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MySQL High Availability Solutions

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A presentation about how to make MySQL highly available, presented at the San Francisco MySQL Meetup (http://www.sfmysql.org/events/15760472/) on January 26th, 2011.A video recording of this presentation is available from Ustream: http://ustre.am/fyLk
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MySQL High Availability Solutions MySQL High Availability Solutions Lenz Grimmer < Lenz Grimmer <[email protected] > > http://lenzg.net/ | Twitter: | Twitter: @lenzgr 2011-01-26 | San Francisco MySQL Meetup | USA 2011-01-26 | San Francisco MySQL Meetup | USA
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Page 1: MySQL High Availability Solutions

MySQL High Availability SolutionsMySQL High Availability Solutions

Lenz Grimmer <Lenz Grimmer <[email protected]>>

http://lenzg.net/ | Twitter: | Twitter: @lenzgr

2011-01-26 | San Francisco MySQL Meetup | USA2011-01-26 | San Francisco MySQL Meetup | USA

Page 2: MySQL High Availability Solutions

$ whoami

1998 2002

20102008

Page 3: MySQL High Availability Solutions

Agenda● High Availability: Concepts &

Considerations● MySQL Replication● DRBD / Pacemaker● MySQL Cluster● Other HA tools/applications

Page 4: MySQL High Availability Solutions

Single MySQL Server

SQL (SELECT, INSERT, SQL (SELECT, INSERT, UPDATE, DELETE)UPDATE, DELETE)

MySQL Storage EnginesMySQL Storage Engines(InnoDB, MyISAM, PBXT...)(InnoDB, MyISAM, PBXT...)

Disk StorageDisk Storage(XFS, ReiserFS, JFS, ext3...)(XFS, ReiserFS, JFS, ext3...)

MySQL ClientMySQL Client

Page 5: MySQL High Availability Solutions

Why HA?● Something can and will fail● Service Maintenance● Downtime is expensive● Adding HA to an existing system is complex

Page 6: MySQL High Availability Solutions

Elimination of the SPOF● Identify what will fail eventually

● Hard disks● Fans

● Consider what might fail● Application crashes● OOM-Situations, Kernel-Panics● Network connections, Cables● Power supply

Page 7: MySQL High Availability Solutions

What is HA Clustering?● Redundancy● One system or service goes down → others

take over● IP address takeover, service takeover● Ensuring data availability & integrity● Not designed for high-performance

Page 8: MySQL High Availability Solutions

High Availability Levels

Page 9: MySQL High Availability Solutions

Rules of High Availability● Prepare for failure● Aim to ensure that no important data is

lost● Keep it simple, stupid (KISS)● Complexity is the enemy of reliability● Automate it● Test your setup frequently!

Page 10: MySQL High Availability Solutions

HA Components● Heartbeat

● Checks that services that are monitored, are alive. ● Can check individual servers, software services,

networking etc.

● HA Monitor● Configuration of the services● Ensures proper shutdown and startup ● Allows manual control

● Shared storage / Replication

Page 11: MySQL High Availability Solutions

Split-Brain● Communications failures can lead to

separated partitions of the cluster● If those partitions each try and take control

of the cluster, then it's called a split-brain condition

● If this happens, then bad things will happen● Use Fencing or Moderation/Arbitration to

avoid it

Page 12: MySQL High Availability Solutions

Redundancy Using MySQL Replication

MySQL ReplicationMySQL Replication

Page 13: MySQL High Availability Solutions

MySQL Replication● Unidirectional● Statement- or row-based (MySQL 5.1)● Built into MySQL● Easy to use and set up● One Master, many Slaves● Asynchronous – Slaves can lag behind● New in MySQL 5.5: Semisync Replication

Page 14: MySQL High Availability Solutions

MySQL Replication (2)● Master maintains Binary logs & index● Replication on Slave is single-threaded

http://forge.mysql.com/wiki/ReplicationFeatures/ParallelSlave

● No automated fail-over● No heartbeat, no monitoring● New in 5.5: replication heartbeat

Page 15: MySQL High Availability Solutions

MySQL Replication - Overview

Web/AppServer

Web/AppServer

Read & Write

MySQL Master

I/OThread

SQLThrea

d

Write

RelayLog

MySQL Slave

mysqld

Index &Binlogs

mysqld

DataBinlogReplication

Data

Page 16: MySQL High Availability Solutions

Statement-based Replication● Pro

✔ Proven (around since MySQL 3.23)✔ Smaller log files✔ Auditing of actual SQL statements✔ No primary key requirement for replicated tables

● Con✗ Non-deterministic functions and UDFs✗ LOAD_FILE(), UUID(), CURRENT_USER(),

FOUND_ROWS()(but RAND() and NOW() work)

Page 17: MySQL High Availability Solutions

Row-based Replication● Pro

✔ All changes can be replicated✔ Similar technology used by other RDBMSes✔ Fewer locks required for some INSERT, UPDATE or

DELETE statements

● Con✗ More data to be logged✗ Log file size increases (backup/restore implications)✗ Replicated tables require explicit primary keys✗ Possible different result sets on bulk INSERTs

Page 18: MySQL High Availability Solutions

Replication Topologies

Master > Slave

Masters > Slave (Multi-Source)

Master < > Master (Multi-Master)

Master > Slaves

Ring (Multi-Master)

Master > Slave > Slaves

Page 19: MySQL High Availability Solutions

Master-Master Replication● Two nodes are both master and slave to

each other● Useful for easier failover● Not suitable for (write) load-balancing● Don't write to both masters

simultaneously!● Use Sharding or Partitioning instead

(e.g. MySQL Proxy)

Page 20: MySQL High Availability Solutions

MySQL Replication as a HA Solution● What happens if the Master fails?● What happens if the Slave fails?● This doesn’t sound like High Availability!● Yes!● Replication is only part of a HA

configuration

Page 21: MySQL High Availability Solutions

Pacemaker (Linux-HA)● Supports 2 or more Nodes (v2)● Resource monitoring (Apps and HW)● Active fencing mechanism (STONITH)● Node failure detection in seconds● Supports many applications (incl. MySQL)● http://clusterlabs.org/● http://www.clusterlabs.org/wiki/Load_Balanced_MySQL_Replicated_Cluster

● http://www.clusterlabs.org/wiki/DRBD_MySQL_HowTo

Page 22: MySQL High Availability Solutions

Replication & HA● Combined with Pacemaker● Virtual IP takeover● Slave gets promoted to Master● Side benefits: load balancing & backup● Can be tricky to fail back● No automatic conflict resolution● Proper failover needs to be scripted

Page 23: MySQL High Availability Solutions

Redundancy With Disk Replication

Disk ReplicationDisk Replication

Page 24: MySQL High Availability Solutions

DRBD● Distributed Replicated Block Device● “RAID-1 over network”● Synchronous/asynchronous block replication● Automatic resynchronisation● Application-agnostic● Can mask local I/O-Errors● Active/passive configuration● Dual-primary mode (requires cluster file sytem

like GFS or OCFS2)● http://drbd.org/

Page 25: MySQL High Availability Solutions

DRBD in Detail● DRBD replicates data blocks between to

block devices● DRBD can be combined with Linux-HA and

other HA solutions● MySQL runs normally

on primary node● MySQL is not active on

the secondary node● DRBD is Linux only

Applications

Virtual IPActive Node Passive Node

DRBD

Page 26: MySQL High Availability Solutions

Redundancy Using Shared Storage

Page 27: MySQL High Availability Solutions

Replication vs. SAN● Data Consistency / Integrity● Synchronous vs. asynchronous● SAN can become the SPOF● Cold caches● “Split brain”-Situations● SAN/NAS I/O Overhead

Page 28: MySQL High Availability Solutions

Redundancy with MySQL Cluster

Page 29: MySQL High Availability Solutions

MySQL Cluster● “Shared-nothing”-Architecture● Automatic partitioning● Distributed fragments● Synchronous replication● Fast, automatic fail-over of data nodes● Automatic resynchronisation● Transparent to MySQL applicationen● Supports transactions● http://mysql.com/products/database/cluster/

Page 30: MySQL High Availability Solutions

MySQL Cluster● In-memory indexes● Not suitable for all query patterns

(cross-table JOINs, range scans)● No support for foreign keys● Not suitable for long running transactions● Network latency crucial● Can be combined with MySQL replication

(RBR)

Page 31: MySQL High Availability Solutions
Page 32: MySQL High Availability Solutions

MySQL Cluster & Replikation● MySQL Cluster

● Easy failover from one MySQL node to another● Scaling write load using multiple SQL nodes

● Asynchronous replication from Cluster to regular MySQL slaves

● Slaves take read load (InnoDB/MyISAM)● Quick setup of new slaves (Cluster Online

Backup)● Easy failover and fast recovery

Page 33: MySQL High Availability Solutions

http://johanandersson.blogspot.com/2009/05/ha-mysql-write-scaling-using-cluster-to.html

Page 34: MySQL High Availability Solutions

Galera Replication● Patch for InnoDB plus external library● Synchronous replication● Single- or multi-master● Multicast-Replication● HA plus load sharing possible● Certifikate-based replikation

(instead of 2PC)● http://codership.com/products/mysql_galera

Page 35: MySQL High Availability Solutions

MMM● MySQL Master-Master Replication

Manager● Perl-Script for monitoring, failover and

management● Master-master replication configuration

(one active writable master)● Failover by moving virtual IP-Address● Also supports read balancing● http://mysql-mmm.org/

Page 36: MySQL High Availability Solutions

Continuent Tungsten Replicator● Database-external solution● Asynchronous, Master-Slave, Fan-out &

Fan-in● Java● Log-based● Events are stored in the Transaction History

Log (THL)● Modular architekture (Pipelines, Stages)● http://continuent.com/community/tungsten-replicator

Page 37: MySQL High Availability Solutions

Red Hat Cluster Suite● HA and load balancing● Supports up to 16 nodes● Shared storage● Monitors services, file systems and network

status● Fencing (STONITH) or distributed lock

manager● Configuration synchronization● http://www.redhat.com/cluster_suite/

Page 38: MySQL High Availability Solutions

Solaris Cluster / OpenHA Cluster● Provides failover and scalability services● Solaris / OpenSolaris (Project Colorado)● Kernel-level components plus userland● Agents monitor applications● Geo Edition to provide Disaster Recovery

using Replication● Open Source since June 2007● http://hub.opensolaris.org/bin/view/Community+Group+ha-clusters/WebHome

● http://hub.opensolaris.org/bin/view/Project+ha-mysql/WebHome

Page 39: MySQL High Availability Solutions

Flipper● Perl Script managing pairs of MySQL

servers replicating to each other.● Automatic switchover, triggered manually● Enables one half of the pair to be taken

offline for maintenance work while other half carries on

● Moves IP addresses based on a role ("read-only", "writable")

● http://provenscaling.com/software/flipper/

Page 40: MySQL High Availability Solutions

Q & A

Questions, Comments?

Page 41: MySQL High Availability Solutions

Lenz Grimmer <[email protected]>Twitter: @lenzgrhttp://lenzg.net/

Thank you!


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