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Server parameters in Azure Database for MySQL

APPLIES TO: Azure Database for MySQL - Single Server

Important

Azure Database for MySQL single server is on the retirement path. We strongly recommend that you upgrade to Azure Database for MySQL flexible server. For more information about migrating to Azure Database for MySQL flexible server, see What's happening to Azure Database for MySQL Single Server?

This article provides considerations and guidelines for configuring server parameters in Azure Database for MySQL.

What are server parameters?

The MySQL engine provides many different server variables and parameters that you use to configure and tune engine behavior. Some parameters can be set dynamically during runtime, while others are static, and require a server restart in order to apply.

Azure Database for MySQL exposes the ability to change the value of various MySQL server parameters by using the Azure portal, the Azure CLI, and PowerShell to match your workload's needs.

Configurable server parameters

The list of supported server parameters is constantly growing. In the Azure portal, use the server parameters tab to view the full list and configure server parameters values.

Refer to the following sections to learn more about the limits of several commonly updated server parameters. The limits are determined by the pricing tier and vCores of the server.

Thread pools

MySQL traditionally assigns a thread for every client connection. As the number of concurrent users grows, there's a corresponding drop in performance. Many active threads can affect the performance significantly, due to increased context switching, thread contention, and bad locality for CPU caches.

Thread pools, a server-side feature and distinct from connection pooling, maximize performance by introducing a dynamic pool of worker threads. You use this feature to limit the number of active threads running on the server and minimize thread churn. This helps ensure that a burst of connections doesn't cause the server to run out of resources or memory. Thread pools are most efficient for short queries and CPU intensive workloads, such as OLTP workloads.

For more information, see Introducing thread pools in Azure Database for MySQL.

Note

Thread pools aren't supported for MySQL 5.6.

Configure the thread pool

To enable a thread pool, update the thread_handling server parameter to pool-of-threads. By default, this parameter is set to one-thread-per-connection, which means MySQL creates a new thread for each new connection. This is a static parameter, and requires a server restart to apply.

You can also configure the maximum and minimum number of threads in the pool by setting the following server parameters:

  • thread_pool_max_threads: This value limits the number of threads in the pool.
  • thread_pool_min_threads: This value sets the number of threads that are reserved, even after connections are closed.

To improve performance issues of short queries on the thread pool, you can enable batch execution. Instead of returning back to the thread pool immediately after running a query, threads will keep active for a short time to wait for the next query through this connection. The thread then runs the query rapidly and, when this is complete, the thread waits for the next one. This process continues until the overall time spent exceeds a threshold.

You determine the behavior of batch execution by using the following server parameters:

  • thread_pool_batch_wait_timeout: This value specifies the time a thread waits for another query to process.
  • thread_pool_batch_max_time: This value determines the maximum time a thread will repeat the cycle of query execution and waiting for the next query.

Important

Don't turn on the thread pool in production until you've tested it.

log_bin_trust_function_creators

In Azure Database for MySQL, binary logs are always enabled (the log_bin parameter is set to ON). If you want to use triggers, you get an error similar to the following: You do not have the SUPER privilege and binary logging is enabled (you might want to use the less safe log_bin_trust_function_creators variable).

The binary logging format is always ROW, and all connections to the server always use row-based binary logging. Row-based binary logging helps maintain security, and binary logging can't break, so you can safely set log_bin_trust_function_creators to TRUE.

innodb_buffer_pool_size

Review the MySQL documentation to learn more about this parameter.

Servers on general purpose storage v1 (supporting up to 4 TB)

Pricing tier vCore(s) Default value (bytes) Min value (bytes) Max value (bytes)
Basic 1 872415232 134217728 872415232
Basic 2 2684354560 134217728 2684354560
General Purpose 2 3758096384 134217728 3758096384
General Purpose 4 8053063680 134217728 8053063680
General Purpose 8 16106127360 134217728 16106127360
General Purpose 16 32749125632 134217728 32749125632
General Purpose 32 66035122176 134217728 66035122176
General Purpose 64 132070244352 134217728 132070244352
Memory Optimized 2 7516192768 134217728 7516192768
Memory Optimized 4 16106127360 134217728 16106127360
Memory Optimized 8 32212254720 134217728 32212254720
Memory Optimized 16 65498251264 134217728 65498251264
Memory Optimized 32 132070244352 134217728 132070244352

Servers on general purpose storage v2 (supporting up to 16 TB)

Pricing tier vCore(s) Default value (bytes) Min value (bytes) Max value (bytes)
Basic 1 872415232 134217728 872415232
Basic 2 2684354560 134217728 2684354560
General Purpose 2 7516192768 134217728 7516192768
General Purpose 4 16106127360 134217728 16106127360
General Purpose 8 32212254720 134217728 32212254720
General Purpose 16 65498251264 134217728 65498251264
General Purpose 32 132070244352 134217728 132070244352
General Purpose 64 264140488704 134217728 264140488704
Memory Optimized 2 15032385536 134217728 15032385536
Memory Optimized 4 32212254720 134217728 32212254720
Memory Optimized 8 64424509440 134217728 64424509440
Memory Optimized 16 130996502528 134217728 130996502528
Memory Optimized 32 264140488704 134217728 264140488704

innodb_file_per_table

MySQL stores the InnoDB table in different tablespaces, based on the configuration you provide during the table creation. The system tablespace is the storage area for the InnoDB data dictionary. A file-per-table tablespace contains data and indexes for a single InnoDB table, and is stored in the file system in its own data file.

You control this behavior by using the innodb_file_per_table server parameter. Setting innodb_file_per_table to OFF causes InnoDB to create tables in the system tablespace. Otherwise, InnoDB creates tables in file-per-table tablespaces.

Note

You can only update innodb_file_per_table in the general purpose and memory optimized pricing tiers on general purpose storage v2 and general purpose storage v1.

Azure Database for MySQL supports 4 TB (at the largest) in a single data file on general purpose storage v2. If your database size is larger than 4 TB, you should create the table in the innodb_file_per_table tablespace. If you have a single table size that is larger than 4 TB, you should use the partition table.

join_buffer_size

Review the MySQL documentation to learn more about this parameter.

Pricing tier vCore(s) Default value (bytes) Min value (bytes) Max value (bytes)
Basic 1 Not configurable in Basic tier N/A N/A
Basic 2 Not configurable in Basic tier N/A N/A
General Purpose 2 262144 128 268435455
General Purpose 4 262144 128 536870912
General Purpose 8 262144 128 1073741824
General Purpose 16 262144 128 2147483648
General Purpose 32 262144 128 4294967295
General Purpose 64 262144 128 4294967295
Memory Optimized 2 262144 128 536870912
Memory Optimized 4 262144 128 1073741824
Memory Optimized 8 262144 128 2147483648
Memory Optimized 16 262144 128 4294967295
Memory Optimized 32 262144 128 4294967295

max_connections

Pricing tier vCore(s) Default value Min value Max value
Basic 1 50 10 50
Basic 2 100 10 100
General Purpose 2 300 10 600
General Purpose 4 625 10 1250
General Purpose 8 1250 10 2500
General Purpose 16 2500 10 5000
General Purpose 32 5000 10 10000
General Purpose 64 10000 10 20000
Memory Optimized 2 625 10 1250
Memory Optimized 4 1250 10 2500
Memory Optimized 8 2500 10 5000
Memory Optimized 16 5000 10 10000
Memory Optimized 32 10000 10 20000

When the number of connections exceeds the limit, you might receive an error.

Tip

To manage connections efficiently, it's a good idea to use a connection pooler, like ProxySQL. To learn about setting up ProxySQL, see the blog post Load balance read replicas using ProxySQL in Azure Database for MySQL. Note that ProxySQL is an open source community tool. It's supported by Microsoft on a best-effort basis.

max_heap_table_size

Review the MySQL documentation to learn more about this parameter.

Pricing tier vCore(s) Default value (bytes) Min value (bytes) Max value (bytes)
Basic 1 Not configurable in Basic tier N/A N/A
Basic 2 Not configurable in Basic tier N/A N/A
General Purpose 2 16777216 16384 268435455
General Purpose 4 16777216 16384 536870912
General Purpose 8 16777216 16384 1073741824
General Purpose 16 16777216 16384 2147483648
General Purpose 32 16777216 16384 4294967295
General Purpose 64 16777216 16384 4294967295
Memory Optimized 2 16777216 16384 536870912
Memory Optimized 4 16777216 16384 1073741824
Memory Optimized 8 16777216 16384 2147483648
Memory Optimized 16 16777216 16384 4294967295
Memory Optimized 32 16777216 16384 4294967295

query_cache_size

The query cache is turned off by default. To enable the query cache, configure the query_cache_type parameter.

Review the MySQL documentation to learn more about this parameter.

Note

The query cache is deprecated as of MySQL 5.7.20 and has been removed in MySQL 8.0.

Pricing tier vCore(s) Default value (bytes) Min value (bytes) Max value
Basic 1 Not configurable in Basic tier N/A N/A
Basic 2 Not configurable in Basic tier N/A N/A
General Purpose 2 0 0 16777216
General Purpose 4 0 0 33554432
General Purpose 8 0 0 67108864
General Purpose 16 0 0 134217728
General Purpose 32 0 0 134217728
General Purpose 64 0 0 134217728
Memory Optimized 2 0 0 33554432
Memory Optimized 4 0 0 67108864
Memory Optimized 8 0 0 134217728
Memory Optimized 16 0 0 134217728
Memory Optimized 32 0 0 134217728

lower_case_table_names

The lower_case_table_name parameter is set to 1 by default, and you can update this parameter in MySQL 5.6 and MySQL 5.7.

Review the MySQL documentation to learn more about this parameter.

Note

In MySQL 8.0, lower_case_table_name is set to 1 by default, and you can't change it.

innodb_strict_mode

If you receive an error similar to Row size too large (> 8126), consider turning off the innodb_strict_mode parameter. You can't modify innodb_strict_mode globally at the server level. If row data size is larger than 8K, the data is truncated, without an error notification, leading to potential data loss. It's a good idea to modify the schema to fit the page size limit.

You can set this parameter at a session level, by using init_connect. To set innodb_strict_mode at a session level, refer to setting parameter not listed.

Note

If you have a read replica server, setting innodb_strict_mode to OFF at the session-level on a source server will break the replication. We suggest keeping the parameter set to ON if you have read replicas.

sort_buffer_size

Review the MySQL documentation to learn more about this parameter.

Pricing tier vCore(s) Default value (bytes) Min value (bytes) Max value (bytes)
Basic 1 Not configurable in Basic tier N/A N/A
Basic 2 Not configurable in Basic tier N/A N/A
General Purpose 2 524288 32768 4194304
General Purpose 4 524288 32768 8388608
General Purpose 8 524288 32768 16777216
General Purpose 16 524288 32768 33554432
General Purpose 32 524288 32768 33554432
General Purpose 64 524288 32768 33554432
Memory Optimized 2 524288 32768 8388608
Memory Optimized 4 524288 32768 16777216
Memory Optimized 8 524288 32768 33554432
Memory Optimized 16 524288 32768 33554432
Memory Optimized 32 524288 32768 33554432

tmp_table_size

Review the MySQL documentation to learn more about this parameter.

Pricing tier vCore(s) Default value (bytes) Min value (bytes) Max value (bytes)
Basic 1 Not configurable in Basic tier N/A N/A
Basic 2 Not configurable in Basic tier N/A N/A
General Purpose 2 16777216 1024 67108864
General Purpose 4 16777216 1024 134217728
General Purpose 8 16777216 1024 268435456
General Purpose 16 16777216 1024 536870912
General Purpose 32 16777216 1024 1073741824
General Purpose 64 16777216 1024 1073741824
Memory Optimized 2 16777216 1024 134217728
Memory Optimized 4 16777216 1024 268435456
Memory Optimized 8 16777216 1024 536870912
Memory Optimized 16 16777216 1024 1073741824
Memory Optimized 32 16777216 1024 1073741824

InnoDB buffer pool warmup

After you restart Azure Database for MySQL, the data pages that reside in the disk are loaded, as the tables are queried. This leads to increased latency and slower performance for the first run of the queries. For workloads that are sensitive to latency, you might find this slower performance unacceptable.

You can use InnoDB buffer pool warmup to shorten the warmup period. This process reloads disk pages that were in the buffer pool before the restart, rather than waiting for DML or SELECT operations to access corresponding rows. For more information, see InnoDB buffer pool server parameters.

However, improved performance comes at the expense of longer start-up time for the server. When you enable this parameter, the server startup and restart times are expected to increase, depending on the IOPS provisioned on the server. It's a good idea to test and monitor the restart time, to ensure that the start-up or restart performance is acceptable, because the server is unavailable during that time. Don't use this parameter when the number of IOPS provisioned is less than 1000 IOPS (in other words, when the storage provisioned is less than 335 GB).

To save the state of the buffer pool at server shutdown, set the server parameter innodb_buffer_pool_dump_at_shutdown to ON. Similarly, set the server parameter innodb_buffer_pool_load_at_startup to ON to restore the buffer pool state at server startup. You can control the impact on start-up or restart by lowering and fine-tuning the value of the server parameter innodb_buffer_pool_dump_pct. By default, this parameter is set to 25.

Note

InnoDB buffer pool warmup parameters are only supported in general purpose storage servers with up to 16 TB storage. For more information, see Azure Database for MySQL storage options.

time_zone

Upon initial deployment, a server running Azure Database for MySQL includes systems tables for time zone information, but these tables aren't populated. You can populate the tables by calling the mysql.az_load_timezone stored procedure from tools like the MySQL command line or MySQL Workbench. For information about how to call the stored procedures and set the global or session-level time zones, see Working with the time zone parameter (Azure portal) or Working with the time zone parameter (Azure CLI).

binlog_expire_logs_seconds

In Azure Database for MySQL, this parameter specifies the number of seconds the service waits before purging the binary log file.

The binary log contains events that describe database changes, such as table creation operations or changes to table data. It also contains events for statements that can potentially make changes. The binary log is used mainly for two purposes, replication and data recovery operations.

Usually, the binary logs are purged as soon as the handle is free from service, backup, or the replica set. If there are multiple replicas, the binary logs wait for the slowest replica to read the changes before being purged. If you want binary logs to persist longer, you can configure the parameter binlog_expire_logs_seconds. If you set binlog_expire_logs_seconds to 0, which is the default value, it purges as soon as the handle to the binary log is freed. If you set binlog_expire_logs_seconds to greater than 0, then the binary log only purges after that period of time.

For Azure Database for MySQL, managed features like backup and read replica purging of binary files are handled internally. When you replicate the data out from the Azure Database for MySQL service, you must set this parameter in the primary to avoid purging binary logs before the replica reads from the changes from the primary. If you set the binlog_expire_logs_seconds to a higher value, then the binary logs won't get purged soon enough. This can lead to an increase in the storage billing.

event_scheduler

In Azure Database for MySQL, the event_schedule server parameter manages creating, scheduling, and running events, i.e., tasks that run according to a schedule, and they're run by a special event scheduler thread. When the event_scheduler parameter is set to ON, the event scheduler thread is listed as a daemon process in the output of SHOW PROCESSLIST. You can create and schedule events using the following SQL syntax:

CREATE EVENT <event name>
ON SCHEDULE EVERY _ MINUTE / HOUR / DAY
STARTS TIMESTAMP / CURRENT_TIMESTAMP
ENDS TIMESTAMP / CURRENT_TIMESTAMP + INTERVAL 1 MINUTE / HOUR / DAY
COMMENT ‘<comment>’
DO
<your statement>;

Note

For more information about creating an event, see the MySQL Event Scheduler documentation here:

Configuring the event_scheduler server parameter

The following scenario illustrates one way to use the event_scheduler parameter in Azure Database for MySQL. To demonstrate the scenario, consider the following example, a simple table:

mysql> describe tab1;
+-----------+-------------+------+-----+---------+----------------+
| Field     | Type        | Null | Key | Default | Extra          |
+-----------+-------------+------+-----+---------+----------------+
| id        | int(11)     | NO   | PRI | NULL    | auto_increment |
| CreatedAt | timestamp   | YES  |     | NULL    |                |
| CreatedBy | varchar(16) | YES  |     | NULL    |                |
+-----------+-------------+------+-----+---------+----------------+
3 rows in set (0.23 sec)

To configure the event_scheduler server parameter in Azure Database for MySQL, perform the following steps:

  1. In the Azure portal, navigate to your server, and then, under Settings, select Server parameters.

  2. On the Server parameters blade, search for event_scheduler, in the VALUE drop-down list, select ON, and then select Save.

    Note

    The dynamic server parameter configuration change will be deployed without a restart.

  3. Then to create an event, connect to the MySQL server, and run the following SQL command:

    CREATE EVENT test_event_01
    ON SCHEDULE EVERY 1 MINUTE
    STARTS CURRENT_TIMESTAMP
    ENDS CURRENT_TIMESTAMP + INTERVAL 1 HOUR
    COMMENT ‘Inserting record into the table tab1 with current timestamp’
    DO
    INSERT INTO tab1(id,createdAt,createdBy)
    VALUES('',NOW(),CURRENT_USER());
    
  4. To view the Event Scheduler Details, run the following SQL statement:

    SHOW EVENTS;
    

    The following output appears:

    mysql> show events;
    +-----+---------------+-------------+-----------+-----------+------------+----------------+----------------+---------------------+---------------------+---------+------------+----------------------+----------------------+--------------------+
    | Db  | Name          | Definer     | Time zone | Type      | Execute at | Interval value | Interval field | Starts              | Ends                | Status  | Originator | character_set_client | collation_connection | Database Collation |
    +-----+---------------+-------------+-----------+-----------+------------+----------------+----------------+---------------------+---------------------+---------+------------+----------------------+----------------------+--------------------+
    | db1 | test_event_01 | azureuser@% | SYSTEM    | RECURRING | NULL       | 1              | MINUTE         | 2023-04-05 14:47:04 | 2023-04-05 15:47:04 | ENABLED | 3221153808 | latin1               | latin1_swedish_ci    | latin1_swedish_ci  |
    +-----+---------------+-------------+-----------+-----------+------------+----------------+----------------+---------------------+---------------------+---------+------------+----------------------+----------------------+--------------------+
    1 row in set (0.23 sec)
    
  5. After few minutes, query the rows from the table to begin viewing the rows inserted every minute as per the event_scheduler parameter you configured:

    mysql> select * from tab1;
    +----+---------------------+-------------+
    | id | CreatedAt           | CreatedBy   |
    +----+---------------------+-------------+
    |  1 | 2023-04-05 14:47:04 | azureuser@% |
    |  2 | 2023-04-05 14:48:04 | azureuser@% |
    |  3 | 2023-04-05 14:49:04 | azureuser@% |
    |  4 | 2023-04-05 14:50:04 | azureuser@% |
    +----+---------------------+-------------+
    4 rows in set (0.23 sec)
    
  6. After an hour, run a Select statement on the table to view the complete result of the values inserted into table every minute for an hour as the event_scheduler is configured in our case.

    mysql> select * from tab1;
    +----+---------------------+-------------+
    | id | CreatedAt           | CreatedBy   |
    +----+---------------------+-------------+
    |  1 | 2023-04-05 14:47:04 | azureuser@% |
    |  2 | 2023-04-05 14:48:04 | azureuser@% |
    |  3 | 2023-04-05 14:49:04 | azureuser@% |
    |  4 | 2023-04-05 14:50:04 | azureuser@% |
    |  5 | 2023-04-05 14:51:04 | azureuser@% |
    |  6 | 2023-04-05 14:52:04 | azureuser@% |
    ..< 50 lines trimmed to compact output >..
    | 56 | 2023-04-05 15:42:04 | azureuser@% |
    | 57 | 2023-04-05 15:43:04 | azureuser@% |
    | 58 | 2023-04-05 15:44:04 | azureuser@% |
    | 59 | 2023-04-05 15:45:04 | azureuser@% |
    | 60 | 2023-04-05 15:46:04 | azureuser@% |
    | 61 | 2023-04-05 15:47:04 | azureuser@% |
    +----+---------------------+-------------+
    61 rows in set (0.23 sec)
    

Other scenarios

You can set up an event based on the requirements of your specific scenario. A few similar examples of scheduling SQL statements to run at different time intervals follow.

Run a SQL statement now and repeat one time per day with no end

CREATE EVENT <event name>
ON SCHEDULE
EVERY 1 DAY
STARTS (TIMESTAMP(CURRENT_DATE) + INTERVAL 1 DAY + INTERVAL 1 HOUR)
COMMENT 'Comment'
DO
<your statement>;

Run a SQL statement every hour with no end

CREATE EVENT <event name>
ON SCHEDULE
EVERY 1 HOUR
COMMENT 'Comment'
DO
<your statement>;

Run a SQL statement every day with no end

CREATE EVENT <event name>
ON SCHEDULE 
EVERY 1 DAY
STARTS str_to_date( date_format(now(), '%Y%m%d 0200'), '%Y%m%d %H%i' ) + INTERVAL 1 DAY
COMMENT 'Comment'
DO
<your statement>;

Nonconfigurable server parameters

The following server parameters aren't configurable in the service:

Parameter Fixed value
innodb_file_per_table in the basic tier OFF
innodb_flush_log_at_trx_commit 1
sync_binlog 1
innodb_log_file_size 256 MB
innodb_log_files_in_group 2

Other variables not listed here are set to the default MySQL values. Refer to the MySQL docs for versions 8.0, 5.7, and 5.6.

Next steps