title | summary |
---|---|
Migrate Data from MariaDB to TiDB |
Learn how to migrate data from MariaDB to TiDB. |
This document describes how to migrate data from a MariaDB server installation to a TiDB cluster.
Choose the right migration strategy:
- The first strategy is to dump data with Dumpling and restore data with TiDB Lightning. This works for all versions of MariaDB. The drawback of this strategy is that it needs more downtime.
- The second strategy is to Replicate data with DM from MariaDB to TiDB with DM. DM does not support all versions of MariaDB. Supported versions are listed on the DM Compatibility Catalog.
Besides these two strategies, there might be other strategies available specifically to your situation. For example:
- Use the functionality of your Object Relational Mapping (ORM) to re-deploy and migrate your data.
- Modify your application to write from both MariaDB and TiDB while the migration is ongoing.
This document only covers the first two strategies.
Prepare the following based on the strategy you choose:
- For the dump and restore strategy:
- Install Dumpling and TiDB Lightning.
- Make sure you have the required privileges on the MariaDB server for Dumpling to export data.
- For the data replication strategy, set up Data Migration (DM).
TiDB is compatible with MySQL, and MySQL and MariaDB have a lot of functionality in common. However, there might be MariaDB-specific features that might not be compatible with TiDB that you should be aware of before migrating.
Besides checking the items in this section, it is recommended that you also check the Compatibility & Differences in the MariaDB documentation.
The Security Compatibility with MySQL document lists authentication methods that TiDB supports. TiDB does not support a few authentication methods in MariaDB. This means that you might have to create a new password hash for the account or take other specific measures.
To check what authentication methods are used, you can run the following statement:
SELECT
plugin,
COUNT(*)
FROM
mysql.user
GROUP BY
plugin;
+-----------------------+----------+
| plugin | COUNT(*) |
+-----------------------+----------+
| mysql_native_password | 11 |
+-----------------------+----------+
1 row in set (0.002 sec)
TiDB does not support system-versioned tables. However, TiDB does support AS OF TIMESTAMP
which might replace some of the use cases of system-versioned tables.
You can check for affected tables with the following statement:
SELECT
TABLE_SCHEMA,
TABLE_NAME
FROM
information_schema.tables
WHERE
TABLE_TYPE='SYSTEM VERSIONED';
+--------------+------------+
| TABLE_SCHEMA | TABLE_NAME |
+--------------+------------+
| test | t |
+--------------+------------+
1 row in set (0.005 sec)
To remove system versioning, execute the ALTER TABLE
statement:
MariaDB [test]> ALTER TABLE t DROP SYSTEM VERSIONING;
Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.071 sec)
Records: 0 Duplicates: 0 Warnings: 0
Both MariaDB and TiDB support CREATE SEQUENCE
. However, it is currently not supported by DM. It is recommended that you do not create, modify, or remove sequences during the migration and test this specifically after migration.
To check if you are using sequences, execute the following statement:
SELECT
TABLE_SCHEMA,
TABLE_NAME
FROM
information_schema.tables
WHERE
TABLE_TYPE='SEQUENCE';
+--------------+------------+
| TABLE_SCHEMA | TABLE_NAME |
+--------------+------------+
| test | s1 |
+--------------+------------+
1 row in set (0.016 sec)
MariaDB offers storage engines for local data such as InnoDB
, MyISAM
and Aria
. While the data format is not directly supported by TiDB, migrating these works fine. However, some engines place data outside of the server, such as the CONNECT
storage engine and Spider
. While you can migrate such tables to TiDB, TiDB does not provide the functionality to store data outside of the TiDB cluster.
To check what storage engines you are using, execute the following statement:
SELECT
ENGINE,
COUNT(*)
FROM
information_schema.tables
GROUP BY
ENGINE;
+--------------------+----------+
| ENGINE | COUNT(*) |
+--------------------+----------+
| NULL | 101 |
| Aria | 38 |
| CSV | 2 |
| InnoDB | 6 |
| MEMORY | 67 |
| MyISAM | 1 |
| PERFORMANCE_SCHEMA | 81 |
+--------------------+----------+
7 rows in set (0.009 sec)
MariaDB supports the RETURNING
keyword for DELETE
, INSERT
, and REPLACE
statements. TiDB does not support them. You might want to look into your application and query logging to see if it affects your migration.
MariaDB supports some data types that TiDB does not support, such as UUID
, INET4
, and INET6
.
To check for these datatypes, execute the following statement:
SELECT
TABLE_SCHEMA,
TABLE_NAME,
COLUMN_NAME,
DATA_TYPE
FROM
information_schema.columns
WHERE
DATA_TYPE IN('INET4','INET6','UUID');
+--------------+------------+-------------+-----------+
| TABLE_SCHEMA | TABLE_NAME | COLUMN_NAME | DATA_TYPE |
+--------------+------------+-------------+-----------+
| test | u1 | u | uuid |
| test | u1 | i4 | inet4 |
| test | u1 | i6 | inet6 |
+--------------+------------+-------------+-----------+
3 rows in set (0.026 sec)
TiDB does not support the latin1_swedish_ci
collation that is often used in MariaDB.
To see what collations TiDB supports, execute this statement on TiDB:
SHOW COLLATION;
+--------------------+---------+-----+---------+----------+---------+
| Collation | Charset | Id | Default | Compiled | Sortlen |
+--------------------+---------+-----+---------+----------+---------+
| ascii_bin | ascii | 65 | Yes | Yes | 1 |
| binary | binary | 63 | Yes | Yes | 1 |
| gbk_bin | gbk | 87 | | Yes | 1 |
| gbk_chinese_ci | gbk | 28 | Yes | Yes | 1 |
| latin1_bin | latin1 | 47 | Yes | Yes | 1 |
| utf8_bin | utf8 | 83 | Yes | Yes | 1 |
| utf8_general_ci | utf8 | 33 | | Yes | 1 |
| utf8_unicode_ci | utf8 | 192 | | Yes | 1 |
| utf8mb4_0900_ai_ci | utf8mb4 | 255 | | Yes | 1 |
| utf8mb4_0900_bin | utf8mb4 | 309 | | Yes | 1 |
| utf8mb4_bin | utf8mb4 | 46 | Yes | Yes | 1 |
| utf8mb4_general_ci | utf8mb4 | 45 | | Yes | 1 |
| utf8mb4_unicode_ci | utf8mb4 | 224 | | Yes | 1 |
+--------------------+---------+-----+---------+----------+---------+
13 rows in set (0.0012 sec)
To check what collations the columns of your current tables are using, you can use this statement:
SELECT
TABLE_SCHEMA,
COLLATION_NAME,
COUNT(*)
FROM
information_schema.columns
GROUP BY
TABLE_SCHEMA, COLLATION_NAME
ORDER BY
COLLATION_NAME;
+--------------------+--------------------+----------+
| TABLE_SCHEMA | COLLATION_NAME | COUNT(*) |
+--------------------+--------------------+----------+
| sys | NULL | 562 |
| test | NULL | 14 |
| mysql | NULL | 84 |
| performance_schema | NULL | 892 |
| information_schema | NULL | 421 |
| mysql | latin1_swedish_ci | 34 |
| performance_schema | utf8mb3_bin | 38 |
| mysql | utf8mb3_bin | 61 |
| sys | utf8mb3_bin | 40 |
| information_schema | utf8mb3_general_ci | 375 |
| performance_schema | utf8mb3_general_ci | 244 |
| sys | utf8mb3_general_ci | 386 |
| mysql | utf8mb3_general_ci | 67 |
| mysql | utf8mb4_bin | 8 |
+--------------------+--------------------+----------+
14 rows in set (0.045 sec)
See also Character Set and Collation.
This method assumes that you take your application offline, migrate the data, and then re-configure your application to use the migrated data.
Note:
It is strongly recommended to first do this on a test or development instance of your application before doing it in production. This is both to check for possible compatibility issues as to get insight into how much time the migration will take.
Perform the following steps to migrate data from MariaDB to TiDB:
-
Stop your application. Take your application offline. This ensures there are no modifications made to the data in MariaDB during or after the migration.
-
Dump data in MariaDB with the
tiup dumpling
command.tiup dumpling --port 3306 --host 127.0.0.1 --user root --password secret -F 256MB -o /data/backup
-
Restore the data by using the
tiup tidb-lightning
command. For more information about how to configure TiDB Lightning and how to run it, see Get Started with TiDB Lightning. -
Migrate user accounts and permissions. For more information about how to migrate your users and permissions, see Export users and grants.
-
Reconfigure your application. You need to change the application configuration so that it can connect to the TiDB server.
-
Clean up. Once you have verified that the migration is successful you can make a final backup of the data in MariaDB and stop the server. This also means you can remove tools such as TiUP, Dumpling, and TiDB Lightning.
This method assumes you would set up replication, stop your application and wait for the replication to catch up, and then re-configure your application to use TiDB.
To use DM, you need to deploy a set of DM services either with a TiUP cluster or with TiDB Operator. After that, use dmctl
to configure the DM services.
Note:
It is strongly recommended to first do this on a test or development instance of your application before doing it in production. This is both to check for possible compatibility issues as to get insight into how much time the migration will take.
Make sure that binlogs are enabled on MariaDB and that the binlog_format
is set to ROW
. It is also recommended to set binlog_annotate_row_events=OFF
and log_bin_compress=OFF
.
You also need an account with the SUPER
permission or with the BINLOG MONITOR
and REPLICATION MASTER ADMIN
permissions. This account also needs read permission for the schemas you are going to migrate.
If you are not using an account with the SUPER
permission, then you might have to add the following to the DM configuration, because TiDB does not yet know how to check for MariaDB specific permissions.
ignore-checking-items: ["replication_privilege"]
Before you use DM to migrate data from upstream to downstream, a precheck helps detect errors in the upstream database configurations and ensures that the migration goes smoothly. For more information, see Migration Task Precheck
Follow the Quick Start Guide for TiDB Data Migration to replicate your data from MariaDB to TiDB.
Note that it is not required to first copy the initial data as you would do with MariaDB to MariaDB replication, DM will do this for you.
See Export users and grants for how to migrate your users and permissions.
Once your data is replicated, you can run read-only queries on it to validate it. For more information, see Test your application.
To switch over to TiDB, you need to do the following:
- Stop your application.
- Monitor the replication delay, which should go to 0 seconds.
- Change the configuration of your application so that it connects to TiDB and start it again.
To check for replication delay, run query-status <taskname>
via dmctl
and check for "synced: true"
in the subTaskStatus
.
Once you have verified that the migration is successful, you can make a final backup of the data in MariaDB and stop the server. It also means you can stop and remove the DM cluster.
You can use pt-show-grants
. It is part of the Percona Toolkit to export users and grants from MariaDB and load these into TiDB.
While it is possible to use generic tools such as sysbench
for testing, it is highly recommended to test some specific features of your application. For example, run a copy of your application against a TiDB cluster with a temporary copy of your data.
Such a test makes sure your application compatibility and performance with TiDB is verified. You need to monitor the log files of your application and TiDB to see if there are any warnings that might need to be addressed. Make sure that the database driver that your application is using (for example MySQL Connector/J for Java based applications) is tested. You might want to use an application such as JMeter to put some load on your application if needed.
You can use sync-diff-inspector to validate if the data in MariaDB and TiDB are identical.