title | summary | aliases | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
Key Features |
Learn about the key features of DM and appropriate parameter configurations. |
|
This document describes the data migration features provided by TiDB Data Migration (DM) and introduces appropriate parameter configurations.
For different DM versions, pay attention to the different match rules of schema or table names in the table routing, block & allow lists, and binlog event filter features:
- For DM v1.0.5 or later versions, all the above features support the wildcard match. For all versions of DM, note that there can be only one
*
in the wildcard expression, and*
must be placed at the end. - For DM versions earlier than v1.0.5, table routing and binlog event filter support the wildcard but do not support the
[...]
and[!...]
expressions. The block & allow lists only supports the regular expression.
It is recommended that you use the wildcard for matching in simple scenarios.
The table routing feature enables DM to migrate a certain table of the upstream MySQL or MariaDB instance to the specified table in the downstream.
Note:
- Configuring multiple different routing rules for a single table is not supported.
- The match rule of schema needs to be configured separately, which is used to migrate
CREATE/DROP SCHEMA xx
, as shown inrule-2
of the parameter configuration.
routes:
rule-1:
schema-pattern: "test_*"
table-pattern: "t_*"
target-schema: "test"
target-table: "t"
rule-2:
schema-pattern: "test_*"
target-schema: "test"
DM migrates the upstream MySQL or MariaDB instance table that matches the schema-pattern
/table-pattern
rule provided by Table selector to the downstream target-schema
/target-table
.
This section shows the usage examples in different scenarios.
Assuming in the scenario of sharded schemas and tables, you want to migrate the test_{1,2,3...}
.t_{1,2,3...}
tables in two upstream MySQL instances to the test
.t
table in the downstream TiDB instance.
To migrate the upstream instances to the downstream test
.t
, you must create the following routing rules:
rule-1
is used to migrate DML or DDL statements of the table that matchesschema-pattern: "test_*"
andtable-pattern: "t_*"
to the downstreamtest
.t
.rule-2
is used to migrate DDL statements of the schema that matchesschema-pattern: "test_*"
, such asCREATE/DROP SCHEMA xx
.
Note:
- If the downstream
schema: test
already exists and is not to be deleted, you can omitrule-2
.- If the downstream
schema: test
does not exist and onlyrule-1
is configured, then it reports theschema test doesn't exist
error during migration.
rule-1:
schema-pattern: "test_*"
table-pattern: "t_*"
target-schema: "test"
target-table: "t"
rule-2:
schema-pattern: "test_*"
target-schema: "test"
Assuming in the scenario of sharded schemas, you want to migrate the test_{1,2,3...}
.t_{1,2,3...}
tables in the two upstream MySQL instances to the test
.t_{1,2,3...}
tables in the downstream TiDB instance.
To migrate the upstream schemas to the downstream test
.t_[1,2,3]
, you only need to create one routing rule.
rule-1:
schema-pattern: "test_*"
target-schema: "test"
Assuming that the following two routing rules are configured and test_1_bak
.t_1_bak
matches both rule-1
and rule-2
, an error is reported because the table routing configuration violates the number limitation.
rule-1:
schema-pattern: "test_*"
table-pattern: "t_*"
target-schema: "test"
target-table: "t"
rule-2:
schema-pattern: "test_1_bak"
table-pattern: "t_1_bak"
target-schema: "test"
target-table: "t_bak"
The block and allow lists filtering rule of the upstream database instance tables is similar to MySQL replication-rules-db/tables, which can be used to filter or only migrate all operations of some databases or some tables.
block-allow-list: # Use black-white-list if the DM version is earlier than or equal to v2.0.0-beta.2.
rule-1:
do-dbs: ["test*"] # Starting with characters other than "~" indicates that it is a wildcard;
# v1.0.5 or later versions support the regular expression rules.
do-tables:
- db-name: "test[123]" # Matches test1, test2, and test3.
tbl-name: "t[1-5]" # Matches t1, t2, t3, t4, and t5.
- db-name: "test"
tbl-name: "t"
rule-2:
do-dbs: ["~^test.*"] # Starting with "~" indicates that it is a regular expression.
ignore-dbs: ["mysql"]
do-tables:
- db-name: "~^test.*"
tbl-name: "~^t.*"
- db-name: "test"
tbl-name: "t"
ignore-tables:
- db-name: "test"
tbl-name: "log"
do-dbs
: allow lists of the schemas to be migrated, similar toreplicate-do-db
in MySQLignore-dbs
: block lists of the schemas to be migrated, similar toreplicate-ignore-db
in MySQLdo-tables
: allow lists of the tables to be migrated, similar toreplicate-do-table
in MySQL. Bothdb-name
andtbl-name
must be specifiedignore-tables
: block lists of the tables to be migrated, similar toreplicate-ignore-table
in MySQL. Bothdb-name
andtbl-name
must be specified
If a value of the above parameters starts with the ~
character, the subsequent characters of this value are treated as a regular expression. You can use this parameter to match schema or table names.
The filtering rules corresponding to do-dbs
and ignore-dbs
are similar to the Evaluation of Database-Level Replication and Binary Logging Options in MySQL. The filtering rules corresponding to do-tables
and ignore-tables
are similar to the Evaluation of Table-Level Replication Options in MySQL.
Note:
In DM and in MySQL, the allow and block lists filtering rules are different in the following ways:
- In MySQL,
replicate-wild-do-table
andreplicate-wild-ignore-table
support wildcard characters. In DM, some parameter values directly supports regular expressions that start with the~
character.- DM currently only supports binlogs in the
ROW
format, and does not support those in theSTATEMENT
orMIXED
format. Therefore, the filtering rules in DM correspond to those in theROW
format in MySQL.- MySQL determines a DDL statement only by the database name explicitly specified in the
USE
section of the statement. DM determines a statement first based on the database name section in the DDL statement. If the DDL statement does not contain such a section, DM determines the statement by theUSE
section. Suppose that the SQL statement to be determined isUSE test_db_2; CREATE TABLE test_db_1.test_table (c1 INT PRIMARY KEY)
; thatreplicate-do-db=test_db_1
is configured in MySQL anddo-dbs: ["test_db_1"]
is configured in DM. Then this rule only applies to DM and not to MySQL.
The filtering process is as follows:
-
Filter at the schema level:
-
If
do-dbs
is not empty, judge whether a matched schema exists indo-dbs
.- If yes, continue to filter at the table level.
- If not, filter
test
.t
.
-
If
do-dbs
is empty andignore-dbs
is not empty, judge whether a matched schema exits inignore-dbs
.- If yes, filter
test
.t
. - If not, continue to filter at the table level.
- If yes, filter
-
If both
do-dbs
andignore-dbs
are empty, continue to filter at the table level.
-
-
Filter at the table level:
-
If
do-tables
is not empty, judge whether a matched table exists indo-tables
.- If yes, migrate
test
.t
. - If not, filter
test
.t
.
- If yes, migrate
-
If
ignore-tables
is not empty, judge whether a matched table exists inignore-tables
.- If yes, filter
test
.t
. - If not, migrate
test
.t
.
- If yes, filter
-
If both
do-tables
andignore-tables
are empty, migratetest
.t
.
-
Note:
To judge whether the schema
test
should be filtered, you only need to filter at the schema level.
Assume that the upstream MySQL instances include the following tables:
`logs`.`messages_2016`
`logs`.`messages_2017`
`logs`.`messages_2018`
`forum`.`users`
`forum`.`messages`
`forum_backup_2016`.`messages`
`forum_backup_2017`.`messages`
`forum_backup_2018`.`messages`
The configuration is as follows:
block-allow-list: # Use black-white-list if the DM version is earlier than or equal to v2.0.0-beta.2.
bw-rule:
do-dbs: ["forum_backup_2018", "forum"]
ignore-dbs: ["~^forum_backup_"]
do-tables:
- db-name: "logs"
tbl-name: "~_2018$"
- db-name: "~^forum.*"
tbl-name: "messages"
ignore-tables:
- db-name: "~.*"
tbl-name: "^messages.*"
After using the bw-rule
rule:
Table | Whether to filter | Why filter |
---|---|---|
logs .messages_2016 |
Yes | The schema logs fails to match any do-dbs . |
logs .messages_2017 |
Yes | The schema logs fails to match any do-dbs . |
logs .messages_2018 |
Yes | The schema logs fails to match any do-dbs . |
forum_backup_2016 .messages |
Yes | The schema forum_backup_2016 fails to match any do-dbs . |
forum_backup_2017 .messages |
Yes | The schema forum_backup_2017 fails to match any do-dbs . |
forum .users |
Yes | 1. The schema forum matches do-dbs and continues to filter at the table level.2. The schema and table fail to match any of do-tables and ignore-tables and do-tables is not empty. |
forum .messages |
No | 1. The schema forum matches do-dbs and continues to filter at the table level.2. The table messages is in the db-name: "~^forum.*",tbl-name: "messages" of do-tables . |
forum_backup_2018 .messages |
No | 1. The schema forum_backup_2018 matches do-dbs and continues to filter at the table level.2. The schema and table match the db-name: "~^forum.*",tbl-name: "messages" of do-tables . |
Binlog event filter is a more fine-grained filtering rule than the block and allow lists filtering rule. You can use statements like INSERT
or TRUNCATE TABLE
to specify the binlog events of schema/table
that you need to migrate or filter out.
Note:
- If the same table matches multiple rules, these rules are applied in order and the block list has priority over the allow list. This means if both the
Ignore
andDo
rules are applied to a table, theIgnore
rule takes effect.- Starting from DM v2.0.2, you can configure binlog event filters in the source configuration file. For details, see Upstream Database Configuration File.
filters:
rule-1:
schema-pattern: "test_*"
table-pattern: "t_*"
events: ["truncate table", "drop table"]
sql-pattern: ["^DROP\\s+PROCEDURE", "^CREATE\\s+PROCEDURE"]
action: Ignore
-
schema-pattern
/table-pattern
: the binlog events or DDL SQL statements of upstream MySQL or MariaDB instance tables that matchschema-pattern
/table-pattern
are filtered by the rules below. -
events
: the binlog event array. You can only select one or moreEvent
s from the following table:Events Type Description all
Includes all the events below all dml
Includes all DML events below all ddl
Includes all DDL events below none
Includes none of the events below none ddl
Includes none of the DDL events below none dml
Includes none of the DML events below insert
DML The INSERT
DML eventupdate
DML The UPDATE
DML eventdelete
DML The DELETE
DML eventcreate database
DDL The CREATE DATABASE
DDL eventdrop database
DDL The DROP DATABASE
DDL eventcreate table
DDL The CREATE TABLE
DDL eventcreate index
DDL The CREATE INDEX
DDL eventdrop table
DDL The DROP TABLE
DDL eventtruncate table
DDL The TRUNCATE TABLE
DDL eventrename table
DDL The RENAME TABLE
DDL eventdrop index
DDL The DROP INDEX
DDL eventalter table
DDL The ALTER TABLE
DDL event -
sql-pattern
: it is used to filter specified DDL SQL statements. The matching rule supports using a regular expression. For example,"^DROP\\s+PROCEDURE"
. -
action
: the string (Do
/Ignore
). Based on the following rules, it judges whether to filter. If either of the two rules is satisfied, the binlog is filtered; otherwise, the binlog is not filtered.Do
: the allow list. The binlog is filtered in either of the following two conditions:- The type of the event is not in the
event
list of the rule. - The SQL statement of the event cannot be matched by
sql-pattern
of the rule.
- The type of the event is not in the
Ignore
: the block list. The binlog is filtered in either of the following two conditions:- The type of the event is in the
event
list of the rule. - The SQL statement of the event can be matched by
sql-pattern
of the rule.
- The type of the event is in the
This section shows the usage examples in the scenario of sharding (sharded schemas and tables).
To filter out all deletion operations, configure the following two filtering rules:
filter-table-rule
filters out thetruncate table
,drop table
anddelete statement
operations of all tables that match thetest_*
.t_*
pattern.filter-schema-rule
filters out thedrop database
operation of all schemas that match thetest_*
pattern.
filters:
filter-table-rule:
schema-pattern: "test_*"
table-pattern: "t_*"
events: ["truncate table", "drop table", "delete"]
action: Ignore
filter-schema-rule:
schema-pattern: "test_*"
events: ["drop database"]
action: Ignore
To only migrate sharding DML statements, configure the following two filtering rules:
do-table-rule
only migrates thecreate table
,insert
,update
anddelete
statements of all tables that match thetest_*
.t_*
pattern.do-schema-rule
only migrates thecreate database
statement of all schemas that match thetest_*
pattern.
Note:
The reason why the
create database/table
statement is migrated is that you can migrate DML statements only after the schema and table are created.
filters:
do-table-rule:
schema-pattern: "test_*"
table-pattern: "t_*"
events: ["create table", "all dml"]
action: Do
do-schema-rule:
schema-pattern: "test_*"
events: ["create database"]
action: Do
To filter out the PROCEDURE
statements that TiDB does not support, configure the following filter-procedure-rule
:
filters:
filter-procedure-rule:
schema-pattern: "test_*"
table-pattern: "t_*"
sql-pattern: ["^DROP\\s+PROCEDURE", "^CREATE\\s+PROCEDURE"]
action: Ignore
filter-procedure-rule
filters out the ^CREATE\\s+PROCEDURE
and ^DROP\\s+PROCEDURE
statements of all tables that match the test_*
.t_*
pattern.
For the SQL statements that the TiDB parser does not support, DM cannot parse them and get the schema
/table
information. So you must use the global filtering rule: schema-pattern: "*"
.
Note:
To avoid filtering out data that need to be migrated, you must configure the global filtering rule as strictly as possible.
To filter out the PARTITION
statements that the TiDB parser (of some version) does not support, configure the following filtering rule:
filters:
filter-partition-rule:
schema-pattern: "*"
sql-pattern: ["ALTER\\s+TABLE[\\s\\S]*ADD\\s+PARTITION", "ALTER\\s+TABLE[\\s\\S]*DROP\\s+PARTITION"]
action: Ignore
In the MySQL ecosystem, tools such as gh-ost and pt-osc are widely used. DM provides supports for these tools to avoid migrating unnecessary intermediate data.
- DM only supports gh-ost and pt-osc.
- When
online-ddl
is enabled, the checkpoint corresponding to incremental replication should not be in the process of online DDL execution. For example, if an upstream online DDL operation starts atposition-A
and ends atposition-B
of the binlog, the starting point of incremental replication should be earlier thanposition-A
or later thanposition-B
; otherwise, an error occurs. For details, refer to FAQ.
In v2.0.5 and later versions, you need to use the online-ddl
configuration item in the task
configuration file.
- If the upstream MySQL/MariaDB (at the same time) uses the gh-ost or pt-osc tool, set
online-ddl
totrue
in the task configuration file:
online-ddl: true
Note:
Since v2.0.5,
online-ddl-scheme
has been deprecated, so you need to useonline-ddl
instead ofonline-ddl-scheme
. That means that settingonline-ddl: true
overwritesonline-ddl-scheme
, and settingonline-ddl-scheme: "pt"
oronline-ddl-scheme: "gh-ost"
is converted toonline-ddl: true
.
Before v2.0.5 (not including v2.0.5), you need to use the online-ddl-scheme
configuration item in the task
configuration file.
- If the upstream MySQL/MariaDB uses the gh-ost tool, set it in the task configuration file:
online-ddl-scheme: "gh-ost"
- If the upstream MySQL/MariaDB uses the pt tool, set it in the task configuration file:
online-ddl-scheme: "pt"
DM supports merging the DML and DDL data in the upstream MySQL/MariaDB sharded tables and migrating the merged data to the downstream TiDB tables.
Currently, the shard merge feature is supported only in limited scenarios. For details, refer to Sharding DDL usage Restrictions in the pessimistic mode and Sharding DDL usage Restrictions in the optimistic mode.
Set shard-mode
to pessimistic
in the task configuration file:
shard-mode: "pessimistic" # The shard merge mode. Optional modes are ""/"pessimistic"/"optimistic". The "" mode is used by default which means sharding DDL merge is disabled. If the task is a shard merge task, set it to the "pessimistic" mode. After getting a deep understanding of the principles and restrictions of the "optimistic" mode, you can set it to the "optimistic" mode.
In some abnormal scenarios, you need to handle sharding DDL Locks manually.