aria_chk(1) — Linux manual page

NAME | SYNOPSIS | DESCRIPTION | SEE ALSO | COLOPHON

ARIA_CHK(1)                   User Commands                  ARIA_CHK(1)

NAME         top

       aria_chk - Aria table-maintenance utility

SYNOPSIS         top

       aria_chk [OPTIONS] tables[.MAI]

DESCRIPTION         top

       Describe, check and repair of Aria tables.  Used without options
       all tables on the command will be checked for errors

   Global options
       -#, --debug=...
              Output debug log. Often this is 'd:t:o,filename'.

       -H, --HELP
              Print all argument options sorted alphabetically.

       -?, --help
              Print all options by groups

       --datadir=path
              Path for control file (and logs if --logdir not used)

       --logdir=path
              Path for log files

       --ignore-control-file
              Don't open the control file. Only use this if you are sure
              the tables are not in use by another program!

       --require-control-file
              Abort if we can't find/read the maria_log_control file

       -s, --silent
              Only print errors.  One can use two -s to make maria_chk
              very silent.

       -t, --tmpdir=path
              Path for temporary files. Multiple paths can be specified,
              separated by colon (:), they will be used in a round-robin
              fashion.

       -v, --verbose
              Print more information. This can be used with
              --description and --check. Use many -v for more verbosity.

       -V, --version
              Print version and exit.

       -w, --wait
              Wait if table is locked.

   Check options (check is the default action for aria_chk)
       -c, --check
              Check table for errors.

       -e, --extend-check
              Check the table VERY thoroughly.  Only use this in extreme
              cases as aria_chk should normally be able to find out if
              the table is ok even without this switch.

       -F, --fast
              Check only tables that haven't been closed properly.

       -C, --check-only-changed
              Check only tables that have changed since last check.

       -f, --force
              Restart with '-r' if there are any errors in the table.
              States will be updated as with '--update-state'.

       -i, --information
              Print statistics information about table that is checked.

       -m, --medium-check
              Faster than extend-check, but only finds 99.99% of all
              errors.  Should be good enough for most cases.

       -T, --read-only
              Don't mark table as checked.

       -U, --update-state
              Mark tables as crashed if any errors were found and clean
              if check didn't find any errors but table was marked as
              'not clean' before. This allows one to get rid of warnings
              like 'table not properly closed'. If table was updated,
              update also the timestamp for when the check was made.
              This option is on by default!  Use --skip-update-state to
              disable.

       --warning-for-wrong-transaction-id

              Give a warning if we find a transaction id in the table
              that is bigger than what exists in the control file. Use
              --skip-... to disable warning

   Recover (repair)/ options (When using '--recover' or '--safe-
       recover')
       -B, --backup
              Make a backup of the .MAD file as 'filename-time.BAK'.

       --correct-checksum
              Correct checksum information for table.

       -D, --data-file-length=#
              Max length of data file (when recreating data file when
              it's full).

       -e, --extend-check
              Try to recover every possible row from the data file
              Normally this will also find a lot of garbage rows; Don't
              use this option if you are not totally desperate.

       -f, --force
              Overwrite old temporary files.

       -k, --keys-used=#
              Tell Aria to update only some specific keys. # is a bit
              mask of which keys to use. This can be used to get faster
              inserts.

       --max-record-length=#
              Skip rows bigger than this if aria_chk can't allocate
              memory to hold it.

       -r, --recover
              Can fix almost anything except unique keys that aren't
              unique.

       -n, --sort-recover
              Forces recovering with sorting even if the temporary file
              would be very big.

       -p, --parallel-recover
              Uses the same technique as '-r' and '-n', but creates all
              the keys in parallel, in different threads.

       -o, --safe-recover
              Uses old recovery method; Slower than '-r' but can handle
              a couple of cases where '-r' reports that it can't fix the
              data file.

       --transaction-log
              Log repair command to transaction log. This is needed if
              one wants to use the aria_read_log to repeat the repair

       --character-sets-dir=...
              Directory where character sets are.

       --set-collation=name
              Change the collation used by the index.

       -q, --quick
              Faster repair by not modifying the data file.  One can
              give a second '-q' to force aria_chk to modify the
              original datafile in case of duplicate keys.  NOTE: Tables
              where the data file is corrupted can't be fixed with this
              option.

       -u, --unpack
              Unpack file packed with ariapack.

   Other actions
       -a, --analyze
              Analyze distribution of keys. Will make some joins in
              MariaDB faster.  You can check the calculated distribution
              by using '--description --verbose table_name'.

       --stats_method=name
              Specifies how index statistics collection code should
              treat NULLs. Possible values of name are "nulls_unequal"
              (default for 4.1/5.0), "nulls_equal" (emulate 4.0), and
              "nulls_ignored".

       -d, --description
              Prints some information about table.

       -A, --set-auto-increment[=value]
              Force auto_increment to start at this or higher value If
              no value is given, then sets the next auto_increment value
              to the highest used value for the auto key + 1.

       -S, --sort-index
              Sort index blocks.  This speeds up 'read-next' in
              applications.

       -R, --sort-records=#
              Sort records according to an index.  This makes your data
              much more localized and may speed up things (It may be
              VERY slow to do a sort the first time!).

       -b,  --block-search=#
              Find a record, a block at given offset belongs to.

       -z,  --zerofill
              Fill empty space in data and index files with zeroes.
              This makes the data file movable between different
              servers.

       --zerofill-keep-lsn
              Like --zerofill but does not zero out LSN of data/index
              pages.

   Variables
       --page_buffer_size=#
              Size of page buffer. Used by --safe-repair

       --read_buffer_size=#
              Read buffer size for sequential reads during scanning

       --sort_buffer_size=#
              Size of sort buffer. Used by --recover

       --sort_key_blocks=#
              Internal buffer for sorting keys; Don't touch.

       --write_buffer_size=#
              Write buffer size for sequential writes during repair

       Default options are read from the following files in the given
       order: /etc/my.cnf /etc/mysql/my.cnf ~/.my.cnf

       The following groups are read: aria_chk

       The following options may be given as the first argument:

       --print-defaults
              Print the program argument list and exit.

       --no-defaults
              Don't read default options from any option file.

       --defaults-file=#
              Only read default options from the given file #.

       --defaults-extra-file=#
              Read this file after the global files are read.

SEE ALSO         top

       myisamchk(1)

       For more information, please refer to the MariaDB Knowledge Base,
       available online at https://mariadb.com/kb/

COLOPHON         top

       This page is part of the MariaDB (MariaDB database server)
       project.  Information about the project can be found at 
       ⟨http://mariadb.org/⟩.  If you have a bug report for this manual
       page, see ⟨https://mariadb.com/kb/en/mariadb/reporting-bugs/⟩.
       This page was obtained from the project's upstream Git repository
       ⟨https://github.com/MariaDB/server⟩ on 2024-06-14.  (At that
       time, the date of the most recent commit that was found in the
       repository was 2023-05-11.)  If you discover any rendering
       problems in this HTML version of the page, or you believe there
       is a better or more up-to-date source for the page, or you have
       corrections or improvements to the information in this COLOPHON
       (which is not part of the original manual page), send a mail to
       [email protected]

aria_chk Ver 1.2                May 2014                     ARIA_CHK(1)