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I understand that the InnoDB engine relies heavily on primary keys for its storage mechanisms (index layouts, etc), and that it is consequently a bad idea to use a non-sequential primary key (say a random 15 digit integer), because it will cause frequent (not to say systematic) rebuilds of the primary key's BTree, thus slowing exponentially insertions on the table.

I was considering setting up a MySQL Cluster to host my application databases, which need to support a write-intensive load (around 40% writes on about 2M operations a day). Given that NDB records are using primary key hashes to distribute records between the cluster's nodes, I was wondering if this limitation also apply to this engine.

My first guess would be that in the contrary, the randomness would help distribute evenly the data, but I can't find precise information about that. So, does anyone have an insight on this matter ?

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