MyISAM
is transactionless and heap-organized. The records are identified by the row offset in the table and the indexes store this offset as a row pointer.
InnoDB
supports transactions and is index-organized. The records are identified by the value of the PRIMARY KEY
(or a hidden internal column is there is no PRIMARY KEY
defined) and are stored in a B-Tree
. The secondary indexes store the value of the PRIMARY KEY
as a row pointer.
Queries that involve full table scans or secondary index lookups are usually faster on MyISAM
tables.
Queries that involve PRIMARY KEY
seeks are usually faster on InnoDB
tables.
MyISAM
tables store the number of records in the table in the table's metadata, that's why the queries like this:
SELECT COUNT(*)
FROM myisamtable
are instant.
MyISAM
tables are completely locked on the DML
operations (with several exceptions).
InnoDB
tables lock individual records and index gaps, however these are the records and the gaps that are scanned, not only those matched by the WHERE
condition. This can lead to the records being locked despite the fact they don't match.
InnoDB
tables support referential integrity (FOREIGN KEY
s) . MyISAM
tables don't.
There are several scenarios that can show benefits of both engines.
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