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MySQL 8 Administrator???s Guide

MySQL 8 Administrator???s Guide

By : Mehta, Oza, Subhash Shah
2.7 (10)
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MySQL 8 Administrator???s Guide

MySQL 8 Administrator???s Guide

2.7 (10)
By: Mehta, Oza, Subhash Shah

Overview of this book

MySQL is one of the most popular and widely used relational databases in the world today. The recently released version 8.0 brings along some major advancements in the way your MySQL solution can be administered. This handbook will be your companion to understand the newly introduced features in MySQL and show you how you can leverage them to design a high-performance MySQL solution for your organization. This book starts with a brief introduction to the new features in MySQL 8, and then quickly jumping onto the crucial administration topics that you will find useful in your day-to-day work. Topics such as migrating to MySQL 8, MySQL benchmarking, achieving high performance by implementing the indexing techniques, and optimizing your queries are covered in this book. You will also learn how to perform replication, scale your MySQL solution and implement effective security techniques. There is also a special section on the common and not so common troubleshooting techniques for effective MySQL administration is also covered in this book. By the end of this highly practical book, you will have all the knowledge you need to tackle any problem you might encounter while administering your MySQL solution.
Table of Contents (17 chapters)
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Best practices for data partitioning

In general terms, partitioning is logically dividing anything into multiple subgroups so that each subgroup can be identified independently and can be combined into a single partition.

Let's now learn different partitioning methods and how partitioning can help where there are large data tables.

For any organization, it is very important to store data in such a way that the database provides scalability, performance, availability, and security. For instance, in a highly accessed e-commerce store, there are thousands, or more, of orders placed frequently. So to maintain day-to-day order delivery showing a dashboard of current orders, what is required is to query a table showing orders from the past five years; the process will take a long time to execute with the current data. Here, historical order data is needed for the analytical purpose...

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