OceanBase Database supports both MySQL and Oracle modes. To accommodate users with different usage habits, OceanBase Database provides different configuration options for data encoding and compression in each mode.
OceanBase Database supports the use of DDL statements to configure the encoding and compression of data tables.
Configure data compression and encoding in MySQL mode
When you create or modify a table in MySQL mode, you can set the row_format and compression parameters to specify the encoding format and compression algorithm.
The SQL syntax is as follows:
Specify the encoding format and compression algorithm when you create the table
CREATE TABLE table_name table_definition_list ROW_FORMAT [=] row_format COMPRESSION [=] 'compression';For more information about the
CREATE TABLEstatement, see CREATE TABLE.Modify the encoding format and compression algorithm when you modify the table
ALTER TABLE table_name [alter_table_action_list] [SET] ROW_FORMAT [=]row_format COMPRESSION [=] 'compression';For more information about the
ALTER TABLEstatement, see ALTER TABLE.
Valid values of the row_format parameter are as follows:
REDUNDANTandCOMPACT: Data is not encoded and is saved in the flat format.DYNAMIC: Data is encoded and saved in the encoding format. The default value isDYNAMIC.COMPRESSED: Data is encoded and saved in the encoding format.CONDENSED: Data is encoded and saved in the selective encoding format.The selective encoding format is a subset of the encoding format and is more query-friendly.
Valid values of the compression parameter are as follows:
Note
The zlib compression algorithm of different minor versions may generate different compression results for the same data. To avoid replica restore failures during an upgrade, the zlib_1.0 compression algorithm is no longer supported in OceanBase Database V4.3.0 and later.
none: Data is not compressed.lz4_1.0: Data is compressed by using the lz4_1.0 algorithm.snappy_1.0: Data is compressed by using the snappy_1.0 algorithm.zstd_1.0: Data is compressed by using the zstd_1.0 algorithm.zstd_1.3.8: Data is compressed by using the zstd_1.3.8 algorithm. By default, thezstd_1.3.8algorithm is used.lz4_1.9.1: Data is compressed by using the lz4_1.9.1 algorithm.
Here are some examples:
Specify the encoding format and compression algorithm when you create the table
Execute the following statement to set the encoding format to encoding and the compression algorithm to zstd_1.0 when you create a table:
obclient> CREATE TABLE test ( id INT NOT NULL, fname VARCHAR(30), lname VARCHAR(30), hired DATE NOT NULL DEFAULT '1970-01-01', separated DATE NOT NULL DEFAULT '9999-12-31', job_code INT NOT NULL, store_id INT NOT NULL ) ROW_FORMAT=CONDENSED COMPRESSION='zstd_1.0';Modify the encoding format and compression algorithm when you modify the table
Execute the following statement to change the encoding format to selective encoding and the compression algorithm to lz4_1.0:
obclient> ALTER TABLE test SET ROW_FORMAT = CONDENSED COMPRESSION = 'lz4_1.0';
Configure data compression and encoding in Oracle mode
When you create or modify a table in Oracle mode, you can specify the data encoding format and compression algorithm.
The SQL syntax is as follows:
Specify the encoding format and compression algorithm when you create the table
CREATE TABLE table_name table_definition_list compression;For more information about the
CREATE TABLEstatement, see CREATE TABLE.Modify the encoding format and compression algorithm when you modify the table
ALTER TABLE table_name [alter_table_action_list] compression;For more information about the
ALTER TABLEstatement, see ALTER TABLE.
Valid values of the compression parameter are as follows:
NOCOMPRESS: Data is not encoded or compressed, and is saved in the flat format.COMPRESS BASIC: Data is not encoded but is saved in the flat format and compressed by using the lz4_1.0 algorithm.COMPRESS FOR OLTP: Data is not encoded but is saved in the flat format and compressed by using the zstd_1.3.8 algorithm.COMPRESS FOR QUERY: Data is encoded, saved in the encoding format, and compressed by using the lz4_1.0 algorithm.COMPRESS FOR ARCHIVE: Data is encoded, saved in the encoding format, and compressed by using the zstd_1.3.8 algorithm. By default,COMPRESS FOR ARCHIVEis used.COMPRESS FOR ARCHIVE HIGH: Data is encoded, saved in the encoding format, and compressed by using the zstd_1.3.8 algorithm.COMPRESS FOR QUERY LOW: Data is encoded, saved in the selective encoding format, and compressed by using the lz4_1.0 algorithm.The selective encoding format is a subset of the encoding format and is more query-friendly.
Here are some examples:
Specify the encoding format and compression algorithm when you create the table
Execute the following statement to set the encoding format to encoding and the compression algorithm to lz4_1.0 when you create a table:
obclient> CREATE TABLE test ( id number NOT NULL, fname VARCHAR2(30), lname VARCHAR2(30), hired DATE NOT NULL DEFAULT sysdate, separated DATE, job_code INT NOT NULL, store_id INT NOT NULL ) COMPRESS FOR QUERY;Modify the encoding format and compression algorithm when you modify the table
Execute the following statement to change the table encoding format to encoding and the compression algorithm to zstd_1.3.8:
obclient> ALTER TABLE test COMPRESS FOR ARCHIVE;
Change the compression algorithm for SSTables
To change the compression algorithm for SSTables without causing a huge volume of I/O writes in major compactions, you need to launch a progressive compaction to rewrite all the data microblocks. The number of rounds of progressive compactions can be determined by specifying the progressive_merge_num parameter in the ALTER TABLE statement.
To do so, perform the following steps:
Log in to the database as a tenant administrator.
Execute the following statement to set the number of rounds of progressive compactions.
The
progressive_merge_numparameter specifies the number of rounds of progressive compactions on a table. The default value is0, which indicates incremental compaction. If you set the parameter to1, a full compaction is performed.To set two rounds of progressive compactions, execute the following statement:
obclient> ALTER TABLE t1 SET progressive_merge_num=2;After the parameter is set, data is progressively rewritten during major compactions each day.
Note
To complete data rewriting at the earliest opportunity, you can set the progressive_merge_num to 1, and launch a major compaction. For more information about how to manually initiate a major compaction, see Manually initiate a major compaction.
Change the compression algorithm.
For more information about how to change the compression algorithm in MySQL mode, see Configure data compression and encoding in MySQL mode in this topic.
For more information about how to change the compression algorithm in Oracle mode, see Configure data compression and encoding in Oracle mode in this topic.