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2.11.3 What the MySQL Upgrade Process Upgrades
Installing a new version of MySQL may require upgrading these parts of the existing installation:
The
mysql
system schema, which contains tables that store information required by the MySQL server as it runs (see Section 5.3, “The mysql System Schema”).mysql
schema tables fall into two broad categories:Data dictionary tables, which store database object metadata.
System tables (that is, the remaining non-data dictionary tables), which are used for other operational purposes.
Other schemas, some of which are built in and may be considered “owned” by the server, and others which are not:
The Performance Schema,
INFORMATION_SCHEMA
, andsys
schema.User schemas.
Two distinct version numbers are associated with parts of the installation that may require upgrading:
The data dictionary version. This applies to the data dictionary tables.
The server version, also known as the MySQL version. This applies to the system tables and objects in other schemas.
In both cases, the actual version applicable to the existing MySQL installation is stored in the data dictionary, and the current expected version is compiled into the new version of MySQL. When an actual version is lower than the current expected version, those parts of the installation associated with that version must be upgraded to the current version. If both versions indicate an upgrade is needed, the data dictionary upgrade must occur first.
As a reflection of the two distinct versions just mentioned, the upgrade occurs in two steps:
Step 1: Data dictionary upgrade.
This step upgrades:
The data dictionary tables in the
mysql
schema. If the actual data dictionary version is lower than the current expected version, the server creates data dictionary tables with updated definitions, copies persisted metadata to the new tables, atomically replaces the old tables with the new ones, and reinitializes the data dictionary.The Performance Schema and
INFORMATION_SCHEMA
.
Step 2: Server upgrade.
This step comprises all other upgrade tasks. If the server version of the existing MySQL installation is lower than that of the new installed MySQL version, everything else must be upgraded:
The system tables in the
mysql
schema (the remaining non-data dictionary tables).The
sys
schema.User schemas.
The data dictionary upgrade (step 1) is the responsibility of the
server, which performs this task as necessary at startup unless
invoked with an option that prevents it from doing so. The option
is --upgrade=NONE
as of MySQL
8.0.16, --no-dd-upgrade
prior to
MySQL 8.0.16.
If the data dictionary is out of date but the server is prevented from upgrading it, the server will not run and exits with an error. For example:
[ERROR] [MY-013381] [Server] Server shutting down because upgrade is
required, yet prohibited by the command line option '--upgrade=NONE'.
[ERROR] [MY-010334] [Server] Failed to initialize DD Storage Engine
[ERROR] [MY-010020] [Server] Data Dictionary initialization failed.
Some changes to the responsibility for step 2 occurred in MySQL 8.0.16:
Prior to MySQL 8.0.16, mysql_upgrade upgrades the Performance Schema, the
INFORMATION_SCHEMA
, and the objects described in step 2. The DBA is expected to invoke mysql_upgrade manually after starting the server.As of MySQL 8.0.16, the server performs all tasks previously handled by mysql_upgrade. Although upgrading remains a two-step operation, the server performs them both, resulting in a simpler process.
Depending on the version of MySQL to which you are upgrading, the instructions in In-Place Upgrade and Logical Upgrade indicate whether the server performs all upgrade tasks or whether you must also invoke mysql_upgrade after server startup.
Because the server upgrades the Performance Schema,
INFORMATION_SCHEMA
, and the objects described
in step 2 as of MySQL 8.0.16, mysql_upgrade
is unneeded and is deprecated as of that version, and will be
removed in a future MySQL version.
Most aspects of what occurs during step 2 are the same prior to and as of MySQL 8.0.16, although different command options may be needed to achieve a particular effect.
As of MySQL 8.0.16, the --upgrade
server option controls whether and how the server performs an
automatic upgrade at startup:
With no option or with
--upgrade=AUTO
, the server upgrades anything it determines to be out of date (steps 1 and 2).With
--upgrade=NONE
, the server upgrades nothing (skips steps 1 and 2), but also exits with an error if the data dictionary must be upgraded. It is not possible to run the server with an out-of-date data dictionary; the server insists on either upgrading it or exiting.With
--upgrade=MINIMAL
, the server upgrades the data dictionary, the Performance Schema, and theINFORMATION_SCHEMA
, if necessary (step 1). Note that following an upgrade with this option, Group Replication cannot be started, because system tables on which the replication internals depend are not updated, and reduced functionality might also be apparent in other areas.With
--upgrade=FORCE
, the server upgrades the data dictionary, the Performance Schema, and theINFORMATION_SCHEMA
, if necessary (step 1), and forces an upgrade of everything else (step 2). Expect server startup to take longer with this option because the server checks all objects in all schemas.
FORCE
is useful to force step 2 actions to be
performed if the server thinks they are not necessary. One way
that FORCE
differs from AUTO
is that with FORCE
, the server re-creates
system tables such as help tables or time zone tables if they are
missing.
The following list shows upgrade commands prior to MySQL 8.0.16 and the equivalent commands for MySQL 8.0.16 and higher:
Perform a normal upgrade (steps 1 and 2 as necessary):
Prior to MySQL 8.0.16: mysqld followed by mysql_upgrade
As of MySQL 8.0.16: mysqld
Perform only step 1 as necessary:
Prior to MySQL 8.0.16: It is not possible to perform all upgrade tasks described in step 1 while excluding those described in step 2. However, you can avoid upgrading user schemas and the
sys
schema using mysqld followed by mysql_upgrade with the--upgrade-system-tables
and--skip-sys-schema
options.As of MySQL 8.0.16: mysqld --upgrade=MINIMAL
Perform step 1 as necessary, and force step 2:
Prior to MySQL 8.0.16: mysqld followed by mysql_upgrade --force
As of MySQL 8.0.16: mysqld --upgrade=FORCE
Prior to MySQL 8.0.16, certain mysql_upgrade
options affect the actions it performs. The following table shows
which server --upgrade
option values to use as of
MySQL 8.0.16 to achieve similar effects. (These are not
necessarily exact equivalents because a given
--upgrade
option value may have additional
effects.)
mysql_upgrade Option | Server Option |
---|---|
--skip-sys-schema |
--upgrade=NONE or
--upgrade=MINIMAL |
--upgrade-system-tables |
--upgrade=NONE or
--upgrade=MINIMAL |
--force |
--upgrade=FORCE |
Additional notes about what occurs during upgrade step 2:
Step 2 installs the
sys
schema if it is not installed, and upgrades it to the current version otherwise. An error occurs if asys
schema exists but has noversion
view, on the assumption that its absence indicates a user-created schema:A sys schema exists with no sys.version view. If you have a user created sys schema, this must be renamed for the upgrade to succeed.
To upgrade in this case, remove or rename the existing
sys
schema first. Then perform the upgrade procedure again. (It may be necessary to force step 2.)To prevent the
sys
schema check:As of MySQL 8.0.16: Start the server with the
--upgrade=NONE
or--upgrade=MINIMAL
option.Prior to MySQL 8.0.16: Invoke mysql_upgrade with the
--skip-sys-schema
option.
Step 2 processes all tables in all user schemas as necessary. Table checking might take a long time to complete. Each table is locked and therefore unavailable to other sessions while it is being processed. Check and repair operations can be time-consuming, particularly for large tables. Table checking uses the
FOR UPGRADE
option of theCHECK TABLE
statement. For details about what this option entails, see Section 13.7.3.2, “CHECK TABLE Syntax”.To prevent table checking:
As of MySQL 8.0.16: Start the server with the
--upgrade=NONE
or--upgrade=MINIMAL
option.Prior to MySQL 8.0.16: Invoke mysql_upgrade with the
--upgrade-system-tables
option.
To force table checking:
As of MySQL 8.0.16: Start the server with the
--upgrade=FORCE
option.Prior to MySQL 8.0.16: Invoke mysql_upgrade with the
--force
option.
Step 2 saves the MySQL version number in a file named
mysql_upgrade_info
in the data directory.To ignore the
mysql_upgrade_info
file and perform the check regardless:As of MySQL 8.0.16: Start the server with the
--upgrade=FORCE
option.Prior to MySQL 8.0.16: Invoke mysql_upgrade with the
--force
option.
NoteThe
mysql_upgrade_info
file is deprecated and will be removed in a future MySQL version.Step 2 marks all checked and repaired tables with the current MySQL version number. This ensures that the next time upgrade checking occurs with the same version of the server, it can be determined whether there is any need to check or repair a given table again.
Step 2 upgrades the system tables to ensure that they have the current structure. This is true whether the server or mysql_upgrade performs the step. With respect to the content of the help tables and time zone tables, mysql_upgrade does not load either type of table, whereas the server loads the help tables, but not the time zone tables. (That is, prior to MySQL 8.0.16, the server loads the help tables only at data directory initialization time. As of MySQL 8.0.16, it loads the help tables at initialization and upgrade time.) The procedure for loading time zone tables is platform dependent and requires decision making by the DBA, so it cannot be done automatically.
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