In addition to the central configuration file, a cluster may also be controlled through a command-line interface available through the management client ndb_mgm. This is the primary administrative interface to a running cluster.
Commands for the event logs are given in Section 17.5.6, “Event Reports Generated in MySQL Cluster”; commands for creating backups and restoring from them are provided in Section 17.5.3, “Online Backup of MySQL Cluster”.
The management client has the following basic commands. In the
listing that follows, node_id
denotes
either a database node ID or the keyword ALL
,
which indicates that the command should be applied to all of the
cluster's data nodes.
Displays information on all available commands.
Displays information on the cluster's status. Possible
node status values include UNKNOWN
,
NO_CONTACT
, NOT_STARTED
,
STARTING
, STARTED
,
SHUTTING_DOWN
, and
RESTARTING
.
Beginning with MySQL Cluster NDB 6.2.8 and MySQL Cluster NDB
6.3.6, the output from this command indicates when the cluster
is in single user mode (status SINGLE USER
MODE
).
Prior to MySQL Cluster NDB 7.0.26 and MySQL Cluster NDB 7.1.5,
in a cluster having multiple management nodes, this command
displayed information only for data nodes that were actually
connected to the current management server; in addition,
management servers could not find each other until all nodes
had been started. Beginning with these versions, such issues
are fixed (see Bug #12352191), and management nodes can be
additionally be reported with status RESUME
or CONNECTED
.
Brings online the data node identified by
node_id
(or all data nodes).
ALL START
works on all data nodes only, and
does not affect management nodes.
To use this command to bring a data node online, the data
node must have been started using ndbd
--nostart
or
ndbd -n
.
Stops the data or management node identified by
node_id
. Note that ALL
STOP
works to stop all data nodes only, and does not
affect management nodes.
A node affected by this command disconnects from the cluster, and its associated ndbd or ndb_mgmd process terminates.
The -a
option causes the node to be stopped
immediately, without waiting for the completion of any pending
transactions.
Normally, STOP
fails if the result would
cause an incomplete cluster. The -f
option,
added in MySQL Cluster NDB 7.0.19 and MySQL Cluster NDB 7.1.8,
forces the node to shut down without checking for this. If
this option is used and the result is an incomplete cluster,
the cluster immediately shuts down.
Use of the -a
option also disables the
safety check otherwise performed when
STOP
is invoked to insure that stopping
the node does not cause an incomplete cluster. In other
words, you should exercise extreme care when using the
-a
option with the STOP
command, due to the fact that this option makes it possible
for the cluster to undergo a forced shutdown because it no
longer has a complete copy of all data stored in
NDB
.
node_id
RESTART [-n] [-i]
[-a] [-f]
Restarts the data node identified by
node_id
(or all data nodes).
Using the -i
option with
RESTART
causes the data node to perform an
initial restart; that is, the node's file system is deleted
and recreated. The effect is the same as that obtained from
stopping the data node process and then starting it again
using ndbd
--initial
from the
system shell. Note that backup files and Disk Data files are
not removed when this option is used.
Using the -n
option causes the data node
process to be restarted, but the data node is not actually
brought online until the appropriate START
command is issued. The effect of this option is the same as
that obtained from stopping the data node and then starting it
again using ndbd
--nostart
or
ndbd -n
from the system
shell.
Using the -a
causes all current transactions
relying on this node to be aborted. No GCP check is done when
the node rejoins the cluster.
Normally, RESTART
fails if taking the node
offline would result in an incomplete cluster. The
-f
option, added in MySQL Cluster NDB 7.0.19
and MySQL Cluster NDB 7.1.8, forces the node to restart
without checking for this. If this option is used and the
result is an incomplete cluster, the entire cluster is
restarted.
Displays status information for the data node identified by
node_id
(or for all data nodes).
Beginning with MySQL Cluster NDB 6.2.8 and MySQL Cluster NDB 6.3.6, the output from this command indicates when the cluster is in single user mode.
Displays a report of type
report-type
for the data node
identified by node_id
, or for all
data nodes using ALL
.
Currently, there are two accepted values for
report-type
:
BackupStatus
provides a status report
on a cluster backup in progress
MemoryUsage
displays how much data
memory and index memory is being used by each data node as
shown in this example:
ndb_mgm> ALL REPORT MEMORY
Node 1: Data usage is 5%(177 32K pages of total 3200)
Node 1: Index usage is 0%(108 8K pages of total 12832)
Node 2: Data usage is 5%(177 32K pages of total 3200)
Node 2: Index usage is 0%(108 8K pages of total 12832)
In MySQL Cluster NDB 7.1.1 and later, this information is
also available from the
ndbinfo.memoryusage
table.
report-type
is case-insensitive and
“fuzzy”; for MemoryUsage
, you
can use MEMORY
(as shown in the prior
example), memory
, or even simply
MEM
(or mem
). You can
abbreviate BackupStatus
in a similar
fashion.
Prior to MySQL Cluster NDB 7.0.37 and MySQL Cluster NDB
7.1.26, ALL REPORT BackupStatus
did not
work correctly with multithreaded data nodes. (Bug #15908907)
The REPORT
command was introduced in MySQL
Cluster NDB 6.2.3 and MySQL Cluster NDB 6.3.0.
ENTER SINGLE USER MODE
node_id
Enters single user mode, whereby only the MySQL server
identified by the node ID node_id
is permitted to access the database.
Currently, it is not possible for data nodes to join a MySQL Cluster while it is running in single user mode. (Bug #20395)
Exits single user mode, enabling all SQL nodes (that is, all running mysqld processes) to access the database.
It is possible to use EXIT SINGLE USER
MODE
even when not in single user mode, although
the command has no effect in this case.
Terminates the management client.
This command does not affect any nodes connected to the cluster.
Shuts down all cluster data nodes and management nodes. To
exit the management client after this has been done, use
EXIT
or QUIT
.
This command does not shut down any SQL nodes or API nodes that are connected to the cluster.
CREATE NODEGROUP
nodeid
[,
nodeid
, ...]
Creates a new MySQL Cluster node group and causes data nodes to join it.
This command is used after adding new data nodes online to a MySQL Cluster, and causes them to join a new node group and thus to begin participating fully in the cluster. The command takes as its sole parameter a comma-separated list of node IDs—these are the IDs of the nodes just added and started that are to join the new node group. The number of nodes must be the same as the number of nodes in each node group that is already part of the cluster (each MySQL Cluster node group must have the same number of nodes). In other words, if the MySQL Cluster has 2 node groups of 2 data nodes each, then the new node group must also have 2 data nodes.
The node group ID of the new node group created by this command is determined automatically, and always the next highest unused node group ID in the cluster; it is not possible to set it manually.
This command was introduced in MySQL Cluster NDB 6.4.0. For more information, see Section 17.5.13, “Adding MySQL Cluster Data Nodes Online”.
Drops the MySQL Cluster node group with the given
nodegroup_id
.
This command can be used to drop a node group from a MySQL
Cluster. DROP NODEGROUP
takes as its sole
argument the node group ID of the node group to be dropped.
DROP NODEGROUP
acts only to remove the data
nodes in the effected node group from that node group. It does
not stop data nodes, assign them to a different node group, or
remove them from the cluster's configuration. A data node
that does not belong to a node group is indicated in the
output of the management client
SHOW
command with
no nodegroup
in place of the node group ID,
like this (indicated using bold text):
id=3 @10.100.2.67 (5.1.67-ndb-7.1.27, no nodegroup)
Prior to MySQL Cluster NDB 7.0.4, the
SHOW
output was not
updated correctly following DROP NODEGROUP
.
(Bug #43413)
DROP NODEGROUP
works only when all data
nodes in the node group to be dropped are completely empty of
any table data and table definitions. Since there is currently
no way using ndb_mgm or the
mysql client to remove all data from a
specific data node or node group, this means that the command
succeeds only in the two following cases:
After issuing CREATE NODEGROUP
in the
ndb_mgm client, but before issuing any
ALTER ONLINE
TABLE ... REORGANIZE PARTITION
statements in the
mysql client.
After dropping all NDBCLUSTER
tables using DROP TABLE
.
TRUNCATE TABLE
does not
work for this purpose because this removes only the table
data; the data nodes continue to store an
NDBCLUSTER
table's
definition until a DROP
TABLE
statement is issued that causes the table
metadata to be dropped.
DROP NODEGROUP
was introduced in MySQL
Cluster NDB 6.4.0. For more information, see
Section 17.5.13, “Adding MySQL Cluster Data Nodes Online”.
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