Migrate from Databases that Use GH-ost/PT-osc

In production scenarios, table locking during DDL execution can block the reads from or writes to the database to a certain extent. Therefore, online DDL tools are often used to execute DDLs to minimize the impact on reads and writes. Common DDL tools are gh-ost and pt-osc.

When using DM to migrate data from MySQL to TiDB, you can enbale online-ddl to allow collaboration of DM and gh-ost or pt-osc. For details about how to enable online-ddl and the workflow after enabling this option, see Continuous Replication with gh-ost or pt-osc. This document focuses on the collaboration details of DM and online DDL tools.

Working details for DM with online DDL tools

This section describes the working details for DM with the online DDL tools gh-ost and pt-osc when implementing online-schema-change.

online-schema-change: gh-ost

When gh-ost implements online-schema-change, 3 types of tables are created:

  • gho: used to apply DDLs. When the data is fully replicated and the gho table is consistent with the origin table, the origin table is replaced by renaming.
  • ghc: used to store information that is related to online-schema-change.
  • del: created by renaming the origin table.

In the process of migration, DM divides the above tables into 3 categories:

  • ghostTable: _*_gho
  • trashTable: _*_ghc, _*_del
  • realTable: the origin table that executes online-ddl.

The SQL statements mostly used by gh-ost and the corresponding operation of DM are as follows:

  1. Create the _ghc table:

    1. Create /* gh-ost */ table `test`.`_test4_ghc` (
    2. id bigint auto_increment,
    3. last_update timestamp not null DEFAULT CURRENT_TIMESTAMP ON UPDATE CURRENT_TIMESTAMP,
    4. hint varchar(64) charset ascii not null,
    5. value varchar(4096) charset ascii not null,
    6. primary key(id),
    7. unique key hint_uidx(hint)
    8. ) auto_increment=256 ;

    DM does not create the _test4_ghc table.

  2. Create the _gho table:

    1. Create /* gh-ost */ table `test`.`_test4_gho` like `test`.`test4` ;

    DM does not create the _test4_gho table. DM deletes the dm_meta.{task_name}_onlineddl record in the downstream according to ghost_schema, ghost_table, and the server_id of dm_worker, and clears the related information in memory.

    1. DELETE FROM dm_meta.{task_name}_onlineddl WHERE id = {server_id} and ghost_schema = {ghost_schema} and ghost_table = {ghost_table};
  3. Apply the DDL that needs to be executed in the _gho table:

    1. Alter /* gh-ost */ table `test`.`_test4_gho` add column cl1 varchar(20) not null ;

    DM does not perform the DDL operation of _test4_gho. It records this DDL in dm_meta.{task_name}_onlineddl and memory.

    1. REPLACE INTO dm_meta.{task_name}_onlineddl (id, ghost_schema , ghost_table , ddls) VALUES (......);
  4. Write data to the _ghc table, and replicate the origin table data to the _gho table:

    1. INSERT /* gh-ost */ INTO `test`.`_test4_ghc` VALUES (......);
    2. INSERT /* gh-ost `test`.`test4` */ ignore INTO `test`.`_test4_gho` (`id`, `date`, `account_id`, `conversion_price`, `ocpc_matched_conversions`, `ad_cost`, `cl2`)
    3. (SELECT `id`, `date`, `account_id`, `conversion_price`, `ocpc_matched_conversions`, `ad_cost`, `cl2` FROM `test`.`test4` FORCE INDEX (`PRIMARY`)
    4. WHERE (((`id` > _binary'1') OR ((`id` = _binary'1'))) AND ((`id` < _binary'2') OR ((`id` = _binary'2')))) lock IN share mode
    5. ) ;

    DM does not execute DML statements that are not for realtable.

  5. After the migration is completed, both the origin table and _gho table are renamed, and the online DDL operation is completed:

    1. Rename /* gh-ost */ table `test`.`test4` to `test`.`_test4_del`, `test`.`_test4_gho` to `test`.`test4`;

    DM performs the following two operations:

    • DM splits the above rename operation into two SQL statements.

      1. rename test.test4 to test._test4_del;
      2. rename test._test4_gho to test.test4;
    • DM does not execute rename to _test4_del. When executing rename ghost_table to origin table, DM takes the following steps:

      • Read the DDL recorded in memory in Step 3

      • Replace ghost_table and ghost_schema with origin_table and its corresponding schema

      • Execute the DDL that has been replaced

        1. alter table test._test4_gho add column cl1 varchar(20) not null;
        2. -- Replaced with:
        3. alter table test.test4 add column cl1 varchar(20) not null;

Migrate from MySQL Databases that Use GH-ost/PT-osc - 图1

Note

The specific SQL statements of gh-ost vary with the parameters used in the execution. This document only lists the major SQL statements. For more details, refer to the gh-ost documentation.

online-schema-change: pt

When pt-osc implements online-schema-change, 2 types of tables are created:

  • new: used to apply DDL. When the data is fully replicated and the new table is consistent with the origin table, the origin table is replaced by renaming.
  • old: created by renaming the origin table.
  • 3 kinds of Trigger: pt_osc_*_ins, pt_osc_*_upd, pt_osc_*_del. In the process of pt_osc, the new data generated by the origin table is replicated to new by the Trigger.

In the process of migration, DM divides the above tables into 3 categories:

  • ghostTable: _*_new
  • trashTable: _*_old
  • realTable: the origin table that executes online-ddl.

The SQL statements mostly used by pt-osc and the corresponding operation of DM are as follows:

  1. Create the _new table:

    1. CREATE TABLE `test`.`_test4_new` ( id int(11) NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT,
    2. date date DEFAULT NULL, account_id bigint(20) DEFAULT NULL, conversion_price decimal(20,3) DEFAULT NULL, ocpc_matched_conversions bigint(20) DEFAULT NULL, ad_cost decimal(20,3) DEFAULT NULL,cl2 varchar(20) COLLATE utf8mb4_bin NOT NULL,cl1 varchar(20) COLLATE utf8mb4_bin NOT NULL,PRIMARY KEY (id) ) ENGINE=InnoDB AUTO_INCREMENT=3 DEFAULT CHARSET=utf8mb4 COLLATE=utf8mb4_bin ;

    DM does not create the _test4_new table. DM deletes the dm_meta.{task_name}_onlineddl record in the downstream according to ghost_schema, ghost_table, and the server_id of dm_worker, and clears the related information in memory.

    1. DELETE FROM dm_meta.{task_name}_onlineddl WHERE id = {server_id} and ghost_schema = {ghost_schema} and ghost_table = {ghost_table};
  2. Execute DDL in the _new table:

    1. ALTER TABLE `test`.`_test4_new` add column c3 int;

    DM does not perform the DDL operation of _test4_new. Instead, it records this DDL in dm_meta.{task_name}_onlineddl and memory.

    1. REPLACE INTO dm_meta.{task_name}_onlineddl (id, ghost_schema , ghost_table , ddls) VALUES (......);
  3. Create 3 Triggers used for data migration:

    1. CREATE TRIGGER `pt_osc_test_test4_del` AFTER DELETE ON `test`.`test4` ...... ;
    2. CREATE TRIGGER `pt_osc_test_test4_upd` AFTER UPDATE ON `test`.`test4` ...... ;
    3. CREATE TRIGGER `pt_osc_test_test4_ins` AFTER INSERT ON `test`.`test4` ...... ;

    DM does not execute Trigger operations that are not supported in TiDB.

  4. Replicate the origin table data to the _new table:

    1. INSERT LOW_PRIORITY IGNORE INTO `test`.`_test4_new` (`id`, `date`, `account_id`, `conversion_price`, `ocpc_matched_conversions`, `ad_cost`, `cl2`, `cl1`) SELECT `id`, `date`, `account_id`, `conversion_price`, `ocpc_matched_conversions`, `ad_cost`, `cl2`, `cl1` FROM `test`.`test4` LOCK IN SHARE MODE /*pt-online-schema-change 3227 copy table*/

    DM does not execute the DML statements that are not for realtable.

  5. After the data migration is completed, the origin table and _new table are renamed, and the online DDL operation is completed:

    1. RENAME TABLE `test`.`test4` TO `test`.`_test4_old`, `test`.`_test4_new` TO `test`.`test4`

    DM performs the following two operations:

    • DM splits the above rename operation into two SQL statements:

      1. rename test.test4 to test._test4_old;
      2. rename test._test4_new to test.test4;
    • DM does not execute rename to _test4_old. When executing rename ghost_table to origin table, DM takes the following steps:

      • Read the DDL recorded in memory in Step 2

      • Replace ghost_table and ghost_schema with origin_table and its corresponding schema

      • Execute the DDL that has been replaced

        1. ALTER TABLE `test`.`_test4_new` add column c3 int;
        2. -- Replaced with:
        3. ALTER TABLE `test`.`test4` add column c3 int;
  6. Delete the _old table and 3 Triggers of the online DDL operation:

    1. DROP TABLE IF EXISTS `test`.`_test4_old`;
    2. DROP TRIGGER IF EXISTS `pt_osc_test_test4_del` AFTER DELETE ON `test`.`test4` ...... ;
    3. DROP TRIGGER IF EXISTS `pt_osc_test_test4_upd` AFTER UPDATE ON `test`.`test4` ...... ;
    4. DROP TRIGGER IF EXISTS `pt_osc_test_test4_ins` AFTER INSERT ON `test`.`test4` ...... ;

    DM does not delete _test4_old and Triggers.

Migrate from MySQL Databases that Use GH-ost/PT-osc - 图2

Note

The specific SQL statements of pt-osc vary with the parameters used in the execution. This document only lists the major SQL statements. For more details, refer to the pt-osc documentation.

Other online schema change tools

In some cases, you might need to change the default behavior of your online schema change tool. For example, you might use customized names for ghost table and trash table. In other cases, you might want to use other tools instead of gh-ost or pt-osc, with the same working principles and change processes.

To achieve such customized needs, you need to write regular expressions to match the names of the ghost table and trash table.

Starting from v2.0.7, DM experimentally supports the modified online schema change tools. By setting online-ddl=true in the DM task configuration and configuring shadow-table-rules and trash-table-rules, you can match the modified temporary tables with regular expressions.

For example, if you use a customized pt-osc with the name of ghost table being _{origin_table}_pcnew and the name of trash table being _{origin_table}_pcold, you can set the custom rules as follows:

  1. online-ddl: true
  2. shadow-table-rules: ["^_(.+)_(?:pcnew)$"]
  3. trash-table-rules: ["^_(.+)_(?:pcold)$"]