MySQL allocates buffers and caches to improve performance of database operations. The default configuration is designed to permit a MySQL server to start on a virtual machine that has approximately 512MB of RAM. You can improve MySQL performance by increasing the values of certain cache and buffer-related system variables. You can also modify the default configuration to run MySQL on systems with limited memory.
The following list describes some of the ways that MySQL uses memory. Where applicable, relevant system variables are referenced. Some items are storage engine or feature specific.
The InnoDB
buffer pool is a memory area that holds cached InnoDB
data for tables, indexes, and other auxiliary buffers. For efficiency of high-volume read operations, the buffer pool is divided into pages that can potentially hold multiple rows. For efficiency of cache management, the buffer pool is implemented as a linked list of pages; data that is rarely used is aged out of the cache, using a variation of the LRU algorithm. For more information, see Section 15.5.1, “Buffer Pool”.
The size of the buffer pool is important for system performance:
InnoDB
allocates memory for the entire buffer pool at server startup, using malloc()
operations. The innodb_buffer_pool_size
system variable defines the buffer pool size. Typically, a recommended innodb_buffer_pool_size
value is 50 to 75 percent of system memory. innodb_buffer_pool_size
can be configured dynamically, while the server is running. For more information, see Section 15.8.3.1, “Configuring InnoDB Buffer Pool Size”.
On systems with a large amount of memory, you can improve concurrency by dividing the buffer pool into multiple buffer pool instances. The innodb_buffer_pool_instances
system variable defines the number of buffer pool instances.
A buffer pool that is too small may cause excessive churning as pages are flushed from the buffer pool only to be required again a short time later.
A buffer pool that is too large may cause swapping due to competition for memory.
The storage engine interface enables the optimizer to provide information about the size of the record buffer to be used for scans that the optimizer estimates are likely to read multiple rows. The buffer size can vary based on the size of the estimate. InnoDB
uses this variable-size buffering capability to take advantage of row prefetching, and to reduce the overhead of latching and B-tree navigation.
All threads share the MyISAM
key buffer. The key_buffer_size
system variable determines its size.
For each MyISAM
table the server opens, the index file is opened once; the data file is opened once for each concurrently running thread that accesses the table. For each concurrent thread, a table structure, column structures for each column, and a buffer of size 3 *
are allocated (where N
N
is the maximum row length, not counting BLOB
columns). A BLOB
column requires five to eight bytes plus the length of the BLOB
data. The MyISAM
storage engine maintains one extra row buffer for internal use.
The myisam_use_mmap
system variable can be set to 1 to enable memory-mapping for all MyISAM
tables.
If an internal in-memory temporary table becomes too large (as determined using the tmp_table_size
and max_heap_table_size
system variables), MySQL automatically converts the table from in-memory to on-disk format. As of MySQL 8.0.16, on-disk temporary tables always use the InnoDB storage engine. (Previously, the storage engine employed for this purpose was determined by the internal_tmp_disk_storage_engine
system variable, which is no longer supported.) You can increase the permissible temporary table size as described in Section 8.4.4, “Internal Temporary Table Use in MySQL”.
For MEMORY
tables explicitly created with CREATE TABLE
, only the max_heap_table_size
system variable determines how large a table can grow, and there is no conversion to on-disk format.
The MySQL Performance Schema is a feature for monitoring MySQL server execution at a low level. The Performance Schema dynamically allocates memory incrementally, scaling its memory use to actual server load, instead of allocating required memory during server startup. Once memory is allocated, it is not freed until the server is restarted. For more information, see Section 27.17, “The Performance Schema Memory-Allocation Model”.
Each thread that the server uses to manage client connections requires some thread-specific space. The following list indicates these and which system variables control their size:
A stack (thread_stack
)
A connection buffer (net_buffer_length
)
A result buffer (net_buffer_length
)
The connection buffer and result buffer each begin with a size equal to net_buffer_length
bytes, but are dynamically enlarged up to max_allowed_packet
bytes as needed. The result buffer shrinks to net_buffer_length
bytes after each SQL statement. While a statement is running, a copy of the current statement string is also allocated.
Each connection thread uses memory for computing statement digests. The server allocates max_digest_length
bytes per session. See Section 27.10, “Performance Schema Statement Digests and Sampling”.
All threads share the same base memory.
When a thread is no longer needed, the memory allocated to it is released and returned to the system unless the thread goes back into the thread cache. In that case, the memory remains allocated.
Each request that performs a sequential scan of a table allocates a read buffer. The read_buffer_size
system variable determines the buffer size.
When reading rows in an arbitrary sequence (for example, following a sort), a random-read buffer may be allocated to avoid disk seeks. The read_rnd_buffer_size
system variable determines the buffer size.
All joins are executed in a single pass, and most joins can be done without even using a temporary table. Most temporary tables are memory-based hash tables. Temporary tables with a large row length (calculated as the sum of all column lengths) or that contain BLOB
columns are stored on disk.
Most requests that perform a sort allocate a sort buffer and zero to two temporary files depending on the result set size. See Section B.3.3.5, “Where MySQL Stores Temporary Files”.
Almost all parsing and calculating is done in thread-local and reusable memory pools. No memory overhead is needed for small items, thus avoiding the normal slow memory allocation and freeing. Memory is allocated only for unexpectedly large strings.
For each table having BLOB
columns, a buffer is enlarged dynamically to read in larger BLOB
values. If you scan a table, the buffer grows as large as the largest BLOB
value.
MySQL requires memory and descriptors for the table cache. Handler structures for all in-use tables are saved in the table cache and managed as “First In, First Out” (FIFO). The table_open_cache
system variable defines the initial table cache size; see Section 8.4.3.1, “How MySQL Opens and Closes Tables”.
MySQL also requires memory for the table definition cache. The table_definition_cache
system variable defines the number of table definitions that can be stored in the table definition cache. If you use a large number of tables, you can create a large table definition cache to speed up the opening of tables. The table definition cache takes less space and does not use file descriptors, unlike the table cache.
A FLUSH TABLES
statement or mysqladmin flush-tables command closes all tables that are not in use at once and marks all in-use tables to be closed when the currently executing thread finishes. This effectively frees most in-use memory. FLUSH TABLES
does not return until all tables have been closed.
The server caches information in memory as a result of GRANT
, CREATE USER
, CREATE SERVER
, and INSTALL PLUGIN
statements. This memory is not released by the corresponding REVOKE
, DROP USER
, DROP SERVER
, and UNINSTALL PLUGIN
statements, so for a server that executes many instances of the statements that cause caching, there is an increase in cached memory use unless it is freed with FLUSH PRIVILEGES
.
In a replication topology, the following settings affect memory usage, and can be adjusted as required:
The max_allowed_packet
system variable on a replication source limits the maximum message size that the source sends to its replicas for processing. This setting defaults to 64M.
The slave_pending_jobs_size_max
system variable on a multithreaded replica sets the maximum amount of memory that is made available for holding messages awaiting processing. This setting defaults to 128M. The memory is only allocated when needed, but it might be used if your replication topology handles large transactions sometimes. It is a soft limit, and larger transactions can be processed.
The rpl_read_size
system variable on a replication source or replica controls the minimum amount of data in bytes that is read from the binary log files and relay log files. The default is 8192 bytes. A buffer the size of this value is allocated for each thread that reads from the binary log and relay log files, including dump threads on sources and coordinator threads on replicas.
The binlog_transaction_dependency_history_size
system variable limits the number of row hashes held as an in-memory history.
The max_binlog_cache_size
system variable specifies the upper limit of memory usage by an individual transaction.
The max_binlog_stmt_cache_size
system variable specifies the upper limit of memory usage by the statement cache.
ps and other system status programs may report that mysqld uses a lot of memory. This may be caused by thread stacks on different memory addresses. For example, the Solaris version of ps counts the unused memory between stacks as used memory. To verify this, check available swap with swap -s
. We test mysqld with several memory-leakage detectors (both commercial and Open Source), so there should be no memory leaks.
The following example demonstrates how to use Performance Schema and sys schema to monitor MySQL memory usage.
Most Performance Schema memory instrumentation is disabled by default. Instruments can be enabled by updating the ENABLED
column of the Performance Schema setup_instruments
table. Memory instruments have names in the form of memory/
, where code_area
/instrument_name
code_area
is a value such as sql
or innodb
, and instrument_name
is the instrument detail.
To view available MySQL memory instruments, query the Performance Schema setup_instruments
table. The following query returns hundreds of memory instruments for all code areas.
mysql>SELECT * FROM performance_schema.setup_instruments
WHERE NAME LIKE '%memory%';
You can narrow results by specifying a code area. For example, you can limit results to InnoDB
memory instruments by specifying innodb
as the code area.
mysql>SELECT * FROM performance_schema.setup_instruments
WHERE NAME LIKE '%memory/innodb%';
+-------------------------------------------+---------+-------+ | NAME | ENABLED | TIMED | +-------------------------------------------+---------+-------+ | memory/innodb/adaptive hash index | NO | NO | | memory/innodb/buf_buf_pool | NO | NO | | memory/innodb/dict_stats_bg_recalc_pool_t | NO | NO | | memory/innodb/dict_stats_index_map_t | NO | NO | | memory/innodb/dict_stats_n_diff_on_level | NO | NO | | memory/innodb/other | NO | NO | | memory/innodb/row_log_buf | NO | NO | | memory/innodb/row_merge_sort | NO | NO | | memory/innodb/std | NO | NO | | memory/innodb/trx_sys_t::rw_trx_ids | NO | NO | ...
Depending on your MySQL installation, code areas may include performance_schema
, sql
, client
, innodb
, myisam
, csv
, memory
, blackhole
, archive
, partition
, and others.
To enable memory instruments, add a performance-schema-instrument
rule to your MySQL configuration file. For example, to enable all memory instruments, add this rule to your configuration file and restart the server:
performance-schema-instrument='memory/%=COUNTED'
Enabling memory instruments at startup ensures that memory allocations that occur at startup are counted.
After restarting the server, the ENABLED
column of the Performance Schema setup_instruments
table should report YES
for memory instruments that you enabled. The TIMED
column in the setup_instruments
table is ignored for memory instruments because memory operations are not timed.
mysql>SELECT * FROM performance_schema.setup_instruments
WHERE NAME LIKE '%memory/innodb%';
+-------------------------------------------+---------+-------+ | NAME | ENABLED | TIMED | +-------------------------------------------+---------+-------+ | memory/innodb/adaptive hash index | NO | NO | | memory/innodb/buf_buf_pool | NO | NO | | memory/innodb/dict_stats_bg_recalc_pool_t | NO | NO | | memory/innodb/dict_stats_index_map_t | NO | NO | | memory/innodb/dict_stats_n_diff_on_level | NO | NO | | memory/innodb/other | NO | NO | | memory/innodb/row_log_buf | NO | NO | | memory/innodb/row_merge_sort | NO | NO | | memory/innodb/std | NO | NO | | memory/innodb/trx_sys_t::rw_trx_ids | NO | NO | ...
Query memory instrument data. In this example, memory instrument data is queried in the Performance Schema memory_summary_global_by_event_name
table, which summarizes data by EVENT_NAME
. The EVENT_NAME
is the name of the instrument.
The following query returns memory data for the InnoDB
buffer pool. For column descriptions, see Section 27.12.20.10, “Memory Summary Tables”.
mysql>SELECT * FROM performance_schema.memory_summary_global_by_event_name
WHERE EVENT_NAME LIKE 'memory/innodb/buf_buf_pool'\G
EVENT_NAME: memory/innodb/buf_buf_pool COUNT_ALLOC: 1 COUNT_FREE: 0 SUM_NUMBER_OF_BYTES_ALLOC: 137428992 SUM_NUMBER_OF_BYTES_FREE: 0 LOW_COUNT_USED: 0 CURRENT_COUNT_USED: 1 HIGH_COUNT_USED: 1 LOW_NUMBER_OF_BYTES_USED: 0 CURRENT_NUMBER_OF_BYTES_USED: 137428992 HIGH_NUMBER_OF_BYTES_USED: 137428992
The same underlying data can be queried using the sys
schema memory_global_by_current_bytes
table, which shows current memory usage within the server globally, broken down by allocation type.
mysql>SELECT * FROM sys.memory_global_by_current_bytes
WHERE event_name LIKE 'memory/innodb/buf_buf_pool'\G
*************************** 1. row *************************** event_name: memory/innodb/buf_buf_pool current_count: 1 current_alloc: 131.06 MiB current_avg_alloc: 131.06 MiB high_count: 1 high_alloc: 131.06 MiB high_avg_alloc: 131.06 MiB
This sys
schema query aggregates currently allocated memory (current_alloc
) by code area:
mysql>SELECT SUBSTRING_INDEX(event_name,'/',2) AS
code_area, FORMAT_BYTES(SUM(current_alloc))
AS current_alloc
FROM sys.x$memory_global_by_current_bytes
GROUP BY SUBSTRING_INDEX(event_name,'/',2)
ORDER BY SUM(current_alloc) DESC;
+---------------------------+---------------+ | code_area | current_alloc | +---------------------------+---------------+ | memory/innodb | 843.24 MiB | | memory/performance_schema | 81.29 MiB | | memory/mysys | 8.20 MiB | | memory/sql | 2.47 MiB | | memory/memory | 174.01 KiB | | memory/myisam | 46.53 KiB | | memory/blackhole | 512 bytes | | memory/federated | 512 bytes | | memory/csv | 512 bytes | | memory/vio | 496 bytes | +---------------------------+---------------+
Prior to MySQL 8.0.16, sys.format_bytes()
was used for FORMAT_BYTES()
.
For more information about sys
schema, see Chapter 28, MySQL sys Schema.