Although you may have enabled a given
      innodb_file_format at a particular time, unless
      you create a new table, the database file format is unchanged.
      If you do create a new table, the tablespace containing the table
      is tagged with the “earliest” or “simplest”
      file format that is required for the table’s features. For example,
      if you enable file format “Barracuda”, and create a new table that
      is not compressed and does not use ROW_FORMAT=DYNAMIC,
      the new tablespace that contains the table is tagged as using file
      format “Antelope”.
    
      It is easy to identify the file format used by a given
      tablespace or table.  The table uses the “Barracuda” format if
      the Row_format reported by
      SHOW CREATE TABLE or
      INFORMATION_SCHEMA.TABLES is
      one of 'Compressed' or
      'Dynamic'.  (Please note that the
      Row_format is a separate column, and ignore the
      contents of the Create_options column, which
      may contain the string ROW_FORMAT.)  If the
      table in a tablespace uses neither of those features, the file
      uses the format supported by prior releases of InnoDB, now
      called file format “Antelope”.  Then, the
      Row_format is one of
      'Redundant' or
      'Compact'.
    
      The file format identifier is written as part of the
      tablespace flags (a 32-bit number) in the *.ibd
      file in the 4 bytes starting at position 54 of the file, most
      significant byte first.  (The first byte of the file is byte
      zero.)  On some systems, you can display these bytes in
      hexadecimal with the command od -t x1 -j 54 -N 4
      . If all bytes
      are zero, the tablespace uses the “Antelope” file format (which
      is the format used by the standard built-in InnoDB in MySQL up to version 5.1).
      Otherwise, the least significant bit should be set in the
      tablespace flags, and the file format identifier is written in the
      bits 5 through 11.  (Divide the tablespace flags by 32 and take
      the remainder after dividing the integer part of the result by
      128.)
    tablename.ibd
This is the User’s Guide for InnoDB Plugin 1.0.6 for MySQL 5.1, generated on March 4, 2010 (rev 673:680M).

