When flushing and compacting a real-time table Manticore provides isolation, so that a changed state doesn't affect the queries that were running when this or that operation started.
For instance, while compacting a table we have a pair of disk chunks that are being merged and also a new chunk produced by merging those two. Then, at one moment we create a new version of the table, where instead of the original pair of chunks the new one is placed. That is done seamlessly, so that if there's a long-running query using the original chunks, it will continue seeing the old version of the table while a new query will see the new version with the resulting merged chunk.
Same is true for flushing a RAM chunk: we merge all suitable RAM segments into a new disk chunk, and finally put a new disk chunk into the set of disk chunks and abandon the participated RAM chunk segments. During this operation, Manticore also provides isolation for those queries that started before the operation began.
Moreover, these operations are also transparent for replaces and updates. If you update an attribute in a document which belongs to a disk chunk which is being merged with another one, the update will be applied both to that chunk and to the resulting chunk after the merge. If you delete a document during a merge - it will be deleted in the original chunk and also the resulting merged chunk will either have the document marked deleted, or it will have no such document at all (if the deletion happened on early stage of the merging).
FREEZE
prepares a real-time/plain table for a safe backup. In particular it:
- Disables table compaction. If the table is being compacted right now
FREEZE
will wait for it to finish. - Flushes current RAM chunk into a disk chunk.
- Flushes attributes.
- Disables implicit operations that may change the files on disk.
- Displays actual list of the files belonging to the table.
Built-in tool manticore-backup uses FREEZE
to guarantee data consistency. So can you if you want to make your own backup solution or need to freeze tables for whatever else reason. All you need to do is:
FREEZE
a table.- Grab output of the
FREEZE
command and backup the provided files. UNFREEZE
the table once you are done.
- Example
FREEZE t;
+-------------------+---------------------------------+
| file | normalized |
+-------------------+---------------------------------+
| data/t/t.0.spa | /work/anytest/data/t/t.0.spa |
| data/t/t.0.spd | /work/anytest/data/t/t.0.spd |
| data/t/t.0.spds | /work/anytest/data/t/t.0.spds |
| data/t/t.0.spe | /work/anytest/data/t/t.0.spe |
| data/t/t.0.sph | /work/anytest/data/t/t.0.sph |
| data/t/t.0.sphi | /work/anytest/data/t/t.0.sphi |
| data/t/t.0.spi | /work/anytest/data/t/t.0.spi |
| data/t/t.0.spm | /work/anytest/data/t/t.0.spm |
| data/t/t.0.spp | /work/anytest/data/t/t.0.spp |
| data/t/t.0.spt | /work/anytest/data/t/t.0.spt |
| data/t/t.meta | /work/anytest/data/t/t.meta |
| data/t/t.ram | /work/anytest/data/t/t.ram |
| data/t/t.settings | /work/anytest/data/t/t.settings |
+-------------------+---------------------------------+
13 rows in set (0.01 sec)
The column file
provides paths to the table's files inside data_dir of the running instance. The column normalized
shows absolute paths of the same files. If you want to back up a table it's safe to just copy the provided files with no other preparations.
When a table is frozen, you can't perform UPDATE
queries on it; they will fail with the error message index is locked now, try again later
.
Also, DELETE
and REPLACE
queries have some limitations while the table is frozen:
- If
DELETE
affects a document stored in a current RAM chunk - it is allowed. - If
DELETE
affects a document in a disk chunk, but it was already deleted before - it is allowed. - If
DELETE
is going to change an actual disk chunk - it will wait until the table is unfrozen.
Manual FLUSH
of a RAM chunk of a frozen table will report 'success', however no actual save will happen.
DROP
/TRUNCATE
of a frozen table is allowed, since such operation is not implicit. We assume that if you truncate or drop a table - you don't need it backed up anyway, therefore it should not have been frozen in the first place.
INSERT
into a frozen table is supported, but also limited: new data will be stored in RAM (as usual), until rt_mem_limit
is reached; then new insertions will wait until the table is unfrozen.
If you shut down the daemon with a frozen table, it will behave as in case of a dirty shutdown (e.g. kill -9
): new inserted data will not be saved in the RAM-chunk on disk, and on restart it will be restored from a binary log (if any), or lost (if binary logging is disabled).
UNFREEZE
re-enables previously blocked operations and restarts the internal compaction service. All the operations that are waiting for a table unfreeze get unfrozen too and finish their operations normally.
- Example
UNFREEZE tbl;
FLUSH ATTRIBUTES
Flushes all in-memory attribute updates in all the active disk tables to disk. Returns a tag that identifies the result on-disk state (basically, a number of actual disk attribute saves performed since the server startup).
mysql> UPDATE testindex SET channel_id=1107025 WHERE id=1;
Query OK, 1 row affected (0.04 sec)
mysql> FLUSH ATTRIBUTES;
+------+
| tag |
+------+
| 1 |
+------+
1 row in set (0.19 sec)