innodb_force_recovery

时间:2023-03-09 21:27:08
innodb_force_recovery
Warning

Before using innodb_force_recovery ensure that you have a backup copy of your database in case you need to start over. You should always begin by setting innodb_force_recovery to a lower value. Incrementally increase the setting as required. Only use an innodb_force_recovery setting of 3 or greater on a production server instance after you have successfully tested the setting on separate physical copy of your database.

innodb_force_recovery is 0 by default (normal startup without forced recovery). The permissible nonzero values for innodb_force_recovery are 1 to 6. A larger value includes the functionality of lesser values. For example, a value of 3 includes all of the functionality 1 and 2. If you are able to dump your tables with an option value of at most 3, then you are relatively safe that only some data on corrupt individual pages is lost. A value of 6 is considered drastic because database pages are left in an obsolete state, which in turn may introduce more corruption into B-trees and other database structures.

  • 1 (SRV_FORCE_IGNORE_CORRUPT)

    Lets the server run even if it detects a corrupt page. Tries to make SELECT * FROM tbl_name jump over corrupt index records and pages, which helps in dumping tables.

  • 2 (SRV_FORCE_NO_BACKGROUND)

    Prevents the master thread and any purge threads from running. If a crash would occur during the purge operation, this recovery value prevents it.

  • 3 (SRV_FORCE_NO_TRX_UNDO)

    Does not run transaction rollbacks after crash recovery.

  • 4 (SRV_FORCE_NO_IBUF_MERGE)

    Prevents insert buffer merge operations. If they would cause a crash, does not do them. Does not calculate table statistics.

  • 5 (SRV_FORCE_NO_UNDO_LOG_SCAN)

    Does not look at undo logs when starting the database: InnoDB treats even incomplete transactions as committed.

  • 6 (SRV_FORCE_NO_LOG_REDO)

    Does not do the redo log roll-forward in connection with recovery.

    With this value, you might not be able to do queries other than a basic SELECT * FROM t, with no WHERE, ORDER BY, or other clauses. More complex queries could encounter corrupted data structures and fail.

    If corruption within the table data prevents you from dumping the entire table contents, a query with an ORDER BY primary_key DESC clause might be able to dump the portion of the table after the corrupted part.

The database must not otherwise be used with any nonzero value of innodb_force_recovery. As a safety measure, InnoDB prevents INSERT, UPDATE, or DELETE operations when innodb_force_recovery is greater than 0.

Q:

When I start mysqld (in /etc/init.d), it failed with

InnoDB: corruption in the InnoDB tablespace.

What's the best innodb_force_recovery value to force mysqld to start? I have tried 4 and 6, but corruption error message is the same. I already have a full dump.

A:

According to MySQL's documentation, if you use innodb_force_recovery=1, the server will start even if it detects a corrupt page.

http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.0/en/forcing-innodb-recovery.html

Still, there are a couple of things you may want to check.

Are there any relevant errors in mysql's error log? cat /var/log/mysqld.log

Is the file system OK, can you create files with touch in the same partition ? ex. touch /var/somefile.txt

If you have a full backup of your databases, as you mention in your question, you can delete the ibdata and ib_logfile(s) and recreate them, then restore your databases. This will resolve any corruption issues you may have in the innodb files.

The steps are:

  1. Stop mysql

  2. delete the ibdata and ib_logfile files.

    ex : rm -f /var/lib/mysql/ibdata1

    ex : rm -f /var/lib/mysql/ib_logfile*

  3. Start MySQL (which recreates the innodb files)

  4. Restore the dump mysql -u root -p < mydump.sql

As long as you only delete the innodb files(ibdata and ib_logfiles), your users and their access rights to the databases will still be in tact.

参考:

http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.5/en/forcing-innodb-recovery.html

http://dba.stackexchange.com/questions/23361/innodb-force-recovery-when-innodb-corruption