After spending four years working with ProxySQL in production, I’ve learned a few interesting lessons about interpreting and processing query rules. I hope to save you some time (and avoid wrong turns) with this summary of ProxySQL query rules.
ProxySQL query engine is very powerful and supports the building of complex rule sets. These can be used to route traffic to backend MySQL instances, rewrite queries, and for traffic mirroring, among other use cases.
When the rule set is short and simple, you can easily understand what the outcome for a certain query would be. However, for complex sets or combined scenarios, you need a deeper understanding of the engine logic.
Note 1: Rules are processed in rule_id order
It might seem like a trivial start, but during testing or implementation, …
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