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15.6.4 Doublewrite Buffer
The doublewrite buffer is a storage area located in the system
tablespace where InnoDB
writes pages that are
flushed from the InnoDB
buffer pool, before the
pages are written to their proper positions in the data file. Only
after flushing and writing pages to the doublewrite buffer, does
InnoDB
write pages to their proper positions.
If there is an operating system, storage subsystem, or
mysqld process crash in the middle of a page
write, InnoDB
can later find a good copy of the
page from the doublewrite buffer during crash recovery.
Although data is always written twice, the doublewrite buffer does
not require twice as much I/O overhead or twice as many I/O
operations. Data is written to the doublewrite buffer itself as a
large sequential chunk, with a single fsync()
call to the operating system.
The doublewrite buffer is enabled by default in most cases. To
disable the doublewrite buffer, set
innodb_doublewrite
to 0.
If system tablespace files (“ibdata files”) are
located on Fusion-io devices that support atomic writes,
doublewrite buffering is automatically disabled and Fusion-io
atomic writes are used for all data files. Because the doublewrite
buffer setting is global, doublewrite buffering is also disabled
for data files residing on non-Fusion-io hardware. This feature is
only supported on Fusion-io hardware and is only enabled for
Fusion-io NVMFS on Linux. To take full advantage of this feature,
an innodb_flush_method
setting of
O_DIRECT
is recommended.
Document created the 26/06/2006, last modified the 26/10/2018
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