MySQL 9.4 Reference Manual Including MySQL NDB Cluster 9.4
In this section, we discuss manual configuration of an installed NDB Cluster by creating and editing configuration files.
For our four-node, four-host NDB Cluster (see Cluster nodes and host computers), it is necessary to write four configuration files, one per node host.
          Each data node or SQL node requires a
          my.cnf file that provides two pieces of
          information: a connection
          string that tells the node where to find the
          management node, and a line telling the MySQL server on this
          host (the machine hosting the data node) to enable the
          NDBCLUSTER storage engine.
        
For more information on connection strings, see Section 25.4.3.3, “NDB Cluster Connection Strings”.
          The management node needs a config.ini
          file telling it how many fragment replicas to maintain, how
          much memory to allocate for data and indexes on each data
          node, where to find the data nodes, where to save data to disk
          on each data node, and where to find any SQL nodes.
        
Configuring the data nodes and SQL nodes. 
        The my.cnf file needed for the data nodes
        is fairly simple. The configuration file should be located in
        the /etc directory and can be edited using
        any text editor. (Create the file if it does not exist.) For
        example:
      
$> vi /etc/my.cnf
We show vi being used here to create the file, but any text editor should work just as well.
      For each data node and SQL node in our example setup,
      my.cnf should look like this:
    
[mysqld] # Options for mysqld process: ndbcluster # run NDB storage engine [mysql_cluster] # Options for NDB Cluster processes: ndb-connectstring=198.51.100.10 # location of management server
After entering the preceding information, save this file and exit the text editor. Do this for the machines hosting data node “A”, data node “B”, and the SQL node.
        Once you have started a mysqld process with
        the ndbcluster and
        ndb-connectstring parameters in the
        [mysqld] and
        [mysql_cluster] sections of the
        my.cnf file as shown previously, you cannot
        execute any CREATE TABLE or
        ALTER TABLE statements without
        having actually started the cluster. Otherwise, these statements
        fail with an error. This is by design.
      
Configuring the management node. 
        The first step in configuring the management node is to create
        the directory in which the configuration file can be found and
        then to create the file itself. For example (running as
        root):
      
$>mkdir /var/lib/mysql-cluster$>cd /var/lib/mysql-cluster$>vi config.ini
      For our representative setup, the config.ini
      file should read as follows:
    
[ndbd default]
# Options affecting ndbd processes on all data nodes:
NoOfReplicas=2    # Number of fragment replicas
DataMemory=98M    # How much memory to allocate for data storage
[ndb_mgmd]
# Management process options:
HostName=198.51.100.10          # Hostname or IP address of management node
DataDir=/var/lib/mysql-cluster  # Directory for management node log files
[ndbd]
# Options for data node "A":
                                # (one [ndbd] section per data node)
HostName=198.51.100.30          # Hostname or IP address
NodeId=2                        # Node ID for this data node
DataDir=/usr/local/mysql/data   # Directory for this data node's data files
[ndbd]
# Options for data node "B":
HostName=198.51.100.40          # Hostname or IP address
NodeId=3                        # Node ID for this data node
DataDir=/usr/local/mysql/data   # Directory for this data node's data files
[mysqld]
# SQL node options:
HostName=198.51.100.20          # Hostname or IP address
                                # (additional mysqld connections can be
                                # specified for this node for various
                                # purposes such as running ndb_restore)
        The world database can be downloaded from
        https://dev.mysql.com/doc/index-other.html.
      
After all the configuration files have been created and these minimal options have been specified, you are ready to proceed with starting the cluster and verifying that all processes are running. We discuss how this is done in Section 25.3.4, “Initial Startup of NDB Cluster”.
For more detailed information about the available NDB Cluster configuration parameters and their uses, see Section 25.4.3, “NDB Cluster Configuration Files”, and Section 25.4, “Configuration of NDB Cluster”. For configuration of NDB Cluster as relates to making backups, see Section 25.6.8.3, “Configuration for NDB Cluster Backups”.
The default port for Cluster management nodes is 1186. For data nodes, the cluster can automatically allocate ports from those that are already free.