We ship out mySQL on our appliances in enterprise level scenarios. We
often
like to start the AUTO_INCREMENT for several tables at 10,000 -- this way
we
can reserve the lower 'block' of IDs for our own internal and 'default'
use
so all customers have the same basic database schema. It also makes our
code
easier to write as we can, in one easy swoop, make the ID's of any record
<
10000 immutable, uneditable, etc.
So insert one record with auto-increment id 9999 or 10000, and the algorithm
should work as expected.
Are there plans to fix what we perceive to be a tremendous bug? Why would
you make it so that the AUTO_INCREMENT value is stored in memory only?!
What
use is that?
If you think about it, there would obviously be a performance advantage to
keeping the auto-increment value in memory rather than committing it to disk
on every insert.
I would have preferred if AUTO_INCREMENT threw an error on
InnoDB tables, this way we would have known this months ago instead of now
that we're well into this porting of tables, schema and now code.
This is such a subtle but significant change to the table-type that it
should have been made painfully obvious to anyone trying to switch types.
You are costing us many man-hours now of re-architecting existing code,
and
trying to figure out a way to upgrade existing customers.
I hate to sound like a jerk, but your design is what is costing you this
redesign, not the behavior of InnoDB. Generally I'd recommend
auto-increment ids be opaque and not trying to "reserve" ranges of ids in
the way you're doing. But if you insist on doing it, whether it's MyISAM or
InnoDB, why not insert a marker record at the end of your "reserved" range?
How much rearchitecting is involved in that?
...And yes, we *DO* pay you your $10,000 support contract.
*sigh*
This is very disappointing.
Again, I don't want to be a jerk about it, but as a Systems Architect
myself, I wouldn't deploy enterprise class systems without having a
significant understanding of the behavior of the InnoDB database engine.
Presuming that the behaviors of the two database engines are identical or
even similar without actually researching the issue seems rather unwise
doesn't it?
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