InnoDB System Variables

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Contents

  1. have_innodb
  2. ignore_builtin_innodb
  3. innodb_adaptive_checkpoint
  4. innodb_adaptive_flushing
  5. innodb_adaptive_flushing_lwm
  6. innodb_adaptive_flushing_method
  7. innodb_adaptive_hash_index
  8. innodb_adaptive_hash_index_partitions
  9. innodb_adaptive_hash_index_parts
  10. innodb_adaptive_max_sleep_delay
  11. innodb_additional_mem_pool_size
  12. innodb_alter_copy_bulk
  13. innodb_api_bk_commit_interval
  14. innodb_api_disable_rowlock
  15. innodb_api_enable_binlog
  16. innodb_api_enable_mdl
  17. innodb_api_trx_level
  18. innodb_auto_lru_dump
  19. innodb_autoextend_increment
  20. innodb_autoinc_lock_mode
  21. innodb_background_scrub_data_check_interval
  22. innodb_background_scrub_data_compressed
  23. innodb_background_scrub_data_interval
  24. innodb_background_scrub_data_uncompressed
  25. innodb_blocking_buffer_pool_restore
  26. innodb_buf_dump_status_frequency
  27. innodb_buffer_pool_chunk_size
  28. innodb_buffer_pool_dump_at_shutdown
  29. innodb_buffer_pool_dump_now
  30. innodb_buffer_pool_dump_pct
  31. innodb_buffer_pool_evict
  32. innodb_buffer_pool_filename
  33. innodb_buffer_pool_instances
  34. innodb_buffer_pool_load_abort
  35. innodb_buffer_pool_load_at_startup
  36. innodb_buffer_pool_load_now
  37. innodb_buffer_pool_load_pages_abort
  38. innodb_buffer_pool_populate
  39. innodb_buffer_pool_restore_at_startup
  40. innodb_buffer_pool_shm_checksum
  41. innodb_buffer_pool_shm_key
  42. innodb_buffer_pool_size
  43. innodb_change_buffer_dump
  44. innodb_change_buffer_max_size
  45. innodb_change_buffering
  46. innodb_change_buffering_debug
  47. innodb_checkpoint_age_target
  48. innodb_checksum_algorithm
  49. innodb_checksums
  50. innodb_cleaner_lsn_age_factor
  51. innodb_cmp_per_index_enabled
  52. innodb_commit_concurrency
  53. innodb_compression_algorithm
  54. innodb_compression_default
  55. innodb_compression_failure_threshold_pct
  56. innodb_compression_level
  57. innodb_compression_pad_pct_max
  58. innodb_concurrency_tickets
  59. innodb_corrupt_table_action
  60. innodb_data_file_buffering
  61. innodb_data_file_path
  62. innodb_data_file_write_through
  63. innodb_data_home_dir
  64. innodb_deadlock_detect
  65. innodb_deadlock_report
  66. innodb_default_page_encryption_key
  67. innodb_default_encryption_key_id
  68. innodb_default_row_format
  69. innodb_defragment
  70. innodb_defragment_fill_factor
  71. innodb_defragment_fill_factor_n_recs
  72. innodb_defragment_frequency
  73. innodb_defragment_n_pages
  74. innodb_defragment_stats_accuracy
  75. innodb_dict_size_limit
  76. innodb_disable_sort_file_cache
  77. innodb_disallow_writes
  78. innodb_doublewrite
  79. innodb_doublewrite_file
  80. innodb_empty_free_list_algorithm
  81. innodb_enable_unsafe_group_commit
  82. innodb_encrypt_log
  83. innodb_encrypt_tables
  84. innodb_encrypt_temporary_tables
  85. innodb_encryption_rotate_key_age
  86. innodb_encryption_rotation_iops
  87. innodb_encryption_threads
  88. innodb_extra_rsegments
  89. innodb_extra_undoslots
  90. innodb_fake_changes
  91. innodb_fast_checksum
  92. innodb_fast_shutdown
  93. innodb_fatal_semaphore_wait_threshold
  94. innodb_file_format
  95. innodb_file_format_check
  96. innodb_file_format_max
  97. innodb_file_per_table
  98. innodb_fill_factor
  99. innodb_flush_log_at_timeout
  100. innodb_flush_log_at_trx_commit
  101. innodb_flush_method
  102. innodb_flush_neighbor_pages
  103. innodb_flush_neighbors
  104. innodb_flush_sync
  105. innodb_flushing_avg_loops
  106. innodb_force_load_corrupted
  107. innodb_force_primary_key
  108. innodb_force_recovery
  109. innodb_foreground_preflush
  110. innodb_ft_aux_table
  111. innodb_ft_cache_size
  112. innodb_ft_enable_diag_print
  113. innodb_ft_enable_stopword
  114. innodb_ft_max_token_size
  115. innodb_ft_min_token_size
  116. innodb_ft_num_word_optimize
  117. innodb_ft_result_cache_limit
  118. innodb_ft_server_stopword_table
  119. innodb_ft_sort_pll_degree
  120. innodb_ft_total_cache_size
  121. innodb_ft_user_stopword_table
  122. innodb_ibuf_accel_rate
  123. innodb_ibuf_active_contract
  124. innodb_ibuf_max_size
  125. innodb_idle_flush_pct
  126. innodb_immediate_scrub_data_uncompressed
  127. innodb_import_table_from_xtrabackup
  128. innodb_instant_alter_column_allowed
  129. innodb_instrument_semaphores
  130. innodb_io_capacity
  131. innodb_io_capacity_max
  132. innodb_kill_idle_transaction
  133. innodb_large_prefix
  134. innodb_lazy_drop_table
  135. innodb_lock_schedule_algorithm
  136. innodb_lock_wait_timeout
  137. innodb_locking_fake_changes
  138. innodb_locks_unsafe_for_binlog
  139. innodb_log_arch_dir
  140. innodb_log_arch_expire_sec
  141. innodb_log_archive
  142. innodb_log_block_size
  143. innodb_log_buffer_size
  144. innodb_log_checksum_algorithm
  145. innodb_log_checksums
  146. innodb_log_compressed_pages
  147. innodb_log_file_buffering
  148. innodb_log_file_size
  149. innodb_log_file_write_through
  150. innodb_log_files_in_group
  151. innodb_log_group_home_dir
  152. innodb_log_optimize_ddl
  153. innodb_log_spin_wait_delay
  154. innodb_log_write_ahead_size
  155. innodb_lru_flush_size
  156. innodb_lru_scan_depth
  157. innodb_max_bitmap_file_size
  158. innodb_max_changed_pages
  159. innodb_max_dirty_pages_pct
  160. innodb_max_dirty_pages_pct_lwm
  161. innodb_max_purge_lag
  162. innodb_max_purge_lag_delay
  163. innodb_max_purge_lag_wait
  164. innodb_max_undo_log_size
  165. innodb_merge_sort_block_size
  166. innodb_mirrored_log_groups
  167. innodb_mtflush_threads
  168. innodb_monitor_disable
  169. innodb_monitor_enable
  170. innodb_monitor_reset
  171. innodb_monitor_reset_all
  172. innodb_numa_interleave
  173. innodb_old_blocks_pct
  174. innodb_old_blocks_time
  175. innodb_online_alter_log_max_size
  176. innodb_open_files
  177. innodb_optimize_fulltext_only
  178. innodb_page_cleaners
  179. innodb_page_size
  180. innodb_pass_corrupt_table
  181. innodb_prefix_index_cluster_optimization
  182. innodb_print_all_deadlocks
  183. innodb_purge_batch_size
  184. innodb_purge_rseg_truncate_frequency
  185. innodb_purge_threads
  186. innodb_random_read_ahead
  187. innodb_read_ahead
  188. innodb_read_ahead_threshold
  189. innodb_read_io_threads
  190. innodb_read_only
  191. innodb_read_only_compressed
  192. innodb_recovery_stats
  193. innodb_recovery_update_relay_log
  194. innodb_replication_delay
  195. innodb_rollback_on_timeout
  196. innodb_rollback_segments
  197. innodb_safe_truncate
  198. innodb_scrub_log
  199. innodb_scrub_log_interval
  200. innodb_scrub_log_speed
  201. innodb_sched_priority_cleaner
  202. innodb_show_locks_held
  203. innodb_show_verbose_locks
  204. innodb_simulate_comp_failures
  205. innodb_snapshot_isolation
  206. innodb_sort_buffer_size
  207. innodb_log_spin_wait_delay
  208. innodb_stats_auto_recalc
  209. innodb_stats_auto_update
  210. innodb_stats_include_delete_marked
  211. innodb_stats_method
  212. innodb_stats_modified_counter
  213. innodb_stats_on_metadata
  214. innodb_stats_persistent
  215. innodb_stats_persistent_sample_pages
  216. innodb_stats_sample_pages
  217. innodb_stats_traditional
  218. innodb_stats_transient_sample_pages
  219. innodb_stats_update_need_lock
  220. innodb_status_output
  221. innodb_status_output_locks
  222. innodb_strict_mode
  223. innodb_support_xa
  224. innodb_sync_array_size
  225. innodb_sync_spin_loops
  226. innodb_table_locks
  227. innodb_thread_concurrency
  228. innodb_thread_concurrency_timer_based
  229. innodb_thread_sleep_delay
  230. innodb_temp_data_file_path
  231. innodb_tmpdir
  232. innodb_track_changed_pages
  233. innodb_track_redo_log_now
  234. innodb_truncate_temporary_tablespace_now
  235. innodb_undo_directory
  236. innodb_undo_log_truncate
  237. innodb_undo_logs
  238. innodb_undo_tablespaces
  239. innodb_use_atomic_writes
  240. innodb_use_fallocate
  241. innodb_use_global_flush_log_at_trx_commit
  242. innodb_use_mtflush
  243. innodb_use_native_aio
  244. innodb_use_purge_thread
  245. innodb_use_stacktrace
  246. innodb_use_sys_malloc
  247. innodb_use_sys_stats_table
  248. innodb_use_trim
  249. innodb_version
  250. innodb_write_io_threads

This page documents system variables related to the InnoDB storage engine. For options that are not system variables, see InnoDB Options.

See Server System Variables for a complete list of system variables and instructions on setting them.

Also see the Full list of MariaDB options, system and status variables.

have_innodb


ignore_builtin_innodb

  • Description: Setting this to 1 results in the built-in InnoDB storage engine being ignored. In some versions of MariaDB, XtraDB is the default and is always present, so this variable is ignored and setting it results in a warning. From MariaDB 10.0.1 to MariaDB 10.0.8, when InnoDB was the default instead of XtraDB, this variable needed to be set. Usually used in conjunction with the plugin-load=innodb=ha_innodb option to use the InnoDB plugin.
  • Commandline: --ignore-builtin-innodb
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: No
  • Data Type: boolean
  • Default Value: OFF

innodb_adaptive_checkpoint

  • Description: Replaced with innodb_adaptive_flushing_method. Controls adaptive checkpointing. InnoDB's fuzzy checkpointing can cause stalls, as many dirty blocks are flushed at once as the checkpoint age nears the maximum. Adaptive checkpointing aims for more consistent flushing, approximately modified age / maximum checkpoint age. Can result in larger transaction log files
    • reflex Similar to innodb_max_dirty_pages_pct flushing but flushes blocks constantly and contiguously based on the oldest modified age. If the age exceeds 1/2 of the maximum age capacity, flushing will be weak contiguous. If the age exceeds 3/4, flushing will be strong. Strength can be adjusted by the variable innodb_io_capacity.
    • estimate The default, and independent of innodb_io_capacity. If the oldest modified age exceeds 1/2 of the maximum age capacity, blocks will be flushed every second at a rate determined by the number of modified blocks, LSN progress speed and the average age of all modified blocks.
    • keep_average Attempts to keep the I/O rate constant by using a shorter loop cycle of one tenth of a second. Designed for SSD cards.
  • Commandline: --innodb-adaptive-checkpoint=#
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: string
  • Default Value: estimate
  • Valid Values: none or 0, reflex or 1, estimate or 2, keep_average or 3
  • Removed: XtraDB 5.5 - replaced with innodb_adaptive_flushing_method

innodb_adaptive_flushing

  • Description: If set to 1, the default, the server will dynamically adjust the flush rate of dirty pages in the InnoDB buffer pool. This assists to reduce brief bursts of I/O activity. If set to 0, adaptive flushing will only take place when the limit specified by innodb_adaptive_flushing_lwm is reached.
  • Commandline: --innodb-adaptive-flushing={0|1}
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: boolean
  • Default Value: ON

innodb_adaptive_flushing_lwm

  • Description: Adaptive flushing is enabled when this low water mark percentage of the InnoDB redo log capacity is reached. Takes effect even if innodb_adaptive_flushing is disabled.
  • Commandline: --innodb-adaptive-flushing-lwm=#
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: double
  • Default Value: 10.000000
  • Range: 0 to 70

innodb_adaptive_flushing_method

  • Description: Determines the method of flushing dirty blocks from the InnoDB buffer pool. If set to native or 0, the original InnoDB method is used. The maximum checkpoint age is determined by the total length of all transaction log files. When the checkpoint age reaches the maximum checkpoint age, blocks are flushed. This can cause lag if there are many updates per second and many blocks with an almost identical age need to be flushed. If set to estimate or 1, the default, the oldest modified age will be compared with the maximum age capacity. If it's more than 1/4 of this age, blocks are flushed every second. The number of blocks flushed is determined by the number of modified blocks, the LSN progress speed and the average age of all modified blocks. It's therefore independent of the innodb_io_capacity for the 1-second loop, but not entirely so for the 10-second loop. If set to keep_average or 2, designed specifically for SSD cards, a shorter loop cycle is used in an attempt to keep the I/O rate constant. Removed in MariaDB 10.0/XtraDB 5.6 and replaced with InnoDB flushing method from MySQL 5.6.
  • Commandline: innodb-adaptive-flushing-method=value
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: enumeration
  • Default Value: estimate
  • Valid Values: native or 0, estimate or 1, keep_average or 2
  • Removed: MariaDB 10.0 - replaced with InnoDB flushing method from MySQL 5.6

innodb_adaptive_hash_index

  • Description: If set to 1, the default until MariaDB 10.5, the InnoDB hash index is enabled. Based on performance testing (MDEV-17492), the InnoDB adaptive hash index helps performance in mostly read-only workloads, and could slow down performance in other environments, especially DROP TABLE, TRUNCATE TABLE, ALTER TABLE, or DROP INDEX operations.
  • Commandline: --innodb-adaptive-hash-index={0|1}
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: boolean
  • Default Value: OFF (>= MariaDB 10.5), ON (<= MariaDB 10.4)

innodb_adaptive_hash_index_partitions

  • Description: Specifies the number of partitions for use in adaptive searching. If set to 1, no extra partitions are created. XtraDB-only. From MariaDB 10.2.6 (which uses InnoDB as default instead of XtraDB), this is an alias for innodb_adaptive_hash_index_parts to allow for easier upgrades.
  • Commandline: innodb-adaptive-hash-index-partitions=#
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: No
  • Data Type: numeric
  • Default Value: 1
  • Range: 1 to 64

innodb_adaptive_hash_index_parts

  • Description: Specifies the number of partitions for use in adaptive searching. If set to 1, no extra partitions are created.
  • Commandline: innodb-adaptive-hash-index-parts=#
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: No
  • Data Type: numeric
  • Default Value: 8
  • Range: 1 to 512

innodb_adaptive_max_sleep_delay

  • Description: Maximum time in microseconds to automatically adjust the innodb_thread_sleep_delay value to, based on the workload. Useful in extremely busy systems with hundreds of thousands of simultaneous connections. 0 disables any limit. Deprecated and ignored from MariaDB 10.5.5.
  • Commandline: --innodb-adaptive-max-sleep-delay=#
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: numeric
  • Default Value:
  • Range: 0 to 1000000
  • Introduced: MariaDB 10.0
  • Deprecated: MariaDB 10.5.5
  • Removed: MariaDB 10.6.0

innodb_additional_mem_pool_size

  • Description: Size in bytes of the InnoDB memory pool used for storing information about internal data structures. Defaults to 8MB, if your application has many tables and a large structure, and this is exceeded, operating system memory will be allocated and warning messages written to the error log, in which case you should increase this value. Deprecated in MariaDB 10.0 and removed in MariaDB 10.2 along with InnoDB's internal memory allocator.
  • Commandline: --innodb-additional-mem-pool-size=#
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: No
  • Data Type: numeric
  • Default Value: 8388608
  • Range: 2097152 to 4294967295
  • Deprecated: MariaDB 10.0
  • Removed: MariaDB 10.2.2

innodb_alter_copy_bulk


innodb_api_bk_commit_interval

  • Description: Time in seconds between auto-commits for idle connections using the InnoDB memcached interface (not implemented in MariaDB).
  • Commandline: --innodb-api-bk-commit-interval=#
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: numeric
  • Default Value: 5
  • Range: 1 to 1073741824
  • Introduced: MariaDB 10.0
  • Removed: MariaDB 10.2.4

innodb_api_disable_rowlock

  • Description: For use with MySQL's memcached (not implemented in MariaDB)
  • Commandline: --innodb-api-disable-rowlock={0|1}
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: No
  • Data Type: boolean
  • Default Value: OFF
  • Introduced: MariaDB 10.0
  • Removed: MariaDB 10.2.4

innodb_api_enable_binlog

  • Description: For use with MySQL's memcached (not implemented in MariaDB)
  • Commandline: --innodb-api-enable-binlog={0|1}
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: No
  • Data Type: boolean
  • Default Value: OFF
  • Introduced: MariaDB 10.0
  • Removed: MariaDB 10.2.4

innodb_api_enable_mdl

  • Description: For use with MySQL's memcached (not implemented in MariaDB)
  • Commandline: --innodb-api-enable-mdl={0|1}
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: No
  • Data Type: boolean
  • Default Value: OFF
  • Introduced: MariaDB 10.0
  • Removed: MariaDB 10.2.4

innodb_api_trx_level

  • Description: For use with MySQL's memcached (not implemented in MariaDB)
  • Commandline: --innodb-api-trx-level=#
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: numeric
  • Default Value: 0
  • Introduced: MariaDB 10.0
  • Removed: MariaDB 10.2.4

innodb_auto_lru_dump


innodb_autoextend_increment

  • Description: Size in MB to increment an auto-extending shared tablespace file when it becomes full. If innodb_file_per_table was set to 1, this setting does not apply to the resulting per-table tablespace files, which are automatically extended in their own way.
  • Commandline: --innodb-autoextend-increment=#
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: numeric
  • Default Value: 64 (from MariaDB 10.0) 8 (before MariaDB 10.0),
  • Range: 1 to 1000

innodb_autoinc_lock_mode

  • Description: The lock mode that is used when generating AUTO_INCREMENT values for InnoDB tables.
  • Commandline: --innodb-autoinc-lock-mode=#
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: No
  • Data Type: numeric
  • Default Value: 1
  • Range: 0 to 2

innodb_background_scrub_data_check_interval


innodb_background_scrub_data_compressed

  • Description: Enable scrubbing of compressed data by background threads (same as encryption_threads). See Data Scrubbing. Deprecated and ignored from MariaDB 10.5.2.
  • Commandline: --innodb-background-scrub-data-compressed={0|1}
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: boolean
  • Default Value: 0
  • Deprecated: MariaDB 10.5.2
  • Removed: MariaDB 10.6.0

innodb_background_scrub_data_interval

  • Description: Scrub spaces that were last scrubbed longer than this number of seconds ago. See Data Scrubbing. Deprecated and ignored from MariaDB 10.5.2.
  • Commandline: --innodb-background-scrub-data-interval=#
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: numeric
  • Default Value: 604800
  • Range: 1 to 4294967295
  • Deprecated: MariaDB 10.5.2
  • Removed: MariaDB 10.6.0

innodb_background_scrub_data_uncompressed

  • Description: Enable scrubbing of uncompressed data by background threads (same as encryption_threads). See Data Scrubbing. Deprecated and ignored from MariaDB 10.5.2.
  • Commandline: --innodb-background-scrub-data-uncompressed={0|1}
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: boolean
  • Default Value: 0
  • Deprecated: MariaDB 10.5.2
  • Removed: MariaDB 10.6.0

innodb_blocking_buffer_pool_restore

  • Description: If set to 1 (0 is default), XtraDB will wait until the least-recently used (LRU) dump is completely restored upon restart before reporting back to the server that it has successfully started up. Available with XtraDB only, not InnoDB.
  • Commandline: innodb-blocking-buffer-pool-restore={0|1}
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: No
  • Data Type: boolean
  • Default Value: OFF
  • Removed: MariaDB 10.0.0

innodb_buf_dump_status_frequency

  • Description: Determines how often (as a percent) the buffer pool dump status should be printed in the logs. For example, 10 means that the buffer pool dump status is printed when every 10% of the number of buffer pool pages are dumped. The default is 0 (only start and end status is printed).
  • Commandline: --innodb-buf-dump-status-frequency=#
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: numeric
  • Default Value: 0
  • Range: 0 to 100

innodb_buffer_pool_chunk_size


innodb_buffer_pool_dump_at_shutdown

  • Description: Whether to record pages cached in the buffer pool on server shutdown, which reduces the length of the warmup the next time the server starts. The related innodb_buffer_pool_load_at_startup specifies whether the buffer pool is automatically warmed up at startup.
  • Commandline: --innodb-buffer-pool-dump-at-shutdown={0|1}
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: boolean
  • Default Value: ON

innodb_buffer_pool_dump_now

  • Description: Immediately records pages stored in the buffer pool. The related innodb_buffer_pool_load_now does the reverse, and will immediately warm up the buffer pool.
  • Commandline: --innodb-buffer-pool-dump-now={0|1}
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: boolean
  • Default Value: OFF
  • Introduced: MariaDB 10.0

innodb_buffer_pool_dump_pct

  • Description: Dump only the hottest N% of each buffer pool.
  • Commandline: --innodb-buffer-pool-dump-pct={0|1}
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: boolean
  • Default Value:
    • 25
  • Range: 1 to 100

innodb_buffer_pool_evict

  • Description: Evict pages from the buffer pool. If set to "uncompressed" then all uncompressed pages are evicted from the buffer pool. Variable to be used only for testing. Only exists in DEBUG builds.
  • Commandline: --innodb-buffer-pool-evict=#
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: string
  • Default Value: ""
  • Valid Values: "" or "uncompressed"

innodb_buffer_pool_filename


innodb_buffer_pool_instances

  • Description: If innodb_buffer_pool_size is set to more than 1GB, innodb_buffer_pool_instances divides the InnoDB buffer pool into the specified number of instances. The default was 1 in MariaDB 5.5, but for large systems with buffer pools of many gigabytes, many instances could help reduce contention concurrency through MariaDB 10.2. The default is 8 in MariaDB 10 (except on Windows 32-bit, where it varies according to innodb_buffer_pool_size, or from MariaDB 10.2.2, where it is set to 1 if innodb_buffer_pool_size < 1GB). Each instance manages its own data structures and takes an equal portion of the total buffer pool size, so for example if innodb_buffer_pool_size is 4GB and innodb_buffer_pool_instances is set to 4, each instance will be 1GB. Each instance should ideally be at least 1GB in size. Starting with MariaDB 10.3, performance improvements intended to reduce the overhead of context-switching between buffer pools changed the recommended number of innodb_buffer_pool_instances to one for every 128GB of buffer pool size. Based on these changes, the variable is deprecated and ignored from MariaDB 10.5.1, where the buffer pool runs in a single instance regardless of size.
  • Commandline: --innodb-buffer-pool-instances=#
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: No
  • Data Type: numeric
  • Default Value: >= MariaDB 10.0.4: 8, 1 (>= MariaDB 10.2.2 if innodb_buffer_pool_size < 1GB), or dependent on innodb_buffer_pool_size (Windows 32-bit)
  • Deprecated: MariaDB 10.5.1
  • Removed: MariaDB 10.6.0

innodb_buffer_pool_load_abort


innodb_buffer_pool_load_at_startup

  • Description: Specifies whether the buffer pool is automatically warmed up when the server starts by loading the pages held earlier. The related innodb_buffer_pool_dump_at_shutdown specifies whether pages are saved at shutdown. If the buffer pool is large and taking a long time to load, increasing innodb_io_capacity at startup may help.
  • Commandline: --innodb-buffer-pool-load-at-startup={0|1}
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: No
  • Data Type: boolean
  • Default Value: ON

innodb_buffer_pool_load_now

  • Description: Immediately warms up the buffer pool by loading the stored data pages. The related innodb_buffer_pool_dump_now does the reverse, and immediately records pages stored in the buffer pool.
  • Commandline: --innodb-buffer-pool-load-now={0|1}
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: boolean
  • Default Value: OFF

innodb_buffer_pool_load_pages_abort

  • Description: Number of pages during a buffer pool load to process before signaling innodb_buffer_pool_load_abort=1. Debug builds only.
  • Commandline: --innodb-buffer-pool-load-pages-abort=#
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: numeric
  • Default Value: 9223372036854775807
  • Range: 1 to 9223372036854775807

innodb_buffer_pool_populate

  • Description: When set to 1 (0 is default), XtraDB will preallocate pages in the buffer pool on starting up so that NUMA allocation decisions are made while the buffer cache is still clean. XtraDB only. This option was made ineffective in MariaDB 10.0.23. Added as a deprecated and ignored option in MariaDB 10.2.6 (which uses InnoDB as default instead of XtraDB) to allow for easier upgrades.
  • Commandline: innodb-buffer-pool-populate={0|1}
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: No
  • Data Type: boolean
  • Default Value: OFF
  • Deprecated: MariaDB 10.0.23
  • Removed: MariaDB 10.3.0

innodb_buffer_pool_restore_at_startup

  • Description: Time in seconds between automatic buffer pool dumps. If set to a non-zero value, XtraDB will also perform an automatic restore of the buffer pool at startup. If set to 0, automatic dumps are not performed, nor automatic restores on startup. Replaced by innodb_buffer_pool_load_at_startup in MariaDB 10.0.
  • Commandline: innodb-buffer-pool-restore-at-startup
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: numeric
  • Default Value: 0
  • Range - 32 bit: 0 to 4294967295
  • Range - 64 bit: 0 to 18446744073709547520
  • Removed: MariaDB 10.0 - replaced by innodb_buffer_pool_load_at_startup

innodb_buffer_pool_shm_checksum

  • Description: Used with Percona's SHM buffer pool patch in XtraDB 5.5. Was shortly deprecated and removed in XtraDB 5.6. XtraDB only.
  • Commandline: innodb-buffer-pool-shm-checksum={0|1}
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: No
  • Data Type: boolean
  • Default Value: ON
  • Removed: MariaDB 10.0

innodb_buffer_pool_shm_key

  • Description: Used with Percona's SHM buffer pool patch in XtraDB 5.5. Later deprecated in XtraDB 5.5, and removed in XtraDB 5.6.
  • Commandline: innodb-buffer-pool-shm-key={0|1}
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: No
  • Data Type: boolean
  • Default Value: 0
  • Removed: MariaDB 10.0

innodb_buffer_pool_size


innodb_change_buffer_dump

  • Description: If set, causes the contents of the InnoDB change buffer to be dumped to the server error log at startup. Only available in debug builds.
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: No
  • Data Type: boolean
  • Default Value: OFF
  • Introduced: MariaDB 10.2.28, MariaDB 10.3.19, MariaDB 10.4.9

innodb_change_buffer_max_size

  • Description: Maximum size of the InnoDB Change Buffer as a percentage of the total buffer pool. The default is 25%, and this can be increased up to 50% for servers with high write activity, and lowered down to 0 for servers used exclusively for reporting.
  • Commandline: --innodb-change-buffer-max-size=#
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: numeric
  • Default Value: 25
  • Range: 0 to 50
  • Introduced: MariaDB 10.0
  • Deprecated: MariaDB 10.9.0
  • Removed: MariaDB 11.0.0

innodb_change_buffering


innodb_change_buffering_debug

  • Description: If set to 1, an InnoDB Change Buffering debug flag is set. 1 forces all changes to the change buffer, while 2 causes a crash at merge. 0, the default, indicates no flag is set. Only available in debug builds.
  • Commandline: --innodb-change-buffering-debug=#
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: numeric
  • Default Value: 0
  • Range: 0 to 2

innodb_checkpoint_age_target

  • Description: The maximum value of the checkpoint age. If set to 0, has no effect. Removed in MariaDB 10.0/XtraDB 5.6 and replaced with InnoDB flushing method from MySQL 5.6.
  • Commandline: innodb-checkpoint-age-target=#
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: numeric
  • Default Value: 0
  • Range: 0 upwards
  • Removed: MariaDB 10.0 - replaced with InnoDB flushing method from MySQL 5.6.

innodb_checksum_algorithm

  • Description: Specifies how the InnoDB tablespace checksum is generated and verified.
    • innodb: Backwards compatible with earlier versions (<= MariaDB 5.5). Deprecated in MariaDB 10.3.29, MariaDB 10.4.19, MariaDB 10.5.10 and removed in MariaDB 10.6. If really needed, data files can still be converted with innochecksum.
    • crc32: A newer, faster algorithm, but incompatible with earlier versions. Tablespace blocks will be converted to the new format over time, meaning that a mix of checksums may be present.
    • full_crc32 and strict_full_crc32: From MariaDB 10.4.3. Permits encryption to be supported over a SPATIAL INDEX, which crc32 does not support. Newly-created data files will carry a flag that indicates that all pages of the file will use a full CRC-32C checksum over the entire page contents (excluding the bytes where the checksum is stored, at the very end of the page). Such files will always use that checksum, no matter what parameter innodb_checksum_algorithm is assigned to. Even if innodb_checksum_algorithm is modified later, the same checksum will continue to be used. A special flag will be set in the FSP_SPACE_FLAGS in the first data page to indicate the new format of checksum and encryption/page_compressed. ROW_FORMAT=COMPRESSED tables will only use the old format. These tables do not support new features, such as larger innodb_page_size or instant ADD/DROP COLUMN. Also cleans up the MariaDB tablespace flags - flags are reserved to store the page_compressed compression algorithm, and to store the compressed payload length, so that checksum can be computed over the compressed (and possibly encrypted) stream and can be validated without decrypting or decompressing the page. In the full_crc32 format, there no longer are separate before-encryption and after-encryption checksums for pages. The single checksum is computed on the page contents that is written to the file.See MDEV-12026 for details.
    • none: Writes a constant rather than calculate a checksum. Deprecated in MariaDB 10.3.29, MariaDB 10.4.19, MariaDB 10.5.10 and removed in MariaDB 10.6 as was mostly used to disable the original, slow, page checksum for benchmarking purposes.
    • strict_crc32, strict_innodb and strict_none: The options are the same as the regular options, but InnoDB will halt if it comes across a mix of checksum values. These are faster, as both new and old checksum values are not required, but can only be used when setting up tablespaces for the first time.
  • Commandline: --innodb-checksum-algorithm=#
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: enumeration
  • Default Value:
  • Valid Values:
    • >= MariaDB 10.6.0: crc32, full_crc32, strict_crc32, strict_full_crc32
    • MariaDB 10.5, >= MariaDB 10.4.3: innodb, crc32, full_crc32, none, strict_innodb, strict_crc32, strict_none, strict_full_crc32
    • <= MariaDB 10.4.2: innodb, crc32, none, strict_innodb, strict_crc32, strict_none

innodb_checksums

  • Description: By default, InnoDB performs checksum validation on all pages read from disk, which provides extra fault tolerance. You would usually want this set to 1 in production environments, although setting it to 0 can provide marginal performance improvements. Deprecated and functionality replaced by innodb_checksum_algorithm in MariaDB 10.0, and should be removed to avoid conflicts. ON is equivalent to --innodb_checksum_algorithm=innodb and OFF to --innodb_checksum_algorithm=none.
  • Commandline: --innodb-checksums, --skip-innodb-checksums
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: No
  • Data Type: boolean
  • Default Value: ON
  • Deprecated: MariaDB 10.0
  • Removed: MariaDB 10.5.0

innodb_cleaner_lsn_age_factor

  • Description: XtraDB has enhanced page cleaner heuristics, and with these in place, the default InnoDB adaptive flushing may be too aggressive. As a result, a new LSN age factor formula has been introduced, controlled by this variable. The default setting, high_checkpoint, uses the new formula, while the alternative, legacy, uses the original algorithm. XtraDB only. Added as a deprecated and ignored option in MariaDB 10.2.6 (which uses InnoDB as default instead of XtraDB) to allow for easier upgrades.
  • Commandline: --innodb-cleaner-lsn-age-factor=value
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: enum
  • Default Value:
    • deprecated
  • Valid Values:
    • deprecated, high_checkpoint, legacy
  • Deprecated: MariaDB 10.2.6
  • Removed: MariaDB 10.3.0

innodb_cmp_per_index_enabled

  • Description: If set to ON (OFF is default), per-index compression statistics are stored in the INFORMATION_SCHEMA.INNODB_CMP_PER_INDEX table. These are expensive to record, so this setting should only be changed with care, such as for performance tuning on development or replica servers.
  • Commandline: --innodb-cmp-per-index-enabled={0|1}
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: boolean
  • Default Value: OFF
  • Introduced: MariaDB 10.0

innodb_commit_concurrency

  • Description: Limit to the number of transaction threads that can can commit simultaneously. 0, the default, imposes no limit. While you can change from one positive limit to another at runtime, you cannot set this variable to 0, or change it from 0, while the server is running. Deprecated and ignored from MariaDB 10.5.5.
  • Commandline: --innodb-commit-concurrency=#
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: numeric
  • Default Value: 0
  • Range: 0 to 1000
  • Deprecated: MariaDB 10.5.5
  • Removed: MariaDB 10.6.0

innodb_compression_algorithm

  • Description: Compression algorithm used for InnoDB page compression. The supported values are:
    • none: Pages are not compressed.
    • zlib: Pages are compressed using the bundled zlib compression algorithm.
    • lz4: Pages are compressed using the lz4 compression algorithm.
    • lzo: Pages are compressed using the lzo compression algorithm.
    • lzma: Pages are compressed using the lzma compression algorithm.
    • bzip2: Pages are compressed using the bzip2 compression algorithm.
    • snappy: Pages are compressed using the snappy algorithm.
    • On many distributions, MariaDB may not support all page compression algorithms by default. From MariaDB 10.7, libraries can be installed as a plugin. See Compression Plugins.
    • See InnoDB Page Compression: Configuring the InnoDB Page Compression Algorithm for more information.
  • Commandline: --innodb-compression-algorithm=value
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: enum
  • Default Value: zlib
  • Valid Values:none, zlib, lz4, lzo, lzma, bzip2 or snappy

innodb_compression_default


innodb_compression_failure_threshold_pct


innodb_compression_level

  • Description: Specifies the default level of compression for tables that use InnoDB page compression.
    • Only a subset of InnoDB page compression algorithms support compression levels. If an InnoDB page compression algorithm does not support compression levels, then the compression level value is ignored.
    • The compression level can be set to any value between 1 and 9. The default compression level is 6. The range goes from the fastest to the most compact, which means that 1 is the fastest and 9 is the most compact.
    • See InnoDB Page Compression: Configuring the Default Compression Level for more information.
  • Commandline: --innodb-compression-level=#
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: numeric
  • Default Value: 6
  • Range: 1 to 9
  • Introduced: MariaDB 10.0

innodb_compression_pad_pct_max


innodb_concurrency_tickets


innodb_corrupt_table_action

  • Description: What action to perform when a corrupt table is found. XtraDB only.
    • When set to assert, the default, XtraDB will intentionally crash the server when it detects corrupted data in a single-table tablespace, with an assertion failure.
    • When set to warn, it will pass corruption as corrupt table instead of crashing, and disable all further I/O (except for deletion) on the table file.
    • If set to salvage, read access is permitted, but corrupted pages are ignored. innodb_file_per_table must be enabled for this option. Previously named innodb_pass_corrupt_table.
    • Added as a deprecated and ignored option in MariaDB 10.2.6 (which uses InnoDB as default instead of XtraDB) to allow for easier upgrades.
  • Commandline: innodb-corrupt-table-action=value
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: enumeration
  • Default Value:
  • Valid Values:
    • deprecated, assert, warn, salvage
  • Deprecated: MariaDB 10.2.6
  • Removed: MariaDB 10.3.0

innodb_data_file_buffering

  • Description: Whether to enable the file system cache for data files. Set to OFF by default, will be set to ON if innodb_flush_method is set to fsync, littlesync, nosync, or (Windows specific) normal.
  • Commandline: --innodb-data-file-buffering={0|1}
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: boolean
  • Default Value: OFF
  • Introduced: MariaDB 11.0.0

innodb_data_file_path

  • Description: Individual InnoDB data files, paths and sizes. The value of innodb_data_home_dir is joined to each path specified by innodb_data_file_path to get the full directory path. If innodb_data_home_dir is an empty string, absolute paths can be specified here. A file size is specified (with K for kilobytes, M for megabytes and G for gigabytes). Also whether or not to autoextend the data file, and whether or not to autoshrink on startup may also be specified.
  • Commandline: --innodb-data-file-path=name
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: No
  • Data Type: numeric
  • Default Value: ibdata1:12M:autoextend (from MariaDB 10.0), ibdata1:10M:autoextend (before MariaDB 10.0)

innodb_data_file_write_through

  • Description: Whether writes to InnoDB data files (including the temporary tablespace) are write through. Set to OFF by default, will be set to ON if innodb_flush_method is set to O_DSYNC. On systems that support FUA it may make sense to enable write-through, to avoid extra system calls.
  • Commandline: --innodb-data-file-write-through={0|1}
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: boolean
  • Default Value: OFF
  • Introduced: MariaDB 11.0.0

innodb_data_home_dir

  • Description: Directory path for all InnoDB data files in the shared tablespace (assuming innodb_file_per_table is not enabled). File-specific information can be added in innodb_data_file_path, as well as absolute paths if innodb_data_home_dir is set to an empty string.
  • Commandline: --innodb-data-home-dir=path
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: No
  • Data Type: directory name
  • Default Value: The MariaDB data directory

innodb_deadlock_detect

  • Description: By default, the InnoDB deadlock detector is enabled. If set to off, deadlock detection is disabled and MariaDB will rely on innodb_lock_wait_timeout instead. This may be more efficient in systems with high concurrency as deadlock detection can cause a bottleneck when a number of threads have to wait for the same lock.
  • Commandline: --innodb-deadlock-detect
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: boolean
  • Default Value: 1

innodb_deadlock_report

  • Description: How to report deadlocks (if innodb_deadlock_detect=ON).
    • off: Do not report any details of deadlocks.
    • basic: Report transactions and waiting locks.
    • full: Default. Report transactions, waiting locks and blocking locks.
  • Commandline: --innodb-deadlock-report=val
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: enum
  • Default Value: full
  • Valid Values: off, basic, full
  • Introduced: MariaDB 10.6.0

innodb_default_page_encryption_key


innodb_default_encryption_key_id

  • Description: ID of encryption key used by default to encrypt InnoDB tablespaces.
  • Commandline: --innodb-default-encryption-key-id=#
  • Scope: Global, Session
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: numeric
  • Default Value: 1
  • Range: 1 to 4294967295

innodb_default_row_format

  • Description: Specifies the default row format to be used for InnoDB tables. The compressed row format cannot be set as the default.
  • Commandline: --innodb-default-row-format=value
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: enum
  • Default Value: dynamic
  • Valid Values: redundant, compact or dynamic

innodb_defragment

  • Description: When set to 1 (the default is 0), InnoDB defragmentation is enabled. When set to FALSE, all existing defragmentation will be paused and new defragmentation commands will fail. Paused defragmentation commands will resume when this variable is set to true again. See Defragmenting InnoDB Tablespaces.
  • Commandline: --innodb-defragment={0|1}
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: boolean
  • Default Value: OFF
  • Deprecated: MariaDB 11.0.1
  • Removed: MariaDB 11.1.0

innodb_defragment_fill_factor

  • Description:. Indicates how full defragmentation should fill a page. Together with innodb_defragment_fill_factor_n_recs ensures defragmentation won’t pack the page too full and cause page split on the next insert on every page. The variable indicating more defragmentation gain is the one effective. See Defragmenting InnoDB Tablespaces.
  • Commandline: --innodb-defragment-fill-factor=#
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: double
  • Default Value: 0.9
  • Range: 0.7 to 1
  • Deprecated: MariaDB 11.0.1
  • Removed: MariaDB 11.1.0

innodb_defragment_fill_factor_n_recs

  • Description: Number of records of space that defragmentation should leave on the page. This variable, together with innodb_defragment_fill_factor, is introduced so defragmentation won't pack the page too full and cause page split on the next insert on every page. The variable indicating more defragmentation gain is the one effective. See Defragmenting InnoDB Tablespaces.
  • Commandline: --innodb-defragment-fill-factor-n-recs=#
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: numeric
  • Default Value: 20
  • Range: 1 to 100
  • Deprecated: MariaDB 11.0.1
  • Removed: MariaDB 11.1.0

innodb_defragment_frequency

  • Description: Maximum times per second for defragmenting a single index. This controls the number of times the defragmentation thread can request X_LOCK on an index. The defragmentation thread will check whether 1/defragment_frequency (s) has passed since it last worked on this index, and put the index back in the queue if not enough time has passed. The actual frequency can only be lower than this given number. See Defragmenting InnoDB Tablespaces.
  • Commandline: --innodb-defragment-frequency=#
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: integer
  • Default Value: 40
  • Range: 1 to 1000
  • Deprecated: MariaDB 11.0.1
  • Removed: MariaDB 11.1.0

innodb_defragment_n_pages

  • Description: Number of pages considered at once when merging multiple pages to defragment. See Defragmenting InnoDB Tablespaces.
  • Commandline: --innodb-defragment-n-pages=#
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: numeric
  • Default Value: 7
  • Range: 2 to 32
  • Deprecated: MariaDB 11.0.1
  • Removed: MariaDB 11.1.0

innodb_defragment_stats_accuracy

  • Description: Number of defragment stats changes there are before the stats are written to persistent storage. Defaults to zero, meaning disable defragment stats tracking. See Defragmenting InnoDB Tablespaces.
  • Commandline: --innodb-defragment-stats-accuracy=#
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: numeric
  • Default Value: 0
  • Range: 0 to 4294967295
  • Deprecated: MariaDB 11.0.1
  • Removed: MariaDB 11.1.0

innodb_dict_size_limit

  • Description: Size in bytes of a soft limit the memory used by tables in the data dictionary. Once this limit is reached, XtraDB will attempt to remove unused entries. If set to 0, the default and standard InnoDB behavior, there is no limit to memory usage. Removed in MariaDB 10.0/XtraDB 5.6 and replaced by MySQL 5.6's new table_definition_cache implementation.
  • Commandline: innodb-dict-size-limit=#
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: numeric
  • Default Value: 0
  • Default Value - 32 bit: 2147483648
  • Default Value - 64 bit: 9223372036854775807
  • Removed: MariaDB 10.0 - replaced by MySQL 5.6's table_definition_cache implementation.

innodb_disable_sort_file_cache

  • Description: If set to 1 (0 is default), the operating system file system cache for merge-sort temporary files is disabled.
  • Commandline: --innodb-disable-sort-file-cache={0|1}
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: boolean
  • Default Value: OFF

innodb_disallow_writes


innodb_doublewrite

  • Description: If set to 1, the default, to improve fault tolerance InnoDB first stores data to a doublewrite buffer before writing it to data file. Disabling will provide a marginal peformance improvement.
  • Commandline: --innodb-doublewrite, --skip-innodb-doublewrite
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: No
  • Data Type: boolean
  • Default Value: ON

innodb_doublewrite_file

  • Description: The absolute or relative path and filename to a dedicated tablespace for the doublewrite buffer. In heavy workloads, the doublewrite buffer can impact heavily on the server, and moving it to a different drive will reduce contention on random reads. Since the doublewrite buffer is mostly sequential writes, a traditional HDD is a better choice than SSD. This Percona XtraDB variable has not been ported to XtraDB 5.6.
  • Commandline: innodb-doublewrite-file=filename
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: No
  • Data Type: filename
  • Default Value: NULL
  • Removed: MariaDB 10.0

innodb_empty_free_list_algorithm

  • Description: XtraDB 5.6.13-61 introduced an algorithm to assist with reducing mutex contention when the buffer pool free list is empty, controlled by this variable. If set to backoff, the default until MariaDB 10.1.24, the new algorithm will be used. If set to legacy, the original InnoDB algorithm will be used. XtraDB only. Added as a deprecated and ignored option in MariaDB 10.2.6 (which uses InnoDB as default instead of XtraDB) to allow for easier upgrades. See #1651657 for the reasons this was changed back to legacy in XtraDB 5.6.36-82.0. When upgrading from 10.0 to 10.1 (>= 10.1.24), for large buffer pools the default will remain backoff, while for small ones it will be changed to legacy.
  • Commandline: innodb-empty-free-list-algorithm=value
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: enum
  • Default Value:
    • deprecated
  • Valid Values:
    • deprecated, backoff, legacy
  • Deprecated: MariaDB 10.2.6
  • Removed: MariaDB 10.3.0

innodb_enable_unsafe_group_commit

  • Description: Unneeded after XtraDB 1.0.5. If set to 0, the default, InnoDB will keep transactions between the transaction log and binary logs in the same order. Safer, but slower. If set to 1, transactions can be group-committed, but there is no guarantee of the order being kept, and a small risk of the two logs getting out of sync. In write-intensive environments, can lead to a significant improvement in performance.
  • Commandline: --innodb-enable-unsafe-group-commit
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: numeric
  • Default Value: 0
  • Range: 0 to 1
  • Removed: Not needed after XtraDB 1.0.5

innodb_encrypt_log


innodb_encrypt_tables

  • Description: Enables automatic encryption of all InnoDB tablespaces.
  • Commandline: --innodb-encrypt-tables={0|1}
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: boolean
  • Default Value: OFF
  • Valid Values: ON, OFF, FORCE

innodb_encrypt_temporary_tables


innodb_encryption_rotate_key_age

  • Description: Re-encrypt in background any page having a key older than this number of key versions. When setting up encryption, this variable must be set to a non-zero value. Otherwise, when you enable encryption through innodb_encrypt_tables MariaDB won't be able to automatically encrypt any unencrypted tables.
  • Commandline: --innodb-encryption-rotate-key-age=#
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: numeric
  • Default Value: 1
  • Range: 0 to 4294967295

innodb_encryption_rotation_iops

  • Description: Use this many iops for background key rotation operations performed by the background encryption threads.
  • Commandline: --innodb-encryption-rotation_iops=#
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: numeric
  • Default Value: 100
  • Range: 0 to 4294967295

innodb_encryption_threads


innodb_extra_rsegments

  • Description: Removed in XtraDB 5.5 and replaced by innodb_rollback_segments. Usually there is one rollback segment protected by single mutex, a source of contention in high write environments. This option specifies a number of extra user rollback segments. Changing the default will make the data readable by XtraDB only, and is incompatible with InnoDB. After modifying, the server must be slow-shutdown. If there is existing data, it must be dumped before changing, and re-imported after the change has taken effect.
  • Commandline: --innodb-extra-rsegments=#
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: No
  • Data Type: numeric
  • Default Value: 0
  • Range: 0 to 126
  • Removed: XtraDB 5.5 - replaced by innodb_rollback_segments

innodb_extra_undoslots

  • Description: Usually, InnoDB has 1024 undo slots in its rollback segment, so 1024 transactions can run in parallel. New transactions will fail if all slots are used. Setting this variable to 1 expands the available undo slots to 4072. Not recommended unless you get the Warning: cannot find a free slot for an undo log error in the error log, as it makes data files unusable for ibbackup, or MariaDB servers not run with this option. See also undo log.
  • Commandline: --innodb-extra-undoslots={0|1}
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: No
  • Data Type: boolean
  • Default Value: OFF
  • Removed: XtraDB 5.5

innodb_fake_changes

  • Description: From MariaDB 5.5 until MariaDB 10.1, XtraDB-only option that enables the fake changes feature. In replication, setting up or restarting a replica can cause a replication reads to perform more slowly, as MariaDB is single-threaded and needs to read the data before it can execute the queries. This can be speeded up by prefetching threads to warm the server, replaying the statements and then rolling back at commit. This however has an overhead from locking rows only then to undo changes at rollback. Fake changes attempts to reduce this overhead by reading the rows for INSERT, UPDATE and DELETE statements but not updating them. The rollback is then very fast with little or nothing to do. Added as a deprecated and ignored option in MariaDB 10.2.6 (which uses InnoDB as default instead of XtraDB) to allow for easier upgrades. Not present in MariaDB 10.3 and beyond.
  • Commandline: --innodb-fake-changes={0|1}
  • Scope: Global, Session
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: boolean
  • Default Value: OFF
  • Deprecated: MariaDB 10.2.6
  • Removed: MariaDB 10.3.0

innodb_fast_checksum

  • Description: Implements a more CPU efficient XtraDB checksum algorithm, useful for write-heavy loads with high I/O. If set to 1 on a server with tables that have been created with it set to 0, reads will be slower, so tables should be recreated (dumped and reloaded). XtraDB will fail to start if set to 0 and there are tables created while set to 1. Replaced with innodb_checksum_algorithm in MariaDB 10.0/XtraDB 5.6.
  • Commandline: --innodb-fast-checksum={0|1}
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: No
  • Data Type: boolean
  • Default Value: OFF
  • Removed: MariaDB 10.0/XtraDB 5.6 - replaced with innodb_checksum_algorithm

innodb_fast_shutdown

  • Description: The shutdown mode.
    • 0 - InnoDB performs a slow shutdown, including full purge (before MariaDB 10.3.6, not always, due to MDEV-13603) and change buffer merge. Can be very slow, even taking hours in extreme cases.
    • 1 - the default, InnoDB performs a fast shutdown, not performing a full purge or an insert buffer merge.
    • 2, the InnoDB redo log is flushed and a cold shutdown takes place, similar to a crash. The resulting startup then performs crash recovery. Extremely fast, in cases of emergency, but risks corruption. Not suitable for upgrades between major versions!
    • 3 (from MariaDB 10.3.6) - active transactions will not be rolled back, but all changed pages will be written to data files. The active transactions will be rolled back by a background thread on a subsequent startup. The fastest option that will not involve InnoDB redo log apply on subsequent startup. See MDEV-15832.
  • Commandline: --innodb-fast-shutdown[=#]
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: numeric
  • Default Value: 1
  • Range: 0 to 3 (>= MariaDB 10.3.6), 0 to 2 (<= MariaDB 10.3.5)

innodb_fatal_semaphore_wait_threshold

  • Description: In MariaDB, the fatal semaphore timeout is configurable. This variable sets the maximum number of seconds for semaphores to time out in InnoDB.
  • Commandline: --innodb-fatal-semaphore-wait-threshold=#
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: No
  • Data Type: numeric
  • Default Value: 600
  • Range: 1 to 4294967295

innodb_file_format

  • Description: File format for new InnoDB tables. Can either be Antelope, the default and the original format, or Barracuda, which supports compression. Note that this value is also used when a table is re-created with an ALTER TABLE which requires a table copy. See XtraDB/InnoDB File Format for more on the file formats. Removed in 10.3.1 and restored as a deprecated and unused variable in 10.4.3 for compatibility purposes.
  • Commandline: --innodb-file-format=value
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: string
  • Default Value:
    • Barracuda
  • Valid Values: Antelope, Barracuda
  • Deprecated: MariaDB 10.2
  • Removed: MariaDB 10.3.1
  • Re-introduced: MariaDB 10.4.3 (for compatibility purposes)
  • Removed: MariaDB 10.6.0

innodb_file_format_check

  • Description: If set to 1, the default, InnoDB checks the shared tablespace file format tag. If this is higher than the current version supported by XtraDB/InnoDB (for example Barracuda when only Antelope is supported), XtraDB/InnoDB will will not start. If it the value is not higher, XtraDB/InnoDB starts correctly and the innodb_file_format_max value is set to this value. If innodb_file_format_check is set to 0, no checking is performed. See XtraDB/InnoDB File Format for more on the file formats.
  • Commandline: --innodb-file-format-check={0|1}
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: No
  • Data Type: boolean
  • Default Value: ON
  • Deprecated: MariaDB 10.2
  • Removed: MariaDB 10.3.1

innodb_file_format_max

  • Description: The highest XtraDB/InnoDB file format. This is set to the value of the file format tag in the shared tablespace on startup (see innodb_file_format_check). If the server later creates a higher table format, innodb_file_format_max is set to that value. See XtraDB/InnoDB File Format for more on the file formats.
  • Commandline: --innodb-file-format-max=value
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: string
  • Default Value: Antelope
  • Valid Values: Antelope, Barracuda
  • Deprecated: MariaDB 10.2
  • Removed: MariaDB 10.3.1

innodb_file_per_table

  • Description: If set to ON, then new InnoDB tables are created with their own InnoDB file-per-table tablespaces. If set to OFF, then new tables are created in the InnoDB system tablespace instead. Page compression is only available with file-per-table tablespaces. Note that this value is also used when a table is re-created with an ALTER TABLE which requires a table copy. Deprecated in MariaDB 11.0 as there's no benefit to setting to OFF, the original InnoDB default.
  • Commandline: --innodb-file-per-table
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: boolean
  • Default Value: ON
  • Deprecated: MariaDB 11.0.1

innodb_fill_factor

  • Description: Percentage of B-tree page filled during bulk insert (sorted index build). Used as a hint rather than an absolute value. Setting to 70, for example, reserves 30% of the space on each B-tree page for the index to grow in future.
  • Commandline: --innodb-fill-factor=#
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: numeric
  • Default Value: 100
  • Range: 10 to 100

innodb_flush_log_at_timeout

  • Description: Interval in seconds to write and flush the InnoDB redo log. Before MariaDB 10, this was fixed at one second, which is still the default, but this can now be changed. It's usually increased to reduce flushing and avoid impacting performance of binary log group commit.
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: numeric
  • Default Value: 1
  • Range: 0 to 2700

innodb_flush_log_at_trx_commit

  • Description: Set to 1, along with sync_binlog=1 for the greatest level of fault tolerance. The value of innodb_use_global_flush_log_at_trx_commit determines whether this variable can be reset with a SET statement or not.
  • Commandline: --innodb-flush-log-at-trx-commit[=#]
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: enumeration
  • Default Value: 1
  • Valid Values: 0, 1, 2 or 3

innodb_flush_method

  • Description: InnoDB flushing method. Windows always uses async_unbuffered and this variable then has no effect. On Unix, before MariaDB 10.6.0, by default fsync() is used to flush data and logs. Adjusting this variable can give performance improvements, but behavior differs widely on different filesystems, and changing from the default has caused problems in some situations, so test and benchmark carefully before adjusting. In MariaDB, Windows recognises and correctly handles the Unix methods, but if none are specified it uses own default - unbuffered write (analog of O_DIRECT) + syncs (e.g FileFlushBuffers()) for all files.
    • O_DSYNC - O_DSYNC is used to open and flush logs, and fsync() to flush the data files.
    • O_DIRECT - O_DIRECT or directio(), is used to open data files, and fsync() to flush data and logs. Default on Unix from MariaDB 10.6.0.
    • fsync - Default on Unix until MariaDB 10.5. Can be specified directly, but if the variable is unset on Unix, fsync() will be used by default.
    • O_DIRECT_NO_FSYNC - introduced in MariaDB 10.0. Uses O_DIRECT during flushing I/O, but skips fsync() afterwards. Not suitable for XFS filesystems. Generally not recommended over O_DIRECT, as does not get the benefit of innodb_use_native_aio=ON.
    • ALL_O_DIRECT - introduced in MariaDB 5.5 and available with XtraDB only. Uses O_DIRECT for opening both data and logs and fsync() to flush data but not logs. Use with large InnoDB files only, otherwise may cause a performance degradation. Set innodb_log_block_size to 4096 on ext4 filesystems. This is the default log block size on ext4 and will avoid unaligned AIO/DIO warnings.
    • unbuffered - Windows-only default
    • async_unbuffered - Windows-only, alias for unbuffered
    • normal - Windows-only, alias for fsync
    • littlesync - for internal testing only
    • nosync - for internal testing only
  • Deprecated in MariaDB 11.0 and replaced by four boolean dynamic variables that can be changed while the server is running: innodb_log_file_buffering (disable O_DIRECT, added by MDEV-28766 in 10.8.4, 10.9.2), innodb_data_file_buffering (disable O_DIRECT on data files), innodb_log_file_write_through (enable O_DSYNC on the log), innodb_data_file_write_through (enable O_DSYNC on persistent data files)

    From MariaDB 11.0, if set to one of the following values, then the values of the four boolean flags will be set as follows:
  • Commandline: --innodb-flush-method=name
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: No
  • Data Type: enumeration (>= MariaDB 10.3.7), string (<= MariaDB 10.3.6)
  • Default Value:
  • Valid Values:
    • Unix: fsync, O_DSYNC, littlesync, nosync. O_DIRECT, O_DIRECT_NO_FSYNC
    • Windows: unbuffered, async_unbuffered, normal
  • Deprecated: MariaDB 11.0

innodb_flush_neighbor_pages

  • Description: Determines whether, when dirty pages are flushed to the data file, neighboring pages in the data file are flushed at the same time. If set to none, the feature is disabled. If set to area, the default, the standard InnoDB behavior is used. For each page to be flushed, dirty neighboring pages are flushed too. If there's little head seek delay, such as SSD or large enough write buffer, one of the other two options may be more efficient. If set to cont, for each page to be flushed, neighboring contiguous blocks are flushed at the same time. Being contiguous, a sequential I/O is used, unlike the random I/O used in area. Replaced by innodb_flush_neighbors in MariaDB 10.0/XtraDB 5.6.
  • Commandline: innodb-flush-neighbor-pages=value
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: enumeration
  • Default Value: area
  • Valid Values: none or 0, area or 1, cont or 2
  • Removed: MariaDB 10.0/XtraDB 5.6 - replaced by innodb_flush_neighbors

innodb_flush_neighbors

  • Description: Determines whether flushing a page from the buffer pool will flush other dirty pages in the same group of pages (extent). In high write environments, if flushing is not aggressive enough, it can fall behind resulting in higher memory usage, or if flushing is too aggressive, cause excess I/O activity. SSD devices, with low seek times, would be less likely to require dirty neighbor flushing to be set. Since MariaDB 10.4.4 an attempt is made under Windows and Linux to determine SSD status which was exposed in information_schema.innodb_tablespaces_scrubbing_table. This variable is ignored for table spaces that are detected as stored on SSD (and the 0 behavior applies).
    • 1: The default, flushes contiguous dirty pages in the same extent from the buffer pool.
    • 0: No other dirty pages are flushed.
    • 2: Flushes dirty pages in the same extent from the buffer pool.
  • Commandline: --innodb-flush-neighbors=#
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: enumeration
  • Default Value: 1
  • Valid Values: 0, 1, 2

innodb_flush_sync

  • Description: If set to ON, the default, the innodb_io_capacity setting is ignored for I/O bursts occuring at checkpoints.
  • Commandline: --innodb-flush-sync={0|1}
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: boolean
  • Default Value: ON

innodb_flushing_avg_loops

  • Description: Determines how quickly adaptive flushing will respond to changing workloads. The value is the number of iterations that a previously calculated flushing state snapshot is kept. Increasing the value smooths and slows the rate that the flushing operations change, while decreasing it causes flushing activity to spike quickly in response to workload changes.
  • Commandline: --innodb-flushing-avg-loops=#
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: numeric
  • Default Value: 30
  • Range: 1 to 1000

innodb_force_load_corrupted

  • Description: Set to 0 by default, if set to 1, InnoDB will be permitted to load tables marked as corrupt. Only use this to recover data you can't recover any other way, or in troubleshooting. Always restore to 0 when the returning to regular use. Given that MDEV-11412 in MariaDB 10.5.4 aims to allow any metadata for a missing or corrupted table to be dropped, and given that MDEV-17567 and MDEV-25506 and related tasks made DDL operations crash-safe, the parameter no longer serves any purpose and was removed in MariaDB 10.6.6.
  • Commandline: --innodb-force-load-corrupted
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: No
  • Data Type: boolean
  • Default Value: OFF
  • Removed: MariaDB 10.6.6

innodb_force_primary_key

  • Description: If set to 1 (0 is default) CREATE TABLEs without a primary or unique key where all keyparts are NOT NULL will not be accepted, and will return an error.
  • Commandline: --innodb-force-primary-key
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: boolean
  • Default Value: OFF

innodb_force_recovery

  • Description: InnoDB crash recovery mode. 0 is the default. The other modes are for recovery purposes only, and no data can be changed while another mode is active. Some queries relying on indexes are also blocked. See InnoDB Recovery Modes for more on mode specifics.
  • Commandline: --innodb-force-recovery=#
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: No
  • Data Type: enumeration
  • Default Value: 0
  • Range: 0 to 6

innodb_foreground_preflush

  • Description: Before XtraDB 5.6.13-61.0, if the checkpoint age is in the sync preflush zone while a thread is writing to the XtraDB redo log, it will try to advance the checkpoint by issuing a flush list flush batch if this is not already being done. XtraDB has enhanced page cleaner tuning, and may already be performing furious flushing, resulting in the flush simply adding unneeded mutex pressure. Instead, the thread now waits for the flushes to finish, and then has two options, controlled by this variable. XtraDB only. Added as a deprecated and ignored option in MariaDB 10.2.6 (which uses InnoDB as default instead of XtraDB) to allow for easier upgrades.
    • exponential_backoff - thread sleeps while it waits for the flush list flush to occur. The sleep time randomly progressively increases, periodically reset to avoid runaway sleeps.
    • sync_preflush - thread issues a flush list batch, and waits for it to complete. This is the same as is used when the page cleaner thread is not running.
  • Commandline: innodb-foreground-preflush=value
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: enum
  • Default Value:
    • deprecated
  • Valid Values:
    • deprecated, exponential_backoff, sync_preflush
  • Deprecated: MariaDB 10.2.6
  • Removed: MariaDB 10.3.0

innodb_ft_aux_table

  • Description: Diagnostic variable intended only to be set at runtime. It specifies the qualified name (for example test/ft_innodb) of an InnoDB table that has a FULLTEXT index, and after being set the INFORMATION_SCHEMA tables INNODB_FT_INDEX_TABLE, INNODB_FT_INDEX_CACHE, INNODB_FT_CONFIG, INNODB_FT_DELETED, and INNODB_FT_BEING_DELETED will contain search index information for the specified table.
  • Commandline: --innodb-ft-aux-table=value
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: string

innodb_ft_cache_size

  • Description: Cache size available for a parsed document while creating an InnoDB FULLTEXT index.
  • Commandline: --innodb-ft-cache-size=#
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: No
  • Data Type: numeric
  • Default Value: 8000000

innodb_ft_enable_diag_print

  • Description: If set to 1, additional full-text search diagnostic output is enabled.
  • Commandline: --innodb-ft-enable-diag-print={0|1}
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: boolean
  • Default Value: OFF

innodb_ft_enable_stopword


innodb_ft_max_token_size

  • Description: Maximum length of words stored in an InnoDB FULLTEXT index. A larger limit will increase the size of the index, slowing down queries, but permit longer words to be searched for. In most normal situations, longer words are unlikely search terms.
  • Commandline: --innodb-ft-max-token-size=#
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: No
  • Data Type: numeric
  • Default Value: 84
  • Range: 10 to 84

innodb_ft_min_token_size

  • Description: Minimum length of words stored in an InnoDB FULLTEXT index. A smaller limit will increase the size of the index, slowing down queries, but permit shorter words to be searched for. For data stored in a Chinese, Japanese or Korean character set, a value of 1 should be specified to preserve functionality.
  • Commandline: --innodb-ft-min-token-size=#
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: No
  • Data Type: numeric
  • Default Value: 3
  • Range: 0 to 16

innodb_ft_num_word_optimize

  • Description: Number of words processed during each OPTIMIZE TABLE on an InnoDB FULLTEXT index. To ensure all changes are incorporated, multiple OPTIMIZE TABLE statements could be run in case of a substantial change to the index.
  • Commandline: --innodb-ft-num-word-optimize=#
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: numeric
  • Default Value: 2000
  • Range: 1000 to 10000

innodb_ft_result_cache_limit

  • Description: Limit in bytes of the InnoDB FULLTEXT index query result cache per fulltext query. The latter stages of the full-text search are handled in memory, and limiting this prevents excess memory usage. If the limit is exceeded, the query returns an error.
  • Commandline: --innodb-ft-result-cache-limit=#
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: numeric
  • Default Value: 2000000000
  • Range: 1000000 to 18446744073709551615

innodb_ft_server_stopword_table

  • Description: Table name containing a list of stopwords to ignore when creating an InnoDB FULLTEXT index, in the format db_name/table_name. The specified table must exist before this option is set, and must be an InnoDB table with a single column, a VARCHAR named VALUE. See also innodb_ft_enable_stopword.
  • Commandline: --innodb-ft-server-stopword-table=db_name/table_name
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: string
  • Default Value: Empty

innodb_ft_sort_pll_degree

  • Description: Number of parallel threads used when building an InnoDB FULLTEXT index. See also innodb_sort_buffer_size.
  • Commandline: --innodb-ft-sort-pll-degree=#
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: No
  • Data Type: numeric
  • Default Value: 2
  • Range: 1 to 32

innodb_ft_total_cache_size

  • Description:Total memory allocated for the cache for all InnoDB FULLTEXT index tables. A force sync is triggered if this limit is exceeded.
  • Commandline: --innodb-ft-total-cache-size=#
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: No
  • Data Type: numeric
  • Default Value: 640000000
  • Range: 32000000 to 1600000000
  • Introduced: MariaDB 10.0.9

innodb_ft_user_stopword_table

  • Description: Table name containing a list of stopwords to ignore when creating an InnoDB FULLTEXT index, in the format db_name/table_name. The specified table must exist before this option is set, and must be an InnoDB table with a single column, a VARCHAR named VALUE. See also innodb_ft_enable_stopword.
  • Commandline: --innodb-ft-user-stopword-table=db_name/table_name
  • Scope: Session
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: string
  • Default Value: Empty

innodb_ibuf_accel_rate

  • Description: Allows the insert buffer activity to be adjusted. The following formula is used: [real activity] = [default activity] * (innodb_io_capacity/100) * (innodb_ibuf_accel_rate/100). As innodb_ibuf_accel_rate is increased from its default value of 100, the lowest setting, insert buffer activity is increased. See also innodb_io_capacity. This Percona XtraDB variable has not been ported to XtraDB 5.6.
  • Commandline: innodb-ibuf-accel-rate=#
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: numeric
  • Default Value: 100
  • Range: 100 to 999999999
  • Removed: MariaDB 10.0

innodb_ibuf_active_contract

  • Description: Specifies whether the insert buffer can be processed before it's full. If set to 0, the standard InnoDB method is used, and the buffer is not processed until it's full. If set to 1, the default, the insert buffer can be processed before it is full. This Percona XtraDB variable has not been ported to XtraDB 5.6.
  • Commandline: innodb-ibuf-active-contract=#
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: numeric
  • Default Value: 1
  • Range: 0 to 1
  • Removed: MariaDB 10.0

innodb_ibuf_max_size

  • Description: Maximum size in bytes of the insert buffer. Defaults to half the size of the buffer pool so you may want to reduce if you have a very large buffer pool. If set to 0, the insert buffer is disabled, which will cause all secondary index updates to be performed synchronously, usually at a cost to performance. This Percona XtraDB variable has not been ported to XtraDB 5.6.
  • Commandline: innodb-ibuf-max-size=#
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: No
  • Data Type: numeric
  • Default Value: 1/2 the size of the InnoDB buffer pool
  • Range: 0 to 1/2 the size of the InnoDB buffer pool
  • Removed: MariaDB 10.0

innodb_idle_flush_pct


innodb_immediate_scrub_data_uncompressed

  • Description: Enable scrubbing of data. See Data Scrubbing.
  • Commandline: --innodb-immediate-scrub-data-uncompressed={0|1}
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: boolean
  • Default Value: OFF

innodb_import_table_from_xtrabackup

  • Description: If set to 1, permits importing of .ibd files exported with the XtraBackup --export option. Previously named innodb_expand_import. Removed in MariaDB 10.0/XtraDB 5.6 and replaced with MySQL 5.6's transportable tablespaces.
  • Commandline: innodb-import-table-from-xtrabackup=#
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: numeric
  • Default Value: 0
  • Range: 0 to 1
  • Removed: MariaDB 10.0

innodb_instant_alter_column_allowed

  • Description:
    • If a table is altered using ALGORITHM=INSTANT, it can force the table to use a non-canonical format: A hidden metadata record at the start of the clustered index is used to store each column's DEFAULT value. This makes it possible to add new columns that have default values without rebuilding the table. Starting with MariaDB 10.4, a BLOB in the hidden metadata record is used to store column mappings. This makes it possible to drop or reorder columns without rebuilding the table. This also makes it possible to add columns to any position or drop columns from any position in the table without rebuilding the table. If a column is dropped without rebuilding the table, old records will contain garbage in that column's former position, and new records will be written with NULL values, empty strings, or dummy values.
    • This is generally not a problem. However, there may be cases where you want to avoid putting a table into this format. For example, to ensure that future UPDATE operations after an ADD COLUMN will be performed in-place, to reduce write amplification. (Instantly added columns are essentially always variable-length.) Also avoid bugs similar to MDEV-19916, or to be able to export tables to older versions of the server.
    • This variable has been introduced as a result, with the following values:
    • never (0): Do not allow instant add/drop/reorder, to maintain format compatibility with MariaDB 10.x and MySQL 5.x. If the table (or partition) is not in the canonical format, then any ALTER TABLE (even one that does not involve instant column operations) will force a table rebuild.
    • add_last (1, default in 10.3): Store a hidden metadata record that allows columns to be appended to the table instantly (MDEV-11369). In 10.4 or later, if the table (or partition) is not in this format, then any ALTER TABLE (even one that does not involve column changes) will force a table rebuild.
    • add_drop_reorder (2, default): From MariaDB 10.4 only. Like 'add_last', but allow the metadata record to store a column map, to support instant add/drop/reorder of columns.
  • Commandline: --innodb-instant-alter-column-allowed=value
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: enum
  • Valid Values:
  • Default Value:
  • Introduced: MariaDB 10.3.23, MariaDB 10.4.13, MariaDB 10.5.3

innodb_instrument_semaphores

  • Description: Enable semaphore request instrumentation. This could have some effect on performance but allows better information on long semaphore wait problems.
  • Commandline: --innodb-instrument-semaphores={0|1}
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: boolean
  • Default Value: OFF
  • Deprecated: MariaDB 10.2.5 (treated as if OFF)
  • Removed: MariaDB 10.3.0

innodb_io_capacity

  • Description: Limit on I/O activity for InnoDB background tasks, including merging data from the insert buffer and flushing pages. Should be set to around the number of I/O operations per second that system can handle, based on the type of drive/s being used. You can also set it higher when the server starts to help with the extra workload at that time, and then reduce for normal use. Ideally, opt for a lower setting, as at higher value data is removed from the buffers too quickly, reducing the effectiveness of caching. See also innodb_flush_sync.
  • Commandline: --innodb-io-capacity=#
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: numeric
  • Default Value: 200
  • Range: 100 to 18446744073709551615 (264-1)

innodb_io_capacity_max


innodb_kill_idle_transaction

  • Description: Time in seconds before killing an idle XtraDB transaction. If set to 0 (the default), the feature is disabled. Used to prevent accidental user locks. XtraDB only. Added as a deprecated and ignored option in MariaDB 10.2.6 (which uses InnoDB as default instead of XtraDB) to allow for easier upgrades.
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: numeric
  • Default Value: 0
  • Range: 0 to 9223372036854775807
  • Deprecated: MariaDB 10.2.6
  • Removed: MariaDB 10.3.0

innodb_large_prefix

  • Description: If set to 1, tables that use specific row formats are permitted to have index key prefixes up to 3072 bytes (for 16k pages, smaller otherwise). If not set, the limit is 767 bytes.
    • This applies to the DYNAMIC and COMPRESSED row formats.
    • Removed in 10.3.1 and restored as a deprecated and unused variable in 10.4.3 for compatibility purposes.
  • Commandline: --innodb-large-prefix
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: boolean
  • Default Value:
    • ON
  • Deprecated: MariaDB 10.2
  • Removed: MariaDB 10.3.1
  • Re-introduced: MariaDB 10.4.3 (for compatibility purposes)
  • Removed: MariaDB 10.6.0

innodb_lazy_drop_table

  • Description: Deprecated and removed in XtraDB 5.6. DROP TABLE processing can take a long time when innodb_file_per_table is set to 1 and there's a large buffer pool. If innodb_lazy_drop_table is set to 1 (0 is default), XtraDB attempts to optimize DROP TABLE processing by deferring the dropping of related pages from the buffer pool until there is time, only initially marking them.
  • Commandline: innodb-lazy-drop-table={0|1}
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: boolean
  • Default Value: 0
  • Deprecated: XtraDB 5.5.30-30.2
  • Removed: MariaDB 10.0.0

innodb_lock_schedule_algorithm


innodb_lock_wait_timeout

  • Description: Time in seconds that an InnoDB transaction waits for an InnoDB record lock (or table lock) before giving up with the error ERROR 1205 (HY000): Lock wait timeout exceeded; try restarting transaction. When this occurs, the statement (not transaction) is rolled back. The whole transaction can be rolled back if the innodb_rollback_on_timeout option is used. Increase this for data warehousing applications or where other long-running operations are common, or decrease for OLTP and other highly interactive applications. This setting does not apply to deadlocks, which InnoDB detects immediately, rolling back a deadlocked transaction. 0 means no wait. See WAIT and NOWAIT. Setting to 100000000 or more (from MariaDB 10.6.3, 100000000 is the maximum) means the timeout is infinite.
  • Commandline: --innodb-lock-wait-timeout=#
  • Scope: Global, Session
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: INT UNSIGNED (>= MariaDB 10.6.3), BIGINT UNSIGNED (<= MariaDB 10.6.2)
  • Default Value: 50
  • Range:

innodb_locking_fake_changes

  • Description: From MariaDB 5.5 to MariaDB 10.1, XtraDB-only option that if set to OFF, fake transactions (see innodb_fake_changes) don't take row locks. This is an experimental feature to attempt to deal with drawbacks in fake changes blocking real locks. It is not safe for use in all environments. Added as a deprecated and ignored option in MariaDB 10.2.6 (which uses InnoDB as default instead of XtraDB) to allow for easier upgrades.
  • Commandline: --innodb-locking-fake-changes
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: boolean
  • Default Value: ON
  • Deprecated: MariaDB 10.2.6
  • Removed: MariaDB 10.3.0

innodb_locks_unsafe_for_binlog


innodb_log_arch_dir

  • Description: The directory for XtraDB redo log archiving. XtraDB only. Added as a deprecated and ignored option in MariaDB 10.2.6 (which uses InnoDB as default instead of XtraDB) to allow for easier upgrades.
  • Commandline: --innodb-log-arch-dir=name
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: No
  • Data Type: string
  • Default Value: ./
  • Deprecated: MariaDB 10.2.6
  • Removed: MariaDB 10.3.0

innodb_log_arch_expire_sec

  • Description: Time in seconds since the last change after which the archived XtraDB redo log should be deleted. XtraDB only. Added as a deprecated and ignored option in MariaDB 10.2.6 (which uses InnoDB as default instead of XtraDB) to allow for easier upgrades.
  • Commandline: --innodb-log-arch-expire-sec=#
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: numeric
  • Default Value: 0
  • Deprecated: MariaDB 10.2.6
  • Removed: MariaDB 10.3.0

innodb_log_archive

  • Description: Whether or not XtraDB redo log archiving is enabled. XtraDB only. Added as a deprecated and ignored option in MariaDB 10.2.6 (which uses InnoDB as default instead of XtraDB) to allow for easier upgrades.
  • Commandline: --innodb-log-archive={0|1}
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: boolean
  • Default Value: OFF
  • Deprecated: MariaDB 10.2.6
  • Removed: MariaDB 10.3.0

innodb_log_block_size

  • Description: Size in bytes of the XtraDB redo log records. Generally 512, the default, or 4096, are the only two useful values. If the server is restarted and this value is changed, all old log files need to be removed. Should be set to 4096 for SSD cards or if innodb_flush_method is set to ALL_O_DIRECT on ext4 filesystems. XtraDB only. Added as a deprecated and ignored option in MariaDB 10.2.6 (which uses InnoDB as default instead of XtraDB) to allow for easier upgrades.
  • Commandline: innodb-log-block-size=#
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: No
  • Data Type: numeric
  • Default Value: 512
  • Deprecated: MariaDB 10.2.6
  • Removed: MariaDB 10.3.0

innodb_log_buffer_size

  • Description: Size in bytes of the buffer for writing InnoDB redo log files to disk. Increasing this means larger transactions can run without needing to perform disk I/O before committing.
  • Commandline: --innodb-log-buffer-size=#
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: No
  • Data Type: numeric
  • Default Value: 16777216 (16MB)
  • Range: 262144 to 4294967295 (256KB to 4096MB)

innodb_log_checksum_algorithm

  • Description: Experimental feature (as of MariaDB 10.0.9), this variable specifies how to generate and verify XtraDB redo log checksums. XtraDB only. Added as a deprecated and ignored option in MariaDB 10.2.6 (which uses InnoDB as default instead of XtraDB) to allow for easier upgrades.
    • none - No checksum. A constant value is instead written to logs, and no checksum validation is performed.
    • innodb - The default, and the original InnoDB algorithm. This is inefficient, but compatible with all MySQL, MariaDB and Percona versions that don't support other checksum algorithms.
    • crc32 - CRC32© is used for log block checksums, which also permits recent CPUs to use hardware acceleration (on SSE4.2 x86 machines and Power8 or later) for the checksums.
    • strict_* - Whether or not to accept checksums from other algorithms. If strict mode is used, checksums blocks will be considered corrupt if they don't match the specified algorithm. Normally they are considered corrupt only if no other algorithm matches.
  • Commandline: innodb-log-checksum-algorithm=value
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: enum
  • Default Value:
  • Valid Values:
    • deprecated, innodb, none, crc32, strict_none, strict_innodb, strict_crc32 (>= MariaDB 10.2.6)
    • innodb, none, crc32, strict_none, strict_innodb, strict_crc32 (<= MariaDB 10.1)
  • Deprecated: MariaDB 10.2.6
  • Removed: MariaDB 10.3.0

innodb_log_checksums

  • Description: If set to 1, the CRC32C for Innodb or innodb_log_checksum_algorithm for XtraDB algorithm is used for InnoDB redo log pages. If disabled, the checksum field contents are ignored. From MariaDB 10.5.0, the variable is deprecated, and checksums are always calculated, as previously, the InnoDB redo log used the slow innodb algorithm, but with hardware or SIMD assisted CRC-32C computation being available, there is no reason to allow checksums to be disabled on the redo log.
  • Commandline: innodb-log-checksums={0|1}
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: boolean
  • Default Value: ON
  • Deprecated: MariaDB 10.5.0
  • Removed: MariaDB 10.6.0

innodb_log_compressed_pages

  • Description: Whether or not images of recompressed pages are stored in the InnoDB redo log. Deprecated and ignored from MariaDB 10.5.3.
  • Commandline: --innodb-log-compressed-pages={0|1}
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: boolean
  • Default Value:
    • ON
  • Deprecated: MariaDB 10.5.3
  • Removed: MariaDB 10.6.0

innodb_log_file_buffering

  • Description: Whether the file system cache for ib_logfile0 is enabled. In MariaDB 10.8.3, MariaDB disabled the file system cache on the InnoDB write-ahead log file (ib_logfile0) by default on Linux. With innodb_flush_trx_log_at_commit=2 in particular, writing to the log via the file system cache typically improves throughput, especially on slow storage or at a small number of concurrent transactions. For other values of innodb_flush_log_at_trx_commit, direct writes were observed to be mostly but not always faster. Whether it pays off to disable the file system cache on the log may depend on the type of storage, the workload, and the operating system kernel version. If the server is started up with innodb_flush_log_at_trx_commit=2, the value will be changed to ON. Will be set to OFF if innodb_flush_method is set to O_DSYNC. On Linux, when the physical block size cannot be determined to be a power of 2 between 64 and 4096 bytes, the file system cache cannot be disabled, and innodb_log_file_buffering=ON cannot be changed. Linux and Windows only.
  • Commandline: --innodb-log-file-buffering={0|1}
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: boolean
  • Default Value: OFF
  • Introduced: MariaDB 10.8.4, MariaDB 10.9.2

innodb_log_file_size

  • Description: Size in bytes of each InnoDB redo log file in the log group. The combined size can be no more than 512GB. Larger values mean less disk I/O due to less flushing checkpoint activity, but also slower recovery from a crash. In MariaDB 10.5, crash recovery has been improved and shouldn't run out of memory, so the default has been increased. It can safely be set higher to reduce checkpoint flushing, even larger than innodb_buffer_pool_size.
    From MariaDB 10.9 the variable is dynamic, and the server no longer needs to be restarted for the resizing to take place. Unless the log is located in a persistent memory file system (PMEM), an attempt to SET GLOBAL innodb_log_file_size to less than innodb_log_buffer_size will be refused. Log resizing can be aborted by killing the connection that is executing the SET GLOBAL statement.
  • Commandline: --innodb-log-file-size=#
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes (>= MariaDB 10.9), No (<= MariaDB 10.8)
  • Data Type: numeric
  • Default Value: 100663296 (96MB) (>= MariaDB 10.5), 50331648 (48MB) (<= MariaDB 10.4)
  • Range:

innodb_log_file_write_through

  • Description: Whether each write to ib_logfile0 is write through (disabling any caching, as in O_SYNC or O_DSYNC). Set to OFF by default, will be set to ON if innodb_flush_method is set to O_DSYNC. On systems that support FUA it may make sense to enable write-through, to avoid extra system calls.
  • Commandline: --innodb-log-file-write-through={0|1}
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: boolean
  • Default Value: OFF
  • Introduced: MariaDB 11.0.0

innodb_log_files_in_group


innodb_log_group_home_dir

  • Description: Path to the InnoDB redo log files. If none is specified, innodb_log_files_in_group files named ib_logfile0 and so on, with a size of innodb_log_file_size are created in the data directory.
  • Commandline: --innodb-log-group-home-dir=path
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: No
  • Data Type: directory name

innodb_log_optimize_ddl


innodb_log_spin_wait_delay

  • Description: Delay between log buffer spin lock polls (0 to use a blocking latch). Specifically, enables a spin lock that will execute that many MY_RELAX_CPU() operations (such as the x86 PAUSE instruction) between successive attempts of acquiring the spin lock. On some hardware with certain workloads (observed on write intensive workloads on NUMA systems), the default setting results in a significant amount of time being spent in native_queued_spin_lock_slowpath() in the Linux kernel, plus context switching between user and kernel address space, in which case changing from the default (for example, setting to 50), may result in a performance improvement.
  • Commandline: --innodb-log-spin-wait-delay=#
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: numeric
  • Default Value: 0
  • Range: 0 to 6000
  • Introduced: MariaDB 10.11.8, MariaDB 11.0.6, MariaDB 11.1.5, MariaDB 11.2.4, MariaDB 11.4.2, MariaDB 11.5.1

innodb_log_write_ahead_size


innodb_lru_flush_size

  • Description: Number of pages to flush on LRU eviction.
  • Commandline: --innodb-lru-flush-size=#
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: numeric
  • Default Value: 32
  • Range: 1 to 18446744073709551615
  • Introduced: MariaDB 10.5.7

innodb_lru_scan_depth

  • Description: Specifies how far down the buffer pool least-recently used (LRU) list the cleaning thread should look for dirty pages to flush. This process is performed once a second. In an I/O intensive-workload, can be increased if there is spare I/O capacity, or decreased if in a write-intensive workload with little spare I/O capacity.
  • Commandline: --innodb-lru-scan-depth=#
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: numeric
  • Default Value:
  • Range - 32bit: 100 to 232-1
  • Range - 64bit: 100 to 264-1

innodb_max_bitmap_file_size

  • Description: Limit in bytes of the changed page bitmap files. For faster incremental backup with Xtrabackup, XtraDB tracks pages with changes written to them according to the XtraDB redo log and writes the information to special changed page bitmap files. These files are rotated when the server restarts or when this limit is reached. XtraDB only. See also innodb_track_changed_pages and innodb_max_changed_pages.
    • Deprecated and ignored in MariaDB 10.2.6 (which uses InnoDB as default instead of XtraDB) to allow for easier upgrades.
  • Commandline: innodb-max-bitmap-file-size=#
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: numeric
  • Default Value: 4096 (4KB)
  • Range: 4096 (4KB) to 18446744073709551615 (16EB)
  • Deprecated: MariaDB 10.2.6

innodb_max_changed_pages


innodb_max_dirty_pages_pct

  • Description: Maximum percentage of unwritten (dirty) pages in the buffer pool.
  • Commandline: --innodb-max-dirty-pages-pct=#
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: numeric
  • Default Value:
  • Range: 0 to 99.999

innodb_max_dirty_pages_pct_lwm

  • Description: Low water mark percentage of dirty pages that will enable preflushing to lower the dirty page ratio. The value 0 (default) means 'refer to innodb_max_dirty_pages_pct'. (Note that 0 meant 0 in 10.5.7 to 10.5.8, but was then reverted back to "same as innodb_max_dirty_pages_pct" again in 10.5.9)
  • Commandline: --innodb-max-dirty-pages-pct-lwm=#
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: numeric
  • Default Value:
  • Range: 0 to 99.999

innodb_max_purge_lag

  • Description: When purge operations are lagging on a busy server, setting innodb_max_purge_lag can help. By default set to 0, no lag, the figure is used to calculate a time lag for each INSERT, UPDATE, and DELETE when the system is lagging. InnoDB keeps a list of transactions with delete-marked index records due to UPDATE and DELETE statements. The length of this list is purge_lag, and the calculation, performed every ten seconds, is as follows: ((purge_lag/innodb_max_purge_lag)×10)–5 microseconds.
  • Commandline: --innodb-max-purge-lag=#
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: numeric
  • Default Value: 0
  • Range: 0 to 4294967295

innodb_max_purge_lag_delay

  • Description: Maximum delay in milliseconds imposed by the innodb_max_purge_lag setting. If set to 0, the default, there is no maximum.
  • Commandline: --innodb-max-purge-lag-delay=#
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: numeric
  • Default Value: 0

innodb_max_purge_lag_wait


innodb_max_undo_log_size

  • Description: If an undo tablespace is larger than this, it will be marked for truncation if innodb_undo_log_truncate is set.
  • Commandline: --innodb-max-undo-log-size=#
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: numeric
  • Default Value:
    • 10485760
  • Range: 10485760 to 18446744073709551615

innodb_merge_sort_block_size

  • Description: Size in bytes of the block used for merge sorting in fast index creation. Replaced in MariaDB 10.0/XtraDB 5.6 by innodb_sort_buffer_size.
  • Commandline: innodb-merge-sort-block-size=#
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: numeric
  • Default Value: 1048576 (1M)
  • Range: 1048576 (1M) to 1073741824 (1G)
  • Removed: MariaDB 10.0 - replaced by innodb_sort_buffer_size

innodb_mirrored_log_groups


innodb_mtflush_threads


innodb_monitor_disable

  • Description: Disables the specified counters in the INFORMATION_SCHEMA.INNODB_METRICS table.
  • Commandline: --innodb-monitor-disable=string
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: string

innodb_monitor_enable

  • Description: Enables the specified counters in the INFORMATION_SCHEMA.INNODB_METRICS table.
  • Commandline: --innodb-monitor-enable=string
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: string

innodb_monitor_reset

  • Description: Resets the count value of the specified counters in the INFORMATION_SCHEMA.INNODB_METRICS table to zero.
  • Commandline: --innodb-monitor-reset=string
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: string

innodb_monitor_reset_all

  • Description: Resets all values for the specified counters in the INFORMATION_SCHEMA.INNODB_METRICS table.
  • Commandline: ---innodb-monitor-reset-all=string
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: string

innodb_numa_interleave


innodb_old_blocks_pct

  • Description: Percentage of the buffer pool to use for the old block sublist.
  • Commandline: --innodb-old-blocks-pct=#
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: numeric
  • Default Value: 37
  • Range: 5 to 95

innodb_old_blocks_time

  • Description: Time in milliseconds an inserted block must stay in the old sublist after its first access before it can be moved to the new sublist. '0' means "no delay". Setting a non-zero value can help prevent full table scans clogging the buffer pool. See also innodb_old_blocks_pct.
  • Commandline: --innodb-old-blocks-time=#
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: numeric
  • Default Value: 1000
  • Range: 0 to 232-1

innodb_online_alter_log_max_size

  • Description: The maximum size for temporary log files during online DDL (data and index structure changes). The temporary log file is used for each table being altered, or index being created, to store data changes to the table while the process is underway. The table is extended by innodb_sort_buffer_size up to the limit set by this variable. If this limit is exceeded, the online DDL operation fails and all uncommitted changes are rolled back. A lower value reduces the time a table could lock at the end of the operation to apply all the log's changes, but also increases the chance of the online DDL changes failing.
  • Commandline: --innodb-online-alter-log-max-size=#
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: numeric
  • Default Value: 134217728
  • Range: 65536 to 264-1

innodb_open_files

  • Description: Maximum .ibd files MariaDB can have open at the same time. Only applies to systems with multiple XtraDB/InnoDB tablespaces, and is separate to the table cache and open_files_limit. The default, if innodb_file_per_table is disabled, is 300 or the value of table_open_cache, whichever is higher. It will also auto-size up to the default value if it is set to a value less than 10.
  • Commandline: --innodb-open-files=#
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: No
  • Data Type: numeric
  • Default Value: autosized
  • Range: 10 to 4294967295

innodb_optimize_fulltext_only

  • Description: When set to 1 (0 is default), OPTIMIZE TABLE will only process InnoDB FULLTEXT index data. Only intended for use during fulltext index maintenance.
  • Commandline: --innodb-optimize-fulltext-only={0|1}
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: boolean
  • Default Value: OFF

innodb_page_cleaners


innodb_page_size

  • Description: Specifies the page size in bytes for all InnoDB tablespaces. The default, 16k, is suitable for most uses.
    • A smaller InnoDB page size might work more effectively in a situation with many small writes (OLTP), or with SSD storage, which usually has smaller block sizes.
    • A larger InnoDB page size can provide a larger maximum row size.
    • InnoDB's page size can be as large as 64k for tables using the following row formats: DYNAMIC, COMPACT, and REDUNDANT.
    • InnoDB's page size must still be 16k or less for tables using the COMPRESSED row format.
    • This system variable's value cannot be changed after the datadir has been initialized. InnoDB's page size is set when a MariaDB instance starts, and it remains constant afterwards.
  • Commandline: --innodb-page-size=#
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: No
  • Data Type: enumeration
  • Default Value: 16384
  • Valid Values: 4k or 4096, 8k or 8192, 16k or 16384, 32k and 64k.

innodb_pass_corrupt_table


innodb_prefix_index_cluster_optimization

  • Description: Enable prefix optimization to sometimes avoid cluster index lookups. Deprecated and ignored from MariaDB 10.10, as the optimization is now always enabled.
  • Commandline: --innodb-prefix-index-cluster-optimization={0|1}
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: boolean
  • Default Value: OFF
  • Deprecated: MariaDB 10.10.1

innodb_print_all_deadlocks

  • Description: If set to 1 (0 is default), all XtraDB/InnoDB transaction deadlock information is written to the error log.
  • Commandline: --innodb-print-all-deadlocks={0|1}
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: boolean
  • Default Value: OFF

innodb_purge_batch_size


innodb_purge_rseg_truncate_frequency


innodb_purge_threads

  • Description: Number of background threads dedicated to InnoDB purge operations. The range is 1 to 32. At least one background thread is always used. Setting to a value greater than 1 creates that many separate purge threads. This can improve efficiency in some cases, such as when performing DML operations on many tables. See also innodb_purge_batch_size.
  • Commandline: --innodb-purge-threads=#
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: No
  • Data Type: numeric
  • Default Value: 4
  • Range: 1 to 32

innodb_random_read_ahead

  • Description: Originally, random read-ahead was always set as an optimization technique, but was removed in MariaDB 5.5. innodb_random_read_ahead permits it to be re-instated if set to 1 (0) is default.
  • Commandline: --innodb-random-read-ahead={0|1}
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: boolean
  • Default Value: OFF

innodb_read_ahead

  • Description: If set to linear, the default, XtraDB/InnoDB will automatically fetch remaining pages if there are enough within the same extent that can be accessed sequentially. If set to none, read-ahead is disabled. random has been removed and is now ignored, while both sets to both linear and random. Also see innodb_read_ahead_threshold for more control on read-aheads. Removed in MariaDB 10.0/XtraDB 5.6 and replaced by MySQL 5.6's innodb_random_read_ahead.
  • Commandline: innodb-read-ahead=value
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: enumeration
  • Default Value: linear
  • Valid Values: none, random, linear, both
  • Removed: MariaDB 10.0/XtraDB 5.6 - replaced by MySQL 5.6's innodb_random_read_ahead

innodb_read_ahead_threshold

  • Description: Minimum number of pages InnoDB must read from an extent of 64 before initiating an asynchronous read for the following extent.
  • Commandline: --innodb-read-ahead-threshold=#
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: numeric
  • Default Value: 56
  • Range: 0 to 64

innodb_read_io_threads

  • Description: Number of I/O threads for InnoDB reads. You may on rare occasions need to reduce this default on Linux systems running multiple MariaDB servers to avoid exceeding system limits.
  • Commandline: --innodb-read-io-threads=#
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes (>= MariaDB 10.11), No (<= MariaDB 10.10)
  • Data Type: numeric
  • Default Value: 4
  • Range: 1 to 64

innodb_read_only

  • Description: If set to 1 (0 is default), the server will be read-only. For use in distributed applications, data warehouses or read-only media.
  • Commandline: --innodb-read-only={0|1}
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: No
  • Data Type: boolean
  • Default Value: OFF

innodb_read_only_compressed

  • Description: If set (the default before MariaDB 10.6.6), ROW_FORMAT=COMPRESSED tables will be read-only. This was intended to be the first step towards removing write support and deprecating the feature, but this plan has been abandoned.
  • Commandline: --innodb-read-only-compressed, --skip-innodb-read-only-compressed
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: boolean
  • Default Value: OFF (>= MariaDB 10.6.6), ON (<= MariaDB 10.6.5)
  • Introduced: MariaDB 10.6.0

innodb_recovery_stats

  • Description: If set to 1 (0 is default) and recovery is necessary on startup, the server will write detailed recovery statistics to the error log at the end of the recovery process. This Percona XtraDB variable has not been ported to XtraDB 5.6.
  • Commandline: No
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: No
  • Data Type: boolean
  • Default Value: OFF
  • Removed: MariaDB 10.0

innodb_recovery_update_relay_log

  • Description: If set to 1 (0 is default), the relay log info file will be overwritten on crash recovery if the information differs from the InnoDB record. Should not be used if multiple storage engine types are being replicated. Previously named innodb_overwrite_relay_log_info. Removed in MariaDB 10.0/XtraDB 5.6 and replaced by MySQL 5.6's relay-log-recovery
  • Commandline: innodb-recovery-update-relay-log={0|1}
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: No
  • Data Type: boolean
  • Default Value: OFF
  • Removed: MariaDB 10.0 - replaced by MySQL 5.6's relay-log-recovery

innodb_replication_delay

  • Description: Time in milliseconds for the replica server to delay the replication thread if innodb_thread_concurrency is reached. Deprecated and ignored from MariaDB 10.5.5.
  • Commandline: --innodb-replication-delay=#
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: numeric
  • Default Value: 0
  • Range: 0 to 4294967295
  • Deprecated: MariaDB 10.5.5
  • Removed: MariaDB 10.6.0

innodb_rollback_on_timeout

  • Description: InnoDB usually rolls back the last statement of a transaction that's been timed out (see innodb_lock_wait_timeout). If innodb_rollback_on_timeout is set to 1 (0 is default), InnoDB will roll back the entire transaction. Before MariaDB 5.5, rolling back the entire transaction was the default behavior.
  • Commandline: --innodb-rollback-on-timeout
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: No
  • Data Type: boolean
  • Default Value: 0

innodb_rollback_segments

  • Description: Specifies the number of rollback segments that XtraDB/InnoDB will use within a transaction (see undo log). Deprecated and replaced by innodb_undo_logs in MariaDB 10.0. Removed in MariaDB 10.5 as part of an InnoDB cleanup, as it makes sense to always create and use the maximum number of rollback segments. |
  • Commandline: --innodb-rollback-segments=#
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: numeric
  • Default Value: 128
  • Range: 1 to 128
  • Deprecated: MariaDB 10.0
  • Removed: MariaDB 10.5.0

innodb_safe_truncate

  • Description: Use a backup-safe TRUNCATE TABLE implementation and crash-safe rename operations inside InnoDB. This is not compatible with hot backup tools other than Mariabackup. Users who need to use such tools may set this to OFF.
  • Commandline: --innodb-safe-truncate={0|1}
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: No
  • Data Type: boolean
  • Default Value: ON
  • Introduced: MariaDB 10.2.19
  • Removed: MariaDB 10.3.0

innodb_scrub_log


innodb_scrub_log_interval


innodb_scrub_log_speed


innodb_sched_priority_cleaner

  • Description: Set a thread scheduling priority for cleaner and least-recently used (LRU) manager threads. The range from 0 to 39 corresponds in reverse order to Linux nice values of -20 to 19. So 0 is the lowest priority (Linux nice value 19) and 39 is the highest priority (Linux nice value -20). XtraDB only. Added as a deprecated and ignored option in MariaDB 10.2.6 (which uses InnoDB as default instead of XtraDB) to allow for easier upgrades.
  • Commandline: innodb-sched-priority-cleaner=#
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: numeric
  • Default Value: 19
  • Range: 0 to 39
  • Deprecated: MariaDB 10.2.6
  • Removed: MariaDB 10.3.0

innodb_show_locks_held

  • Description: Specifies the number of locks held for each InnoDB transaction to be displayed in SHOW ENGINE INNODB STATUS output. XtraDB only. Added as a deprecated and ignored option in MariaDB 10.2.6 (which uses InnoDB as default instead of XtraDB) to allow for easier upgrades.
  • Commandline: innodb-show-locks-held=#
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: numeric
  • Default Value: 10
  • Range: 0 to 1000
  • Deprecated: MariaDB 10.2.6
  • Removed: MariaDB 10.3.0

innodb_show_verbose_locks

  • Description: If set to 1, and innodb_status_output_locks is also ON, the traditional InnoDB behavior is followed and locked records will be shown in SHOW ENGINE INNODB STATUS output. If set to 0, the default, only high-level information about the lock is shown. XtraDB only. Added as a deprecated and ignored option in MariaDB 10.2.6 (which uses InnoDB as default instead of XtraDB) to allow for easier upgrades.
  • Commandline: innodb-show-verbose-locks=#
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: numeric
  • Default Value: 0
  • Range: 0 to 1
  • Deprecated: MariaDB 10.2.6
  • Removed: MariaDB 10.3.0

innodb_simulate_comp_failures

  • Description: Simulate compression failures. Used for testing robustness against random compression failures. XtraDB only.
  • Commandline: None
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: numeric
  • Default Value: 0
  • Range: 0 to 99

innodb_snapshot_isolation

  • Description: Use snapshot isolation (write-write conflict detection). If set, if an attempt to acquire a lock on a record that does not exist in the current read view is made, an error DB_RECORD_CHANGED (HA_ERR_RECORD_CHANGED, ER_CHECKREAD) will be raised. This error will be treated in the same way as a deadlock and the transaction will be rolled back. When set, the default isolation level, REPEATABLE READ will become Snapshot Isolation. The default is OFF for backwards compatibility.
  • Commandline: --innodb-snapshot-isolation={0|1}
  • Scope: Global, Session
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: boolean
  • Default Value: OFF
  • Introduced: MariaDB 10.6.18, MariaDB 10.11.8, MariaDB 11.0.6, MariaDB 11.1.5, MariaDB 11.2.4, MariaDB 11.4.2

innodb_sort_buffer_size

  • Description: Size of the sort buffers used for sorting data when an InnoDB index is created, as well as the amount by which the temporary log file is extended during online DDL operations to record concurrent writes. The larger the setting, the fewer merge phases are required between buffers while sorting. When a CREATE TABLE or ALTER TABLE creates a new index, three buffers of this size are allocated, as well as pointers for the rows in the buffer.
  • Commandline: --innodb-sort-buffer-size=#
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: No
  • Data Type: numeric
  • Default Value: 1048576 (1M)
  • Range: 65536 to 67108864

innodb_log_spin_wait_delay

  • Description: Maximum delay (not strictly corresponding to a time unit) between spin lock polls. Default changed from 6 to 4 in MariaDB 10.3.5, as this was verified to give the best throughput by OLTP update index and read-write benchmarks on Intel Broadwell (2/20/40) and ARM (1/46/46).
  • Commandline: --innodb-log-spin-wait-delay=#
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: numeric
  • Default Value: 4 (>= MariaDB 10.3.5), 6 (<= MariaDB 10.3.4)
  • Range: 0 to 4294967295

innodb_stats_auto_recalc

  • Description: If set to 1 (the default), persistent statistics are automatically recalculated when the table changes significantly (more than 10% of the rows). Affects tables created or altered with STATS_PERSISTENT=1 (see CREATE TABLE), or when innodb_stats_persistent is enabled. innodb_stats_persistent_sample_pages determines how much data to sample when recalculating. See InnoDB Persistent Statistics.
  • Commandline: --innodb-stats-auto-recalc={0|1}
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: boolean
  • Default Value: ON

innodb_stats_auto_update


innodb_stats_include_delete_marked

  • Description: Include delete marked records when calculating persistent statistics.
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: boolean
  • Default Value: OFF

innodb_stats_method

  • Description: Determines how NULLs are treated for InnoDB index statistics purposes.
    • nulls_equal: The default, all NULL index values are treated as a single group. This is usually fine, but if you have large numbers of NULLs the average group size is slanted higher, and the optimizer may miss using the index for ref accesses when it would be useful.
    • nulls_unequal: The opposite approach to nulls_equal is taken, with each NULL forming its own group of one. Conversely, the average group size is slanted lower, and the optimizer may use the index for ref accesses when not suitable.
    • nulls_ignored: Ignore NULLs altogether from index group calculations.
    • See also Index Statistics, aria_stats_method and myisam_stats_method.
  • Commandline: --innodb-stats-method=name
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: enumeration
  • Default Value: nulls_equal
  • Valid Values: nulls_equal, nulls_unequal, nulls_ignored

innodb_stats_modified_counter

  • Description: The number of rows modified before we calculate new statistics. If set to 0, the default, current limits are used.
  • Commandline: --innodb-stats-modified-counter=#
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: numeric
  • Default Value: 0
  • Range: 0 to 18446744073709551615

innodb_stats_on_metadata

  • Description: If set to 1, the default, XtraDB/InnoDB updates statistics when accessing the INFORMATION_SCHEMA.TABLES or INFORMATION_SCHEMA.STATISTICS tables, and when running metadata statements such as SHOW INDEX or SHOW TABLE STATUS. If set to 0, statistics are not updated at those times, which can reduce the access time for large schemas, as well as make execution plans more stable.
  • Commandline: --innodb-stats-on-metadata
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: boolean
  • Default Value: OFF

innodb_stats_persistent

  • Description: ANALYZE TABLE produces index statistics, and this setting determines whether they will be stored on disk, or be required to be recalculated more frequently, such as when the server restarts. This information is stored for each table, and can be set with the STATS_PERSISTENT clause when creating or altering tables (see CREATE TABLE). See InnoDB Persistent Statistics.
  • Commandline: --innodb-stats-persistent={0|1}
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: boolean
  • Default Value: ON

innodb_stats_persistent_sample_pages

  • Description: Number of index pages sampled when estimating cardinality and statistics for indexed columns. Increasing this value will increases index statistics accuracy, but use more I/O resources when running ANALYZE TABLE. See InnoDB Persistent Statistics.
  • Commandline: --innodb-stats-persistent-sample-pages=#
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: numeric
  • Default Value: 20

innodb_stats_sample_pages

  • Description: Gives control over the index distribution statistics by determining the number of index pages to sample. Higher values produce more disk I/O, but, especially for large tables, produce more accurate statistics and therefore make more effective use of the query optimizer. Lower values than the default are not recommended, as the statistics can be quite inaccurate.
  • Commandline: --innodb-stats-sample-pages=#
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: numeric
  • Default Value: 8
  • Range: 1 to 264-1
  • Deprecated: MariaDB 10.0
  • Removed: MariaDB 10.5.0

innodb_stats_traditional

  • Description: This system variable affects how the number of pages to sample for transient statistics is determined, in particular how innodb_stats_transient_sample_pages is used.
    • If innodb_stats_traditional is enabled, then the exact number of pages configured by the system variable will be sampled for statistics.
    • If innodb_stats_traditional is disabled, then the number of pages to sample for statistics is calculated using a logarithmic algorithm, so the exact number can change depending on the size of the table. This means that more samples may be used for larger tables.
    • This system variable does not affect the calculation of persistent statistics.
  • Commandline: --innodb-stats-traditional={0|1}
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: boolean
  • Default Value: ON

innodb_stats_transient_sample_pages

  • Description: Gives control over the index distribution statistics by determining the number of index pages to sample. Higher values produce more disk I/O, but, especially for large tables, produce more accurate statistics and therefore make more effective use of the query optimizer. Lower values than the default are not recommended, as the statistics can be quite inaccurate.
  • Commandline: --innodb-stats-transient-sample-pages=#
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: numeric
  • Default Value: 8
  • Range: 1 to 264-1

innodb_stats_update_need_lock

  • Description: Setting to 0 (1 is default) may help reduce contention of the &dict_operation_lock, but also disables the Data_free option in SHOW TABLE STATUS. This Percona XtraDB variable has not been ported to XtraDB 5.6.
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: boolean
  • Default Value: 1
  • Removed: MariaDB 10.0/XtraDB 5.6

innodb_status_output

  • Description: Enable InnoDB monitor output to the error log.
  • Commandline: --innodb-status-output={0|1}
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: boolean
  • Default Value: OFF

innodb_status_output_locks


innodb_strict_mode

  • Description: If set to 1 (the default), InnoDB will return errors instead of warnings in certain cases, similar to strict SQL mode. See InnoDB Strict Mode for details.
  • Commandline: --innodb-strict-mode={0|1}
  • Scope: Global, Session
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: boolean
  • Default Value: ON

innodb_support_xa

  • Description: If set to 1, the default, XA transactions are supported. XA support ensures data is written to the binary log in the same order to the actual database, which is critical for replication and disaster recovery, but comes at a small performance cost. If your database is set up to only permit one thread to change data (for example, on a replication replica with only the replication thread writing), it is safe to turn this option off. Removed in MariaDB 10.3, XA transactions are always supported.
  • Commandline: --innodb-support-xa
  • Scope: Global, Session
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: boolean
  • Default Value: ON
  • Deprecated: MariaDB 10.2
  • Removed: MariaDB 10.3.0

innodb_sync_array_size

  • Description: By default 1, can be increased to split internal thread co-ordinating, giving higher concurrency when there are many waiting threads.
  • Commandline: --innodb-sync-array-size=#
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: No
  • Data Type: numeric
  • Default Value: 1
  • Range: 1 to 1024
  • Removed: MariaDB 10.6.0

innodb_sync_spin_loops

  • Description: The number of times a thread waits for an InnoDB mutex to be freed before the thread is suspended.
  • Commandline: --innodb-sync-spin-loops=#
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: numeric
  • Default Value: 30
  • Range: 0 to 4294967295

innodb_table_locks

  • Description: If autocommit is set to to 0 (1 is default), setting innodb_table_locks to 1, the default, will cause InnoDB to lock a table internally upon a LOCK TABLE.
  • Commandline: --innodb-table-locks
  • Scope: Global, Session
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: boolean
  • Default Value: ON

innodb_thread_concurrency

  • Description: Once this number of threads is reached (excluding threads waiting for locks), XtraDB/InnoDB will place new threads in a wait state in a first-in, first-out queue for execution, in order to limit the number of threads running concurrently. A setting of 0, the default, permits as many threads as necessary. A suggested setting is twice the number of CPU's plus the number of disks. Deprecated and ignored from MariaDB 10.5.5.
  • Commandline: --innodb-thread-concurrency=#
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: numeric
  • Default Value: 0
  • Range: 0 to 1000
  • Deprecated: MariaDB 10.5.5
  • Removed: MariaDB 10.6.0

innodb_thread_concurrency_timer_based

  • Description: If set to 1, thread concurrency will be handled in a lock-free timer-based manner rather than the default mutex-based method. Depends on atomic op builtins being available. This Percona XtraDB variable has not been ported to XtraDB 5.6.
  • Commandline: innodb-thread-concurrency-timer-based={0|1}
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: No
  • Data Type: boolean
  • Default Value: OFF
  • Removed: MariaDB 10.0/XtraDB 5.6

innodb_thread_sleep_delay

  • Description: Time in microseconds that InnoDB threads sleep before joining the queue. Setting to 0 disables sleep. Deprecated and ignored from MariaDB 10.5.5
  • Commandline: --innodb-thread-sleep-delay=#
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: numeric
  • Default Value:
  • Range: 0 to 1000000
  • Deprecated: MariaDB 10.5.5
  • Removed: MariaDB 10.6.0

innodb_temp_data_file_path

  • Description:
  • Commandline: --innodb-temp-data-file-path=path
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: No
  • Data Type: string
  • Default Value: ibtmp1:12M:autoextend

innodb_tmpdir

  • Description: Allows an alternate location to be set for temporary non-tablespace files. If not set (the default), files will be created in the usual tmpdir location.
  • Commandline: --innodb-tmpdir=path
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: string
  • Default Value: Empty

innodb_track_changed_pages

  • Description: For faster incremental backup with Xtrabackup, XtraDB tracks pages with changes written to them according to the XtraDB redo log and writes the information to special changed page bitmap files. This read-only variable is used for controlling this feature. See also innodb_max_changed_pages and innodb_max_bitmap_file_size. XtraDB only. Added as a deprecated and ignored option in MariaDB 10.2.6 (which uses InnoDB as default instead of XtraDB) to allow for easier upgrades.
  • Commandline: innodb-track-changed-pages={0|1}
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: No
  • Data Type: boolean
  • Default Value: OFF
  • Deprecated: MariaDB 10.2.6

innodb_track_redo_log_now

  • Description: Available on debug builds only. XtraDB only. Added as a deprecated and ignored option in MariaDB 10.2.6 (which uses InnoDB as default instead of XtraDB) to allow for easier upgrades.
  • Commandline: innodb-track-redo-log-now={0|1}
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: boolean
  • Default Value: OFF
  • Deprecated: MariaDB 10.2.6

innodb_truncate_temporary_tablespace_now

  • Description: Set to ON to shrink the temporary tablespace.
  • Commandline: innodb-truncate-temporary-tablespace-now={0|1}
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: boolean
  • Default Value: OFF
  • Introduced: MariaDB 11.3.0

innodb_undo_directory

  • Description: Path to the directory (relative or absolute) that InnoDB uses to create separate tablespaces for the undo logs. . (the default value before 10.2.2) leaves the undo logs in the same directory as the other log files. From MariaDB 10.2.2, the default value is NULL, and if no path is specified, undo tablespaces will be created in the directory defined by datadir. Use together with innodb_undo_logs and innodb_undo_tablespaces. Undo logs are most usefully placed on a separate storage device.
  • Commandline: --innodb-undo-directory=name
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: No
  • Data Type: string
  • Default Value: NULL

innodb_undo_log_truncate


innodb_undo_logs


innodb_undo_tablespaces

  • Description: Number of tablespaces files used for dividing up the undo logs. Zero (the default before MariaDB 11.0) means that undo logs are all part of the system tablespace, which contains one undo tablespace more than the innodb_undo_tablespaces setting. A value of 1 is reset to 0 as 2 or more are needed for separate tablespaces. When the undo logs can grow large, splitting them over multiple tablespaces will reduce the size of any single tablespace. Until MariaDB 10.11.1, must be set before InnoDB is initialized, or else MariaDB will fail to start, with an error saying that InnoDB did not find the expected number of undo tablespaces. The files are created in the directory specified by innodb_undo_directory, and are named undoN, N being an integer. The default size of an undo tablespace is 10MB.
    From MariaDB 11.0, multiple undo tablespaces are enabled by default, and the default is changed to 3 so that the space occupied by possible bursts of undo log records can be reclaimed after innodb_undo_log_truncate is set. Before MariaDB 10.6, innodb_undo_logs must have a non-zero setting for innodb_undo_tablespaces to take effect.
  • Commandline: --innodb-undo-tablespaces=#
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: No
  • Data Type: numeric
  • Default Value: 3 (>= MariaDB 11.0), 0 (<= MariaDB 10.11)
  • Range: 0, or 2 to 95

innodb_use_atomic_writes

  • Description: Implement atomic writes on supported SSD devices. See atomic write support for other variables affected when this is set.
  • Commandline: innodb-use-atomic-writes={0|1}
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: No
  • Data Type: boolean
  • Default Value: ON

innodb_use_fallocate


innodb_use_global_flush_log_at_trx_commit

  • Description: Determines whether a user can set the variable innodb_flush_log_at_trx_commit. If set to 1, a user cannot reset the value with a SET command, while if set to 1, a user can reset the value of innodb_flush_log_at_trx_commit. XtraDB only. Added as a deprecated and ignored option in MariaDB 10.2.6 (which uses InnoDB as default instead of XtraDB) to allow for easier upgrades.
  • Commandline: innodb-use-global-flush-log-at-trx_commit={0|1}
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes
  • Data Type: boolean
  • Default Value: ON
  • Deprecated: MariaDB 10.2.6
  • Removed: MariaDB 10.3.0

innodb_use_mtflush


innodb_use_native_aio

  • Description: For Linux systems only, specified whether to use Linux's asynchronous I/O subsystem. Set to ON by default, it may be changed to 0 at startup if InnoDB detects a problem, or from MariaDB 10.6.5/MariaDB 10.7.1, if a 5.11 - 5.15 Linux kernel is detected, to avoid an io-uring bug/incompatibility (MDEV-26674). MariaDB-10.6.6/MariaDB-10.7.2 and later also consider 5.15.3+ as a fixed kernel and default to ON. To really benefit from the setting, the files should be opened in O_DIRECT mode (innodb_flush_method=O_DIRECT, default from MariaDB 10.6), to bypass the file system cache. In this way, the reads and writes can be submitted with DMA, using the InnoDB buffer pool directly, and no processor cycles need to be used for copying data.
  • Commandline: --innodb-use-native-aio={0|1}
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: No
  • Data Type: boolean
  • Default Value: ON

innodb_use_purge_thread

  • Description: Usually with InnoDB, data changed by a transaction is written to an undo space to permit read consistency, and freed when the transaction is complete. Many, or large, transactions, can cause the main tablespace to grow dramatically, reducing performance. This option, introduced in XtraDB 5.1 and removed for 5.5, allows multiple threads to perform the purging, resulting in slower, but much more stable performance.
  • Commandline: --innodb-use-purge-thread=#
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: No
  • Data Type: numeric
  • Default Value: 1
  • Range: 0 to 32
  • Removed: XtraDB 5.5

innodb_use_stacktrace

  • Description: If set to ON (OFF is default), a signal handler for SIGUSR2 is installed when the InnoDB server starts. When a long semaphore wait is detected at sync/sync0array.c, a SIGUSR2 signal is sent to the waiting thread and thread that has acquired the RW-latch. For both threads a full stacktrace is produced as well as if possible. XtraDB only. Added as a deprecated and ignored option in MariaDB 10.2.6 (which uses InnoDB as default instead of XtraDB) to allow for easier upgrades.
  • Commandline: --innodb-use-stacktrace={0|1}
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: No
  • Data Type: boolean
  • Default Value: OFF
  • Deprecated: MariaDB 10.2.6
  • Removed: MariaDB 10.3.0

innodb_use_sys_malloc

  • Description: If set the 1, the default, XtraDB/InnoDB will use the operating system's memory allocator. If set to 0 it will use its own. Deprecated in MariaDB 10.0 and removed in MariaDB 10.2 along with InnoDB's internal memory allocator.
  • Commandline: --innodb-use-sys-malloc={0|1}
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: No
  • Data Type: boolean
  • Default Value: ON
  • Deprecated: MariaDB 10.0
  • Removed: MariaDB 10.2.2

innodb_use_sys_stats_table

  • Description: If set to 1 (0 is default), XtraDB will use the SYS_STATS system table for extra table index statistics. When a table is opened for the first time, statistics will then be loaded from SYS_STATS instead of sampling the index pages. Statistics are designed to be maintained only by running an ANALYZE TABLE. Replaced by MySQL 5.6's Persistent Optimizer Statistics.
  • Commandline: innodb-use-sys-stats-table={0|1}
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: No
  • Data Type: boolean
  • Default Value: 0
  • Removed: MariaDB 10.0/XtraDB 5.6

innodb_use_trim


innodb_version

  • Description: InnoDB version number. From MariaDB 10.3.7, as the InnoDB implementation in MariaDB has diverged from MySQL, the MariaDB version is instead reported. For example, the InnoDB version reported in MariaDB 10.1 (which is based on MySQL 5.6) included encryption and variable-size page compression before MySQL 5.7 introduced them. MariaDB 10.2 (based on MySQL 5.7) introduced persistent AUTO_INCREMENT (MDEV-6076) in a GA release before MySQL 8.0. MariaDB 10.3 (based on MySQL 5.7) introduced instant ADD COLUMN (MDEV-11369) before MySQL.
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: No
  • Data Type: string
  • Removed: MariaDB 10.10

innodb_write_io_threads

  • Description: Number of I/O threads for InnoDB writes. You may on rare occasions need to reduce this default on Linux systems running multiple MariaDB servers to avoid exceeding system limits.
  • Commandline: --innodb-write-io-threads=#
  • Scope: Global
  • Dynamic: Yes (>= MariaDB 10.11), No (<= MariaDB 10.10)
  • Data Type: numeric
  • Default Value: 4
  • Range: 1 to 64

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