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README.md |
gh-ost
GitHub's online schema migration for MySQL
gh-ost
allows for online schema migrations in MySQL which are:
- Triggerless
- Testable
- Pausable
- Operations-friendly
How?
WORK IN PROGRESS
Please meanwhile refer to the docs for more information. No, really, go to the docs.
- Why triggerless
- Triggerless design
- Cut over phase
- Testing on replica
- Throttle
- Operational perks
- Migrating with Statement Based Replication
- Understanding output
- Interactive commands
- Command line flags
Usage
Where to execute
The recommended way of executing gh-ost
is to have it connect to a replica, as opposed to having it connect to the master. gh-ost
will crawl its way up the replication chain to figure out who the master is.
By connecting to a replica, gh-ost
sets up a self-throttling mechanism; feels more comfortable in querying information_schema
tables; and more. Connecting gh-ost
to a replica is also the trick to make it work even if your master is configured with statement based replication
, as gh-ost
is able to manipulate the replica to rewrite logs in row based replication
. See Migrating with Statement Based Replication.
The replica would have to use binary logs and be configured with log_slave_updates
.
It is still OK to connect gh-ost
directly on master; you will need to confirm this by providing --allow-on-master
. The master would have to be using row based replication
.
gh-ost
itself may be executed from anywhere. It connects via tcp
and it does not have to be executed from a MySQL
box. However, do note it generates a lot of traffic, as it connects as a replica and pulls binary log data.
Testing on replica
Newcomer? We think you would enjoy building trust with this tool. You can ask gh-ost
to simulate a migration on a replica -- this will not affect data on master and will not actually do a complete migration. It will operate on a replica, and end up with two tables: the original (untouched), and the migrated. You will have your chance to compare the two and verify the tool works to your satisfaction.
gh-ost --conf=.my.cnf --database=mydb --table=mytable --verbose --alter="engine=innodb" --execute --initially-drop-ghost-table --initially-drop-old-table -max-load=Threads_running=30 --switch-to-rbr --chunk-size=2500 --exact-rowcount --test-on-replica --verbose --postpone-cut-over-flag-file=/tmp/ghost.postpone.flag --throttle-flag-file=/tmp/ghost.throttle.flag
Please read more on testing on replica
Migrating a master table
gh-ost --conf=.my.cnf --database=mydb --table=mytable --verbose --alter="engine=innodb" --initially-drop-ghost-table --initially-drop-old-table --max-load=Threads_running=30 --switch-to-rbr --chunk-size=2500 --exact-rowcount --verbose --postpone-cut-over-flag-file=/tmp/ghost.postpone.flag --throttle-flag-file=/tmp/ghost.throttle.flag [--execute]
Note: in order to migrate a table on the master you don't need to connect to the master. gh-ost
is happy (and prefers) if you connect to a replica; it then figures out the identity of the master and makes the connection itself.
What's in a name?
Originally this was named gh-osc
: GitHub Online Schema Change, in the likes of Facebook online schema change and pt-online-schema-change.
But then a rare genetic mutation happened, and the s
transformed into t
. And that sent us down the path of trying to figure out a new acronym. Right now, gh-ost
(pronounce: Ghost), stands for:
- GitHub Online Schema Translator/Transformer/Transfigurator
Authors
gh-ost
is designed, authored, reviewed and tested by the database infrastructure team at GitHub: