21.4.25 ndb_select_all — Print Rows from an NDB Table
ndb_select_all prints all rows from an NDB
table to stdout
.
Usage
ndb_select_all -c connection_string tbl_name -d db_name [> file_name]
The following table includes options that are specific to the NDB Cluster native backup restoration program ndb_select_all. Additional descriptions follow the table. For options common to most NDB Cluster programs (including ndb_select_all), see Section 21.4.32, “Options Common to NDB Cluster Programs — Options Common to NDB Cluster Programs”.
Table 21.258 Command-line options for the ndb_select_all program
Format | Description | Added, Deprecated, or Removed |
---|---|---|
Name of database in which table is found | (Supported in all MySQL 5.7 based releases) |
|
Degree of parallelism | (Supported in all MySQL 5.7 based releases) |
|
Lock type | (Supported in all MySQL 5.7 based releases) |
|
Sort resultset according to index having this name | (Supported in all MySQL 5.7 based releases) |
|
Sort resultset in descending order (requires --order) | (Supported in all MySQL 5.7 based releases) |
|
Print header (set to 0|FALSE to disable headers in output) | (Supported in all MySQL 5.7 based releases) |
|
Output numbers in hexadecimal format | (Supported in all MySQL 5.7 based releases) |
|
Set column delimiter | (Supported in all MySQL 5.7 based releases) |
|
Print disk references (useful only for Disk Data tables having nonindexed columns) | (Supported in all MySQL 5.7 based releases) |
|
Print row ID | (Supported in all MySQL 5.7 based releases) |
|
Include GCI in output | (Supported in all MySQL 5.7 based releases) |
|
Include GCI and row epoch in output | (Supported in all MySQL 5.7 based releases) |
|
Scan in tup order | (Supported in all MySQL 5.7 based releases) |
|
Do not print table column data | (Supported in all MySQL 5.7 based releases) |
Name of the database in which the table is found. The default value is
TEST_DB
.Specifies the degree of parallelism.
--lock=
,lock_type
-l
lock_type
Employs a lock when reading the table. Possible values for
lock_type
are:0
: Read lock1
: Read lock with hold2
: Exclusive read lock
There is no default value for this option.
--order=
,index_name
-o
index_name
Orders the output according to the index named
index_name
.NoteThis is the name of an index, not of a column; the index must have been explicitly named when created.
Sorts the output in descending order. This option can be used only in conjunction with the
-o
(--order
) option.Excludes column headers from the output.
Causes all numeric values to be displayed in hexadecimal format. This does not affect the output of numerals contained in strings or datetime values.
--delimiter=
,character
-D
character
Causes the
character
to be used as a column delimiter. Only table data columns are separated by this delimiter.The default delimiter is the tab character.
Adds a disk reference column to the output. The column is nonempty only for Disk Data tables having nonindexed columns.
Adds a
ROWID
column providing information about the fragments in which rows are stored.Adds a
GCI
column to the output showing the global checkpoint at which each row was last updated. See Section 21.1, “NDB Cluster Overview”, and Section 21.5.3.2, “NDB Cluster Log Events”, for more information about checkpoints.Adds a
ROW$GCI64
column to the output showing the global checkpoint at which each row was last updated, as well as the number of the epoch in which this update occurred.Scan the table in the order of the tuples.
Causes any table data to be omitted.
Sample Output
Output from a MySQL SELECT
statement:
mysql> SELECT * FROM ctest1.fish;
+----+-----------+
| id | name |
+----+-----------+
| 3 | shark |
| 6 | puffer |
| 2 | tuna |
| 4 | manta ray |
| 5 | grouper |
| 1 | guppy |
+----+-----------+
6 rows in set (0.04 sec)
Output from the equivalent invocation of ndb_select_all:
shell> ./ndb_select_all -c localhost fish -d ctest1
id name
3 [shark]
6 [puffer]
2 [tuna]
4 [manta ray]
5 [grouper]
1 [guppy]
6 rows returned
NDBT_ProgramExit: 0 - OK
All string values are enclosed by square brackets ([
...]
) in the output of ndb_select_all. For another example, consider the table created and populated as shown here:
CREATE TABLE dogs (
id INT(11) NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT,
name VARCHAR(25) NOT NULL,
breed VARCHAR(50) NOT NULL,
PRIMARY KEY pk (id),
KEY ix (name)
)
TABLESPACE ts STORAGE DISK
ENGINE=NDBCLUSTER;
INSERT INTO dogs VALUES
('', 'Lassie', 'collie'),
('', 'Scooby-Doo', 'Great Dane'),
('', 'Rin-Tin-Tin', 'Alsatian'),
('', 'Rosscoe', 'Mutt');
This demonstrates the use of several additional ndb_select_all options:
shell> ./ndb_select_all -d ctest1 dogs -o ix -z --gci --disk
GCI id name breed DISK_REF
834461 2 [Scooby-Doo] [Great Dane] [ m_file_no: 0 m_page: 98 m_page_idx: 0 ]
834878 4 [Rosscoe] [Mutt] [ m_file_no: 0 m_page: 98 m_page_idx: 16 ]
834463 3 [Rin-Tin-Tin] [Alsatian] [ m_file_no: 0 m_page: 34 m_page_idx: 0 ]
835657 1 [Lassie] [Collie] [ m_file_no: 0 m_page: 66 m_page_idx: 0 ]
4 rows returned
NDBT_ProgramExit: 0 - OK