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Anders Karlsson Principal Sales Engineer, MySQL MySQL Embedded - Getting started with libmysqld
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Agenda Who am I? (Good question!) Why libmysqld? What is libmysqld? > What is MySQL Emmbedded? And is it different from libmysqld? Programming with libmysqld > API, Samples etc. Limitations of libmysqld Questions? Answers?
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About Anders Karlsson Sales Engineer with Sun / MySQL for 5+ years I have been in the RDBMS business for 20+ years I have worked for many of the major vendors and with most of the vendor products I’ve been in roles as > Sales Engineer > Consultant > Porting engineer > Support engineer > Etc. Outside MySQL I build websites (www.papablues.com), develop Open Source software (MyQuery, ndbtop etc), am a keen photographer and drives sub-standard cars, among other things. Also, I am pushing for ZFS to become GPL: http://www.makezfsgpl.com
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Why libmysqld? Libmysqld is compact and fast Libmysqld is easily integrated into an application Application installation is MUCH easier > No separate server to install or run > No need to run as service or daemon Low hardware requirements Zero maintenance MySQL hidden from end user
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And why NOT libmysqld? Only ONE application can connect at the time! No server means less flexibility Application itself has larger footprint > Includes both the server and the application Certain limitations exist No Replication No Client / Server connection No authentication / security More functions must be implemented in the application > Any mysql Client operations such as dump, restore, check etc.
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What is libmysqld and why is it different? “Normal” MySQL is a classic client/server based RDBMS > The database server is a separate process from the client application > The client and the sever communicates using standard networking (typically sockets or TCP/IP) > The Server may, and again may not, run in a separate hardware environment from the client > The client talks to the server using a MySQL defined protocol, typically implemented in a client interface or “driver” or Connector
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What is libmysqld and why is it different? MySQL in Client / Server configuration > MySQL Server runs on machine on the network > Clients communicate with Server using the MySQL Protocol > Many clients talk to the same server Clients using MySQL Protocol Server Disk
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What is libmysqld and why is it different? Libmysqld is a SQL database layer tightly integrated with the application or “client” > The database and the application runs in the same process space > No special means of communication is needed as both the application and the database are in the same process, calling MySQL is similar to calling any other library function > The interface between the Application or client is different, but the exposed component, the API, is the same as with Client / Server MySQL > Although the API looks the same, the implementation is different!
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What is libmysqld and why is it different? Libmysqld configuration > The Application IS the server! > There is just 1 process > Data is stored on the local disk > NOTE: The API for the application is the same, but the implementation is different! There is just one implementation: In C > All data is local > Only one “client” Application process libmysqld Client system
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So where do I find libmysqld? Libmysqld is part of the usual MySQL distribution Just download the MySQL Server and you find > On Windows : libmysqld is in the Embedded subdirectory, both debug and release versions are available, and in DLL and static builds > On Linux : libmysqld.a is in the lib subdirectory where MySQL is installed Includefiles: > Use the normal MySQL C API includefiles
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Building libmysqld applications Develop applications in C > Add calls to mysql_library_init() etc. Compile as usual Link with libmysqld > Can be linked dynamically or statically > A dynamic link is easier, just as a dynamic link with the MySQL C Client library is easier Set up an option file Ship application, possibly the libmysqld shared library and option file
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The libmysqld API VERY similar to the MySQL C API > Does NOT implement the MySQL Protocol! > Only looks the same, implementation is different! Key functions that are different > mysql_library_init() – Starts the internal “MySQL Server” > mysql_library_end() – Shuts down the internal “MySQL Server” gracefully > mysql_thread_init() / mysql_thread_end() > mysql_options() – Set MYSQL_OPT_USE_EMBEDDED_CONNECTION before connecting
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The mysql_library_init() function Initializes the MySQL internal server Passes parameters to the server in that process Must be passed information on initialization files and sections in those > No server is already running! > This means all necessary server parameters needs to be specified! This means that this call is mostly different from when NOT using libmysqld! MUST be called before mysql_init()!
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The mysql_library_init() parameters Argument count (argc) Arguments (argv) – Like the parameters to mysqld, the first argument (as in argv[0] beging name of the program) being ignored. A list of option file sections to read > If a -- defaults-file or any other argument with an option file is passed, the config files section specifies whicg sections in this file to read > The last section name is NULL > If no option file is passed, this argument may be NULL.
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static char *server_options[] = { "mysql_test", "--datadir=C:/mydata", NULL}; static char *server_groups[] = { "libmysqld_server", NULL}; int main(argc, argv) { MYSQL mysql; mysql_library_init(sizeof(server_options)/ sizeof(char *) – 1, server_options, (char **) server_gropus); mysql = mysql_init(NULL); mysql_options(mysql, MYSQL_OPT_USE_EMBEDDED_CONNECTION, NULL); mysql_real_connect(mysql, NULL, NULL, NULL, "test", 0, NULL, 0); Initializing a libmysqld application
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Configuring a libmysqld application Use a my.cnf file > Set server_options as per the previous slide, to include --defaults-file=my.cnf > Note that you must be careful with the path here! > Set up the my.cnf file Or set all options in the application itself > Set all options in the server_options variable
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Dynamic linking of a libmysqld application As a shared object / DLL > An import library is provided to be linked with your application > Your application will need to be distributed with the libmysqld shared object / DLL > Not available on all platforms Application Libmysqld Import Library Libmysqld shared library
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Static linking of a libmysqld application As a static library > The libmysqld library is linked directly into the application > No additional files needs to be distributed with the application > The only option on some platforms > Has a slight performance benefit Application Libmysqld Library
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Linking a libmysqld application Note that dynamic linking does NOT necessarily allow you to update libmysqld by just changing the DLL / Shared object > Typically, an application linked with MySQL version X needs libmysqld version X, even with dynamic linking For Windows, I recommed dynamic linking > Windows static linking is complex, as the static library depends on a particular version of Visual C++ is used For Linux, I recommend static linking > Not the least because that is the only option right now. But it is less problematic than on windows, and has a slight performance advantage
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Managing libmysqld data Data format are the same for libmysqld as it is for the MySQL Server mysqld > Hence: Data that can be freely copied with mysqld can be freely copied with libmysqld > This relates to most storage engines, but in some cases with limitations MyISAM may use compression (which is common) and other MyISAM variations Starting a libmysqld application with InnoDB enabled (not using --skip-innodb ) will create InnoDB data and transaction log files, as usual
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Managing libmysqld data Offline tools for mysqld data may be used on libmysqld data > myisampack > myisamchk > etc Online tools need to be implemented as part of the application > mysqldump > mysqlshow > etc.
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Libmysqld demo! The following demo application is available > On sourceforge: http://sourceforge.net/projects/libmysqlddemo/ > On MySQL Forge: http://forge.mysql.com/projects/project.php?id=323 The application is Windows dialog-based and written in C using the Win32 API Should be self contained, except for libmysqld of course, and the language file
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Limitations of libmysqld No replication No events InnoDB is single threaded No authentication / authorization Single application access > But that is the whole point of libmysqld Only C / C++
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Libmysqld performance 100.000 operations each, time in average after several runs INSERT UPDATE SELECT libmysqldmysqld 6.82 s 6.54 s 6.92 s 20.91 s 21.59 s 21.73 s Note: This is very far from a scientific benchmark! The operations executed are simple single-row operations, searching on the PRIMARY KEY
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Libmysqld performance So does this mean that libmysqld is faster than mysqld? > No, it means that libmysqld has less overhead, that performance is better is a side-effect of that So why is this useful data then > As it means that I need less OS and Hardware resources to achieve the same level of performance!
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Resources and contacts Email me at: anders@mysql.com Read my blog at: http://karlssonondatabases.blogspot.com/ MySQL Forum for Embedded systems: http://forums.mysql.com/list.php?58 Contribute to the community with samples and ideas, we need more of those for libmysqld http://forge.mysql.com
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Questions? anders@mysql.com
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