25.5.11 ndb_drop_table — 删除 NDB 表
ndb_drop_table drops the specified NDB
table. (If you try to use this on a table created with a storage engine other than NDB
, the attempt fails with the error 723: No such table exists.) This operation is extremely fast; in some cases, it can be an order of magnitude faster than using a MySQL DROP TABLE
statement on an NDB
table.
ndb_drop_table -c connection_string tbl_name -d db_name
Options that can be used with ndb_drop_table are shown in the following table. Additional descriptions follow the table.
-
Command-Line Format --character-sets-dir=path
Directory containing character sets.
-
Command-Line Format --connect-retries=#
Type Integer Default Value 12
Minimum Value 0
Maximum Value 12
Number of times to retry connection before giving up.
-
Command-Line Format --connect-retry-delay=#
Type Integer Default Value 5
Minimum Value 0
Maximum Value 5
Number of seconds to wait between attempts to contact management server.
-
Command-Line Format --connect-string=connection_string
Type String Default Value [none]
Same as
--ndb-connectstring
. -
Command-Line Format --core-file
Write core file on error; used in debugging.
-
--database
,-d
Command-Line Format --database=name
Type String Default Value TEST_DB
Name of the database in which the table resides.
-
Command-Line Format --defaults-extra-file=path
Type String Default Value [none]
Read given file after global files are read.
-
Command-Line Format --defaults-file=path
Type String Default Value [none]
Read default options from given file only.
-
Command-Line Format --defaults-group-suffix=string
Type String Default Value [none]
Also read groups with concat(group, suffix).
-
Command-Line Format --help
Display help text and exit.
-
Command-Line Format --login-path=path
Type String Default Value [none]
Read given path from login file.
-
Command-Line Format --no-login-paths
Skips reading options from the login path file.
-
Command-Line Format --ndb-connectstring=connection_string
Type String Default Value [none]
Set connection string for connecting to ndb_mgmd. Syntax:
[nodeid=
. Overrides entries inid
;][host=]hostname
[:port
]NDB_CONNECTSTRING
andmy.cnf
. -
Command-Line Format --ndb-mgm-tls=level
Type Enumeration Default Value relaxed
Valid Values relaxed
strict
Sets the level of TLS support required to connect to the management server; one of
relaxed
orstrict
.relaxed
(the default) means that a TLS connection is attempted, but success is not required;strict
means that TLS is required to connect. -
Command-Line Format --ndb-mgmd-host=connection_string
Type String Default Value [none]
Same as
--ndb-connectstring
. -
Command-Line Format --ndb-nodeid=#
Type Integer Default Value [none]
Set node ID for this node, overriding any ID set by
--ndb-connectstring
. -
--ndb-optimized-node-selection
Command-Line Format --ndb-optimized-node-selection
Enable optimizations for selection of nodes for transactions. Enabled by default; use
--skip-ndb-optimized-node-selection
to disable. -
Command-Line Format --ndb-tls-search-path=list
Type Path name Default Value (Unix) $HOME/ndb-tls
Default Value (Windows) $HOMEDIR/ndb-tls
Specify a list of directories to search for a CA file. On Unix platforms, the directory names are separated by colons (
:
); on Windows systems, the semicolon character (;
) is used as the separator. A directory reference may be relative or absolute; it may contain one or more environment variables, each denoted by a prefixed dollar sign ($
), and expanded prior to use.Searching begins with the leftmost named directory and proceeds from left to right until a file is found. An empty string denotes an empty search path, which causes all searches to fail. A string consisting of a single dot (
.
) indicates that the search path limited to the current working directory.If no search path is supplied, the compiled-in default value is used. This value depends on the platform used: On Windows, this is
\ndb-tls
; on other platforms (including Linux), it is$HOME/ndb-tls
. This can be overridden by compiling NDB Cluster using-DWITH_NDB_TLS_SEARCH_PATH
. -
Command-Line Format --no-defaults
Do not read default options from any option file other than login file.
-
Command-Line Format --print-defaults
Print program argument list and exit.
-
Command-Line Format --usage
Display help text and exit; same as
--help
. -
Command-Line Format --version
Display version information and exit.