MySQL 9.4 Reference Manual Including MySQL NDB Cluster 9.4
NDB Cluster is a technology that enables clustering of in-memory databases in a shared-nothing system. The shared-nothing architecture enables the system to work with very inexpensive hardware, and with a minimum of specific requirements for hardware or software.
NDB Cluster is designed not to have any single point of failure. In a shared-nothing system, each component is expected to have its own memory and disk, and the use of shared storage mechanisms such as network shares, network file systems, and SANs is not recommended or supported.
    NDB Cluster integrates the standard MySQL server with an in-memory
    clustered storage engine called NDB
    (which stands for “Network
    DataBase”). In our
    documentation, the term NDB refers to
    the part of the setup that is specific to the storage engine,
    whereas “MySQL NDB Cluster” refers to the combination
    of one or more MySQL servers with the
    NDB storage engine.
  
An NDB Cluster consists of a set of computers, known as hosts, each running one or more processes. These processes, known as nodes, may include MySQL servers (for access to NDB data), data nodes (for storage of the data), one or more management servers, and possibly other specialized data access programs. The relationship of these components in an NDB Cluster is shown here:
    All these programs work together to form an NDB Cluster (see
    Section 25.5, “NDB Cluster Programs”. When data is stored by the
    NDB storage engine, the tables (and
    table data) are stored in the data nodes. Such tables are directly
    accessible from all other MySQL servers (SQL nodes) in the cluster.
    Thus, in a payroll application storing data in a cluster, if one
    application updates the salary of an employee, all other MySQL
    servers that query this data can see this change immediately.
  
    An NDB Cluster 9.4 SQL node uses the
    mysqld server daemon, which is the same as the
    mysqld supplied with MySQL Server
    9.4 distributions. You should keep in mind that
    an instance of mysqld, regardless of
    version, that is not connected to an NDB Cluster cannot use the
    NDB storage engine and cannot access
    any NDB Cluster data.
  
The data stored in the data nodes for NDB Cluster can be mirrored; the cluster can handle failures of individual data nodes with no other impact than that a small number of transactions are aborted due to losing the transaction state. Because transactional applications are expected to handle transaction failure, this should not be a source of problems.
Individual nodes can be stopped and restarted, and can then rejoin the system (cluster). Rolling restarts (in which all nodes are restarted in turn) are used in making configuration changes and software upgrades (see Section 25.6.5, “Performing a Rolling Restart of an NDB Cluster”). Rolling restarts are also used as part of the process of adding new data nodes online (see Section 25.6.7, “Adding NDB Cluster Data Nodes Online”). For more information about data nodes, how they are organized in an NDB Cluster, and how they handle and store NDB Cluster data, see Section 25.2.2, “NDB Cluster Nodes, Node Groups, Fragment Replicas, and Partitions”.
    Backing up and restoring NDB Cluster databases can be done using the
    NDB-native functionality found in the NDB Cluster
    management client and the ndb_restore program
    included in the NDB Cluster distribution. For more information, see
    Section 25.6.8, “Online Backup of NDB Cluster”, and
    Section 25.5.23, “ndb_restore — Restore an NDB Cluster Backup”. You can also
    use the standard MySQL functionality provided for this purpose in
    mysqldump and the MySQL server. See
    Section 6.5.4, “mysqldump — A Database Backup Program”, for more information.
  
NDB Cluster nodes can employ different transport mechanisms for inter-node communications; TCP/IP over standard 100 Mbps or faster Ethernet hardware is used in most real-world deployments.