MaxScale 24.02 Simple Sharding with Two Servers
Schemarouter: Simple Sharding With Two Servers
Sharding is the method of splitting a single logical database server into separate physical databases. This tutorial describes a very simple way of sharding. Each schema is located on a different database server and MariaDB MaxScale's schemarouter module is used to combine them into a single logical database server.
Environment
This tutorial was written for Ubuntu 22.04, MaxScale 23.08 and MariaDB 10.11. In addition to the MaxScale server, you'll need two MariaDB servers which will be used for the sharding. The installation of MariaDB is not covered by this tutorial.
Installing MaxScale
The easiest way to install MaxScale is to use the MariaDB repositories.
# Install MaxScale apt update apt -y install sudo curl curl -LsS https://r.mariadb.com/downloads/mariadb_repo_setup | sudo bash apt -y install maxscale
Creating Users
This tutorial uses a broader set of grants than is required for the sake of brevity and backwards compatibility. For the minimal set of grants, refer to the MaxScale Configuration Guide.
All MaxScale configurations require at least two accounts: one for reading authentication data and another for monitoring the state of the database. Services will use the first one and monitors will use the second one. In addition to this, we want to have a separate account that our application will use.
-- Create the user for the service -- https://mariadb.com/kb/en/mariadb-maxscale-2308-authentication-modules/#required-grants CREATE USER 'service_user'@'%' IDENTIFIED BY 'secret'; GRANT SELECT ON mysql.* TO 'service_user'@'%'; GRANT SHOW DATABASES ON *.* TO 'service_user'@'%'; -- Create the user for the monitor -- https://mariadb.com/kb/en/mariadb-maxscale-2308-galera-monitor/#required-grants CREATE USER 'monitor_user'@'%' IDENTIFIED BY 'secret'; GRANT REPLICATION CLIENT ON *.* TO 'monitor_user'@'%'; -- Create the application user -- https://mariadb.com/kb/en/mariadb-maxscale-2308-authentication-modules/#limitations-and-troubleshooting CREATE USER app_user@'%' IDENTIFIED BY 'secret'; GRANT SELECT, INSERT, UPDATE, DELETE ON *.* TO app_user@'%';
All of the users must be created on both of the MariaDB servers.
Creating the Schemas and Tables
Each server will hold one unique schema which contains the data of one specific customer. We'll also create a shared schema that is present on all shards that the shard-local tables can be joined into.
Create the tables on the first server:
CREATE DATABASE IF NOT EXISTS customer_01; CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS customer_01.accounts(id INT, account_type INT, account_name VARCHAR(255)); INSERT INTO customer_01.accounts VALUES (1, 1, 'foo'); -- The shared schema that's on all shards CREATE DATABASE IF NOT EXISTS shared_info; CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS shared_info.account_types(account_type INT, type_name VARCHAR(255)); INSERT INTO shared_info.account_types VALUES (1, 'admin'), (2, 'user');
Create the tables on the second server:
CREATE DATABASE IF NOT EXISTS customer_02; CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS customer_02.accounts(id INT, account_type INT, account_name VARCHAR(255)); INSERT INTO customer_02.accounts VALUES (2, 2, 'bar'); -- The shared schema that's on all shards CREATE DATABASE IF NOT EXISTS shared_info; CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS shared_info.account_types(account_type INT, type_name VARCHAR(255)); INSERT INTO shared_info.account_types VALUES (1, 'admin'), (2, 'user');
Configuring MaxScale
The MaxScale configuration is stored in /etc/maxscale.cnf
.
First, we configure two servers we will use to shard our database. The db-01
server has the customer_01
schema and the db-02
server has the customer_02
schema.
[db-01] type=server address=192.168.0.102 port=3306 [db-02] type=server address=192.168.0.103 port=3306
The next step is to configure the service which the users connect to. This
section defines which router to use, which servers to connect to and the
credentials to use. For sharding, we use schemarouter router and the
service_user credentials we defined earlier. By default the schemarouter warns
if two or more nodes have duplicate schemas so we need to ignore them with
ignore_tables_regex=.*
.
[Sharded-Service] type=service router=schemarouter targets=db-02,db-01 user=service_user password=secret ignore_tables_regex=.*
After this we configure a listener for the service. The listener is the actual port that the user connects to. We will use the port 4000.
[Sharded-Service-Listener] type=listener service=Sharded-Service port=4000
The final step is to configure a monitor which will monitor the state of the
servers. The monitor will notify MariaDB MaxScale if the servers are down. We
add the two servers to the monitor and use the monitor_user
credentials. For
the sharding use-case, the galeramon
module is suitable even if we're not
using a Galera cluster. The schemarouter
is only interested in whether the
server is in the Running
state or in the Down
state.
[Shard-Monitor] type=monitor module=galeramon servers=db-02,db-01 user=monitor_user password=secret
After this we have a fully working configuration and the contents of
/etc/maxscale.cnf
should look like this.
[db-01] type=server address=192.168.0.102 port=3306 [db-02] type=server address=192.168.0.103 port=3306 [Sharded-Service] type=service router=schemarouter targets=db-02,db-01 user=service_user password=secret ignore_tables_regex=.* [Sharded-Service-Listener] type=listener service=Sharded-Service protocol=MariaDBClient port=4000 [Shard-Monitor] type=monitor module=galeramon servers=db-02,db-01 user=monitor_user password=secret
Then you're ready to start MaxScale.
systemctl start maxscale.service
Testing the Sharding
MariaDB MaxScale is now ready to start accepting client connections and routing them. Queries are routed to the right servers based on the database they target and switching between the shards is seamless since MariaDB MaxScale keeps the session state intact between servers.
To test, we query the schema that's located on the local shard and join it to the shared table.
$ mariadb -A -u app_user -psecret -h 127.0.0.1 -P 4000 Welcome to the MariaDB monitor. Commands end with ; or \g. Your MariaDB connection id is 3 Server version: 10.11.7-MariaDB-1:10.11.7+maria~ubu2004-log mariadb.org binary distribution Copyright (c) 2000, 2018, Oracle, MariaDB Corporation Ab and others. Type 'help;' or '\h' for help. Type '\c' to clear the current input statement. MariaDB [(none)]> USE customer_01; Database changed MariaDB [customer_01]> SELECT c.account_name, c.account_type, s.type_name FROM accounts c -> JOIN shared_info.account_types s ON (c.account_type = s.account_type); +--------------+--------------+-----------+ | account_name | account_type | type_name | +--------------+--------------+-----------+ | foo | 1 | admin | +--------------+--------------+-----------+ 1 row in set (0.001 sec) MariaDB [customer_01]> USE customer_02; Database changed MariaDB [customer_02]> SELECT c.account_name, c.account_type, s.type_name FROM accounts c -> JOIN shared_info.account_types s ON (c.account_type = s.account_type); +--------------+--------------+-----------+ | account_name | account_type | type_name | +--------------+--------------+-----------+ | bar | 2 | user | +--------------+--------------+-----------+ 1 row in set (0.000 sec)
The sharding also works even if no default database is selected.
MariaDB [(none)]> SELECT c.account_name, c.account_type, s.type_name FROM customer_01.accounts c -> JOIN shared_info.account_types s ON (c.account_type = s.account_type); +--------------+--------------+-----------+ | account_name | account_type | type_name | +--------------+--------------+-----------+ | foo | 1 | admin | +--------------+--------------+-----------+ 1 row in set (0.001 sec) MariaDB [(none)]> SELECT c.account_name, c.account_type, s.type_name FROM customer_02.accounts c -> JOIN shared_info.account_types s ON (c.account_type = s.account_type); +--------------+--------------+-----------+ | account_name | account_type | type_name | +--------------+--------------+-----------+ | bar | 2 | user | +--------------+--------------+-----------+ 1 row in set (0.001 sec)
One limitation of this sort of simple sharding is that cross-shard joins are not possible.
MariaDB [(none)]> SELECT * FROM customer_01.accounts UNION SELECT * FROM customer_02.accounts; ERROR 1146 (42S02): Table 'customer_01.accounts' doesn't exist MariaDB [(none)]> USE customer_01; Database changed MariaDB [customer_01]> SELECT * FROM customer_01.accounts UNION SELECT * FROM customer_02.accounts; ERROR 1146 (42S02): Table 'customer_02.accounts' doesn't exist MariaDB [customer_01]> USE customer_02; Database changed MariaDB [customer_02]> SELECT * FROM customer_01.accounts UNION SELECT * FROM customer_02.accounts; ERROR 1146 (42S02): Table 'customer_01.accounts' doesn't exist
In most multi-tenant situations, this is an acceptable limitation. If you do need cross-shard joins, the Spider storage engine will provide you this.