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MySQL 5.1 supports the following storage engines:
          MyISAM
          — The default MySQL storage engine and the one that is
          used the most in Web, data warehousing, and other application
          environments. MyISAM is supported in all
          MySQL configurations, and is the default storage engine unless
          you have configured MySQL to use a different one by default.
        
          InnoDB
          — A transaction-safe (ACID compliant) storage engine for
          MySQL that has commit, rollback, and crash-recovery
          capabilities to protect user data. InnoDB
          row-level locking (without escalation to coarser granularity
          locks) and Oracle-style consistent non-locking reads increase
          multi-user concurrency and performance.
          InnoDB stores user data in clustered
          indexes to reduce I/O for common queries based on primary
          keys. To maintain data integrity, InnoDB
          also supports FOREIGN KEY
          referential-integrity constraints.
        
          Memory
          — Stores all data in RAM for extremely fast access in
          environments that require quick lookups of reference and other
          like data. This engine was formerly known as the
          HEAP engine.
        
          Merge
          — Allows a MySQL DBA or developer to logically group a
          series of identical MyISAM tables and
          reference them as one object. Good for VLDB environments such
          as data warehousing.
        
          Archive
          — Provides the perfect solution for storing and
          retrieving large amounts of seldom-referenced historical,
          archived, or security audit information.
        
          Federated
          — Offers the ability to link separate MySQL servers to
          create one logical database from many physical servers. Very
          good for distributed or data mart environments.
        
          NDB
          — The Clustered database engine that is particularly
          suited for applications with high performance lookup needs
          that also require the highest possible degree of uptime and
          availability.
        
          CSV
          — The CSV storage engine stores data in text files using
          comma-separated values format. You can use the CSV engine to
          easily exchange data between other software and applications
          that can import and export in CSV format.
        
          Blackhole
          — The Blackhole storage engine accepts but does not
          store data and retrievals always return an empty set. The
          functionality can be used in distributed database design where
          data is automatically replicated, but not stored locally.
        
          Example
          — The Example storage engine is “stub”
          engine that does nothing. You can create tables with this
          engine, but no data can be stored in them or retrieved from
          them. The purpose of this engine is to serve as an example in
          the MySQL source code that illustrates how to begin writing
          new storage engines. As such, it is primarily of interest to
          developers.
        
      This chapter describes each of the MySQL storage engines except
      for NDBCLUSTER, which is covered in
      MySQL Cluster NDB 6.X/7.X.
    
It is important to remember that you are not restricted to using the same storage engine for an entire server or schema: you can use a different storage engine for each table in your schema.


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