Today, I’d like to discuss getting better MySQL scalability on Amazon RDS.
The question of the day: “What can you do when a MySQL database needs to scale write-intensive workloads beyond the capabilities of the largest available machine on Amazon RDS?”
Let’s take a look.
In a typical EC2/RDS set-up, users connect to app servers from their mobile devices and tablets, computers, browsers, etc. Then app servers connect to an RDS instance (web/cloud services) and in some cases they might leverage some read-only replicas.
Figure 1. A typical RDS instance is a single-instance database, with read replicas. This is not very good at handling high write-based throughput.
As your application becomes more popular you can expect an increasing number of users, more transactions, and more accumulated data. User interactions can become more challenging as the application adds more sophisticated capabilities. The result of all this positive activity: your MySQL database will inevitably begin to experience scalability pressures.
What can you do?
Broadly speaking, there are four options available to improve MySQL scalability on RDS.
1. Larger RDS Instances – If you’re not already using the maximum available RDS instance, you can always scale up – to larger hardware. Bigger CPUs, more compute power, more memory et cetera. But the largest available RDS instance is still limited. And they get expensive.
“High-Memory Quadruple Extra Large DB Instance”:
68 GB of memory
26 ECUs (8 virtual cores with 3.25 ECUs each)
64-bit platform
High I/O Capacity
Provisioned IOPS Optimized: 1000Mbps
2. Provisioned IOPs – You can get provisioned IOPs and higher throughput on the I/O level.
However, there is a hard limit with a maximum instance size and maximum number of provisioned IOPs you can buy from Amazon and you simply cannot scale beyond these hardware specifications.
3. Leverage Read Replicas – If your application permits, you can leverage read replicas to offload some reads from the master databases. But there are a limited number of replicas you can utilize and Amazon generally requires some modifications to your existing application.
And read-replicas don’t help with write-intensive applications.
4. Multiple Database Instances – Amazon offers a fourth option:
“You can implement partitioning,thereby spreading your data across multiple database Instances” (Link)
However, Amazon does not offer any guidance or facilities to help you with this. “Multiple database instances” is not an RDS feature. And Amazon doesn’t explain how to implement this idea.
In fact, when asked, this is the response on an Amazon forum:
Q: Is there any documents that describe the partition DB across multiple RDS?
I need to use DB with more 1TB but exist a limitation during the create process, but I read in the any FAQ that you need to partition database, but I don’t find any documents that describe it.
A: “DB partitioning/sharding is not an official feature of Amazon RDS or MySQL, but a technique to scale out database by using multiple database instances. The appropriate way to split data depends on the characteristics of the application or data set. Therefore, there is no concrete and specific guidance.”
So now what?
The answer is to scale out with ScaleBase.
Amazon RDS with ScaleBase: What you get – MySQL Scalability!
ScaleBase is specifically designed to scale out a single MySQL RDS instance into multiple MySQL instances.
Critically, this is accomplished with no changes to your application code. Your application continues to “see” one database. ScaleBase does all the work of managing and enforcing an optimized data distribution policy to create multiple MySQL instances.
With ScaleBase, data distribution, transactions, concurrency control, and two-phase commit are all 100% transparent and 100% ACID-compliant, so applications, services and tooling continue to interact with your distributed RDS as if it were a single MySQL instance.
The result: now you can cost-effectively leverage multiple MySQL RDS instance to scale out write-intensive workloads to an unlimited number of users, transactions, and data.
Amazon RDS with ScaleBase: What you keep – Everything!
And how does this change your Amazon environment?
1. Keep your application, unchanged – There is no change your application development life-cycle at all. You still use your existing development tools, frameworks and libraries. Application quality assurance and testing cycles stay the same. And, critically, you stay with an ACID-compliant MySQL environment.
2. Keep your RDS value-added services – The value-added services that you rely on are all still available. Amazon will continue to handle database maintenance and updates for you. You can still leverage High Availability via Multi A-Z. And, if it benefits youra application throughput, you can still use read replicas.
3. Keep your RDS administration – Finally the RDS monitoring and provisioning tools you rely on still work as they did before.
With your one large MySQL instance, now split into multiple instances, you can actually use less expensive, smallersmaller available RDS hardware and continue to see better database performance.
Conclusion
Amazon RDS is a tremendous service, but it doesn’t offer solutions to scale beyond a single MySQL instance. Larger RDS instances get more expensive. And when you max-out on the available hardware, you’re stuck. Amazon recommends scaling out your single instance into multiple instances for transaction-intensive apps, but offers no services or guidance to help you. This is where ScaleBase comes in to save the day.
It gives you a simple and effective way to create multiple MySQL RDS instances, while removing all the complexities typically caused by “DIY” sharding andwith no changes to your applications .
With ScaleBase you continue to leverage the AWS/RDS ecosystem: commodity hardware and value added services like read replicas, multi A-Z, maintenance/updates and administration with monitoring tools and provisioning.
SCALEBASE ON AMAZON
If you’re curious to try ScaleBase on Amazon, it can be found here – Download NOW.
Reference: Pinal Dave (http://blog.sqlauthority.com)Filed under: MySQL, PostADay, SQL, SQL Authority, SQL Optimization, SQL Performance, SQL Query, SQL Server, SQL Tips and Tricks, T SQL