mariadb-check
mariadb-check
mariadb-check
is a maintenance tool that allows you to check, repair, analyze and optimize multiple tables from the command line.
Prior to MariaDB 10.5, the client was called mysqlcheck
. It can still be accessed under this name, via a symlink in Linux, or an alternate binary in Windows.
It is essentially a commandline interface to the CHECK TABLE, REPAIR TABLE, ANALYZE TABLE and OPTIMIZE TABLE commands, and so, unlike myisamchk and aria_chk, requires the server to be running.
This tool does not work with partitioned tables.
Using mariadb-check
./client/mariadb-check [OPTIONS] database [tables]
OR
./client/mariadb-check [OPTIONS] --databases DB1 [DB2 DB3...]
OR
./client/mariadb-check [OPTIONS] --all-databases
mariadb-check
can be used to CHECK (-c, -m, -C), REPAIR (-r), ANALYZE (-a),
or OPTIMIZE (-o) tables. Some of the options (like -e or -q) can be
used at the same time. Not all options are supported by all storage engines.
The -c, -r, -a and -o options are exclusive to each other.
The option --check
will be used by default, if no other options were specified.
You can change the default behavior by making a symbolic link to the binary, or
copying it somewhere with another name, the alternatives are:
mysqlrepair
The default option will be -r (--repair)
mysqlanalyze
The default option will be -a (--analyze)
mysqloptimize
The default option will be -o (--optimize)
Options
mariadb-check
supports the following options:
-A, --all-databases
Check all the databases. This is the same as --databases with all databases selected.
-1, --all-in-1
Instead of issuing one query for each table, use one query per database, naming all tables in the database in a comma-separated list.
-a, --analyze
Analyze given tables.
--auto-repair
If a checked table is corrupted, automatically fix it. Repairing will be done after all tables have been checked.
--character-sets-dir=name
Directory where character set files are installed.
-c, --check
Check table for errors.
-C, --check-only-changed
Check only tables that have changed since last check or haven't been closed properly.
-g, --check-upgrade
Check tables for version-dependent changes. May be used with --auto-repair to correct tables requiring version-dependent updates. Automatically enables the --fix-db-names and --fix-table-names options. Used when upgrading
--compress
Compress all information sent between the client and server if both support compression.
-B, --databases
Check several databases. Note that normally mariadb-check treats the first argument as a database name, and following arguments as table names. With this option, no tables are given, and all name arguments are regarded as database names.
## , --debug[=name]
Output debug log. Often this is 'd:t:o,filename'.
--debug-check
Check memory and open file usage at exit.
--debug-info
Print some debug info at exit.
--default-auth=plugin
Default authentication client-side plugin to use.
--default-character-set=name
Set the default character set.
-e, --extended
If you are using this option with --check, it will ensure that the table is 100 percent consistent, but will take a long time. If you are using this option with --repair, it will force using the old, slow, repair with keycache method, instead of the much faster repair by sorting.
-F, --fast
Check only tables that haven't been closed properly.
--fix-db-names
Convert database names to the format used since MySQL 5.1. Only database names that contain special characters are affected. Used when upgrading from an old MySQL version.
--fix-table-names
Convert table names (including views) to the format used since MySQL 5.1. Only table names that contain special characters are affected. Used when upgrading from an old MySQL version.
--flush
Flush each table after check. This is useful if you don't want to have the checked tables take up space in the caches after the check.
-f, --force
Continue even if we get an SQL error.
-?, --help
Display this help message and exit.
-h name, --host=name
Connect to the given host.
-m, --medium-check
Faster than extended-check, but only finds 99.99 percent of all errors. Should be good enough for most cases.
-o, --optimize
Optimize tables.
-p, --password[=name]
Password to use when connecting to the server. If you use the short option form (-p), you cannot have a space between the option and the password. If you omit the password value following the --password or -p option on the command line, mariadb-check prompts for one. Specifying a password on the command line should be considered insecure. You can use an option file to avoid giving the password on the command line.
-Z, --persistent
When using ANALYZE TABLE (--analyze), uses the PERSISTENT FOR ALL option, which forces Engine-independent Statistics for this table to be updated. Added in MariaDB 10.1.10
-W, --pipe
On Windows, connect to the server via a named pipe. This option applies only if the server supports named-pipe connections.
--plugin-dir
Directory for client-side plugins.
-P num, --port=num
Port number to use for connection or 0 for default to, in order of preference, my.cnf, $MYSQL_TCP_PORT, /etc/services, built-in default (3306).
--process-tables
Perform the requested operation (check, repair, analyze, optimize) on tables. Enabled by default. Use --skip-process-tables to disable.
--process-views[=val]
Perform the requested operation (only CHECK VIEW or REPAIR VIEW). Possible values are NO, YES (correct the checksum, if necessary, add the mariadb-version field), UPGRADE_FROM_MYSQL (same as YES and toggle the algorithm MERGE<->TEMPTABLE.
--protocol=name
The connection protocol (tcp, socket, pipe, memory) to use for connecting to the server. Useful when other connection parameters would cause a protocol to be used other than the one you want.
-q, --quick
If you are using this option with CHECK TABLE, it prevents the check from scanning the rows to check for wrong links. This is the fastest check. If you are using this option with REPAIR TABLE, it will try to repair only the index tree. This is the fastest repair method for a table.
-r, --repair
Can fix almost anything except unique keys that aren't unique.
--shared-memory-base-name
Shared-memory name to use for Windows connections using shared memory to a local server (started with the --shared-memory option). Case-sensitive.
-s, --silent
Print only error messages.
--skip-database
Don't process the database (case-sensitive) specified as argument.
-S name, --socket=name
For connections to localhost, the Unix socket file to use, or, on Windows, the name of the named pipe to use.
--ssl
Enables TLS. TLS is also enabled even without setting this option when certain other TLS options are set. Starting with MariaDB 10.2, the --ssl option will not enable verifying the server certificate by default. In order to verify the server certificate, the user must specify the --ssl-verify-server-cert option.
--ssl-ca=name
Defines a path to a PEM file that should contain one or more X509 certificates for trusted Certificate Authorities (CAs) to use for TLS. This option requires that you use the absolute path, not a relative path. See Secure Connections Overview: Certificate Authorities (CAs) for more information. This option implies the --ssl option.
--ssl-capath=name
Defines a path to a directory that contains one or more PEM files that should each contain one X509 certificate for a trusted Certificate Authority (CA) to use for TLS. This option requires that you use the absolute path, not a relative path. The directory specified by this option needs to be run through the openssl rehash command. See Secure Connections Overview: Certificate Authorities (CAs) for more information. This option is only supported if the client was built with OpenSSL or yaSSL. If the client was built with GnuTLS or Schannel, then this option is not supported. See TLS and Cryptography Libraries Used by MariaDB for more information about which libraries are used on which platforms. This option implies the --ssl option.
--ssl-cert=name
Defines a path to the X509 certificate file to use for TLS. This option requires that you use the absolute path, not a relative path. This option implies the --ssl option.
--ssl-cipher=name
List of permitted ciphers or cipher suites to use for TLS. This option implies the --ssl option.
--ssl-crl=name
Defines a path to a PEM file that should contain one or more revoked X509 certificates to use for TLS. This option requires that you use the absolute path, not a relative path. See Secure Connections Overview: Certificate Revocation Lists (CRLs) for more information. This option is only supported if the client was built with OpenSSL or Schannel. If the client was built with yaSSL or GnuTLS, then this option is not supported. See TLS and Cryptography Libraries Used by MariaDB for more information about which libraries are used on which platforms.
--ssl-crlpath=name
Defines a path to a directory that contains one or more PEM files that should each contain one revoked X509 certificate to use for TLS. This option requires that you use the absolute path, not a relative path. The directory specified by this option needs to be run through the openssl rehash command. See Secure Connections Overview: Certificate Revocation Lists (CRLs) for more information. This option is only supported if the client was built with OpenSSL. If the client was built with yaSSL, GnuTLS, or Schannel, then this option is not supported. See TLS and Cryptography Libraries Used by MariaDB for more information about which libraries are used on which platforms.
--ssl-key=name
Defines a path to a private key file to use for TLS. This option requires that you use the absolute path, not a relative path. This option implies the --ssl option.
--ssl-verify-server-cert
Enables server certificate verification. This option is disabled by default.
--tables
Overrides the --databases or -B option such that all name arguments following the option are regarded as table names.
--use-frm
For repair operations on MyISAM tables, get table structure from .frm file, so the table can be repaired even if the .MYI header is corrupted.
-u, --user=name
User for login if not current user.
-v, --verbose
Print info about the various stages. You can give this option several times to get even more information. See mariadb-check and verbose, below.
-V, --version
Output version information and exit.
--write-binlog
Write ANALYZE, OPTIMIZE and REPAIR TABLE commands to the binary log. Enabled by default; use --skip-write-binlog when commands should not be sent to replication slaves.
Option Files
In addition to reading options from the command-line, mariadb-check
can also read options from option files. If an unknown option is provided to mariadb-check
in an option file, then it is ignored.
The following options relate to how MariaDB command-line tools handles option files. They must be given as the first argument on the command-line:
--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.
--defaults-group-suffix=#
In addition to the default option groups, also read option groups with this suffix.
mariadb-check
is linked with MariaDB Connector/C. However, MariaDB Connector/C does not yet handle the parsing of option files for this client. That is still performed by the server option file parsing code. See MDEV-19035 for more information.
Option Groups
mariadb-check
reads options from the following option groups from option files:
[mysqlcheck]
Options read by mysqlcheck, which includes both MariaDB Server and MySQL Server.
[mariadb-check]
Options read by mariadb-check. Available starting with MariaDB 10.4.6.
[client]
Options read by all MariaDB and MySQL client programs, which includes both MariaDB and MySQL clients. For example, mysqldump.
[client-server]
Options read by all MariaDB client programs and the MariaDB Server. This is useful for options like socket and port, which is common between the server and the clients.
[client-mariadb]
Options read by all MariaDB client programs.
Notes
Default Values
To see the default values for the options and also to see the arguments you get from configuration files you can do:
./client/mariadb-check --print-defaults
./client/mariadb-check --help
mariadb-check and auto-repair
When running mariadb-check
with --auto-repair
(as done bymariadb-upgrade), mariadb-check
will first
check all tables and then in a separate phase repair those that failed the
check.
mariadb-check and all-databases
mariadb-check --all-databases
will ignore the internal log tables general_log and slow_log as these can't be checked, repaired or optimized.
mariadb-check and verbose
Using one --verbose
option will give you more information about what mariadb-check is doing.
Using two --verbose
options will also give you connection information.
If you use three --verbose
options you will also get, on stdout, all ALTER, RENAME, and CHECK commands that mariadb-check executes.
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