/usr/share/mysql/innodb_memcached_config.sql is in percona-xtradb-cluster-server-5.6 5.6.21-25.8-0ubuntu3.
This file is owned by root:root, with mode 0o644.
The actual contents of the file can be viewed below.
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 | create database innodb_memcache;
use innodb_memcache;
-- ------------------------------------------------------------------------
-- Following are set of "configuration tables" that used to configure
-- the InnoDB Memcached.
-- ------------------------------------------------------------------------
-- ------------------------------------------------------------------------
-- Table `cache_policies`
--
-- Each record in this table represents a named caching policy, specifying:
-- * How the memcache GET command is executed, including whether to get
-- records from local cache only, from InnoDB only, from local cache if
-- present (treating InnoDB as a backing store), or not at all.
-- * Similarly, how memcache SET commands are executed.
-- * How memcache DELETE commands are executed.
-- * Whether flushing the cache should cause a mass delete from NDB.
--
-- ------------------------------------------------------------------------
CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS `cache_policies` (
`policy_name` VARCHAR(40) PRIMARY KEY,
`get_policy` ENUM('innodb_only', 'cache_only', 'caching','disabled')
NOT NULL ,
`set_policy` ENUM('innodb_only', 'cache_only','caching','disabled')
NOT NULL ,
`delete_policy` ENUM('innodb_only', 'cache_only', 'caching','disabled')
NOT NULL,
`flush_policy` ENUM('innodb_only', 'cache_only', 'caching','disabled')
NOT NULL
) ENGINE = innodb;
-- ------------------------------------------------------------------------
-- Table `containers`
--
-- A container record describes an InnoDB table used for data storage by
-- InnoDB Memcache.
-- There must be a unique index on the `key column`, and unique index name
-- is specified in the `unique_idx_name_on_key` column of the table
-- `value_columns` are comma-separated lists of the columns that make up
-- the memcache key and value. Each column width is defined such that they
-- are in consistent with NDB memcached.
-- ------------------------------------------------------------------------
CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS `containers` (
`name` varchar(50) not null primary key,
`db_schema` VARCHAR(250) NOT NULL,
`db_table` VARCHAR(250) NOT NULL,
`key_columns` VARCHAR(250) NOT NULL,
`value_columns` VARCHAR(250),
`flags` VARCHAR(250) NOT NULL DEFAULT "0",
`cas_column` VARCHAR(250),
`expire_time_column` VARCHAR(250),
`unique_idx_name_on_key` VARCHAR(250) NOT NULL
) ENGINE = InnoDB;
CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS `config_options` (
`name` varchar(50) not null primary key,
`value` varchar(50)) ENGINE = InnoDB;
-- ------------------------------------------------------------------------
-- This is an example
-- We create a InnoDB table `demo_test` is the `test` database
-- and insert an entry into contrainers' table to tell InnoDB Memcache
-- that we has such InnoDB table as back store:
-- c1 -> key
-- c2 -> value
-- c3 -> flags
-- c4 -> cas
-- c5 -> exp time
-- PRIMARY -> use primary key to search
-- ------------------------------------------------------------------------
INSERT INTO containers VALUES ("aaa", "test", "demo_test",
"c1", "c2", "c3", "c4", "c5", "PRIMARY");
INSERT INTO cache_policies VALUES("cache_policy", "innodb_only",
"innodb_only", "innodb_only", "innodb_only");
INSERT INTO config_options VALUES("separator", "|");
INSERT INTO config_options VALUES("table_map_delimiter", ".");
USE test
-- ------------------------------------------------------------------------
-- Key (c1) must be VARCHAR or CHAR type, memcached supports key up to 255
-- Bytes
-- Value (c2) must be VARCHAR or CHAR type
-- Flag (c3) is a 32 bits integer
-- CAS (c4) is a 64 bits integer, per memcached define
-- Exp (c5) is again a 32 bits integer
-- ------------------------------------------------------------------------
CREATE TABLE demo_test (c1 VARCHAR(32),
c2 VARCHAR(1024),
c3 INT, c4 BIGINT UNSIGNED, c5 INT, primary key(c1))
ENGINE = INNODB;
INSERT INTO demo_test VALUES ("AA", "HELLO, HELLO", 8, 0, 0);
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