl_semi_sync_master_wait_no_slave
System Variable | Name | rpl_semi_sync_master_wait_no_slave | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | Type | boolean | |
Default | ON |
With semisynchronous replication, for each transaction, the master waits until timeout for acknowledgment of receipt from some semisynchronous slave. If no response occurs during this period, the master reverts to normal replication. This variable controls whether the master waits for the timeout to expire before reverting to normal replication even if the slave count drops to zero during the timeout period.
If the value is ON
(the default), it is
permissible for the slave count to drop to zero during the
timeout period (for example, if slaves disconnect). The master
still waits for the timeout, so as long as some slave
reconnects and acknowledges the transaction within the timeout
interval, semisynchronous replication continues.
If the value is OFF
, the master reverts to
normal replication if the slave count drops to zero during the
timeout period.
This variable is available only if the master-side semisynchronous replication plugin is installed.
System Variable | Name | rpl_semi_sync_slave_enabled | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | Type | boolean | |
Default | OFF |
Controls whether semisynchronous replication is enabled on the
slave. To enable or disable the plugin, set this variable to
ON
or OFF
(or 1 or 0),
respectively. The default is OFF
.
This variable is available only if the slave-side semisynchronous replication plugin is installed.
rpl_semi_sync_slave_trace_level
System Variable | Name | rpl_semi_sync_slave_trace_level | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | Type | integer | |
Default | 32 |
The semisynchronous replication debug trace level on the
slave. See
rpl_semi_sync_master_trace_level
for the permissible values.
This variable is available only if the slave-side semisynchronous replication plugin is installed.
Command-Line Format | --secure-auth | ||
System Variable | Name | secure_auth | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values (<= 5.6.4) | Type | boolean | |
Default | OFF | ||
Permitted Values (>= 5.6.5) | Type | boolean | |
Default | ON |
If this variable is enabled, the server blocks connections by clients that attempt to use accounts that have passwords stored in the old (pre-4.1) format.
Enable this variable to prevent all use of passwords employing the old format (and hence insecure communication over the network). Before MySQL 5.6.5, this variable is disabled by default. As of MySQL 5.6.5, it is enabled by default.
Server startup fails with an error if this variable is enabled and the privilege tables are in pre-4.1 format. See Section B.5.2.4, “Client does not support authentication protocol”.
Passwords that use the pre-4.1 hashing method are less
secure than passwords that use the native password hashing
method and should be avoided. Pre-4.1 passwords are
deprecated and support for them will be removed in a future
MySQL release. Consequently, disabling
secure_auth
is also
deprecated.
Command-Line Format | --secure-file-priv=path | ||
System Variable | Name | secure_file_priv | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | No | ||
Permitted Values | Type | string | |
Default | empty | ||
Valid Values | dirname |
This variable is used to limit the effect of data import and
export operations, such as those performed by the
LOAD DATA
and
SELECT ... INTO
OUTFILE
statements and the
LOAD_FILE()
function. By
default, this variable is empty. If set to the name of a
directory, it limits import and export operations to work only
with files in that directory.
Command-Line Format | --server-id=# | ||
System Variable | Name | server_id | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | Type | integer | |
Default | 0 | ||
Min Value | 0 | ||
Max Value | 4294967295 |
The server ID, used in replication to give each master and
slave a unique identity. This variable is set by the
--server-id
option. For each
server participating in replication, you should pick a
positive integer in the range from 1 to
232 – 1 to act as that
server's ID.
sha256_password_private_key_path
Introduced | 5.6.6 | ||
System Variable | Name | sha256_password_private_key_path | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | No | ||
Permitted Values | Type | file name | |
Default | private_key.pem |
The path name of the RSA private key file for the
sha256_password
authentication plugin. If
the file is named as a relative path, it is interpreted
relative to the server data directory. The file must be in PEM
format. Because this file stores a private key, its access
mode should be restricted so that only the MySQL server can
read it.
For information about sha256_password
,
including instructions for creating the RSA key files, see
Section 6.3.8.4, “The SHA-256 Authentication Plugin”.
This variable is available only if MySQL was built using OpenSSL. It was added in MySQL 5.6.6. (MySQL Community Edition is built using yaSSL.)
sha256_password_public_key_path
Introduced | 5.6.6 | ||
System Variable | Name | sha256_password_public_key_path | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | No | ||
Permitted Values | Type | file name | |
Default | public_key.pem |
The path name of the RSA public key file for the
sha256_password
authentication plugin. If
the file is named as a relative path, it is interpreted
relative to the server data directory. The file must be in PEM
format. Because this file stores a public key, copies can be
freely distributed to client users. (Clients that explicitly
specify a public key when connecting to the server using RSA
password encryption must use the same public key as that used
by the server.)
For information about sha256_password
,
including instructions for creating the RSA key files and how
clients specify the RSA public key, see
Section 6.3.8.4, “The SHA-256 Authentication Plugin”.
This variable is available only if MySQL was built using OpenSSL. It was added in MySQL 5.6.6. (MySQL Community Edition is built using yaSSL.)
Command-Line Format | --shared-memory-base-name=name | ||
System Variable | Name | shared_memory | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | No | ||
Platform Specific | Windows |
(Windows only.) Whether the server permits shared-memory connections.
System Variable | Name | shared_memory_base_name | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | No | ||
Platform Specific | Windows |
(Windows only.) The name of shared memory to use for
shared-memory connections. This is useful when running
multiple MySQL instances on a single physical machine. The
default name is MYSQL
. The name is case
sensitive.
Introduced | 5.6.24 | ||
Deprecated | 5.6.24 | ||
Command-Line Format | --show_old_temporals={OFF|ON} | ||
System Variable | Name | show_old_temporals | |
Variable Scope | Global, Session | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | Type | boolean | |
Default | OFF |
Whether SHOW CREATE TABLE
output includes comments to flag temporal columns found to be
in pre-5.6.4 format (TIME
,
DATETIME
, and
TIMESTAMP
columns without
support for fractional seconds precision). This variable is
disabled by default. If enabled, SHOW
CREATE TABLE
output looks like this:
CREATE TABLE `mytbl` ( `ts` timestamp /* 5.5 binary format */ NOT NULL DEFAULT CURRENT_TIMESTAMP, `dt` datetime /* 5.5 binary format */ DEFAULT NULL, `t` time /* 5.5 binary format */ DEFAULT NULL ) DEFAULT CHARSET=latin1
Output for the COLUMN_TYPE
column of the
INFORMATION_SCHEMA.COLUMNS
table
is affected similarly.
This variable was added in MySQL 5.6.24. It is deprecated and will be removed in a future MySQL release.
Command-Line Format | --skip-external-locking | ||
System Variable | Name | skip_external_locking | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | No | ||
Permitted Values | Type | boolean | |
Default | ON |
This is OFF
if mysqld
uses external locking (system locking), ON
if external locking is disabled. This affects only
MyISAM
table access.
This variable is set by the
--external-locking
or
--skip-external-locking
option. External locking has been disabled by default as of
MySQL 4.0.
External locking affects only
MyISAM
table access. For more
information, including conditions under which it can and
cannot be used, see Section 8.10.5, “External Locking”.
Command-Line Format | --skip-name-resolve | ||
System Variable | Name | skip_name_resolve | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | No | ||
Permitted Values | Type | boolean | |
Default | OFF |
This variable is set from the value of the
--skip-name-resolve
option. If
it is OFF
, mysqld
resolves host names when checking client connections. If it is
ON
, mysqld uses only IP
numbers; in this case, all Host
column
values in the grant tables must be IP addresses or
localhost
. See
Section 8.11.5.2, “DNS Lookup Optimization and the Host Cache”.
Command-Line Format | --skip-networking | ||
System Variable | Name | skip_networking | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | No |
This is ON
if the server permits only local
(non-TCP/IP) connections. On Unix, local connections use a
Unix socket file. On Windows, local connections use a named
pipe or shared memory. This variable can be set to
ON
with the
--skip-networking
option.
Command-Line Format | --skip-show-database | ||
System Variable | Name | skip_show_database | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | No |
This prevents people from using the SHOW
DATABASES
statement if they do not have the
SHOW DATABASES
privilege. This
can improve security if you have concerns about users being
able to see databases belonging to other users. Its effect
depends on the SHOW DATABASES
privilege: If the variable value is ON
, the
SHOW DATABASES
statement is
permitted only to users who have the SHOW
DATABASES
privilege, and the statement displays all
database names. If the value is OFF
,
SHOW DATABASES
is permitted to
all users, but displays the names of only those databases for
which the user has the SHOW
DATABASES
or other privilege. (Note that
any global privilege is considered a
privilege for the database.)
Command-Line Format | --slow_launch_time=# | ||
System Variable | Name | slow_launch_time | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | Type | integer | |
Default | 2 |
If creating a thread takes longer than this many seconds, the
server increments the
Slow_launch_threads
status
variable.
Command-Line Format | --slow-query-log | ||
System Variable | Name | slow_query_log | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | Type | boolean | |
Default | OFF |
Whether the slow query log is enabled. The value can be 0 (or
OFF
) to disable the log or 1 (or
ON
) to enable the log. The default value
depends on whether the
--slow_query_log
option is
given. The destination for log output is controlled by the
log_output
system variable;
if that value is NONE
, no log entries are
written even if the log is enabled.
“Slow” is determined by the value of the
long_query_time
variable. See
Section 5.2.5, “The Slow Query Log”.
Command-Line Format | --slow-query-log-file=file_name | ||
System Variable | Name | slow_query_log_file | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | Type | file name | |
Default | host_name-slow.log |
The name of the slow query log file. The default value is
,
but the initial value can be changed with the
host_name
-slow.log--slow_query_log_file
option.
Command-Line Format | --socket=file_name | ||
System Variable | Name | socket | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | No | ||
Permitted Values | Type | file name | |
Default | /tmp/mysql.sock |
On Unix platforms, this variable is the name of the socket
file that is used for local client connections. The default is
/tmp/mysql.sock
. (For some distribution
formats, the directory might be different, such as
/var/lib/mysql
for RPMs.)
On Windows, this variable is the name of the named pipe that
is used for local client connections. The default value is
MySQL
(not case sensitive).
Command-Line Format | --sort_buffer_size=# | ||
System Variable | Name | sort_buffer_size | |
Variable Scope | Global, Session | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values (Windows, <= 5.6.3) | Type | integer | |
Default | 2097144 | ||
Min Value | 32768 | ||
Max Value | 4294967295 | ||
Permitted Values (Other, 32-bit platforms, <= 5.6.3) | Type | integer | |
Default | 2097144 | ||
Min Value | 32768 | ||
Max Value | 4294967295 | ||
Permitted Values (Other, 64-bit platforms, <= 5.6.3) | Type | integer | |
Default | 2097144 | ||
Min Value | 32768 | ||
Max Value | 18446744073709551615 | ||
Permitted Values (Windows, >= 5.6.4) | Type | integer | |
Default | 262144 | ||
Min Value | 32768 | ||
Max Value | 4294967295 | ||
Permitted Values (Other, 32-bit platforms, >= 5.6.4) | Type | integer | |
Default | 262144 | ||
Min Value | 32768 | ||
Max Value | 4294967295 | ||
Permitted Values (Other, 64-bit platforms, >= 5.6.4) | Type | integer | |
Default | 262144 | ||
Min Value | 32768 | ||
Max Value | 18446744073709551615 |
Each session that needs to do a sort allocates a buffer of
this size. sort_buffer_size
is not specific to any storage engine and applies in a general
manner for optimization. See
Section 8.2.1.15, “ORDER BY Optimization”, for example.
If you see many
Sort_merge_passes
per second
in SHOW GLOBAL
STATUS
output, you can consider increasing the
sort_buffer_size
value to
speed up ORDER BY
or GROUP
BY
operations that cannot be improved with query
optimization or improved indexing.
As of MySQL 5.6.4, the optimizer tries to work out how much space is needed but can allocate more, up to the limit. Before MySQL 5.6.4, the optimizer allocates the entire buffer even if it is not all needed. In either case, setting it larger than required globally will slow down most queries that sort. It is best to increase it as a session setting, and only for the sessions that need a larger size. On Linux, there are thresholds of 256KB and 2MB where larger values may significantly slow down memory allocation, so you should consider staying below one of those values. Experiment to find the best value for your workload. See Section B.5.4.4, “Where MySQL Stores Temporary Files”.
The maximum permissible setting for
sort_buffer_size
is
4GB–1. Larger values are permitted for 64-bit platforms
(except 64-bit Windows, for which large values are truncated
to 4GB–1 with a warning).
System Variable | Name | sql_auto_is_null | |
Variable Scope | Global, Session | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | Type | boolean | |
Default | 0 |
If this variable is set to 1, then after a statement that
successfully inserts an automatically generated
AUTO_INCREMENT
value, you can find that
value by issuing a statement of the following form:
SELECT * FROMtbl_name
WHEREauto_col
IS NULL
If the statement returns a row, the value returned is the same
as if you invoked the
LAST_INSERT_ID()
function. For
details, including the return value after a multiple-row
insert, see Section 12.14, “Information Functions”. If no
AUTO_INCREMENT
value was successfully
inserted, the SELECT
statement
returns no row.
The behavior of retrieving an
AUTO_INCREMENT
value by using an
IS NULL
comparison is used by
some ODBC programs, such as Access. See
Obtaining Auto-Increment Values.
This behavior can be disabled by setting
sql_auto_is_null
to 0.
The default value of
sql_auto_is_null
is 0 in
MySQL 5.6.
System Variable | Name | sql_big_selects | |
Variable Scope | Global, Session | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | Type | boolean | |
Default | 1 |
If set to 0, MySQL aborts
SELECT
statements that are
likely to take a very long time to execute (that is,
statements for which the optimizer estimates that the number
of examined rows exceeds the value of
max_join_size
). This is
useful when an inadvisable WHERE
statement
has been issued. The default value for a new connection is 1,
which permits all SELECT
statements.
If you set the max_join_size
system variable to a value other than
DEFAULT
,
sql_big_selects
is set to 0.
System Variable | Name | sql_buffer_result | |
Variable Scope | Global, Session | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | Type | boolean | |
Default | 0 |
If set to 1,
sql_buffer_result
forces
results from SELECT
statements
to be put into temporary tables. This helps MySQL free the
table locks early and can be beneficial in cases where it
takes a long time to send results to the client. The default
value is 0.
System Variable | Name | sql_log_bin | |
Variable Scope | Global, Session | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | Type | boolean |
This variable controls whether logging to the binary log is
done. The default value is 1 (do logging). To change logging
for the current session, change the session value of this
variable. The session user must have the
SUPER
privilege to set this
variable.
In MySQL 5.6, it is not possible to set
@@session.sql_log_bin
within a transaction
or subquery. (Bug #53437)
System Variable | Name | sql_log_off | |
Variable Scope | Global, Session | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | Type | boolean | |
Default | 0 |
This variable controls whether logging to the general query
log is done. The default value is 0 (do logging). To change
logging for the current session, change the session value of
this variable. The session user must have the
SUPER
privilege to set this
option. The default value is 0.
Command-Line Format | --sql-mode=name | ||
System Variable | Name | sql_mode | |
Variable Scope | Global, Session | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values (<= 5.6.5) | Type | set | |
Default | '' | ||
Valid Values | ALLOW_INVALID_DATES | ||
ANSI_QUOTES | |||
ERROR_FOR_DIVISION_BY_ZERO | |||
HIGH_NOT_PRECEDENCE | |||
IGNORE_SPACE | |||
NO_AUTO_CREATE_USER | |||
NO_AUTO_VALUE_ON_ZERO | |||
NO_BACKSLASH_ESCAPES | |||
NO_DIR_IN_CREATE | |||
NO_ENGINE_SUBSTITUTION | |||
NO_FIELD_OPTIONS | |||
NO_KEY_OPTIONS | |||
NO_TABLE_OPTIONS | |||
NO_UNSIGNED_SUBTRACTION | |||
NO_ZERO_DATE | |||
NO_ZERO_IN_DATE | |||
ONLY_FULL_GROUP_BY | |||
PAD_CHAR_TO_FULL_LENGTH | |||
PIPES_AS_CONCAT | |||
REAL_AS_FLOAT | |||
STRICT_ALL_TABLES | |||
STRICT_TRANS_TABLES | |||
Permitted Values (>= 5.6.6) | Type | set | |
Default | NO_ENGINE_SUBSTITUTION | ||
Valid Values | ALLOW_INVALID_DATES | ||
ANSI_QUOTES | |||
ERROR_FOR_DIVISION_BY_ZERO | |||
HIGH_NOT_PRECEDENCE | |||
IGNORE_SPACE | |||
NO_AUTO_CREATE_USER | |||
NO_AUTO_VALUE_ON_ZERO | |||
NO_BACKSLASH_ESCAPES | |||
NO_DIR_IN_CREATE | |||
NO_ENGINE_SUBSTITUTION | |||
NO_FIELD_OPTIONS | |||
NO_KEY_OPTIONS | |||
NO_TABLE_OPTIONS | |||
NO_UNSIGNED_SUBTRACTION | |||
NO_ZERO_DATE | |||
NO_ZERO_IN_DATE | |||
ONLY_FULL_GROUP_BY | |||
PAD_CHAR_TO_FULL_LENGTH | |||
PIPES_AS_CONCAT | |||
REAL_AS_FLOAT | |||
STRICT_ALL_TABLES | |||
STRICT_TRANS_TABLES |
The current server SQL mode, which can be set dynamically. The
default as of MySQL 5.6.6 is
NO_ENGINE_SUBSTITUTION
;
previously it was an empty string. See
Section 5.1.7, “Server SQL Modes”.
MySQL installation programs may configure the SQL mode
during the installation process. For example,
mysql_install_db creates a default option
file named my.cnf
in the base
installation directory. This file contains a line that sets
the SQL mode; see Section 4.4.3, “mysql_install_db — Initialize MySQL Data Directory”.
If the SQL mode differs from the default or from what you expect, check for a setting in an option file that the server reads at startup.
If set to 1 (the default), warnings of Note
level increment warning_count
and the
server records them. If set to 0, Note
warnings do not increment
warning_count
and the server
does not record them. mysqldump includes
output to set this variable to 0 so that reloading the dump
file does not produce warnings for events that do not affect
the integrity of the reload operation.
If set to 1 (the default), the server quotes identifiers for
SHOW CREATE TABLE
and
SHOW CREATE DATABASE
statements. If set to 0, quoting is disabled. This option is
enabled by default so that replication works for identifiers
that require quoting. See Section 13.7.5.12, “SHOW CREATE TABLE Syntax”,
and Section 13.7.5.8, “SHOW CREATE DATABASE Syntax”.
If set to 1, MySQL aborts
UPDATE
or
DELETE
statements that do not
use a key in the WHERE
clause or a
LIMIT
clause. (Specifically,
UPDATE
statements must have a
WHERE
clause that uses a key or a
LIMIT
clause, or both.
DELETE
statements must have
both.) This makes it possible to catch
UPDATE
or
DELETE
statements where keys
are not used properly and that would probably change or delete
a large number of rows. The default value is 0.
System Variable | Name | sql_select_limit | |
Variable Scope | Global, Session | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | Type | integer |
The maximum number of rows to return from
SELECT
statements. The default
value for a new connection is the maximum number of rows that
the server permits per table. Typical default values are
(232)–1 or
(264)–1. If you have changed
the limit, the default value can be restored by assigning a
value of DEFAULT
.
If a SELECT
has a
LIMIT
clause, the LIMIT
takes precedence over the value of
sql_select_limit
.
This variable controls whether single-row
INSERT
statements produce an
information string if warnings occur. The default is 0. Set
the value to 1 to produce an information string.
Command-Line Format | --ssl-ca=file_name | ||
System Variable | Name | ssl_ca | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | No | ||
Permitted Values | Type | file name |
The path to a file with a list of trusted SSL CAs.
Command-Line Format | --ssl-capath=dir_name | ||
System Variable | Name | ssl_capath | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | No | ||
Permitted Values | Type | directory name |
The path to a directory that contains trusted SSL CA certificates in PEM format.
Command-Line Format | --ssl-cert=file_name | ||
System Variable | Name | ssl_cert | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | No | ||
Permitted Values | Type | file name |
The name of the SSL certificate file to use for establishing a secure connection.
Command-Line Format | --ssl-cipher=name | ||
System Variable | Name | ssl_cipher | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | No | ||
Permitted Values | Type | string |
A list of permissible ciphers to use for SSL encryption.
Introduced | 5.6.3 | ||
Command-Line Format | --ssl-crl=file_name | ||
System Variable | Name | ssl_crl | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | No | ||
Permitted Values | Type | file name |
The path to a file containing certificate revocation lists in PEM format. Revocation lists work for MySQL distributions compiled against OpenSSL (but not yaSSL).
This variable was added in MySQL 5.6.3.
Introduced | 5.6.3 | ||
Command-Line Format | --ssl-crlpath=dir_name | ||
System Variable | Name | ssl_crlpath | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | No | ||
Permitted Values | Type | directory name |
The path to a directory that contains files containing certificate revocation lists in PEM format. Revocation lists work for MySQL distributions compiled against OpenSSL (but not yaSSL).
This variable was added in MySQL 5.6.3.
Command-Line Format | --ssl-key=file_name | ||
System Variable | Name | ssl_key | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | No | ||
Permitted Values | Type | file name |
The name of the SSL key file to use for establishing a secure connection.
System Variable | Name | storage_engine | |
Variable Scope | Global, Session | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | Type | enumeration | |
Default | InnoDB |
The default storage engine (table type). To set the storage
engine at server startup, use the
--default-storage-engine
option. See Section 5.1.3, “Server Command Options”.
This variable is deprecated. Use
default_storage_engine
instead.
Introduced | 5.6.5 | ||
Command-Line Format | --stored-program-cache=# | ||
System Variable | Name | stored_program_cache | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | Type | integer | |
Default | 256 | ||
Min Value | 256 | ||
Max Value | 524288 |
Sets a soft upper limit for the number of cached stored routines per connection. The value of this variable is specified in terms of the number of stored routines held in each of the two caches maintained by the MySQL Server for, respectively, stored procedures and stored functions.
Whenever a stored routine is executed this cache size is checked before the first or top-level statement in the routine is parsed; if the number of routines of the same type (stored procedures or stored functions according to which is being executed) exceeds the limit specified by this variable, the corresponding cache is flushed and memory previously allocated for cached objects is freed. This allows the cache to be flushed safely, even when there are dependencies between stored routines.
Command-Line Format | --sync-frm | ||
System Variable | Name | sync_frm | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | Type | boolean | |
Default | TRUE |
If this variable is set to 1, when any nontemporary table is
created its .frm
file is synchronized to
disk (using fdatasync()
). This is slower
but safer in case of a crash. The default is 1.
System Variable | Name | system_time_zone | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | No | ||
Permitted Values | Type | string |
The server system time zone. When the server begins executing,
it inherits a time zone setting from the machine defaults,
possibly modified by the environment of the account used for
running the server or the startup script. The value is used to
set system_time_zone
.
Typically the time zone is specified by the
TZ
environment variable. It also can be
specified using the
--timezone
option of the
mysqld_safe script.
The system_time_zone
variable
differs from time_zone
.
Although they might have the same value, the latter variable
is used to initialize the time zone for each client that
connects. See Section 10.6, “MySQL Server Time Zone Support”.
System Variable | Name | table_definition_cache | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values (<= 5.6.7) | Type | integer | |
Default | 400 | ||
Min Value | 400 | ||
Max Value | 524288 | ||
Permitted Values (>= 5.6.8) | Type | integer | |
Default | -1 (autosized) | ||
Min Value | 400 | ||
Max Value | 524288 |
The number of table definitions (from
.frm
files) that can be stored in the
definition cache. If you use a large number of tables, you can
create a large table definition cache to speed up opening of
tables. The table definition cache takes less space and does
not use file descriptors, unlike the normal table cache. The
minimum value is 400. The default value is based on the
following formula, capped to a limit of 2000:
400 + (table_open_cache / 2)
Before MySQL 5.6.8, the default is 400.
For InnoDB
,
table_definition_cache
acts
as a soft limit for the number of open table instances in the
InnoDB
data dictionary cache. If the number
of open table instances exceeds the
table_definition_cache
setting, the LRU mechanism begins to mark table instances for
eviction and eventually removes them from the data dictionary
cache. The limit helps address situations in which significant
amounts of memory would be used to cache rarely used table
instances until the next server restart. The number of table
instances with cached metadata could be higher than the limit
defined by
table_definition_cache
,
because InnoDB
system table instances and
parent and child table instances with foreign key
relationships are not placed on the LRU list and are not
subject to eviction from memory.
Additionally,
table_definition_cache
defines a soft limit for the number of
InnoDB
file-per-table tablespaces
that can be open at one time, which is also controlled by
innodb_open_files
. If both
table_definition_cache
and
innodb_open_files
are set,
the highest setting is used. If neither variable is set,
table_definition_cache
, which
has a higher default value, is used. If the number of open
tablespace file handles exceeds the limit defined by
table_definition_cache
or
innodb_open_files
, the LRU
mechanism searches the tablespace file LRU list for files that
are fully flushed and are not currently being extended. This
process is performed each time a new tablespace is opened. If
there are no “inactive” tablespaces, no
tablespace files are closed.
System Variable | Name | table_open_cache | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values (<= 5.6.7) | Type | integer | |
Default | 400 | ||
Min Value | 1 | ||
Max Value | 524288 | ||
Permitted Values (>= 5.6.8) | Type | integer | |
Default | 2000 | ||
Min Value | 1 | ||
Max Value | 524288 |
The number of open tables for all threads. Increasing this
value increases the number of file descriptors that
mysqld requires. You can check whether you
need to increase the table cache by checking the
Opened_tables
status
variable. See Section 5.1.6, “Server Status Variables”. If
the value of Opened_tables
is large and you do not use
FLUSH TABLES
often (which just forces all tables to be closed and
reopened), then you should increase the value of the
table_open_cache
variable.
For more information about the table cache, see
Section 8.4.3.1, “How MySQL Opens and Closes Tables”.
Introduced | 5.6.6 | ||
System Variable | Name | table_open_cache_instances | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | No | ||
Permitted Values | Type | integer | |
Default | 1 |
The number of open tables cache instances (default 1). To
improve scalability by reducing contention among sessions, the
open tables cache can be partitioned into several smaller
cache instances of size
table_open_cache
/
table_open_cache_instances
.
A session needs to lock only one instance to access it for DML
statements. This segments cache access among instances,
permitting higher performance for operations that use the
cache when there are many sessions accessing tables. (DDL
statements still require a lock on the entire cache, but such
statements are much less frequent than DML statements.)
A value of 8 or 16 is recommended on systems that routinely use 16 or more cores.
This variable was added in MySQL 5.6.6.
Command-Line Format | --thread_cache_size=# | ||
System Variable | Name | thread_cache_size | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values (<= 5.6.7) | Type | integer | |
Default | 0 | ||
Min Value | 0 | ||
Max Value | 16384 | ||
Permitted Values (>= 5.6.8) | Type | integer | |
Default | -1 (autosized) | ||
Min Value | 0 | ||
Max Value | 16384 |
How many threads the server should cache for reuse. When a
client disconnects, the client's threads are put in the cache
if there are fewer than
thread_cache_size
threads
there. Requests for threads are satisfied by reusing threads
taken from the cache if possible, and only when the cache is
empty is a new thread created. This variable can be increased
to improve performance if you have a lot of new connections.
Normally, this does not provide a notable performance
improvement if you have a good thread implementation. However,
if your server sees hundreds of connections per second you
should normally set
thread_cache_size
high enough
so that most new connections use cached threads. By examining
the difference between the
Connections
and
Threads_created
status
variables, you can see how efficient the thread cache is. For
details, see Section 5.1.6, “Server Status Variables”.
The default value is based on the following formula, capped to a limit of 100:
8 + (max_connections / 100)
Before MySQL 5.6.8, the default is 0.
Deprecated | 5.6.1 | ||
Command-Line Format | --thread_concurrency=# | ||
System Variable | Name | thread_concurrency | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | No | ||
Permitted Values | Type | integer | |
Default | 10 | ||
Min Value | 1 | ||
Max Value | 512 |
This variable is specific to Solaris 8 and earlier systems,
for which mysqld invokes the
thr_setconcurrency()
function with the
variable value. This function enables applications to give the
threads system a hint about the desired number of threads that
should be run at the same time. Current Solaris versions
document this as having no effect.
This variable is deprecated as of MySQL 5.6.1 and is removed in MySQL 5.7. You should remove this from MySQL configuration files whenever you see it unless they are for Solaris 8 or earlier.
Command-Line Format | --thread_handling=name | ||
System Variable | Name | thread_handling | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | No | ||
Permitted Values | Type | enumeration | |
Default | one-thread-per-connection | ||
Valid Values | no-threads | ||
one-thread-per-connection | |||
dynamically-loaded |
The thread-handling model used by the server for connection
threads. The permissible values are
no-threads
(the server uses a single thread
to handle one connection) and
one-thread-per-connection
(the server uses
one thread to handle each client connection).
no-threads
is useful for debugging under
Linux; see Section 24.4, “Debugging and Porting MySQL”.
If the thread pool plugin is enabled, the server sets the
thread_handling
value to
dynamically-loaded
. See
Section 8.11.6.1, “Thread Pool Components and Installation”.
Introduced | 5.6.10 | ||
Command-Line Format | --thread_pool_algorithm=# | ||
System Variable | Name | thread_pool_algorithm | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | No | ||
Permitted Values | Type | integer | |
Default | 0 | ||
Min Value | 0 | ||
Max Value | 1 |
This variable controls which algorithm the thread pool plugin uses:
A value of 0 (the default) uses a conservative low-concurrency algorithm which is most well tested and is known to produce very good results.
A value of 1 increases the concurrency and uses a more aggressive algorithm which at times has been known to perform 5–10% better on optimal thread counts, but has degrading performance as the number of connections increases. Its use should be considered as experimental and not supported.
This variable was added in MySQL 5.6.10. It is available only if the thread pool plugin is enabled. See Section 8.11.6, “The Thread Pool Plugin”
thread_pool_high_priority_connection
Introduced | 5.6.10 | ||
Command-Line Format | --thread_pool_high_priority_connection=# | ||
System Variable | Name | thread_pool_high_priority_connection | |
Variable Scope | Global, Session | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | Type | integer | |
Default | 0 | ||
Min Value | 0 | ||
Max Value | 1 |
This variable affects queuing of new statements prior to execution. If the value is 0 (false, the default), statement queuing uses both the low-priority and high-priority queues. If the value is 1 (true), queued statements always go to the high-priority queue.
This variable was added in MySQL 5.6.10. It is available only if the thread pool plugin is enabled. See Section 8.11.6, “The Thread Pool Plugin”
thread_pool_max_unused_threads
Introduced | 5.6.10 | ||
Command-Line Format | --thread_pool_max_unused_threads=# | ||
System Variable | Name | thread_pool_max_unused_threads | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | Type | integer | |
Default | 0 | ||
Min Value | 0 | ||
Max Value | 4096 |
The maximum permitted number of unused threads in the thread pool. This variable makes it possible to limit the amount of memory used by sleeping threads.
A value of 0 (the default) means no limit on the number of
sleeping threads. A value of N
where N
is greater than 0 means 1
consumer thread and N
–1
reserve threads. In this case, if a thread is ready to sleep
but the number of sleeping threads is already at the maximum,
the thread exits rather than going to sleep.
A sleeping thread is either sleeping as a consumer thread or a reserve thread. The thread pool permits one thread to be the consumer thread when sleeping. If a thread goes to sleep and there is no existing consumer thread, it will sleep as a consumer thread. When a thread must be woken up, a consumer thread is selected if there is one. A reserve thread is selected only when there is no consumer thread to wake up.
This variable was added in MySQL 5.6.10. It is available only if the thread pool plugin is enabled. See Section 8.11.6, “The Thread Pool Plugin”
Introduced | 5.6.10 | ||
Command-Line Format | --thread_pool_prio_kickup_timer=# | ||
System Variable | Name | thread_pool_prio_kickup_timer | |
Variable Scope | Global, Session | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | Type | integer | |
Default | 1000 | ||
Min Value | 0 | ||
Max Value | 4294967294 |
This variable affects statements waiting for execution in the low-priority queue. The value is the number of milliseconds before a waiting statement is moved to the high-priority queue. The default is 1000 (1 second). The range of values is 0 to 232 – 2.
This variable was added in MySQL 5.6.10. It is available only if the thread pool plugin is enabled. See Section 8.11.6, “The Thread Pool Plugin”
Introduced | 5.6.10 | ||
Command-Line Format | --thread_pool_size=# | ||
System Variable | Name | thread_pool_size | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | No | ||
Permitted Values | Type | integer | |
Default | 16 | ||
Min Value | 1 | ||
Max Value | 64 |
The number of thread groups in the thread pool. This is the most important parameter controlling thread pool performance. It affects how many statements can execute simultaneously. The default value is 16, with a range from 1 to 64 of permissible values. If a value outside this range is specified, the thread pool plugin does not load and the server writes a message to the error log.
This variable was added in MySQL 5.6.10. It is available only if the thread pool plugin is enabled. See Section 8.11.6, “The Thread Pool Plugin”
Introduced | 5.6.10 | ||
Command-Line Format | --thread_pool_stall_limit=# | ||
System Variable | Name | thread_pool_stall_limit | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | Type | integer | |
Default | 6 | ||
Min Value | 4 | ||
Max Value | 600 |
This variable affects executing statements. The value is the amount of time a statement has to finish after starting to execute before it becomes defined as stalled, at which point the thread pool permits the thread group to begin executing another statement. The value is measured in 10 millisecond units, so a value of 6 (the default) means 60ms. The range of values is 4 to 600 (40ms to 6s). Short wait values permit threads to start more quickly. Short values are also better for avoiding deadlock situations. Long wait values are useful for workloads that include long-running statements, to avoid starting too many new statements while the current ones execute.
This variable was added in MySQL 5.6.10. It is available only if the thread pool plugin is enabled. See Section 8.11.6, “The Thread Pool Plugin”
Command-Line Format | --thread_stack=# | ||
System Variable | Name | thread_stack | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | No | ||
Permitted Values (32-bit platforms) | Type | integer | |
Default | 196608 | ||
Min Value | 131072 | ||
Max Value | 4294967295 | ||
Block Size | 1024 | ||
Permitted Values (64-bit platforms) | Type | integer | |
Default | 262144 | ||
Min Value | 131072 | ||
Max Value | 18446744073709551615 | ||
Block Size | 1024 |
The stack size for each thread. Many of the limits detected by
the crash-me
test are dependent on this
value. See Section 8.12.2, “The MySQL Benchmark Suite”. The default of
192KB (256KB for 64-bit systems) is large enough for normal
operation. If the thread stack size is too small, it limits
the complexity of the SQL statements that the server can
handle, the recursion depth of stored procedures, and other
memory-consuming actions.
This variable is unused. It is deprecated as of MySQL 5.6.7 and will be removed in a future MySQL release.
System Variable | Name | time_zone | |
Variable Scope | Global, Session | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | Type | string |
The current time zone. This variable is used to initialize the
time zone for each client that connects. By default, the
initial value of this is 'SYSTEM'
(which
means, “use the value of
system_time_zone
”).
The value can be specified explicitly at server startup with
the --default-time-zone
option.
See Section 10.6, “MySQL Server Time Zone Support”.
Deprecated | 5.6.20 | ||
Command-Line Format | --timed_mutexes | ||
System Variable | Name | timed_mutexes | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | Type | boolean | |
Default | OFF |
In MySQL 5.6, this variable is deprecated; it has no use. It will be removed in a future MySQL release.
System Variable | Name | timestamp | |
Variable Scope | Session | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | Type | numeric |
Set the time for this client. This is used to get the original
timestamp if you use the binary log to restore rows.
timestamp_value
should be a Unix
epoch timestamp (a value like that returned by
UNIX_TIMESTAMP()
, not a value
in 'YYYY-MM-DD hh:mm:ss'
format) or
DEFAULT
.
Setting timestamp
to a
constant value causes it to retain that value until it is
changed again. Setting
timestamp
to
DEFAULT
causes its value to be the current
date and time as of the time it is accessed.
As of MySQL 5.6.4, timestamp
is a DOUBLE
rather than
BIGINT
because its value includes a
microseconds part.
SET timestamp
affects the value returned by
NOW()
but not by
SYSDATE()
. This means that
timestamp settings in the binary log have no effect on
invocations of SYSDATE()
. The
server can be started with the
--sysdate-is-now
option to
cause SYSDATE()
to be an alias
for NOW()
, in which case
SET timestamp
affects both functions.
Command-Line Format | --tmp_table_size=# | ||
System Variable | Name | tmp_table_size | |
Variable Scope | Global, Session | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | Type | integer | |
Default | 16777216 | ||
Min Value | 1024 | ||
Max Value | 18446744073709551615 |
The maximum size of internal in-memory temporary tables. (The
actual limit is determined as the minimum of
tmp_table_size
and
max_heap_table_size
.) If an
in-memory temporary table exceeds the limit, MySQL
automatically converts it to an on-disk
MyISAM
table. Increase the value of
tmp_table_size
(and
max_heap_table_size
if
necessary) if you do many advanced GROUP BY
queries and you have lots of memory. This variable does not
apply to user-created MEMORY
tables.
You can compare the number of internal on-disk temporary
tables created to the total number of internal temporary
tables created by comparing the values of the
Created_tmp_disk_tables
and
Created_tmp_tables
variables.
See also Section 8.4.4, “How MySQL Uses Internal Temporary Tables”.
Command-Line Format | --tmpdir=path | ||
System Variable | Name | tmpdir | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | No | ||
Permitted Values | Type | directory name |
The directory used for temporary files and temporary tables.
This variable can be set to a list of several paths that are
used in round-robin fashion. Paths should be separated by
colon characters (“:
”) on Unix
and semicolon characters (“;
”)
on Windows.
The multiple-directory feature can be used to spread the load
between several physical disks. If the MySQL server is acting
as a replication slave, you should not set
tmpdir
to point to a
directory on a memory-based file system or to a directory that
is cleared when the server host restarts. A replication slave
needs some of its temporary files to survive a machine restart
so that it can replicate temporary tables or
LOAD DATA
INFILE
operations. If files in the temporary file
directory are lost when the server restarts, replication
fails. You can set the slave's temporary directory using the
slave_load_tmpdir
variable.
In that case, the slave will not use the general
tmpdir
value and you can set
tmpdir
to a nonpermanent
location.
Command-Line Format | --transaction_alloc_block_size=# | ||
System Variable | Name | transaction_alloc_block_size | |
Variable Scope | Global, Session | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values (32-bit platforms, <= 5.6.23) | Type | integer | |
Default | 8192 | ||
Min Value | 1024 | ||
Max Value | 4294967295 | ||
Block Size | 1024 | ||
Permitted Values (64-bit platforms, <= 5.6.23) | Type | integer | |
Default | 8192 | ||
Min Value | 1024 | ||
Max Value | 18446744073709551615 | ||
Block Size | 1024 | ||
Permitted Values (>= 5.6.24) | Type | integer | |
Default | 8192 | ||
Min Value | 1024 | ||
Max Value | 131072 | ||
Block Size | 1024 |
The amount in bytes by which to increase a per-transaction
memory pool which needs memory. See the description of
transaction_prealloc_size
.
Command-Line Format | --transaction_prealloc_size=# | ||
System Variable | Name | transaction_prealloc_size | |
Variable Scope | Global, Session | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values (32-bit platforms, <= 5.6.23) | Type | integer | |
Default | 4096 | ||
Min Value | 1024 | ||
Max Value | 4294967295 | ||
Block Size | 1024 | ||
Permitted Values (64-bit platforms, <= 5.6.23) | Type | integer | |
Default | 4096 | ||
Min Value | 1024 | ||
Max Value | 18446744073709551615 | ||
Block Size | 1024 | ||
Permitted Values (>= 5.6.24) | Type | integer | |
Default | 4096 | ||
Min Value | 1024 | ||
Max Value | 131072 | ||
Block Size | 1024 |
There is a per-transaction memory pool from which various
transaction-related allocations take memory. The initial size
of the pool in bytes is
transaction_prealloc_size
.
For every allocation that cannot be satisfied from the pool
because it has insufficient memory available, the pool is
increased by
transaction_alloc_block_size
bytes. When the transaction ends, the pool is truncated to
transaction_prealloc_size
bytes.
By making
transaction_prealloc_size
sufficiently large to contain all statements within a single
transaction, you can avoid many malloc()
calls.
System Variable | Name | tx_isolation | |
Variable Scope | Global, Session | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | Type | enumeration | |
Default | REPEATABLE-READ | ||
Valid Values | READ-UNCOMMITTED | ||
READ-COMMITTED | |||
REPEATABLE-READ | |||
SERIALIZABLE |
The default transaction isolation level. Defaults to
REPEATABLE-READ
.
This variable can be set directly, or indirectly using the
SET TRANSACTION
statement. See
Section 13.3.6, “SET TRANSACTION Syntax”. If you set
tx_isolation
directly to an
isolation level name that contains a space, the name should be
enclosed within quotation marks, with the space replaced by a
dash. For example:
SET tx_isolation = 'READ-COMMITTED';
Any unique prefix of a valid value may be used to set the value of this variable.
The default transaction isolation level can also be set at
startup using the
--transaction-isolation
server
option.
Introduced | 5.6.5 | ||
System Variable | Name | tx_read_only | |
Variable Scope | Global, Session | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | Type | boolean | |
Default | OFF |
The default transaction access mode. The value can be
OFF
(read/write, the default) or
ON
(read only).
This variable can be set directly, or indirectly using the
SET TRANSACTION
statement. See
Section 13.3.6, “SET TRANSACTION Syntax”.
To set the default transaction access mode at startup, use the
--transaction-read-only
server
option.
This variable was added in MySQL 5.6.5.
System Variable | Name | unique_checks | |
Variable Scope | Global, Session | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | Type | boolean | |
Default | 1 |
If set to 1 (the default), uniqueness checks for secondary
indexes in InnoDB
tables are performed. If
set to 0, storage engines are permitted to assume that
duplicate keys are not present in input data. If you know for
certain that your data does not contain uniqueness violations,
you can set this to 0 to speed up large table imports to
InnoDB
.
Setting this variable to 0 does not require storage engines to ignore duplicate keys. An engine is still permitted to check for them and issue duplicate-key errors if it detects them.
Command-Line Format | --updatable_views_with_limit=# | ||
System Variable | Name | updatable_views_with_limit | |
Variable Scope | Global, Session | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | Type | boolean | |
Default | 1 |
This variable controls whether updates to a view can be made
when the view does not contain all columns of the primary key
defined in the underlying table, if the update statement
contains a LIMIT
clause. (Such updates
often are generated by GUI tools.) An update is an
UPDATE
or
DELETE
statement. Primary key
here means a PRIMARY KEY
, or a
UNIQUE
index in which no column can contain
NULL
.
The variable can have two values:
1
or YES
: Issue a
warning only (not an error message). This is the default
value.
0
or NO
: Prohibit
the update.
validate_password_
xxx
The validate_password
plugin implements a
set of system variables having names of the form
validate_password_
.
These variables affect password testing by that plugin; see
Section 6.1.2.6.2, “Password Validation Plugin Options and Variables”.
xxx
Introduced | 5.6.11 | ||
System Variable | Name | validate_user_plugins | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | No | ||
Permitted Values | Type | boolean | |
Default | ON |
If this variable is enabled (the default), the server checks each user account and produces a warning if conditions are found that would make the account unusable:
The account requires an authentication plugin that is not loaded.
The account requires the
sha256_password
authentication plugin
but the server was started with neither SSL nor RSA
enabled as required by this plugin.
Enabling validate_user_plugins
slows down
server initialization and FLUSH PRIVILEGES
.
If you do not require the additional checking, you can disable
this variable at startup to avoid the performance decrement.
This variable was added in MySQL 5.6.11.
The version number for the server. The value might also
include a suffix indicating server build or configuration
information. -log
indicates that one or
more of the general log, slow query log, or binary log are
enabled. -debug
indicates that the server was
built with debugging support enabled.
System Variable | Name | version_comment | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | No | ||
Permitted Values | Type | string |
The CMake configuration program has a
COMPILATION_COMMENT
option that
permits a comment to be specified when building MySQL. This
variable contains the value of that comment. See
Section 2.9.4, “MySQL Source-Configuration Options”.
System Variable | Name | version_compile_machine | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | No | ||
Permitted Values | Type | string |
The type of the server binary.
System Variable | Name | version_compile_os | |
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | No | ||
Permitted Values | Type | string |
The type of operating system on which MySQL was built.
Command-Line Format | --wait_timeout=# | ||
System Variable | Name | wait_timeout | |
Variable Scope | Global, Session | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values (Windows) | Type | integer | |
Default | 28800 | ||
Min Value | 1 | ||
Max Value | 2147483 | ||
Permitted Values (Other) | Type | integer | |
Default | 28800 | ||
Min Value | 1 | ||
Max Value | 31536000 |
The number of seconds the server waits for activity on a noninteractive connection before closing it.
On thread startup, the session
wait_timeout
value is
initialized from the global
wait_timeout
value or from
the global
interactive_timeout
value,
depending on the type of client (as defined by the
CLIENT_INTERACTIVE
connect option to
mysql_real_connect()
). See
also interactive_timeout
.
The number of errors, warnings, and notes that resulted from the last statement that generated messages. This variable is read only. See Section 13.7.5.41, “SHOW WARNINGS Syntax”.
User Comments
if you set
[mysqld]
ft_min_word_len=3
you should also set
[myisamchk]
ft_min_word_len=3
if you use myisamchk
The description for lower_case_table_names is a bit unclear with regards to the value 0 (but does explain 1 and 2).
A value of 0 means that table & database names are stored as-is, and name comparisons are case sensitive.
There's more information about lower_case_table_names on this page:
http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.0/en/identifier-case-sensitivity.html
Documentation says "The maximum allowable setting for sort_buffer_size is 4GB." and there is reference to a chapter explaining temporary on-disk files.
However, the fact that on 32-bit GNU/Linux x86, "sort_buffer_size" must be a few MiB only to avoid exceeding maximum process space, as explained in http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.0/en/innodb-configuration.html makes one infer that that sort_buffer_size is actually some kind of in-memory buffer.
Additionally, the formula should probably be extended:
total =
innodb_buffer_pool_size +
key_buffer_size +
innodb_additional_mem_pool_size +
innodb_log_buffer_size +
max_connections *
(sort_buffer_size +
read_buffer_size +
binlog_cache_size +
maximum_thread_stack_size);
Noting that "key_buffer_size" is a MyISAM parameter
there is abug in MySQL server that treat open_files_limit and open-files-limit differently also the limit for open-files-limit mentioned on this page is not entirely true
http://www.geeksww.com/tutorials/database_management_systems/mysql/configuration/mysql_open_files_limit_openfileslimit_vs_openfileslimit_on_linux.php
It appears that the "read_buffer_size" setting is used by the MEMORY table engine as the allocation increment size (minus a few bytes). This means that a MEMORY table with *one row* will take up, essentially, "read_buffer_size" bytes. For each on the table, add on another "read_buffer_size" bytes to the table. The table will not change in size again until all of that allocation is used by new rows; then it will grow in increments again.
This is not documented anywhere as far as I can tell, and I only found it after banging my head against a wall looking through the MySQL source code.
Many users upgrading from 5.1 to 5.6 will be caught out by this: query_cache_type by default is turned off, even if query_cache_size is set. Previous versions turned on the query cache simply by setting a value for query_cache_size.
We've just upgraded some servers for our CRM systems and itv took us a while to work out why performance was slow!
John Paterson
http://www.reallysimplesystems.com/
Making CRM Simple
It should also be noted that the table_definition_cache is also used to cache text/blob data during certain actions. This means it is impractical to think that the memory usage of the table definition cache is a fixed amount in anyway. There are purge functions and limits in place but on a busy system with many tables with large blobs you could see a significant amount of bloat.