The MERGE
storage engine, also known as the
MRG_MyISAM
engine, is a collection of identical
MyISAM
tables that can be used as one.
“Identical” means that all tables have identical column
and index information. You cannot merge MyISAM
tables in which the columns are listed in a different order, do not
have exactly the same columns, or have the indexes in different
order. However, any or all of the MyISAM
tables
can be compressed with myisampack. See
Section 4.6.5, “myisampack — Generate Compressed, Read-Only MyISAM Tables”. Differences in table options such as
AVG_ROW_LENGTH
, MAX_ROWS
, or
PACK_KEYS
do not matter.
When you create a MERGE
table, MySQL creates two
files on disk. The files have names that begin with the table name
and have an extension to indicate the file type. An
.frm
file stores the table format, and an
.MRG
file contains the names of the tables that
should be used as one. The tables do not have to be in the same
database as the MERGE
table itself.
You can use SELECT
,
DELETE
,
UPDATE
, and
INSERT
on MERGE
tables. You must have SELECT
,
UPDATE
, and
DELETE
privileges on the
MyISAM
tables that you map to a
MERGE
table.
The use of MERGE
tables entails the following
security issue: If a user has access to MyISAM
table t
, that user can create a
MERGE
table m
that
accesses t
. However, if the user's
privileges on t
are subsequently
revoked, the user can continue to access
t
by doing so through
m
.
If you DROP
the MERGE
table,
you are dropping only the MERGE
specification.
The underlying tables are not affected.
To create a MERGE
table, you must specify a
UNION=(
clause that indicates which list-of-tables
)MyISAM
tables you
want to use as one. You can optionally specify an
INSERT_METHOD
option if you want inserts for the
MERGE
table to take place in the first or last
table of the UNION
list. Use a value
of FIRST
or LAST
to cause
inserts to be made in the first or last table, respectively. If you
do not specify an INSERT_METHOD
option or if you
specify it with a value of NO
, attempts to insert
rows into the MERGE
table result in an error.
The following example shows how to create a MERGE
table:
mysql>CREATE TABLE t1 (
->a INT NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT PRIMARY KEY,
->message CHAR(20)) ENGINE=MyISAM;
mysql>CREATE TABLE t2 (
->a INT NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT PRIMARY KEY,
->message CHAR(20)) ENGINE=MyISAM;
mysql>INSERT INTO t1 (message) VALUES ('Testing'),('table'),('t1');
mysql>INSERT INTO t2 (message) VALUES ('Testing'),('table'),('t2');
mysql>CREATE TABLE total (
->a INT NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT,
->message CHAR(20), INDEX(a))
->ENGINE=MERGE UNION=(t1,t2) INSERT_METHOD=LAST;
Note that the a
column is indexed as a
PRIMARY KEY
in the underlying
MyISAM
tables, but not in the
MERGE
table. There it is indexed but not as a
PRIMARY KEY
because a MERGE
table cannot enforce uniqueness over the set of underlying tables.
In MySQL 5.1.15 and later, when a table that is part of a
MERGE
table is opened, the following checks are
applied before opening each table. If any table fails the
conformance checks, then the operation that triggered the opening of
the table will fail. The conformance checks applied to each table
are:
Table must have exactly the same amount of columns that
MERGE
table has.
Column order in the MERGE
table must match
the column order in the underlying tables.
Additionally, the specification for each column in the parent
MERGE
table and the underlying table are
compared. For each column, MySQL checks:
Column type in the underlying table equals the column type
of MERGE
table.
Column length in the underlying table equals the column
length of MERGE
table.
Column of underlying table and column of
MERGE
table can be
NULL
.
Underlying table must have at least the same amount of keys that
merge table has. The underlying table may have more keys than
the MERGE
table, but cannot have less.
A known issue exists that keys on the some columns must be
identical in order in both the MERGE
table
and the underlying MyISAM
table. See Bug#33653.
For each key:
Check whether the key type of underlying table equals the key type of merge table.
Check whether the number of key parts (that is, multiple columns within a compound key) in the underlying table key definition equals the number of key parts in merge table key definition.
For each key part:
Check whether key part lengths are equal.
Check whether key part types are equal.
Check whether key part languages are equal.
Check whether key part can be NULL
.
After creating the MERGE
table, you can issue
queries that operate on the group of tables as a whole:
mysql> SELECT * FROM total;
+---+---------+
| a | message |
+---+---------+
| 1 | Testing |
| 2 | table |
| 3 | t1 |
| 1 | Testing |
| 2 | table |
| 3 | t2 |
+---+---------+
To remap a MERGE
table to a different collection
of MyISAM
tables, you can use one of the
following methods:
MERGE
tables can help you solve the following
problems:
Easily manage a set of log tables. For example, you can put data
from different months into separate tables, compress some of
them with myisampack, and then create a
MERGE
table to use them as one.
Obtain more speed. You can split a big read-only table based on
some criteria, and then put individual tables on different
disks. A MERGE
table on this could be much
faster than using the big table.
Perform more efficient searches. If you know exactly what you
are looking for, you can search in just one of the split tables
for some queries and use a MERGE
table for
others. You can even have many different
MERGE
tables that use overlapping sets of
tables.
Perform more efficient repairs. It is easier to repair
individual tables that are mapped to a MERGE
table than to repair a single large table.
Instantly map many tables as one. A MERGE
table need not maintain an index of its own because it uses the
indexes of the individual tables. As a result,
MERGE
table collections are
very fast to create or remap. (Note that
you must still specify the index definitions when you create a
MERGE
table, even though no indexes are
created.)
If you have a set of tables from which you create a large table
on demand, you should instead create a MERGE
table on them on demand. This is much faster and saves a lot of
disk space.
Exceed the file size limit for the operating system. Each
MyISAM
table is bound by this limit, but a
collection of MyISAM
tables is not.
You can create an alias or synonym for a
MyISAM
table by defining a
MERGE
table that maps to that single table.
There should be no really notable performance impact from doing
this (only a couple of indirect calls and
memcpy()
calls for each read).
The disadvantages of MERGE
tables are:
You can use only identical MyISAM
tables for
a MERGE
table.
You cannot use a number of MyISAM
features in
MERGE
tables. For example, you cannot create
FULLTEXT
indexes on MERGE
tables. (You can, of course, create FULLTEXT
indexes on the underlying MyISAM
tables, but
you cannot search the MERGE
table with a
full-text search.)
If the MERGE
table is nontemporary, all
underlying MyISAM
tables must be
nontemporary, too. If the MERGE
table is
temporary, the MyISAM
tables can be any mix
of temporary and nontemporary.
MERGE
tables use more file descriptors. If 10
clients are using a MERGE
table that maps to
10 tables, the server uses (10 × 10) + 10 file
descriptors. (10 data file descriptors for each of the 10
clients, and 10 index file descriptors shared among the
clients.)
Key reads are slower. When you read a key, the
MERGE
storage engine needs to issue a read on
all underlying tables to check which one most closely matches
the given key. To read the next key, the
MERGE
storage engine needs to search the read
buffers to find the next key. Only when one key buffer is used
up does the storage engine need to read the next key block. This
makes MERGE
keys much slower on
eq_ref
searches, but not much
slower on ref
searches. See
Section 12.3.2, “EXPLAIN
Syntax”, for more information about
eq_ref
and
ref
.
Additional resources
A forum dedicated to the MERGE
storage engine
is available at http://forums.mysql.com/list.php?93.
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