The following list indicates some of the ways that the mysqld server uses memory. Where applicable, the name of the system variable relevant to the memory use is given:
All threads share the MyISAM
key buffer; its size is determined by the
key_buffer_size variable.
Other buffers used by the server are allocated as needed.
See Section 8.9.2, “Tuning Server Parameters”.
Each thread that is used to manage client connections uses some thread-specific space. The following list indicates these and which variables control their size:
A stack (variable
thread_stack)
A connection buffer (variable
net_buffer_length)
A result buffer (variable
net_buffer_length)
The connection buffer and result buffer each begin with a
size equal to
net_buffer_length bytes,
but are dynamically enlarged up to
max_allowed_packet bytes as
needed. The result buffer shrinks to
net_buffer_length bytes
after each SQL statement. While a statement is running, a
copy of the current statement string is also allocated.
All threads share the same base memory.
When a thread is no longer needed, the memory allocated to it is released and returned to the system unless the thread goes back into the thread cache. In that case, the memory remains allocated.
Only compressed MyISAM tables are memory
mapped. This is because the 32-bit memory space of 4GB is
not large enough for most big tables. When systems with a
64-bit address space become more common, we may add general
support for memory mapping.
Each request that performs a sequential scan of a table
allocates a read buffer (variable
read_buffer_size).
When reading rows in an arbitrary sequence (for example,
following a sort), a random-read
buffer (variable
read_rnd_buffer_size) may
be allocated to avoid disk seeks.
All joins are executed in a single pass, and most joins can
be done without even using a temporary table. Most temporary
tables are memory-based hash tables. Temporary tables with a
large row length (calculated as the sum of all column
lengths) or that contain BLOB
columns are stored on disk.
If an internal in-memory temporary table becomes too large,
MySQL handles this automatically by changing the table from
in-memory to on-disk format, to be handled by the
MyISAM storage engine. You can increase
the permissible temporary table size as described in
Section 8.8.5, “How MySQL Uses Internal Temporary Tables”.
Most requests that perform a sort allocate a sort buffer and zero to two temporary files depending on the result set size. See Section C.5.4.4, “Where MySQL Stores Temporary Files”.
Almost all parsing and calculating is done in thread-local and reusable memory pools. No memory overhead is needed for small items, so the normal slow memory allocation and freeing is avoided. Memory is allocated only for unexpectedly large strings.
For each MyISAM table that is opened, the
index file is opened once; the data file is opened once for
each concurrently running thread. For each concurrent
thread, a table structure, column structures for each
column, and a buffer of size 3 *
are allocated (where
NN is the maximum row length, not
counting BLOB columns). A
BLOB column requires five to
eight bytes plus the length of the
BLOB data. The
MyISAM storage engine maintains one extra
row buffer for internal use.
For each table having BLOB
columns, a buffer is enlarged dynamically to read in larger
BLOB values. If you scan a
table, a buffer as large as the largest
BLOB value is allocated.
Handler structures for all in-use tables are saved in a
cache and managed as a FIFO. The initial cache size is taken
from the value of the
table_cache system
variable. If a table has been used by two running threads at
the same time, the cache contains two entries for the table.
See Section 8.8.3, “How MySQL Opens and Closes Tables”.
A FLUSH
TABLES statement or mysqladmin
flush-tables command closes all tables that are
not in use at once and marks all in-use tables to be closed
when the currently executing thread finishes. This
effectively frees most in-use memory.
FLUSH
TABLES does not return until all tables have been
closed.
The server caches information in memory as a result of
GRANT and
CREATE USER statements. This
memory is not released by the corresponding
REVOKE and
DROP USER statements, so for
a server that executes many instances of the statements that
cause caching, there will be an increase in memory use. This
cached memory can be freed with
FLUSH
PRIVILEGES.
ps and other system status programs may
report that mysqld uses a lot of memory. This
may be caused by thread stacks on different memory addresses.
For example, the Solaris version of ps counts
the unused memory between stacks as used memory. To verify this,
check available swap with swap -s. We test
mysqld with several memory-leakage detectors
(both commercial and Open Source), so there should be no memory
leaks.