Dear MySQL Users, MySQL Cluster 7.4.2 (Milestone Release) is a public milestone release for MySQL Cluster 7.4. MySQL Cluster is the distributed, shared-nothing variant of MySQL. This storage engine provides: - In-Memory storage - Real-time performance (with optional checkpointing to disk) - Transparent Auto-Sharding - Read & write scalability - Active-Active/Multi-Master geographic replication - 99.999% High Availability with no single point of failure and on-line maintenance - NoSQL and SQL APIs (including C++, Java, http, Memcached and JavaScript/Node.js) MySQL Cluster 7.4 makes significant advances in performance; operational efficiency (such as enhanced reporting and faster restarts and upgrades) and conflict detection and resolution for active-active replication between MySQL Clusters. MySQL Cluster 7.4.2 DMR can be downloaded from the "Development Releases" tab at http://www.mysql.com/downloads/cluster/ where you will also find Quick Start guides to help you get your first MySQL Cluster database up and running. The release notes are available from http://dev.mysql.com/doc/relnotes/mysql-cluster/7.4/en/index.html MySQL Cluster enables users to meet the database challenges of next generation web, cloud, and communications services with uncompromising scalability, uptime and agility. As with any other pre-production release, caution should be taken when installing on production level systems or systems with critical data. More information on the Development Milestone Release process can be found at http://dev.mysql.com/doc/mysql-development-cycle/en/development-milestone-releases.html More details can be found at http://www.mysql.com/products/cluster/ Enjoy ! ============================================================================== Changes in MySQL Cluster NDB 7.4.2 (5.6.21-ndb-7.4.2 2014-11-05) MySQL Cluster NDB 7.4.2 is a new release of MySQL Cluster, based on MySQL Server 5.6 and including features under development for version 7.4 of the NDB storage engine, as well as fixing a number of recently discovered bugs in previous MySQL Cluster releases. Obtaining MySQL Cluster NDB 7.4. MySQL Cluster NDB 7.4 source code and binaries can be obtained from http://dev.mysql.com/downloads/cluster/. For an overview of changes made in MySQL Cluster NDB 7.4, see MySQL Cluster Development in MySQL Cluster NDB 7.4 (http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.6/en/mysql-cluster-development-5-6-ndb-7-4.html). This release also incorporates all bugfixes and changes made in previous MySQL Cluster releases, as well as all bugfixes and feature changes which were added in mainline MySQL 5.6 through MySQL 5.6.21 (see Changes in MySQL 5.6.21 (2014-09-23) (http://dev.mysql.com/doc/relnotes/mysql/5.6/en/news-5-6-21.html). Functionality Added or Changed * After adding new data nodes to the configuration file of a MySQL Cluster having many API nodes, but prior to starting any of the data node processes, API nodes tried to connect to these "missing" data nodes several times per second, placing extra loads on management nodes and the network. To reduce unnecessary traffic caused in this way, it is now possible to control the amount of time that an API node waits between attempts to connect to data nodes which fail to respond; this is implemented in two new API node configuration parameters StartConnectBackoffMaxTime and ConnectBackoffMaxTime. Time elapsed during node connection attempts is not taken into account when applying these parameters, both of which are given in milliseconds with approximately 100 ms resolution. As long as the API node is not connected to any data nodes as described previously, the value of the StartConnectBackoffMaxTime parameter is applied; otherwise, ConnectBackoffMaxTime is used. In a MySQL Cluster with many unstarted data nodes, the values of these parameters can be raised to circumvent connection attempts to data nodes which have not yet begun to function in the cluster, as well as moderate high traffic to management nodes. For more information about the behavior of these parameters, see Defining SQL and Other API Nodes in a MySQL Cluster (http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.6/en/mysql-cluster-api-definition.html). (Bug#17257842) Bugs Fixed * Online downgrades to MySQL Cluster NDB 7.3 failed when a MySQL Cluster NDB 7.4 master attempted to request a local checkpoint with 32 fragments from a data node already running NDB 7.3, which supports only 2 fragments for LCPs. Now in such cases, the NDB 7.4 master determines how many fragments the data node can handle before making the request. (Bug#19600834) * The server side of an NDB transporter disconnected an incoming client connection very quickly during the handshake phase if the node at the server end was not yet ready to receive connections from the other node. This led to problems when the client immediately attempted once again to connect to the server socket, only to be disconnected again, and so on in a repeating loop, until it suceeded. Since each client connection attempt left behind a socket in TIME_WAIT, the number of sockets in TIME_WAIT increased rapidly, leading in turn to problems with the node on the server side of the transporter. Further analysis of the problem and code showed that the root of the problem lay in the handshake portion of the transporter connection protocol. To keep the issue described previously from occurring, the node at the server end now sends back a WAIT message instead of disconnecting the socket when the node is not yet ready to accept a handshake. This means that the client end should no longer need to create a new socket for the next retry, but can instead begin immediately with a new handshake hello message. (Bug#17257842) * Corrupted messages to data nodes sometimes went undetected, causing a bad signal to be delivered to a block which aborted the data node. This failure in combination with disconnecting nodes could in turn cause the entire cluster to shut down. To keep this from happening, additional checks are now made when unpacking signals received over TCP, including checks for byte order, compression flag (which must not be used), and the length of the next message in the receive buffer (if there is one). Whenever two consecutive unpacked messages fail the checks just described, the current message is assumed to be corrupted. In this case, the transporter is marked as having bad data and no more unpacking of messages occurs until the transporter is reconnected. In addition, an entry is written to the cluster log containing the error as well as a hex dump of the corrupted message. (Bug#73843, Bug#19582925) * During restore operations, an attribute's maximum length was used when reading variable-length attributes from the receive buffer instead of the attribute's actual length. (Bug#73312, Bug#19236945) * Cluster Replication: The fix for Bug#18770469 in the MySQL Server made changes in the transactional behavior of the temporary conversion tables used when replicating between tables with different schemas. These changes as implemented are not compatible with NDB, and thus the fix for this bug has been reverted in MySQL Cluster. (Bug#19692387) References: See also Bug#19704825.
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MySQL Cluster 7.4.2 has been released (no replies)
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