309

I know I can issue an alter table individually to change the table storage from MyISAM to InnoDB.

I am wondering if there is a way to quickly change all of them to InnoDB?

1

32 Answers 32

632

Run this SQL statement (in the MySQL client, phpMyAdmin, or wherever) to retrieve all the MyISAM tables in your database.

Replace value of the name_of_your_db variable with your database name.

SET @DATABASE_NAME = 'name_of_your_db';

SELECT  CONCAT('ALTER TABLE `', table_name, '` ENGINE=InnoDB;') AS sql_statements
FROM    information_schema.tables AS tb
WHERE   table_schema = @DATABASE_NAME
AND     `ENGINE` = 'MyISAM'
AND     `TABLE_TYPE` = 'BASE TABLE'
ORDER BY table_name DESC;

Then, copy the output and run as a new SQL query.

11
  • 4
    That worked nicely! I've put it into an example shell script here: shrubbery.mynetgear.net/c/display/W/… Jun 28, 2012 at 14:46
  • 5
    "#1267 illegal mix of collations..." I'm getting this error, it doesn't work Nov 8, 2013 at 13:37
  • 2
    Just out of curiosity, what's the point of the explicit descending ordering? (ORDER BY table_name DESC)
    – rinogo
    Mar 7, 2014 at 19:55
  • 14
    If your dealing with multiple databases and don't want to change the database everytime, change CONCAT('ALTER TABLE ', table_name, ' ENGINE=InnoDB;') to CONCAT('ALTER TABLE ',@DATABASE_NAME,'.', table_name, ' ENGINE=InnoDB;') Sep 17, 2014 at 3:23
  • 3
    If you want to get the the statements for all databases (except the MySQL system databases): SELECT CONCAT('ALTER TABLE `', table_schema, '`.`', table_name, '` ENGINE=InnoDB;') AS sql_statements FROM information_schema.tables WHERE table_schema NOT IN ('information_schema', 'performance_schema', 'mysql') AND engine = 'MyISAM' AND table_type = 'BASE TABLE' ORDER BY table_schema,table_name Sep 22, 2017 at 2:15
186
<?php
    // connect your database here first 
    // 

    // Actual code starts here 

    $sql = "SELECT TABLE_NAME FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.TABLES
        WHERE TABLE_SCHEMA = 'your_database_name' 
        AND ENGINE = 'MyISAM'";

    $rs = mysql_query($sql);

    while($row = mysql_fetch_array($rs))
    {
        $tbl = $row[0];
        $sql = "ALTER TABLE `$tbl` ENGINE=INNODB";
        mysql_query($sql);
    }
?>
8
  • 5
    It probably would be better to limit this to the database you're focusing on. Add a " AND TABLE_SCHEMA = 'dbname', otherwise this can/will change all the internet MySQL tables to innodb as well (when some of them should be memory)
    – Noodles
    May 27, 2014 at 2:20
  • 10
    PHP's mysql_* interface is deprecated and removed from ver 7. Don't use this code as is.
    – Rick James
    Jan 13, 2017 at 20:42
  • 4
    @GajendraBang - Yes, the answer as valid when presented. But for newcomers, it is no longer valid. My intent was to warn against using it as is.
    – Rick James
    Jan 19, 2017 at 22:47
  • 1
    The question does not mention PHP whatsoever
    – phil294
    Apr 18, 2019 at 21:53
  • 2
    How is the most recent edit not flagged? The MySQL portion is a direct copy of Will Jones' answer. Look at each edit history to find that Will's answer appeared in 2013 while this answer appeared in 2019. As a result, the integrity of this question is compromised.
    – rmutalik
    Feb 19, 2020 at 18:52
76
SELECT CONCAT('ALTER TABLE ',TABLE_NAME,' ENGINE=InnoDB;') 
FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.TABLES
WHERE ENGINE='MyISAM'
AND table_schema = 'mydatabase';

Works like a charm.

This will give you list of all tables with the alter queries that you can run in a batch

4
  • 6
    After running this you first need to execute the following query: USE databasename; Then you can use the queries that the above script gives.
    – gijs007
    Jul 14, 2015 at 1:56
  • How do you run a batch? Jun 22, 2017 at 1:45
  • The above query will give you alter table queries. just select them all and execute them together. or divide them in groups of 50 queries and run them if there are too many tables in the resultset Jun 22, 2017 at 15:35
  • 2
    It's working even on 2018 and on Percona Cluster. If using it from PHPMyAdmin, you'll only get 20 or so names, then "..." or a pagination >> symbol. This means you have to click and keep copying all the next pages so you won't miss any table. If you do forget that, you can safely re-apply the above query and it'll give you the next MyISAM tables to convert. Feb 13, 2018 at 1:39
28

One line:

 mysql -u root -p dbName -e 
 "show table status where Engine='MyISAM';" | awk 
 'NR>1 {print "ALTER TABLE "$1" ENGINE = InnoDB;"}'  | 
  mysql -u root -p dbName
3
  • 1
    The BEST and the most INTELLIJENT answer!
    – biniam
    Mar 20, 2015 at 8:56
  • When I run this in a bash script it interprets the $1 as a bash script variable overwriting the NR definition. Any way around this? Apr 9, 2020 at 10:17
  • @WorksforaLiving enclose the "$1" in backticks like this: `"$1"` similar to what's in my answer. Apr 29, 2020 at 5:51
24

In the scripts below, replace <username>, <password> and <schema> with your specific data.

To show the statements that you can copy-paste into a mysql client session type the following:

echo 'SHOW TABLES;' \
 | mysql -u <username> --password=<password> -D <schema> \
 | awk '!/^Tables_in_/ {print "ALTER TABLE `"$0"` ENGINE = InnoDB;"}' \
 | column -t \

To simply execute the change, use this:

echo 'SHOW TABLES;' \
 | mysql -u <username> --password=<password> -D <schema> \
 | awk '!/^Tables_in_/ {print "ALTER TABLE `"$0"` ENGINE = InnoDB;"}' \
 | column -t \
 | mysql -u <username> --password=<password> -D <schema>

CREDIT: This is a variation of what was outlined in this article.

21

Use this as a sql query in your phpMyAdmin

SELECT CONCAT('ALTER TABLE ',table_schema,'.',table_name,' engine=InnoDB;') 
FROM information_schema.tables 
WHERE engine = 'MyISAM';
8
  • 4
    This doesn't seem to actually convert the tables to InnoDB. Feb 18, 2013 at 14:04
  • 4
    This outputs a script that you then run to convert the tables - it's two steps. It tries to convert INFORMATION_SCHEMA tables, though - that's a bad thing. Need to limit it to the right database.
    – Brilliand
    Apr 12, 2013 at 21:13
  • 1
    You will have to filter our the internal mysql tables - according to the docs "Do not convert MySQL system tables in the mysql database (such as user or host) to the InnoDB type. This is an unsupported operation. The system tables must always be of the MyISAM type." link
    – eug
    Sep 1, 2016 at 1:56
  • Without editing to incorporate @eug's comment into this answer, I think it's deserving of a down-vote, though it's otherwise as elegant as any of the variants on this page.
    – mc0e
    Dec 19, 2016 at 10:06
  • 1
    Very Good. I also escaped the table names and ignored the system tables with the following query: SELECT CONCAT('ALTER TABLE `',table_schema,'`.`',table_name,'` engine=InnoDB;') FROM information_schema.tables WHERE engine = 'MyISAM' and table_schema not in ('information_schema','mysql','performance_schema','sys');
    – Marty Sama
    Sep 19, 2021 at 16:21
20

You can execute this statement in the mysql command line tool:

echo "SELECT concat('ALTER TABLE `',TABLE_NAME,'` ENGINE=InnoDB;')
FROM Information_schema.TABLES 
WHERE ENGINE != 'InnoDB' AND TABLE_TYPE='BASE TABLE' 
AND TABLE_SCHEMA='name-of-database'" | mysql > convert.sql

You may need to specify username and password using: mysql -u username -p The result is an sql script that you can pipe back into mysql:

mysql name-of-database < convert.sql

Replace "name-of-database" in the above statement and command line.

7
  • @itsraja, "echo" is a command supported by both sh on linux/unix and cmd on Microsoft systems, the result is piped as input to the mysql tool. Sep 27, 2011 at 11:19
  • 2
    that's right. But u've mentioned as "mysql command line tool"
    – itsraja
    Sep 27, 2011 at 12:50
  • 1
    Also, echo "SELECT concat(concat('ALTER TRABLE ', TABLE_NAME), ' ENGINE=InnoDB;') FROM TABLES WHERE ENGINE != 'InnoDB' AND TABLE_TYPE='BASE TABLE' AND TABLE_SCHEMA='testinno'" | mysql -u root --sock=/opt/lampp/var/mysql/mysql.sock --database=testinno > convert.sql ERROR 1146 (42S02) at line 1: Table 'testinno.TABLES' doesn't exist
    – itsraja
    Sep 27, 2011 at 12:55
  • I've put this into an example shell script here: shrubbery.mynetgear.net/c/display/W/… Jun 28, 2012 at 14:46
  • 1
    How can we properly escape the sql statement as a string? As it is now, I get -bash: ,TABLE_NAME,: command not found
    – arjan
    Jan 22, 2014 at 12:00
17

It’s very simple. There are only two steps.

  1. Copy, paste and run this:

    SET @DATABASE_NAME = 'name_of_your_db';
    SELECT  CONCAT('ALTER TABLE `', table_name, '` ENGINE=InnoDB;') AS  sql_statements FROM information_schema.tables AS tb WHERE   table_schema = @DATABASE_NAME AND `ENGINE` = 'MyISAM' AND `TABLE_TYPE` = 'BASE TABLE' ORDER BY table_name DESC;
    

(copy and paste all result in in sql tab)

  1. Copy all result into the SQL tab and paste below in the line.

    START TRANSACTION;
    COMMIT;
    

For example:

START TRANSACTION;
ALTER TABLE `admin_files` ENGINE=InnoDB;
COMMIT;
14

To generate ALTER statements for all tables in all the non-system schemas, ordered by those schemas/tables run the following:

SELECT  CONCAT('ALTER TABLE ',TABLE_SCHEMA,'.', table_name, ' ENGINE=InnoDB;') AS sql_statements
FROM    information_schema.tables
WHERE   TABLE_SCHEMA NOT IN ('mysql', 'information_schema', 'performance_schema', 'innodb', 'sys', 'tmp')
AND     `ENGINE` = 'MyISAM'
AND     `TABLE_TYPE` = 'BASE TABLE'
ORDER BY TABLE_SCHEMA, table_name DESC;

After that, run those queries via a client to perform the alteration.

  • Answer is based on above answers, but improves schema handling.
10

It hasn't been mentioned yet, so I'll write it for posterity:

If you're migrating between DB servers (or have another reason you'd dump and reload your dta), you can just modify the output from mysqldump:

mysqldump --no-data DBNAME | sed 's/ENGINE=MyISAM/ENGINE=InnoDB/' > my_schema.sql;
mysqldump --no-create-info DBNAME > my_data.sql;

Then load it again:

mysql DBNAME < my_schema.sql && mysql DBNAME < my_data.sql

(Also, in my limited experience, this can be a much faster process than altering the tables ‘live’. It probably depends on the type of data and indexes.)

1
  • 1
    ty! exactly what I was looking for. Will test it in a few days.
    – Rainer
    Feb 10, 2017 at 15:45
8

Here is a way to do it for Django users:

from django.core.management.base import BaseCommand
from django.db import connections


class Command(BaseCommand):

    def handle(self, database="default", *args, **options):

        cursor = connections[database].cursor()

        cursor.execute("SHOW TABLE STATUS");

        for row in cursor.fetchall():
            if row[1] != "InnoDB":
                print "Converting %s" % row[0],
                result = cursor.execute("ALTER TABLE %s ENGINE=INNODB" % row[0])
                print result

Add that to your app under the folders management/commands/ Then you can convert all your tables with a manage.py command:

python manage.py convert_to_innodb
8

A plain MySQL Version.

You can simply start mysql executable, use database and copy-paste the query.

This will convert all MyISAM tables in the current Database into INNODB tables.

DROP PROCEDURE IF EXISTS convertToInnodb;
DELIMITER //
CREATE PROCEDURE convertToInnodb()
BEGIN
mainloop: LOOP
  SELECT TABLE_NAME INTO @convertTable FROM information_schema.TABLES
  WHERE `TABLE_SCHEMA` LIKE DATABASE()
  AND `ENGINE` LIKE 'MyISAM' ORDER BY TABLE_NAME LIMIT 1;
  IF @convertTable IS NULL THEN 
    LEAVE mainloop;
  END IF;
  SET @sqltext := CONCAT('ALTER TABLE `', DATABASE(), '`.`', @convertTable, '` ENGINE = INNODB');
  PREPARE convertTables FROM @sqltext;
  EXECUTE convertTables;
  DEALLOCATE PREPARE convertTables;
  SET @convertTable = NULL;
END LOOP mainloop;

END//
DELIMITER ;

CALL convertToInnodb();
DROP PROCEDURE IF EXISTS convertToInnodb;
2
  • I'm surprised that there weren't more stored procedure-based solutions! Jul 5, 2018 at 19:28
  • Because writing and testing procedures in MySQL is pain ;-) the comment has nothing todo with the question. Jul 5, 2018 at 20:23
6

Just tested another (simple ?) way, and worked for me.

Just export your DB as .sql file, edit-it with gedit or notepad;

Replace ENGINE=MyISAM with ENGINE=INNODB and Save the file edited

Number or replacement done should be the number of your tables

Import it to MySQL (phpMyAdmin or command line)

And Voila !

0
5

From inside mysql, you could use search/replace using a text editor:

SELECT table_schema, table_name FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.TABLES WHERE engine = 'myisam';

Note: You should probably ignore information_schema and mysql because "The mysql and information_schema databases, that implement some of the MySQL internals, still use MyISAM. In particular, you cannot switch the grant tables to use InnoDB." ( http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.5/en/innodb-default-se.html )

In any case, note the tables to ignore and run:

SELECT table_name FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.TABLES WHERE engine = 'myisam';

Now just copy/paste that list into your text editor and search/replace "|" with "ALTER TABLE" etc.

You'll then have a list like this you can simply paste into your mysql terminal:

ALTER TABLE arth_commentmeta           ENGINE=Innodb;
ALTER TABLE arth_comments              ENGINE=Innodb;
ALTER TABLE arth_links                 ENGINE=Innodb;
ALTER TABLE arth_options               ENGINE=Innodb;
ALTER TABLE arth_postmeta              ENGINE=Innodb;
ALTER TABLE arth_posts                 ENGINE=Innodb;
ALTER TABLE arth_term_relationships    ENGINE=Innodb;
ALTER TABLE arth_term_taxonomy         ENGINE=Innodb;
ALTER TABLE arth_terms                 ENGINE=Innodb;
ALTER TABLE arth_usermeta              ENGINE=Innodb;

If your text editor can't do this easily, here's another solution for getting a similar list (that you can paste into mysql) for just one prefix of your database, from linux terminal:

mysql -u [username] -p[password] -B -N -e 'show tables like "arth_%"' [database name] | xargs -I '{}' echo "ALTER TABLE {} ENGINE=INNODB;"
4

use this line to alter the database engine for single table.

  ALTER TABLE table_name ENGINE = INNODB;
3

I'm a newbie and had to find my own solution because mysql commands on the web are usually riddled with misspellings create a real life nightmare for people just starting out. Here is my solution....

Instead of in 1 command per table, I prepared dozens of commands (ready to copy and paste) at once using excel.

How? expand your putty window and enter mysql and then run the command "SHOW TABLE STATUS;" and the copy/paste the output to microsoft excel. Go to the Data tab and use the "text to columns" feature an delimit the columns by a space key. Then Sort the columns by whichever column shows your table types and delete all rows which the tables are already in InnoDb format (because we don't need to run commands against them, they are already done). Then add 2 columns to the left of the tables column, and 2 columns to the right. Then paste in the first part of the command in column-1 (see below). Column 2 should contain only a space. Column 3 is your tables column. Column 4 should contain only a space. Column 5 is the last part of your command. It should look like this:

column-1        column-2            column-3         column-4     column-5
ALTER TABLE     t_lade_tr           ENGINE=InnoDB;
ALTER TABLE     t_foro_detail_ms    ENGINE=InnoDB;
ALTER TABLE     t_ljk_ms            ENGINE=InnoDB;

Then copy and paste about 5 rows at a time into mysql. This will convert about 5 at once. I noticed if I did more than that at once then the commands would fail.

3

In my case, I was migrating from a MySQL instance with a default of MyISAM, to a MariaDB instance with a DEFAULT of InnoDB.

Per MariaDB Migration Doc's.

On old Server Run :

mysqldump -u root -p --skip-create-options --all-databases > migration.sql

The --skip-create-options ensures that the database server uses the default storage engine when loading the data, instead of MyISAM.

mysql -u root -p < migration.sql

This threw an error regarding creating mysql.db, but everything works great now :)

2

Try this shell script

DBENGINE='InnoDB' ;
DBUSER='your_db_user' ;
DBNAME='your_db_name' ;
DBHOST='your_db_host'
DBPASS='your_db_pass' ;
mysqldump --add-drop-table -h$DBHOST -u$DBUSER -p$DBPASS $DBNAME > mtest.sql; mysql -h$DBHOST -u$DBUSER -p$DBPASS $DBNAME -Nse "SHOW TABLES;" | while read TABLE ; do mysql -h$DBHOST -u$DBUSER -p$DBPASS $DBNAME -Nse "ALTER TABLE $TABLE ENGINE=$DBENGINE;" ; done
2

Some fixes to this util script

SET @DATABASE_NAME = 'Integradb';

SELECT  CONCAT('ALTER TABLE ', table_schema, '.', table_name, ' ENGINE=InnoDB;') AS sql_statements
FROM    information_schema.tables AS tb
WHERE   table_schema = @DATABASE_NAME
AND     `ENGINE` = 'MyISAM'
AND     `TABLE_TYPE` = 'BASE TABLE'
ORDER BY table_name DESC;
1

You could write a script to do it in your favourite scripting language. The script would do the following:

  1. Issue SHOW FULL TABLES.
  2. For each row returned, check that the second column says 'BASE TABLE' and not 'VIEW'.
  3. If it is not 'VIEW', issue the appropriate ALTER TABLE command.
1

This is a simple php script.

<?php
    @error_reporting(E_ALL | E_STRICT);
    @ini_set('display_errors', '1');


    $con = mysql_connect('server', 'user', 'pass');
    $dbName = 'moodle2014';

    $sql = "SELECT table_name FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.TABLES WHERE TABLE_SCHEMA = '".$dbName."';";
    $rs = mysql_query($sql, $con);

    $count = 0;
    $ok = 0;
    while($row = mysql_fetch_array($rs)){
            $count ++;
            $tbl = $row[0];
            $sql = "ALTER TABLE ".$dbName.".".$tbl." ENGINE=INNODB;";
            $resultado = mysql_query($sql);
            if ($resultado){
                    $ok ++;
                    echo $sql."<hr/>";
            }
    }
    if ($count == $ok){
            echo '<div style="color: green"><b>ALL OK</b></div>';
    }else{
            echo '<div style="color: red"><b>ERRORS</b>Total tables: '.$count.', updated tables:'.$ok.'</div>';
    }
1
<?php

// Convert all MyISAM tables to INNODB tables in all non-special databases.
// Note: With MySQL less than 5.6, tables with a fulltext search index cannot be converted to INNODB and will be skipped.

if($argc < 4)
    exit("Usage: {$argv[0]} <host> <username> <password>\n");
$host = $argv[1];
$username = $argv[2];
$password = $argv[3];

// Connect to the database.
if(!mysql_connect($host, $username, $password))
    exit("Error opening database. " . mysql_error() . "\n");

// Get all databases except special ones that shouldn't be converted.
$databases = mysql_query("SHOW databases WHERE `Database` NOT IN ('mysql', 'information_schema', 'performance_schema')");
if($databases === false)
    exit("Error showing databases. " . mysql_error() . "\n");

while($db = mysql_fetch_array($databases))
{
    // Select the database.
    if(!mysql_select_db($db[0]))
        exit("Error selecting database: {$db[0]}. " . mysql_error() . "\n");
    printf("Database: %s\n", $db[0]);

    // Get all MyISAM tables in the database.
    $tables = mysql_query("SHOW table status WHERE Engine = 'MyISAM'");
    if($tables === false)
        exit("Error showing tables. " . mysql_error() . "\n");

    while($tbl = mysql_fetch_array($tables))
    {
        // Convert the table to INNODB.
        printf("--- Converting %s\n", $tbl[0]);
        if(mysql_query("ALTER TABLE `{$tbl[0]}` ENGINE = INNODB") === false)
            printf("--- --- Error altering table: {$tbl[0]}. " . mysql_error() . "\n");
    }
}

mysql_close();

?>
1

for mysqli connect;

<?php

$host       = "host";
$user       = "user";
$pass       = "pss";
$database   = "db_name";


$connect = new mysqli($host, $user, $pass, $database);  

// Actual code starts here Dont forget to change db_name !!
$sql = "SELECT TABLE_NAME FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.TABLES
    WHERE TABLE_SCHEMA = 'db_name' 
    AND ENGINE = 'MyISAM'";

$rs = $connect->query($sql);

while($row = $rs->fetch_array())
{
    $tbl = $row[0];
    $sql = "ALTER TABLE `$tbl` ENGINE=INNODB";
    $connect->query($sql);
} ?>
1
<?php

  // connect your database here first

  mysql_connect('host', 'user', 'pass');

  $databases = mysql_query('SHOW databases');

  while($db = mysql_fetch_array($databases)) {
    echo "database => {$db[0]}\n";
    mysql_select_db($db[0]);

    $tables = mysql_query('SHOW tables');

    while($tbl = mysql_fetch_array($tables)) {
      echo "table => {$tbl[0]}\n";
      mysql_query("ALTER TABLE {$tbl[0]} ENGINE=InnoDB");
    }
  }
1

For converting MySql tables storage engine there is a number way:

  1. Use MySql commands as follow, for converting to innodb (ALTER TABLE t1 ENGINE = InnoDB) or (ALTER TABLE t1 ENGINE = MyISAM) for myisam (You should do this for each individual tables, t1 is for table name.).
  2. Write a script that loop on all tables and run the alter command
  3. Use an already available script to handle that: https://github.com/rafihaidari/convert-mysql-tables-storage-engine
1
  • @AdrianMole and SilverNak, thank you for your inputs I have edited my answer I hope this help.
    – RCode
    Jan 19, 2021 at 19:43
1

Follow steps:

  1. Use MySql commands as follows, for converting to InnoDB (ALTER TABLE t1 ENGINE = InnoDB) or (ALTER TABLE t1 ENGINE = MyISAM) for MyISAM (You should do this for each individual tables, t1 is for the table name.).

  2. Write a script that loops on all tables and run the alter command

  3. Use an already available script to handle that: https://github.com/rafihaidari/convert-mysql-tables-storage-engine

  4. Try this SQL to Get all info will get all the tables information then you can change all the table from isam to InnoDB

    SELECT CONCAT('ALTER TABLE ',TABLE_NAME,' ENGINE=InnoDB;') 
    FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.TABLES
    WHERE ENGINE='MyISAM'
          AND table_schema = 'your_DB_Name';
    
0

Yet another option... Here's how to do it in ansible. It assumes that the name of your database is in dbname and that you have already configured access.

- name: Get list of DB tables that need converting to InnoDB
  command: >
    mysql --batch --skip-column-names --execute="SELECT TABLE_NAME
    FROM information_schema.TABLES
    WHERE TABLE_SCHEMA = '{{ dbname }}' AND ENGINE = 'MyISAM';"
  register: converttables
  check_mode: no
  changed_when: False

- name: Convert any unconverted tables
  command: >
    mysql --batch --skip-column-names --execute="ALTER TABLE `{{ dbname }}`.`{{ item }}` ENGINE = InnoDB;"
  with_items: "{{ converttables.stdout_lines }}"
0

If you are using Windows you can accomplish this inside a batch file with the following loop.

set database=YOURDATABASENAME
for /F "tokens=1 skip=1 usebackq" %%a in (`mysql %%database%% -e "show table status where Engine != 'InnoDB';"`) do (
    mysql %database% -e "ALTER TABLE %%a ENGINE = 'InnoDB';"
)

Simply change the YOURDATABASENAME to the name of the database you are targeting or use %~1 to pass the database name via the command line.

Every table which is not currently InooDB will be converted to InnoDB. If you want to specifically target MyISAM as the question suggested, the following code has an updated MySQL conditional for only MyISAM.

set database=YOURDATABASENAME
for /F "tokens=1 skip=1 usebackq" %%a in (`mysql %%database%% -e "show table status where Engine = 'MyISAM';"`) do (
    mysql %database% -e "ALTER TABLE %%a ENGINE = 'InnoDB';"
)
0

Create a SQL dump file of your database (database_dump.sql) and open it in notepad. Find and Replace all "ENGINE=MyISAM" with "ENGINE=InnoDB". Save the file and import it back into your database.

0

When tables are big, better doing it from a console

convert-to-innodb.sh

#!/usr/bin/env bash

# Usage: ./convert-to-innodb.sh 'db' 'user' 'password' | mysql 'db' -u  user -p password


set -eu

db="$1"
user="$2"
pass="$3"


sql="SET @DATABASE_NAME = '${db}';"

sql+="SELECT  CONCAT('ALTER TABLE \`', table_name, '\` ENGINE=InnoDB;') AS sql_statements
FROM    information_schema.tables AS tb
WHERE   table_schema = @DATABASE_NAME
AND     \`ENGINE\` = 'MyISAM'
AND     \`TABLE_TYPE\` = 'BASE TABLE'
ORDER BY table_name DESC;"

echo $sql | mysql -u${user} -p${pass} | tail -n +2 

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