[+/-]
      The usual (uncompressed) size of InnoDB data pages is 16KB.
      Beginning with the InnoDB storage engine, you can use the attributes
      ROW_FORMAT=COMPRESSED and/or KEY_BLOCK_SIZE in the
      CREATE TABLE and ALTER TABLE commands to enable table
      compression. Depending on the combination of option values,
      InnoDB attempts to compress each page to 1KB, 2KB, 4KB, 8KB, or
      16KB.
    
        The term KEY_BLOCK_SIZE does not refer to a
        “key”, but simply specifies the size of compressed
        pages to use for the table. Likewise, in the InnoDB storage engine,
        compression is applicable to tables, not to individual rows,
        despite the option name ROW_FORMAT. Because the InnoDB storage
        engine cannot add syntax to SQL statements, the InnoDB storage engine
        re-uses the clauses originally defined for
        MyISAM.
      
To create a compressed table, you might use a command like this:
CREATE TABLEname(column1 INT PRIMARY KEY) ENGINE=InnoDB ROW_FORMAT=COMPRESSED KEY_BLOCK_SIZE=4;
      If you specify ROW_FORMAT=COMPRESSED but not KEY_BLOCK_SIZE,
      the default compressed page size of 8KB is used. If
      KEY_BLOCK_SIZE is specified, you can omit the attribute
      ROW_FORMAT=COMPRESSED.
    
      Setting KEY_BLOCK_SIZE=16 most often does not
      result in much compression, since the normal InnoDB page size is
      16KB. However, this setting may be useful for tables with many
      long BLOB, VARCHAR or
      TEXT columns, because such values often do
      compress well, and might therefore require fewer
      “overflow” pages as described in
      Section 3.4.2.2, “Compressing BLOB, VARCHAR and TEXT Columns”.
    
      Note that compression is specified on a table-by-table basis. All
      indexes of a table (including the clustered index) are compressed
      using the same page size, as specified on the CREATE TABLE or
      ALTER TABLE command. Table attributes such as ROW_FORMAT and
      KEY_BLOCK_SIZE are not part of the CREATE INDEX syntax, and
      are ignored if they are specified (although you see them in the
      output of the SHOW CREATE TABLE command).
    
This is the User’s Guide for InnoDB storage engine 1.1 for MySQL 5.5, generated on 2010-04-13 (revision: 19994) .

