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MyISAM is designed with the idea that your database is queried far more than its updated and as a result it performs very fast read operations. If your read to write(insert|update) ratio is less than 15% its better to use MyISAM.

InnoDB uses row level locking, has commit, rollback, and crash-recovery capabilities to protect user data. It supports transaction and fault tolerance

above differences is correct between MyISAM and InnobDB? please guide if any other limitations are there for MYISAM and InnobDB. when should i use MyiSAM or when Innodb? Thank you!

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    There are few scenarios. 1. if you want use full text search then use MYISAM. 2. If you want to use relation constraint in table then use INNODB.
    – Dieepak
    Commented Mar 28, 2013 at 9:40
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    Why not to look into column to the right called "Related"? Commented Mar 28, 2013 at 9:41
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    Why upvote this apparently-too-duplicated-and-soon-to-be-closed question? Commented Mar 28, 2013 at 9:42
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    @Neo Mysql 5.6 also supports full text search for InnoDB Commented Mar 28, 2013 at 9:47
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    Now Innodb rocks, Performance too when comparing Myisam, i have changed my engine MyISAM to INNODB at 2017. and its actively developed.. mysql.com/why-mysql/presentations/myisam-2-innodb-why-and-how Commented Jan 14, 2018 at 11:46

2 Answers 2

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Read about Storage Engines.

MyISAM:

The MyISAM storage engine in MySQL.

  • Simpler to design and create, thus better for beginners. No worries about the foreign relationships between tables.
  • Faster than InnoDB on the whole as a result of the simpler structure thus much less costs of server resources. -- Mostly no longer true.
  • Full-text indexing. -- InnoDB has it now
  • Especially good for read-intensive (select) tables. -- Mostly no longer true.
  • Disk footprint is 2x-3x less than InnoDB's. -- As of Version 5.7, this is perhaps the only real advantage of MyISAM.

InnoDB:

The InnoDB storage engine in MySQL.

  • Support for transactions (giving you support for the ACID property).
  • Row-level locking. Having a more fine grained locking-mechanism gives you higher concurrency compared to, for instance, MyISAM.
  • Foreign key constraints. Allowing you to let the database ensure the integrity of the state of the database, and the relationships between tables.
  • InnoDB is more resistant to table corruption than MyISAM.
  • Support for large buffer pool for both data and indexes. MyISAM key buffer is only for indexes.
  • MyISAM is stagnant; all future enhancements will be in InnoDB. This was made abundantly clear with the roll out of Version 8.0.

MyISAM Limitations:

  • No foreign keys and cascading deletes/updates
  • No transactional integrity (ACID compliance)
  • No rollback abilities
  • 4,284,867,296 row limit (2^32) -- This is old default. The configurable limit (for many versions) has been 2**56 bytes.
  • Maximum of 64 indexes per table

InnoDB Limitations:

  • No full text indexing (Below-5.6 mysql version)
  • Cannot be compressed for fast, read-only (5.5.14 introduced ROW_FORMAT=COMPRESSED)
  • You cannot repair an InnoDB table

For brief understanding read below links:

  1. MySQL Engines: InnoDB vs. MyISAM – A Comparison of Pros and Cons
  2. MySQL Engines: MyISAM vs. InnoDB
  3. What are the main differences between InnoDB and MyISAM?
  4. MyISAM versus InnoDB
  5. What's the difference between MyISAM and InnoDB?
  6. MySql: MyISAM vs. Inno DB!
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    Full-Text indexing is available in InnoDB in MySQL 5.6
    – Argeman
    Commented Mar 28, 2013 at 9:51
  • You didn't list the benefits for MyISAM.
    – Perception
    Commented Mar 28, 2013 at 10:02
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    @Perception add MyISAM dscription & all in below links also.
    – Tony Stark
    Commented Mar 28, 2013 at 10:14
  • For converting from MyISAM to InnoDB, see myisam2innodb blog.
    – Rick James
    Commented Jun 5, 2015 at 4:45
  • InnoDB also have a limitation of having maximum of 64 indexes per table in MySQL 5.7.
    – VCD
    Commented Jul 6, 2017 at 6:17
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Use MyISAM for very unimportant data or if you really need those minimal performance advantages. The read performance is not better in every case for MyISAM.

I would personally never use MyISAM at all anymore. Choose InnoDB and throw a bit more hardware if you need more performance. Another idea is to look at database systems with more features like PostgreSQL if applicable.

EDIT: For the read-performance, this link shows that innoDB often is actually not slower than MyISAM: https://www.percona.com/blog/2007/01/08/innodb-vs-myisam-vs-falcon-benchmarks-part-1/

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    "Use MyISAM for very unimportant data" is overstating the reliability difference, especially when using a modern journaling filesystem. And the more common opinion is generally that MyISAM is faster for reads. I can't figure out why the Percona blog's results were an exception. We did experiments on our tables with both engines and found MyISAM reads were typically almost twice as fast as InnoDB. It's always best to test with your own real data and environment when possible.
    – orrd
    Commented Jul 27, 2016 at 19:56
  • @orrd You are correct, only tests with the own data can show how the performance impact will be. My experiments showed near to no difference at all in most read-only cases, with myisam tending to suffer real problems when writes occur regularly, so in all usecases that I had so far innodb was much better
    – Argeman
    Commented Aug 2, 2016 at 13:28
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    The link to to blog entry is now about 10 years old.
    – robsch
    Commented Sep 4, 2017 at 12:26
  • not just twice as fast, in our test we reached 80x speed up in lookups, sad that its not being improved for write intensive applications.
    – Jones G
    Commented Feb 21, 2018 at 21:28

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