Suppose that you have installed MySQL and have edited your
        option file so that it contains the necessary
        InnoDB configuration parameters. Before
        starting MySQL, you should verify that the directories you have
        specified for InnoDB data files and log files
        exist and that the MySQL server has access rights to those
        directories. InnoDB does not create
        directories, only files. Check also that you have enough disk
        space for the data and log files.
      
        It is best to run the MySQL server mysqld
        from the command prompt when you first start the server with
        InnoDB enabled, not from
        mysqld_safe or as a Windows service. When you
        run from a command prompt you see what mysqld
        prints and what is happening. On Unix, just invoke
        mysqld. On Windows, start
        mysqld with the
        --console option to direct the
        output to the console window.
      
        When you start the MySQL server after initially configuring
        InnoDB in your option file,
        InnoDB creates your data files and log files,
        and prints something like this:
      
InnoDB: The first specified datafile /home/heikki/data/ibdata1 did not exist: InnoDB: a new database to be created! InnoDB: Setting file /home/heikki/data/ibdata1 size to 134217728 InnoDB: Database physically writes the file full: wait... InnoDB: datafile /home/heikki/data/ibdata2 did not exist: new to be created InnoDB: Setting file /home/heikki/data/ibdata2 size to 262144000 InnoDB: Database physically writes the file full: wait... InnoDB: Log file /home/heikki/data/logs/ib_logfile0 did not exist: new to be created InnoDB: Setting log file /home/heikki/data/logs/ib_logfile0 size to 5242880 InnoDB: Log file /home/heikki/data/logs/ib_logfile1 did not exist: new to be created InnoDB: Setting log file /home/heikki/data/logs/ib_logfile1 size to 5242880 InnoDB: Doublewrite buffer not found: creating new InnoDB: Doublewrite buffer created InnoDB: Creating foreign key constraint system tables InnoDB: Foreign key constraint system tables created InnoDB: Started mysqld: ready for connections
        At this point InnoDB has initialized its
        tablespace and log files. You can connect to the MySQL server
        with the usual MySQL client programs like
        mysql. When you shut down the MySQL server
        with mysqladmin shutdown, the output is like
        this:
      
010321 18:33:34 mysqld: Normal shutdown 010321 18:33:34 mysqld: Shutdown Complete InnoDB: Starting shutdown... InnoDB: Shutdown completed
You can look at the data file and log directories and you see the files created there. When MySQL is started again, the data files and log files have been created already, so the output is much briefer:
InnoDB: Started mysqld: ready for connections
        If you add the
        innodb_file_per_table option to
        my.cnf, InnoDB stores
        each table in its own .ibd file in the same
        MySQL database directory where the .frm
        file is created. See Section 13.6.2.1, “Using Per-Table Tablespaces”.
      


User Comments
To get InnoDB to work on mysqld 4.1.14 and Fedora Core 3 on a 30 GByte, LVM (logical volume manager) raw partition whose pathname is /dev/VolGroupXX/LogVolYY, both innodb_data_home_dir and innodb_data_file_path must be set "correctly" in configuration file /etc/my.cnf.
Set "innodb_data_home_dir = /dev/VolGroupXX".
To initialize the raw partition, set "innodb_data_file_path = LogVolYY:30Gnewraw". "new" is synonymous with clobber or initialize; so, use it _only_ to initialize a raw partition. Start mysqld, wait until the raw partition's initialization is complete, and stop mysqld.
Once the server is stopped, set "innodb_data_file_path = LogVolYY:30Graw".
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