Schema Management

Using Vitess requires you to work with two different types of schemas:

  1. The MySQL database schema. This is the schema of the individual MySQL instances.
  2. The VSchema, which describes all the keyspaces and how they’re sharded.

The workflow for the VSchema is as follows:

  1. Apply the VSchema for each keyspace using the ApplyVschema command. This saves the VSchemas in the global topology service.
  2. Execute RebuildVSchemaGraph for each cell (or all cells). This command propagates a denormalized version of the combined VSchema to all the specified cells. The main purpose for this propagation is to minimize the dependency of each cell from the global topology. The ability to push a change to only specific cells allows you to canary the change to make sure that it’s good before deploying it everywhere.

This document describes the vtctl commands that you can use to review or update your schema in Vitess.

Note that this functionality is not recommended for long-running schema changes. It is recommended to use a tool such as pt-online-schema-change or gh-ost instead.

Reviewing your schema

This section describes the following vtctl commands, which let you look at the schema and validate its consistency across tablets or shards:

GetSchema

The GetSchema command displays the full schema for a tablet or a subset of the tablet’s tables. When you call GetSchema, you specify the tablet alias that uniquely identifies the tablet. The <tablet alias> argument value has the format <cell name>-<uid>.

Note: You can use the vtctl ListAllTablets command to retrieve a list of tablets in a cell and their unique IDs.

The following example retrieves the schema for the tablet with the unique ID test-000000100:

  1. GetSchema test-000000100

ValidateSchemaShard

The ValidateSchemaShard command confirms that for a given keyspace, all of the replica tablets in a specified shard have the same schema as the primary tablet in that shard. When you call ValidateSchemaShard, you specify both the keyspace and the shard that you are validating.

The following command confirms that the primary and replica tablets in shard 0 all have the same schema for the user keyspace:

  1. ValidateSchemaShard user/0

ValidateSchemaKeyspace

The ValidateSchemaKeyspace command confirms that all of the tablets in a given keyspace have the the same schema as the primary tablet on shard 0 in that keyspace. Thus, whereas the ValidateSchemaShard command confirms the consistency of the schema on tablets within a shard for a given keyspace, ValidateSchemaKeyspace confirms the consistency across all tablets in all shards for that keyspace.

The following command confirms that all tablets in all shards have the same schema as the primary tablet in shard 0 for the user keyspace:

  1. ValidateSchemaKeyspace user

GetVSchema

The GetVSchema command displays the global VSchema for the specified keyspace.

GetSrvVSchema

The GetSrvVSchema command displays the combined VSchema for a given cell.

Changing your schema

This section describes the following commands:

ApplySchema

Vitess offers managed schema migration, and notably supports online schema migrations (aka Online DDL), transparently to the user. Vitess Online DDL offers:

The ApplySchema command applies a schema change to the specified keyspace on all shards. The command format is: ApplySchema -- {--sql=<sql> || --sql_file=<filename>} <keyspace>

Further reading:

Permitted schema changes

The ApplySchema command supports these commands:

  • CREATE TABLE, ALTER TABLE, DROP TABLE, CREATE VIEW, ALTER VIEW, DROP VIEW in Online DDL
  • In addition, CREATE INDEX, DROP INDEX, RENAME TABLE, in non Online DDL

ApplySchema does not support creation or modifications of stored routines, including functions, procedures, triggers, and events.

ApplyVSchema

The ApplyVSchema command applies the specified VSchema to the keyspace. The VSchema can be specified as a string or in a file.

RebuildVSchemaGraph

The RebuildVSchemaGraph command propagates the global VSchema to a specific cell or the list of specified cells.