Google releases patches that enhance the manageability and reliability of
MySQL
Posted by
Mark Callaghan, Software EngineerThough you may think of
us as simply a company with a big search index, Google uses MySQL, the open source relational
database, in some of the applications that we build that are not search related.
We think MySQL is a fantastic data storage solution, and as our projects push
the requirements for the database in certain areas, we've made changes to enhance MySQL
itself, mainly in the areas of high availability and manageability.
We
would love for the some of these changes to be merged with the official MySQL release, but
until then we felt strongly that anyone should have access to them, thus
we have released the changes
with a GPL license for the MySQL community to use and review.
What have we added and enhanced?The high
availability features include support for semi-synchronous replication, mirroring the binlog
from a master to a slave, quickly promoting a slave to a master during failover, and keeping
InnoDB and replication state on a slave consistent during crash recovery.
The manageability features include new SQL statements for monitoring resource usage by
table and account. This includes the ability to count the number of rows fetched or changed
per account or per table. It also includes the number of seconds of database time an account
uses to execute SQL commands.
More
details:
The current patches are for version 4 of MySQL, with version 5 support coming
shortly.
We look forward to hearing from the large MySQL community.