NAME | SYNOPSIS | DESCRIPTION | MYISAMCHK GENERAL OPTIONS | MYISAMCHK CHECK OPTIONS | MYISAMCHK REPAIR OPTIONS | OTHER MYISAMCHK OPTIONS | MYISAMCHK TABLE INFORMATION | MYISAMCHK MEMORY USAGE | COPYRIGHT | SEE ALSO | AUTHOR | COLOPHON

MYISAMCHK(1)               MariaDB Database System              MYISAMCHK(1)

NAME         top

       myisamchk - MyISAM table-maintenance utility

SYNOPSIS         top

       myisamchk [options] tbl_name ...

DESCRIPTION         top

       The myisamchk utility gets information about your database tables or
       checks, repairs, or optimizes them.  myisamchk works with MyISAM
       tables (tables that have .MYD and .MYI files for storing data and
       indexes).
       The use of myisamchk with partitioned tables is not supported.
           Caution
           It is best to make a backup of a table before performing a table
           repair operation; under some circumstances the operation might
           cause data loss. Possible causes include but are not limited to
           file system errors.
       Invoke myisamchk like this:
           shell> myisamchk [options] tbl_name ...
       The options specify what you want myisamchk to do. They are described
       in the following sections. You can also get a list of options by
       invoking myisamchk --help.
       With no options, myisamchk simply checks your table as the default
       operation. To get more information or to tell myisamchk to take
       corrective action, specify options as described in the following
       discussion.
       tbl_name is the database table you want to check or repair. If you
       run myisamchk somewhere other than in the database directory, you
       must specify the path to the database directory, because myisamchk
       has no idea where the database is located. In fact, myisamchk does
       not actually care whether the files you are working on are located in
       a database directory. You can copy the files that correspond to a
       database table into some other location and perform recovery
       operations on them there.
       You can name several tables on the myisamchk command line if you
       wish. You can also specify a table by naming its index file (the file
       with the .MYI suffix). This allows you to specify all tables in a
       directory by using the pattern *.MYI. For example, if you are in a
       database directory, you can check all the MyISAM tables in that
       directory like this:
           shell> myisamchk *.MYI
       If you are not in the database directory, you can check all the
       tables there by specifying the path to the directory:
           shell> myisamchk /path/to/database_dir/*.MYI
       You can even check all tables in all databases by specifying a
       wildcard with the path to the MariaDB data directory:
           shell> myisamchk /path/to/datadir/*/*.MYI
       The recommended way to quickly check all MyISAM tables is:
           shell> myisamchk --silent --fast /path/to/datadir/*/*.MYI
       If you want to check all MyISAM tables and repair any that are
       corrupted, you can use the following command:
           shell> myisamchk --silent --force --fast --update-state \
                     --key_buffer_size=64M --sort_buffer_size=64M \
                     --read_buffer_size=1M --write_buffer_size=1M \
                     /path/to/datadir/*/*.MYI
       This command assumes that you have more than 64MB free. For more
       information about memory allocation with myisamchk, see the section
       called “MYISAMCHK MEMORY USAGE”.
           Important
           You must ensure that no other program is using the tables while
           you are running myisamchk. The most effective means of doing so
           is to shut down the MariaDB server while running myisamchk, or to
           lock all tables that myisamchk is being used on.
           Otherwise, when you run myisamchk, it may display the following
           error message:
               warning: clients are using or haven´t closed the table properly
           This means that you are trying to check a table that has been
           updated by another program (such as the mysqld server) that
           hasn´t yet closed the file or that has died without closing the
           file properly, which can sometimes lead to the corruption of one
           or more MyISAM tables.
           If mysqld is running, you must force it to flush any table
           modifications that are still buffered in memory by using FLUSH
           TABLES. You should then ensure that no one is using the tables
           while you are running myisamchk
           However, the easiest way to avoid this problem is to use CHECK
           TABLE instead of myisamchk to check tables.
       myisamchk supports the following options, which can be specified on
       the command line or in the [myisamchk] option file group.

MYISAMCHK GENERAL OPTIONS         top

       The options described in this section can be used for any type of
       table maintenance operation performed by myisamchk. The sections
       following this one describe options that pertain only to specific
       operations, such as table checking or repairing.
       ·   --help, -?
           Display a help message and exit. Options are grouped by type of
           operation.
       ·   --HELP, -H
           Display a help message and exit. Options are presented in a
           single list.
       ·   --debug=debug_options, -# debug_options
           Write a debugging log. A typical debug_options string is
           ´d:t:o,file_name´. The default is ´d:t:o,/tmp/myisamchk.trace´.
       ·   --silent, -s
           Silent mode. Write output only when errors occur. You can use -s
           twice (-ss) to make myisamchk very silent.
       ·   --verbose, -v
           Verbose mode. Print more information about what the program does.
           This can be used with -d and -e. Use -v multiple times (-vv,
           -vvv) for even more output.
       ·   --version, -V
           Display version information and exit.
       ·   --wait, -w
           Instead of terminating with an error if the table is locked, wait
           until the table is unlocked before continuing. If you are running
           mysqld with external locking disabled, the table can be locked
           only by another myisamchk command.
       ·   --print-defaults
           Print the program argument list and exit.
       ·   --no-defaults
           Don't read default options from any option file.
       ·   --defaults-file=#
           Only read default options from the given file.
       ·   --defaults-extra-file=#
           Read this file after the global files are read.
       You can also set the following variables by using --var_name=value
       syntax:
       ┌─────────────────────┬───────────────────┐
       │Variable             Default Value     │
       ├─────────────────────┼───────────────────┤
       │decode_bits          │ 9                 │
       ├─────────────────────┼───────────────────┤
       │ft_max_word_len      │ version-dependent │
       ├─────────────────────┼───────────────────┤
       │ft_min_word_len      │ 4                 │
       ├─────────────────────┼───────────────────┤
       │ft_stopword_file     │ built-in list     │
       ├─────────────────────┼───────────────────┤
       │key_buffer_size      │ 523264            │
       ├─────────────────────┼───────────────────┤
       │key_cache_block_size │ 1024              │
       ├─────────────────────┼───────────────────┤
       │myisam_block_size    │ 1024              │
       ├─────────────────────┼───────────────────┤
       │read_buffer_size     │ 262136            │
       ├─────────────────────┼───────────────────┤
       │sort_buffer_size     │ 2097144           │
       ├─────────────────────┼───────────────────┤
       │sort_key_blocks      │ 16                │
       ├─────────────────────┼───────────────────┤
       │stats_method         │ nulls_unequal     │
       ├─────────────────────┼───────────────────┤
       │write_buffer_size    │ 262136            │
       └─────────────────────┴───────────────────┘
       The possible myisamchk variables and their default values can be
       examined with myisamchk --help:
       sort_buffer_size is used when the keys are repaired by sorting keys,
       which is the normal case when you use --recover.
       key_buffer_size is used when you are checking the table with
       --extend-check or when the keys are repaired by inserting keys row by
       row into the table (like when doing normal inserts). Repairing
       through the key buffer is used in the following cases:
       ·   You use --safe-recover.
       ·   The temporary files needed to sort the keys would be more than
           twice as big as when creating the key file directly. This is
           often the case when you have large key values for CHAR, VARCHAR,
           or TEXT columns, because the sort operation needs to store the
           complete key values as it proceeds. If you have lots of temporary
           space and you can force myisamchk to repair by sorting, you can
           use the --sort-recover option.
       Repairing through the key buffer takes much less disk space than
       using sorting, but is also much slower.
       If you want a faster repair, set the key_buffer_size and
       sort_buffer_size variables to about 25% of your available memory. You
       can set both variables to large values, because only one of them is
       used at a time.
       myisam_block_size is the size used for index blocks.
       stats_method influences how NULL values are treated for index
       statistics collection when the --analyze option is given. It acts
       like the myisam_stats_method system variable. For more information,
       see the description of myisam_stats_method in Section 5.1.4, “Server
       System Variables”, and Section 7.4.7, “MyISAM Index Statistics
       Collection”.
       ft_min_word_len and ft_max_word_len indicate the minimum and maximum
       word length for FULLTEXT indexes.  ft_stopword_file names the
       stopword file. These need to be set under the following
       circumstances.
       If you use myisamchk to perform an operation that modifies table
       indexes (such as repair or analyze), the FULLTEXT indexes are rebuilt
       using the default full-text parameter values for minimum and maximum
       word length and the stopword file unless you specify otherwise. This
       can result in queries failing.
       The problem occurs because these parameters are known only by the
       server. They are not stored in MyISAM index files. To avoid the
       problem if you have modified the minimum or maximum word length or
       the stopword file in the server, specify the same ft_min_word_len,
       ft_max_word_len, and ft_stopword_file values to myisamchk that you
       use for mysqld. For example, if you have set the minimum word length
       to 3, you can repair a table with myisamchk like this:
           shell> myisamchk --recover --ft_min_word_len=3 tbl_name.MYI
       To ensure that myisamchk and the server use the same values for
       full-text parameters, you can place each one in both the [mysqld] and
       [myisamchk] sections of an option file:
           [mysqld]
           ft_min_word_len=3
           [myisamchk]
           ft_min_word_len=3
       An alternative to using myisamchk is to use the REPAIR TABLE, ANALYZE
       TABLE, OPTIMIZE TABLE, or ALTER TABLE. These statements are performed
       by the server, which knows the proper full-text parameter values to
       use.

MYISAMCHK CHECK OPTIONS         top

       myisamchk supports the following options for table checking
       operations:
       ·   --check, -c
           Check the table for errors. This is the default operation if you
           specify no option that selects an operation type explicitly.
       ·   --check-only-changed, -C
           Check only tables that have changed since the last check.
       ·   --extend-check, -e
           Check the table very thoroughly. This is quite slow if the table
           has many indexes. This option should only be used in extreme
           cases. Normally, myisamchk or myisamchk --medium-check should be
           able to determine whether there are any errors in the table.
           If you are using --extend-check and have plenty of memory,
           setting the key_buffer_size variable to a large value helps the
           repair operation run faster.
           For a description of the output format, see the section called
           “MYISAMCHK TABLE INFORMATION”.
       ·   --fast, -F
           Check only tables that haven´t been closed properly.
       ·   --force, -f
           Do a repair operation automatically if myisamchk finds any errors
           in the table. The repair type is the same as that specified with
           the --recover or -r option. States will be updated as with
           --update-state.
       ·   --information, -i
           Print informational statistics about the table that is checked.
       ·   --medium-check, -m
           Do a check that is faster than an --extend-check operation. This
           finds only 99.99% of all errors, which should be good enough in
           most cases.
       ·   --read-only, -T
           Do not mark the table as checked. This is useful if you use
           myisamchk to check a table that is in use by some other
           application that does not use locking, such as mysqld when run
           with external locking disabled.
       ·   --update-state, -U
           Store information in the .MYI file to indicate when the table was
           checked and whether the table crashed. This should be used to get
           full benefit of the --check-only-changed option, but you
           shouldn´t use this option if the mysqld server is using the table
           and you are running it with external locking disabled.

MYISAMCHK REPAIR OPTIONS         top

       myisamchk supports the following options for table repair operations
       (operations performed when an option such as --recover or
       --safe-recover is given):
       ·   --backup, -B
           Make a backup of the .MYD file as file_name-time.BAK
       ·   --character-sets-dir=path
           The directory where character sets are installed.
       ·   --correct-checksum
           Correct the checksum information for the table.
       ·   --create-missing-keys
           Create missing keys. This assumes that the data file is correct
           and that the number of rows stored in the index file is correct.
           Enables --quick.
       ·   --data-file-length=len, -D len
           The maximum length of the data file (when re-creating data file
           when it is “full”).
       ·   --extend-check, -e
           Do a repair that tries to recover every possible row from the
           data file. Normally, this also finds a lot of garbage rows. Do
           not use this option unless you are desperate.
           For a description of the output format, see the section called
           “MYISAMCHK TABLE INFORMATION”.
       ·   --force, -f
           Overwrite old intermediate files (files with names like
           tbl_name.TMD) instead of aborting. Add another --force to avoid
           'myisam_sort_buffer_size is too small' errors. In this case we
           will attempt to do the repair with the given
           myisam_sort_buffer_size and dynamically allocate as many
           management buffers as needed.
       ·   --keys-used=val, -k val
           For myisamchk, the option value is a bit-value that indicates
           which indexes to update. Each binary bit of the option value
           corresponds to a table index, where the first index is bit 0. An
           option value of 0 disables updates to all indexes, which can be
           used to get faster inserts. Deactivated indexes can be
           reactivated by using myisamchk -r.
       ·   --max-record-length=len
           Skip rows larger than the given length if myisamchk cannot
           allocate memory to hold them.
       ·   --parallel-recover, -p
           Use the same technique as -r and -n, but create all the keys in
           parallel, using different threads.  This is beta-quality code.
           Use at your own risk!
       ·   --quick, -q
           Achieve a faster repair by modifying only the index file, not the
           data file. You can specify this option twice to force myisamchk
           to modify the original data file in case of duplicate keys. NOTE:
           Tables where the data file is corrupted can't be fixed with this
           option.
       ·   --recover, -r
           Do a repair that can fix almost any problem except unique keys
           that are not unique (which is an extremely unlikely error with
           MyISAM tables). If you want to recover a table, this is the
           option to try first. You should try --safe-recover only if
           myisamchk reports that the table cannot be recovered using
           --recover. (In the unlikely case that --recover fails, the data
           file remains intact.)
           If you have lots of memory, you should increase the value of
           sort_buffer_size.
       ·   --safe-recover, -o
           Do a repair using an old recovery method that reads through all
           rows in order and updates all index trees based on the rows
           found. This is an order of magnitude slower than --recover, but
           can handle a couple of very unlikely cases that --recover cannot.
           This recovery method also uses much less disk space than
           --recover. Normally, you should repair first using --recover, and
           then with --safe-recover only if --recover fails.
           If you have lots of memory, you should increase the value of
           key_buffer_size.
       ·   --set-collation=name
           Specify the collation to use for sorting table indexes. The
           character set name is implied by the first part of the collation
           name.
       ·   --sort-recover, -n
           Force myisamchk to use sorting to resolve the keys even if the
           temporary files would be very large.
       ·   --tmpdir=path, -t path
           The path of the directory to be used for storing temporary files.
           If this is not set, myisamchk uses the value of the TMPDIR
           environment variable.  tmpdir can be set to a list of directory
           paths that are used successively in round-robin fashion for
           creating temporary files. The separator character between
           directory names is the colon (“:”) on Unix and the semicolon
           (“;”) on Windows, NetWare, and OS/2.
       ·   --unpack, -u
           Unpack a table that was packed with myisampack.

OTHER MYISAMCHK OPTIONS         top

       myisamchk supports the following options for actions other than table
       checks and repairs:
       ·   --analyze, -a
           Analyze the distribution of key values. This improves join
           performance by enabling the join optimizer to better choose the
           order in which to join the tables and which indexes it should
           use. To obtain information about the key distribution, use a
           myisamchk --description --verbose tbl_name command or the SHOW
           INDEX FROM tbl_name statement.
       ·   --block-search=offset, -b offset
           Find the record that a block at the given offset belongs to.
       ·   --description, -d
           Print some descriptive information about the table. Specifying
           the --verbose option once or twice produces additional
           information. See the section called “MYISAMCHK TABLE
           INFORMATION”.
       ·   --set-auto-increment[=value], -A[value]
           Force AUTO_INCREMENT numbering for new records to start at the
           given value (or higher, if there are existing records with
           AUTO_INCREMENT values this large). If value is not specified,
           AUTO_INCREMENT numbers for new records begin with the largest
           value currently in the table, plus one.
       ·   --sort-index, -S
           Sort the index tree blocks in high-low order. This optimizes
           seeks and makes table scans that use indexes faster.
       ·   --sort-records=N, -R N
           Sort records according to a particular index. This makes your
           data much more localized and may speed up range-based SELECT and
           ORDER BY operations that use this index. (The first time you use
           this option to sort a table, it may be very slow.) To determine a
           table´s index numbers, use SHOW INDEX, which displays a table´s
           indexes in the same order that myisamchk sees them. Indexes are
           numbered beginning with 1.
           If keys are not packed (PACK_KEYS=0), they have the same length,
           so when myisamchk sorts and moves records, it just overwrites
           record offsets in the index. If keys are packed (PACK_KEYS=1),
           myisamchk must unpack key blocks first, then re-create indexes
           and pack the key blocks again. (In this case, re-creating indexes
           is faster than updating offsets for each index.)
       ·   --stats-method=name
           Specifies how index statistics collection code should treat
           NULLs. Possible values of name are "nulls_unequal" (default),
           "nulls_equal" (emulate MySQL 4 behavior), and "nulls_ignored".

MYISAMCHK TABLE INFORMATION         top

       To obtain a description of a MyISAM table or statistics about it, use
       the commands shown here. The output from these commands is explained
       later in this section.
       ·   myisamchk -d tbl_name
           Runs myisamchk in “describe mode” to produce a description of
           your table. If you start the MariaDB server with external locking
           disabled, myisamchk may report an error for a table that is
           updated while it runs. However, because myisamchk does not change
           the table in describe mode, there is no risk of destroying data.
       ·   myisamchk -dv tbl_name
           Adding -v runs myisamchk in verbose mode so that it produces more
           information about the table. Adding -v a second time produces
           even more information.
       ·   myisamchk -eis tbl_name
           Shows only the most important information from a table. This
           operation is slow because it must read the entire table.
       ·   myisamchk -eiv tbl_name
           This is like -eis, but tells you what is being done.
       The tbl_name argument can be either the name of a MyISAM table or the
       name of its index file, as described in myisamchk(1). Multiple
       tbl_name arguments can be given.
       Suppose that a table named person has the following structure. (The
       MAX_ROWS table option is included so that in the example output from
       myisamchk shown later, some values are smaller and fit the output
       format more easily.)
           CREATE TABLE person
           (
             id         INT NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT,
             last_name  VARCHAR(20) NOT NULL,
             first_name VARCHAR(20) NOT NULL,
             birth      DATE,
             death      DATE,
             PRIMARY KEY (id),
             INDEX (last_name, first_name),
             INDEX (birth)
           ) MAX_ROWS = 1000000;
       Suppose also that the table has these data and index file sizes:
           -rw-rw----  1 mysql  mysql  9347072 Aug 19 11:47 person.MYD
           -rw-rw----  1 mysql  mysql  6066176 Aug 19 11:47 person.MYI
       Example of myisamchk -dvv output:
           MyISAM file:         person
           Record format:       Packed
           Character set:       latin1_swedish_ci (8)
           File-version:        1
           Creation time:       2009-08-19 16:47:41
           Recover time:        2009-08-19 16:47:56
           Status:              checked,analyzed,optimized keys
           Auto increment key:              1  Last value:                306688
           Data records:               306688  Deleted blocks:                 0
           Datafile parts:             306688  Deleted data:                   0
           Datafile pointer (bytes):        4  Keyfile pointer (bytes):        3
           Datafile length:           9347072  Keyfile length:           6066176
           Max datafile length:    4294967294  Max keyfile length:   17179868159
           Recordlength:                   54
           table description:
           Key Start Len Index   Type                 Rec/key         Root  Blocksize
           1   2     4   unique  long                       1        99328       1024
           2   6     20  multip. varchar prefix           512      3563520       1024
               27    20          varchar                  512
           3   48    3   multip. uint24 NULL           306688      6065152       1024
           Field Start Length Nullpos Nullbit Type
           1     1     1
           2     2     4                      no zeros
           3     6     21                     varchar
           4     27    21                     varchar
           5     48    3      1       1       no zeros
           6     51    3      1       2       no zeros
       Explanations for the types of information myisamchk produces are
       given here.  “Keyfile” refers to the index file.  “Record” and “row”
       are synonymous, as are “field” and “column.”
       The initial part of the table description contains these values:
       ·   MyISAM file
           Name of the MyISAM (index) file.
       ·   Record format
           The format used to store table rows. The preceding examples use
           Fixed length. Other possible values are Compressed and Packed.
           (Packed corresponds to what SHOW TABLE STATUS reports as
           Dynamic.)
       ·   Chararacter set
           The table default character set.
       ·   File-version
           Version of MyISAM format. Currently always 1.
       ·   Creation time
           When the data file was created.
       ·   Recover time
           When the index/data file was last reconstructed.
       ·   Status
           Table status flags. Possible values are crashed, open, changed,
           analyzed, optimized keys, and sorted index pages.
       ·   Auto increment key, Last value
           The key number associated the table´s AUTO_INCREMENT column, and
           the most recently generated value for this column. These fields
           do not appear if there is no such column.
       ·   Data records
           The number of rows in the table.
       ·   Deleted blocks
           How many deleted blocks still have reserved space. You can
           optimize your table to minimize this space. See Section 6.6.4,
           “MyISAM Table Optimization”.
       ·   Datafile parts
           For dynamic-row format, this indicates how many data blocks there
           are. For an optimized table without fragmented rows, this is the
           same as Data records.
       ·   Deleted data
           How many bytes of unreclaimed deleted data there are. You can
           optimize your table to minimize this space. See Section 6.6.4,
           “MyISAM Table Optimization”.
       ·   Datafile pointer
           The size of the data file pointer, in bytes. It is usually 2, 3,
           4, or 5 bytes. Most tables manage with 2 bytes, but this cannot
           be controlled from MariaDB yet. For fixed tables, this is a row
           address. For dynamic tables, this is a byte address.
       ·   Keyfile pointer
           The size of the index file pointer, in bytes. It is usually 1, 2,
           or 3 bytes. Most tables manage with 2 bytes, but this is
           calculated automatically by MariaDB. It is always a block
           address.
       ·   Max datafile length
           How long the table data file can become, in bytes.
       ·   Max keyfile length
           How long the table index file can become, in bytes.
       ·   Recordlength
           How much space each row takes, in bytes.
       The table description part of the output includes a list of all keys
       in the table. For each key, myisamchk displays some low-level
       information:
       ·   Key
           This key´s number. This value is shown only for the first column
           of the key. If this value is missing, the line corresponds to the
           second or later column of a multiple-column key. For the table
           shown in the example, there are two table description lines for
           the second index. This indicates that it is a multiple-part index
           with two parts.
       ·   Start
           Where in the row this portion of the index starts.
       ·   Len
           How long this portion of the index is. For packed numbers, this
           should always be the full length of the column. For strings, it
           may be shorter than the full length of the indexed column,
           because you can index a prefix of a string column. The total
           length of a multiple-part key is the sum of the Len values for
           all key parts.
       ·   Index
           Whether a key value can exist multiple times in the index.
           Possible values are unique or multip.  (multiple).
       ·   Type
           What data type this portion of the index has. This is a MyISAM
           data type with the possible values packed, stripped, or empty.
       ·   Root
           Address of the root index block.
       ·   Blocksize
           The size of each index block. By default this is 1024, but the
           value may be changed at compile time when MariaDB is built from
           source.
       ·   Rec/key
           This is a statistical value used by the optimizer. It tells how
           many rows there are per value for this index. A unique index
           always has a value of 1. This may be updated after a table is
           loaded (or greatly changed) with myisamchk -a. If this is not
           updated at all, a default value of 30 is given.
       The last part of the output provides information about each column:
       ·   Field
           The column number.
       ·   Start
           The byte position of the column within table rows.
       ·   Length
           The length of the column in bytes.
       ·   Nullpos, Nullbit
           For columns that can be NULL, MyISAM stores NULL values as a flag
           in a byte. Depending on how many nullable columns there are,
           there can be one or more bytes used for this purpose. The Nullpos
           and Nullbit values, if nonempty, indicate which byte and bit
           contains that flag indicating whether the column is NULL.
           The position and number of bytes used to store NULL flags is
           shown in the line for field 1. This is why there are six Field
           lines for the person table even though it has only five columns.
       ·   Type
           The data type. The value may contain any of the following
           descriptors:
           ·   constant
               All rows have the same value.
           ·   no endspace
               Do not store endspace.
           ·   no endspace, not_always
               Do not store endspace and do not do endspace compression for
               all values.
           ·   no endspace, no empty
               Do not store endspace. Do not store empty values.
           ·   table-lookup
               The column was converted to an ENUM.
           ·   zerofill(N)
               The most significant N bytes in the value are always 0 and
               are not stored.
           ·   no zeros
               Do not store zeros.
           ·   always zero
               Zero values are stored using one bit.
       ·   Huff tree
           The number of the Huffman tree associated with the column.
       ·   Bits
           The number of bits used in the Huffman tree.
       The Huff tree and Bits fields are displayed if the table has been
       compressed with myisampack. See myisampack(1), for an example of this
       information.
       Example of myisamchk -eiv output:
           Checking MyISAM file: person
           Data records:  306688   Deleted blocks:       0
           - check file-size
           - check record delete-chain
           No recordlinks
           - check key delete-chain
           block_size 1024:
           - check index reference
           - check data record references index: 1
           Key:  1:  Keyblocks used:  98%  Packed:    0%  Max levels:  3
           - check data record references index: 2
           Key:  2:  Keyblocks used:  99%  Packed:   97%  Max levels:  3
           - check data record references index: 3
           Key:  3:  Keyblocks used:  98%  Packed:  -14%  Max levels:  3
           Total:    Keyblocks used:  98%  Packed:   89%
           - check records and index references
           *** LOTS OF ROW NUMBERS DELETED ***
           Records:            306688  M.recordlength:       25  Packed:            83%
           Recordspace used:       97% Empty space:           2% Blocks/Record:   1.00
           Record blocks:      306688  Delete blocks:         0
           Record data:       7934464  Deleted data:          0
           Lost space:         256512  Linkdata:        1156096
           User time 43.08, System time 1.68
           Maximum resident set size 0, Integral resident set size 0
           Non-physical pagefaults 0, Physical pagefaults 0, Swaps 0
           Blocks in 0 out 7, Messages in 0 out 0, Signals 0
           Voluntary context switches 0, Involuntary context switches 0
           Maximum memory usage: 1046926 bytes (1023k)
       myisamchk -eiv output includes the following information:
       ·   Data records
           The number of rows in the table.
       ·   Deleted blocks
           How many deleted blocks still have reserved space. You can
           optimize your table to minimize this space. See Section 6.6.4,
           “MyISAM Table Optimization”.
       ·   Key
           The key number.
       ·   Keyblocks used
           What percentage of the keyblocks are used. When a table has just
           been reorganized with myisamchk, the values are very high (very
           near theoretical maximum).
       ·   Packed
           MariaDB tries to pack key values that have a common suffix. This
           can only be used for indexes on CHAR and VARCHAR columns. For
           long indexed strings that have similar leftmost parts, this can
           significantly reduce the space used. In the preceding example,
           the second key is 40 bytes long and a 97% reduction in space is
           achieved.
       ·   Max levels
           How deep the B-tree for this key is. Large tables with long key
           values get high values.
       ·   Records
           How many rows are in the table.
       ·   M.recordlength
           The average row length. This is the exact row length for tables
           with fixed-length rows, because all rows have the same length.
       ·   Packed
           MariaDB strips spaces from the end of strings. The Packed value
           indicates the percentage of savings achieved by doing this.
       ·   Recordspace used
           What percentage of the data file is used.
       ·   Empty space
           What percentage of the data file is unused.
       ·   Blocks/Record
           Average number of blocks per row (that is, how many links a
           fragmented row is composed of). This is always 1.0 for
           fixed-format tables. This value should stay as close to 1.0 as
           possible. If it gets too large, you can reorganize the table. See
           Section 6.6.4, “MyISAM Table Optimization”.
       ·   Recordblocks
           How many blocks (links) are used. For fixed-format tables, this
           is the same as the number of rows.
       ·   Deleteblocks
           How many blocks (links) are deleted.
       ·   Recorddata
           How many bytes in the data file are used.
       ·   Deleted data
           How many bytes in the data file are deleted (unused).
       ·   Lost space
           If a row is updated to a shorter length, some space is lost. This
           is the sum of all such losses, in bytes.
       ·   Linkdata
           When the dynamic table format is used, row fragments are linked
           with pointers (4 to 7 bytes each).  Linkdata is the sum of the
           amount of storage used by all such pointers.

MYISAMCHK MEMORY USAGE         top

       Memory allocation is important when you run myisamchk.  myisamchk
       uses no more memory than its memory-related variables are set to. If
       you are going to use myisamchk on very large tables, you should first
       decide how much memory you want it to use. The default is to use only
       about 3MB to perform repairs. By using larger values, you can get
       myisamchk to operate faster. For example, if you have more than 32MB
       RAM, you could use options such as these (in addition to any other
       options you might specify):
           shell> myisamchk --sort_buffer_size=16M \
                      --key_buffer_size=16M \
                      --read_buffer_size=1M \
                      --write_buffer_size=1M ...
       Using --sort_buffer_size=16M should probably be enough for most
       cases.
       Be aware that myisamchk uses temporary files in TMPDIR. If TMPDIR
       points to a memory file system, out of memory errors can easily
       occur. If this happens, run myisamchk with the --tmpdir=path option
       to specify a directory located on a file system that has more space.
       When performing repair operations, myisamchk also needs a lot of disk
       space:
       ·   Twice the size of the data file (the original file and a copy).
           This space is not needed if you do a repair with --quick; in this
           case, only the index file is re-created.  This space must be
           available on the same file system as the original data file, as
           the copy is created in the same directory as the original.
       ·   Space for the new index file that replaces the old one. The old
           index file is truncated at the start of the repair operation, so
           you usually ignore this space. This space must be available on
           the same file system as the original data file.
       ·   When using --recover or --sort-recover (but not when using
           --safe-recover), you need space on disk for sorting. This space
           is allocated in the temporary directory (specified by TMPDIR or
           --tmpdir=path). The following formula yields the amount of space
           required:
               (largest_key + row_pointer_length) × number_of_rows × 2
           You can check the length of the keys and the row_pointer_length
           with myisamchk -dv tbl_name (see the section called “MYISAMCHK
           TABLE INFORMATION”). The row_pointer_length and number_of_rows
           values are the Datafile pointer and Data records values in the
           table description. To determine the largest_key value, check the
           Key lines in the table description. The Len column indicates the
           number of bytes for each key part. For a multiple-column index,
           the key size is the sum of the Len values for all key parts.
       If you have a problem with disk space during repair, you can try
       --safe-recover instead of --recover.

COPYRIGHT         top

       Copyright 2007-2008 MySQL AB, 2008-2010 Sun Microsystems, Inc.,
       2010-2015 MariaDB Foundation
       This documentation is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
       modify it only under the terms of the GNU General Public License as
       published by the Free Software Foundation; version 2 of the License.
       This documentation is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
       but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
       MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU
       General Public License for more details.
       You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
       along with the program; if not, write to the Free Software
       Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA
       02110-1301 USA or see http://www.gnu.org/licenses/.

SEE ALSO         top

       For more information, please refer to the MariaDB Knowledge Base,
       available online at https://mariadb.com/kb/

AUTHOR         top

       MariaDB Foundation (http://www.mariadb.org/).

COLOPHON         top

       This page is part of the MariaDB (MariaDB database server) project.
       Information about the project can be found at ⟨http://mariadb.org/⟩.
       If you have a bug report for this manual page, see 
       ⟨https://mariadb.com/kb/en/mariadb/reporting-bugs/⟩.  This page was
       obtained from the project's upstream Git repository 
       ⟨https://github.com/MariaDB/server⟩ on 2017-07-05.  If you discover
       any rendering problems in this HTML version of the page, or you
       believe there is a better or more up-to-date source for the page, or
       you have corrections or improvements to the information in this
       COLOPHON (which is not part of the original manual page), send a mail
       to man-pages@man7.org
MariaDB 10.1                     14/12/2015                     MYISAMCHK(1)

Pages that refer to this page: aria_chk(1)myisamchk(1)myisampack(1)