mysql_upgrade
mysql_upgrade is a tool that checks and updates your tables to the latest version.
Usage
mysql_upgrade [--force] [--user=# --password --host=hostname --port=# --socket=# --protocol=tcp|socket|pipe|memory --verbose] OTHER_OPTIONS]
You should run mysql_upgrade after upgrading from one major MySQL/MariaDB release to another, such as from MySQL 5.0 to MariaDB 5.1 or MariaDB 10.0 to MariaDB 10.1. It is also recommended that you run mysql_upgrade
after upgrading from a minor version, like MariaDB 5.5.40 to MariaDB 5.5.41, or even after a direct "horizontal" migration from MySQL 5.5.40 to MariaDB 5.5.40. If calling mysql_upgrade
was not necessary, it does nothing.
On Windows Server 2008 or newer, mysql_upgrade needs to be run with administrator privileges.
It is recommended to make a backup of all the databases before running mysql_upgrade.
The following groups are read from the my.cnf files: [mysql_upgrade] and [client].
The following options to handle option files may be given as the first argument:
Option | Description |
---|---|
--print-defaults | Print the program argument list and exit. |
--no-defaults | Don't read default options from any option file. |
--defaults-file=filename | Only read default options from the given file filename. |
--defaults-extra-file=filename | Read the file filename after the global files are read. |
Main arguments are:
Option | Description |
---|---|
-? , --help | Display this help message and exit. |
--basedir=path | Old option accepted for backward compatibility but ignored. |
--character-sets-dir=path | Old option accepted for backward compatibility but ignored. |
--compress=name | Old option accepted for backward compatibility but ignored. |
--datadir=name | Old option accepted for backward compatibility but ignored. |
-# [name] , --debug[=name] | For debug builds, output debug log. |
--debug-check | Check memory and open file usage at exit. |
-T , --debug-info | Print some debug info at exit. |
--default-character-set=name | Old option accepted for backward compatibility but ignored. |
-f , --force | Force execution of mysqlcheck even if mysql_upgrade has already been executed for the current version of MariaDB. |
-h , --host=name | Connect to MariaDB on the given host. |
-p , --password[=name] | Password to use when connecting to server. If password is not given, it's solicited on the command line (which should be considered insecure). You can use an option file to avoid giving the password on the command line. |
-P , --port=name | Port number to use for connection or 0 for default to, in order of preference, my.cnf, the MYSQL_TCP_PORT environment variable, /etc/services, built-in default (3306). |
--protocol=name | The protocol to use for connection (tcp, socket, pipe, memory). |
--silent | Print less information. |
-S , --socket=name | For connections to localhost, the Unix socket file to use, or, on Windows, the name of the named pipe to use. |
--ssl | Enable SSL for connection (automatically enabled with other flags). |
--ssl-ca=name | CA file in PEM format (check OpenSSL docs, implies --ssl ). |
--ssl-capath=name | CA directory (check OpenSSL docs, implies --ssl ). |
--ssl-cert=name | X509 cert in PEM format (implies --ssl ). |
--ssl-cipher=name | SSL cipher to use (implies --ssl ). |
--ssl-key=name | X509 key in PEM format (implies --ssl ). |
--ssl-crl=name | Certificate revocation list (implies --ssl ). |
--ssl-crlpath=name | Certificate revocation list path (implies --ssl ). |
--ssl-verify-server-cert | Verify server's "Common Name" in its cert against hostname used when connecting. This option is disabled by default. |
-t , --tmpdir=name | Directory for temporary files. |
-s , --upgrade-system-tables | Only upgrade the system tables in the mysql database. Tables in other databases are not checked or touched. |
-u , --user=name | User for login if not current user. |
-v , --verbose | Display more output about the process, using it twice will print connection arguments; using it 3 times will print out all CHECK, RENAME and ALTER TABLE commands used during the check phase; using it 4 times (added in MariaDB 10.0.14) will also write out all mysqlcheck commands used. |
-V , --version | Output version information and exit. |
-k , --version-check | Run this program only if its 'server version' matches the version of the server to which it's connecting check. Note: the 'server version' of the program is the version of the MariaDB server with which it was built/distributed. (Defaults to on; use --skip-version-check to disable.) |
--write-binlog | All commands including those run by mysqlcheck are written to the binary log. Enabled by default. Use --skip-write-binlog when commands should not be sent to replication slaves. |
"mysql_upgrade" is mainly a framework to call
mysqlcheck
. mysql_upgrade
works by doing the following operations:
# Find out path to datadir echo "show show variables like 'datadir'" | mysql mysqlcheck --no-defaults --check-upgrade --auto-repair --databases mysql mysql_fix_privilege_tables mysqlcheck --no-defaults --all-databases --fix-db-names --fix-table-names --write-binlog mysqlcheck --no-defaults --check-upgrade --all-databases --auto-repair --write-binlog
The connect options given to mysql_upgrade
are passed along to
mysqlcheck
and mysql
.
The mysql_fix_privilege_tables
script is not actually called; it's included as part of mysql_upgrade
.
If you have a problem with mysql_upgrade, try run it in very verbose mode:
mysql_upgrade --verbose --verbose other-options
Differences between mysql_upgrade
in MariaDB and MySQL
This is as of MariaDB 5.1.50:
- MariaDB will convert long table names properly.
- MariaDB will convert InnoDB tables (no need to do a dump/restore or
ALTER TABLE
). - MariaDB will convert old archive tables to the new 5.1 format.
- "mysql_upgrade --verbose" will run "mysqlcheck --verbose" so that you get more information of what is happening. Running with 3 times --verbose will in MariaDB 10.0 print out all CHECK, RENAME and ALTER TABLE commands executed.
- More descriptive output.
Speeding up mysql_upgrade
- If you are sure that all your tables are up to date with the current version, then you can run mysql_upgrade ---upgrade-system-tables
, which will only fix your system tables in the mysql database to be compatible with the latest version.
The main reason to run mysql_upgrade
on all your tables is to allow it to check that:
- There has not been any change in table formats between versions
- Has not happened after MariaDB 5.1
- If some of the tables are using an index for which we have changed sort order.
- Has not happened after MariaDB 5.5
If you are 100% sure this applies to you, you can just run mysql_upgrade
with the ---upgrade-system-tables
option.
Symptoms of not having run mysql_upgrade
when it was needed
- Errors in the error log that some system tables doesn't have all needed columns.
- Updates or searches on may not find the record.
- CHECKSUM TABLE may report the wrong checksum for MyISAM or Aria tables.
To fix issues like this, run mysql_upgrade
, mysqlcheck, CHECK TABLE and if needed REPAIR TABLE on the wrong table.