Inconsistencies in the sequence of transactions that have been executed from the relay log can occur depending on your replication configuration. This section explains how to avoid inconsistencies and solve any problems they cause.
The following types of inconsistencies can exist:
Half-applied transactions. A transaction which updates non-transactional tables has applied some but not all of its changes.
Gaps. A gap in the externalized transaction set appears when, given an ordered sequence of transactions, a transaction that is later in the sequence is applied before some other transaction that is prior in the sequence. Gaps can only appear when using a multithreaded replica. To avoid gaps occurring, set slave_preserve_commit_order=1
. Up to and including MySQL 8.0.18, this setting requires that binary logging (log_bin
) and replica update logging (log_slave_updates
) are also enabled, which are the default settings from MySQL 8.0. From MySQL 8.0.19, binary logging and replica update logging are not required on the replica to set slave_preserve_commit_order=1
, and can be disabled if wanted. In all releases, setting slave_preserve_commit_order=1
requires that slave_parallel_type
is set to LOGICAL_CLOCK
, which is not the default setting. Note that in some specific situations, as listed in the description for slave_preserve_commit_order
, setting slave_preserve_commit_order=1
cannot preserve commit order on the replica, so in these cases gaps might still appear in the sequence of transactions that have been executed from the replica's relay log.
Source binary log position lag. Even in the absence of gaps, it is possible that transactions after Exec_master_log_pos
have been applied. That is, all transactions up to point N
have been applied, and no transactions after N
have been applied, but Exec_master_log_pos
has a value smaller than N
. In this situation, Exec_master_log_pos
is a “low-water mark” of the transactions applied, and lags behind the position of the most recently applied transaction. This can only happen on multithreaded replicas. Enabling slave_preserve_commit_order
does not prevent source binary log position lag.
The following scenarios are relevant to the existence of half-applied transactions, gaps, and source binary log position lag:
While replication threads are running, there may be gaps and half-applied transactions.
mysqld shuts down. Both clean and unclean shutdown abort ongoing transactions and may leave gaps and half-applied transactions.
KILL
of replication threads (the SQL thread when using a single-threaded replica, the coordinator thread when using a multithreaded replica). This aborts ongoing transactions and may leave gaps and half-applied transactions.
Error in applier threads. This may leave gaps. If the error is in a mixed transaction, that transaction is half-applied. When using a multithreaded replica, workers which have not received an error complete their queues, so it may take time to stop all threads.
STOP REPLICA | SLAVE
when using a multithreaded replica. After issuing STOP REPLICA | SLAVE
, the replica waits for any gaps to be filled and then updates Exec_master_log_pos
. This ensures it never leaves gaps or source binary log position lag, unless any of the cases above applies, in other words, before STOP REPLICA | SLAVE
completes, either an error happens, or another thread issues KILL
, or the server restarts. In these cases, STOP REPLICA | SLAVE
returns successfully.
If the last transaction in the relay log is only half-received and the multithreaded replica's coordinator thread has started to schedule the transaction to a worker, then STOP REPLICA | SLAVE
waits up to 60 seconds for the transaction to be received. After this timeout, the coordinator gives up and aborts the transaction. If the transaction is mixed, it may be left half-completed.
STOP REPLICA | SLAVE
when using a single-threaded replica. If the ongoing transaction only updates transactional tables, it is rolled back and STOP REPLICA | SLAVE
stops immediately. If the ongoing transaction is mixed, STOP REPLICA | SLAVE
waits up to 60 seconds for the transaction to complete. After this timeout, it aborts the transaction, so it may be left half-completed.
The global variable rpl_stop_slave_timeout
is unrelated to the process of stopping the replication threads. It only makes the client that issues STOP REPLICA | SLAVE
return to the client, but the replication threads continue to try to stop.
If a replication channel has gaps, it has the following consequences:
The replica database is in a state that may never have existed on the source.
The field Exec_master_log_pos
in SHOW REPLICA | SLAVE STATUS
is only a “low-water mark”. In other words, transactions appearing before the position are guaranteed to have committed, but transactions after the position may have committed or not.
CHANGE REPLICATION SOURCE TO
and CHANGE MASTER TO
statements for that channel fail with an error, unless the applier threads are running and the statement only sets receiver options.
If mysqld is started with --relay-log-recovery
, no recovery is done for that channel, and a warning is printed.
If mysqldump is used with --dump-slave
, it does not record the existence of gaps; thus it prints CHANGE REPLICATION SOURCE TO
| CHANGE MASTER TO
with RELAY_LOG_POS
set to the “low-water mark” position in Exec_master_log_pos
.
After applying the dump on another server, and starting the replication threads, transactions appearing after the position are replicated again. Note that this is harmless if GTIDs are enabled (however, in that case it is not recommended to use --dump-slave
).
If a replication channel has source binary log position lag but no gaps, cases 2 to 5 above apply, but case 1 does not.
The source binary log position information is persisted in binary format in the internal table mysql.slave_worker_info
. START REPLICA | SLAVE [SQL_THREAD]
always consults this information so that it applies only the correct transactions. This remains true even if slave_parallel_workers
has been changed to 0 before START REPLICA | SLAVE
, and even if START REPLICA | SLAVE
is used with UNTIL
clauses. START REPLICA | SLAVE UNTIL SQL_AFTER_MTS_GAPS
only applies as many transactions as needed in order to fill in the gaps. If START REPLICA | SLAVE
is used with UNTIL
clauses that tell it to stop before it has consumed all the gaps, then it leaves remaining gaps.
RESET REPLICA | SLAVE
removes the relay logs and resets the replication position. Thus issuing RESET REPLICA | SLAVE
on a replica with gaps means the replica loses any information about the gaps, without correcting the gaps.
When GTID-based replication is in use, from MySQL 5.7.28 a multithreaded replica checks first whether MASTER_AUTO_POSITION
is set to ON
, and if it is, omits the step of calculating the transactions that should be skipped or not skipped. In that situation, the old relay logs are not required for the recovery process.