Aurora MySQL database engine updates 2024-07-19 (version 2.11.6, compatible with MySQL 5.7.12)
Version: 2.11.6
Aurora MySQL 2.11.6 is generally available. Aurora MySQL 2.11 versions are compatible with MySQL 5.7.12. For more information on community changes, see
Changes in MySQL 5.7.12 (2016-04-11, General Availability)
The currently supported Aurora MySQL releases are 2.07.9, 2.07.10, 2.11.*, 2.12.*, 3.01.*, 3.02.*, 3.03.*, 3.04.*, 3.05.*, 3.06.*, and 3.07.*.
You can upgrade an existing Aurora MySQL 2.* database cluster to Aurora MySQL 2.11.6. You can also restore a snapshot from any currently supported lower Aurora MySQL version 2 release into Aurora MySQL 2.11.6.
If you upgrade an Aurora MySQL global database to version 2.11.*, you must upgrade your primary and secondary DB clusters to the exact same version, including the patch level. For more information on upgrading the minor version of an Aurora global database, see Minor version upgrades.
Immediately after an in-place engine version upgrade to Aurora MySQL 2.11.* is performed, an operating system upgrade is applied automatically to all affected instances on the db.r4, db.r5, db.t2, and db.t3 DB instance classes, if the instances are running an old operating system version. In a Multi-AZ DB cluster, all of the reader instances apply the operating system upgrade first. When the operating system upgrade on the first reader instance is finished, a failover occurs and the previous writer instance is upgraded.
Note
The operating system upgrade isn't applied automatically to Aurora global databases during major version upgrades.
Note
For information on how to upgrade your Aurora MySQL database cluster, see Upgrading the minor version or patch level of an Aurora MySQL DB cluster in the Amazon Aurora User Guide.
If you have any questions or concerns, Amazon Support is available on the community forums and through
Amazon Support
Improvements
Fixed security issues and CVEs:
-
Fixed a security issue in MySQL stored procedures.
This release includes all community CVE fixes up to and including MySQL 5.7.12. The following CVE fixes are included in this release:
Availability improvements:
-
Fixed an issue that can cause a database server to restart due to the concurrent access of connection resources during seamless scaling, zero downtime restart (ZDR), and zero downtime patching (ZDP).
-
Fixed an issue that can cause a reader DB instance to restart when freeing memory used for log application.
-
Fixed an issue that causes a reader DB instance to restart when running a parallel query.
-
Fixed an issue that can cause a reader DB instance that uses write forwarding to restart when a forwarded implicit commit statement
encounters an error.
General improvements:
-
Fixed an issue that can cause SQL statements to experience unexpected primary key violation errors or warnings on some rows when performing concurrent
INSERT
statements on a table that has anAUTO_INCREMENT
primary key column and a unique key column, and when anINSERT
statement has unique key violations on different rows. -
Fixed an issue that can lead to incorrect query results when zero downtime restart (ZDR) incorrectly restores session variables set as hints in queries.
-
Fixed an issue during Aurora Serverless v1 scaling that causes the DB instance to restart due to incorrect access to an internal data structure while finding a scaling point.
-
Fixed an issue where slow
INSERT
,DELETE
, andUPDATE
queries run by the MySQL Event Schedulerweren't recorded in the slow query log unless preceded by a slow SELECT
query.
Integration of MySQL Community Edition bug fixes
This release includes all community bug fixes up to and including 5.7.12. For more information, see MySQL bugs fixed by Aurora MySQL 2.x database engine updates.
Features not supported in Aurora MySQL version 2
The following features are currently not supported in Aurora MySQL version 2 (compatible with MySQL 5.7).
-
Scan batching. For more information, see Aurora MySQL database engine updates 2017-12-11 (version 1.16) (Deprecated).
MySQL 5.7 compatibility
This Aurora MySQL version is wire-compatible with MySQL 5.7 and includes features such as JSON support, spatial indexes, and generated columns. Aurora MySQL uses a native implementation of spatial indexing using z-order curves to deliver >20x better write performance and >10x better read performance than MySQL 5.7 for spatial datasets.
This Aurora MySQL version does not currently support the following MySQL 5.7 features:
-
Group replication plugin
-
Increased page size
-
InnoDB buffer pool loading at startup
-
InnoDB full-text parser plugin
-
Multisource replication
-
Online buffer pool resizing
-
Password validation plugin
-
Query rewrite plugins
-
Replication filtering
-
The
CREATE TABLESPACE
SQL statement