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MySQL 8.4 Reference Manual  /  ...  /  Connection Compression Control

6.2.8 连接压缩控制

Connections to the server can use compression on the traffic between client and server to reduce the number of bytes sent over the connection. By default, connections are uncompressed, but can be compressed if the server and the client agree on a mutually permitted compression algorithm.

Compressed connections originate on the client side but affect CPU load on both the client and server sides because both sides perform compression and decompression operations. Because enabling compression decreases performance, its benefits occur primarily when there is low network bandwidth, network transfer time dominates the cost of compression and decompression operations, and result sets are large.

This section describes the available compression-control configuration parameters and the information sources available for monitoring use of compression. It applies to classic MySQL protocol connections.

Compression control applies to connections to the server by client programs and by servers participating in source/replica replication or Group Replication. Compression control does not apply to connections for FEDERATED tables. In the following discussion, client connection is shorthand for a connection to the server originating from any source for which compression is supported, unless context indicates a specific connection type.

Note

X Protocol connections to a MySQL Server instance support compression, but compression for X Protocol connections operates independently from the compression for classic MySQL protocol connections described here, and is controlled separately. See Section 22.5.5, “Connection Compression with X Plugin” for information on X Protocol connection compression.

These configuration parameters are available for controlling connection compression:

Configuration parameters that enable specifying compression algorithms are string-valued and take a list of one or more comma-separated compression algorithm names, in any order, chosen from the following items (not case-sensitive):

  • zlib: Permit connections that use the zlib compression algorithm.

  • zstd: Permit connections that use the zstd compression algorithm.

  • uncompressed: Permit uncompressed connections.

Note

Because uncompressed is an algorithm name that may or may not be configured, it is possible to configure MySQL not to permit uncompressed connections.

Examples:

  • To configure which compression algorithms the server permits for incoming connections, set the protocol_compression_algorithms system variable. By default, the server permits all available algorithms. To configure that setting explicitly at startup, use these lines in the server my.cnf file:

    [mysqld]
    protocol_compression_algorithms=zlib,zstd,uncompressed

    To set and persist the protocol_compression_algorithms system variable to that value at runtime, use this statement:

    SET PERSIST protocol_compression_algorithms='zlib,zstd,uncompressed';

    SET PERSIST sets a value for the running MySQL instance. It also saves the value, causing it to carry over to subsequent server restarts. To change the value for the running MySQL instance without having it carry over to subsequent restarts, use the GLOBAL keyword rather than PERSIST. See Section 15.7.6.1, “SET Syntax for Variable Assignment”.

  • To permit only incoming connections that use zstd compression, configure the server at startup like this:

    [mysqld]
    protocol_compression_algorithms=zstd

    Or, to make the change at runtime:

    SET PERSIST protocol_compression_algorithms='zstd';
  • To permit the mysql client to initiate zlib or uncompressed connections, invoke it like this:

    mysql --compression-algorithms=zlib,uncompressed
  • To configure replicas to connect to the source using zlib or zstd connections, with a compression level of 7 for zstd connections, use a CHANGE REPLICATION SOURCE TO statement:

    CHANGE REPLICATION SOURCE TO
      SOURCE_COMPRESSION_ALGORITHMS = 'zlib,zstd',
      SOURCE_ZSTD_COMPRESSION_LEVEL = 7;

    This assumes that the replica_compressed_protocol system variable is disabled, for reasons described in Configuring Legacy Connection Compression.

For successful connection setup, both sides of the connection must agree on a mutually permitted compression algorithm. The algorithm-negotiation process attempts to use zlib, then zstd, then uncompressed. If the two sides can find no common algorithm, the connection attempt fails.

Because both sides must agree on the compression algorithm, and because uncompressed is an algorithm value that is not necessarily permitted, fallback to an uncompressed connection does not necessarily occur. For example, if the server is configured to permit zstd and a client is configured to permit zlib,uncompressed, the client cannot connect at all. In this case, no algorithm is common to both sides, so connection attempts fail.

Configuration parameters that enable specifying the zstd compression level take an integer value from 1 to 22, with larger values indicating increasing levels of compression. The default zstd compression level is 3. The compression level setting has no effect on connections that do not use zstd compression.

A configurable zstd compression level enables choosing between less network traffic and higher CPU load versus more network traffic and lower CPU load. Higher compression levels reduce network congestion but the additional CPU load may reduce server performance.

Prior to MySQL 8.0.18, these configuration parameters are available for controlling connection compression:

  • Client programs support a --compress command-line option to specify use of compression for the connection to the server.

  • For programs that use the MySQL C API, enabling the MYSQL_OPT_COMPRESS option for the mysql_options() function specifies use of compression for the connection to the server.

  • For source/replica replication, enabling the system variable replica_compressed_protocol specifies use of compression for replica connections to the source.

In each case, when use of compression is specified, the connection uses the zlib compression algorithm if both sides permit it, with fallback to an uncompressed connection otherwise.

As of MySQL 8.0.18, the compression parameters just described become legacy parameters, due to the additional compression parameters introduced for more control over connection compression that are described in Configuring Connection Compression. An exception is MySQL Shell, where the --compress command-line option remains current, and can be used to request compression without selecting compression algorithms. For information on MySQL Shell's connection compression control, see Using Compressed Connections.

The legacy compression parameters interact with the newer parameters and their semantics change as follows:

The Compression status variable is ON or OFF to indicate whether the current connection uses compression.

The mysql client \status command displays a line that says Protocol: Compressed if compression is enabled for the current connection. If that line is not present, the connection is uncompressed.

The MySQL Shell \status command displays a Compression: line that says Disabled or Enabled to indicate whether the connection is compressed.

These additional sources of information are available for monitoring connection compression:

  • To monitor compression in use for client connections, use the Compression_algorithm and Compression_level status variables. For the current connection, their values indicate the compression algorithm and compression level, respectively.

  • To determine which compression algorithms the server is configured to permit for incoming connections, check the protocol_compression_algorithms system variable.

  • For source/replica replication connections, the configured compression algorithms and compression level are available from multiple sources:

    • The Performance Schema replication_connection_configuration table has COMPRESSION_ALGORITHMS and ZSTD_COMPRESSION_LEVEL columns.

    • The mysql.slave_master_info system table has Master_compression_algorithms and Master_zstd_compression_level columns. If the master.info file exists, it contains lines for those values as well.