It is a good idea to perform table checks on a regular basis rather than waiting for problems to occur. One way to check and repair MyISAM
tables is with the CHECK TABLE
and REPAIR TABLE
statements. See Section 15.7.3, “Table Maintenance Statements”.
Another way to check tables is to use myisamchk. For maintenance purposes, you can use myisamchk -s. The -s
option (short for --silent
) causes myisamchk to run in silent mode, printing messages only when errors occur.
It is also a good idea to enable automatic MyISAM
table checking. For example, whenever the machine has done a restart in the middle of an update, you usually need to check each table that could have been affected before it is used further. (These are “expected crashed tables.”) To cause the server to check MyISAM
tables automatically, start it with the myisam_recover_options
system variable set. See Section 7.1.8, “Server System Variables”.
You should also check your tables regularly during normal system operation. For example, you can run a cron job to check important tables once a week, using a line like this in a crontab
file:
35 0 * * 0 /path/to/myisamchk --fast --silent /path/to/datadir/*/*.MYI
This prints out information about crashed tables so that you can examine and repair them as necessary.
To start with, execute myisamchk -s each night on all tables that have been updated during the last 24 hours. As you see that problems occur infrequently, you can back off the checking frequency to once a week or so.
Normally, MySQL tables need little maintenance. If you are performing many updates to MyISAM
tables with dynamic-sized rows (tables with VARCHAR
, BLOB
, or TEXT
columns) or have tables with many deleted rows you may want to defragment/reclaim space from the tables from time to time. You can do this by using OPTIMIZE TABLE
on the tables in question. Alternatively, if you can stop the mysqld server for a while, change location into the data directory and use this command while the server is stopped:
$> myisamchk -r -s --sort-index --myisam_sort_buffer_size=16M */*.MYI