The physical entities that form TDengine clusters are known as data nodes (dnodes). Each dnode is a process running on the operating system of the physical machine. Dnodes can contain virtual nodes (vnodes), which store time-series data. Virtual nodes are formed into vgroups, which have 1 or 3 vnodes depending on the replica setting. If you want to enable replication on your cluster, it must contain at least three nodes. Dnodes can also contain management nodes (mnodes). Each cluster has up to three mnodes. Finally, dnodes can contain query nodes (qnodes), which compute time-series data, thus separating compute from storage. A single dnode can contain a vnode, qnode, and mnode.
Create the dnode before starting the corresponding dnode process. The dnode can then join the cluster based on the value of the firstEp parameter. Each dnode is assigned an ID after it joins a cluster.
The parameters that you can modify through this statement are the same as those located in the dnode configuration file. Modifications that you make through this statement take effect immediately, while modifications to the configuration file take effect when the dnode restarts.
TDengine automatically creates an mnode on the firstEp node. You can use this statement to create more mnodes for higher system availability. A cluster can have a maximum of three mnodes. Each dnode can contain only one mnode.
TDengine does not automatically create qnodes on startup. You can create qnodes as necessary for compute/storage separation. Each dnode can contain only one qnode. If a qnode is created on a dnode whose supportVnodes parameter is not 0, a vnode and qnode may coexist on the dnode. Each dnode can have a maximum of one vnode, one qnode, and one mnode. However, you can configure your cluster so that vnodes, qnodes, and mnodes are located on separate dnodes. If you set supportVnodes to 0 for a dnode, you can then decide whether to deploy an mnode or a qnode on it. In this way you can physically separate virtual node types.
The parameters that you can modify through this statement are the same as those located in the client configuration file. Modifications that you make through this statement take effect immediately, while modifications to the configuration file take effect when the client restarts.