The InnoDB Plugin introduces the idea of a named file format and a configuration parameter to enable the use of features that require use of that format. The new file format is the “Barracuda” format, and the file format supported by prior releases of InnoDB is called file format “Antelope”. Compressed tables and the new row format that stores long columns “off-page” require the use of the “Barracuda” file format or newer. Future versions of InnoDB may introduce a series of file formats, identified with the names of animals, in ascending alphabetical order.
      Beginning with this release, every InnoDB per-table
      tablespace file is labeled with a file format identifier.  This
      does not apply to the system tablespace (the
      ibdata files) but only the files of separate
      tablespaces (the *.ibd files where tables and
      indexes are stored in their own tablespace). As noted below,
      however, the system tablespace is tagged with the
      “highest” file format in use in a group of InnoDB
      database files, and this tag is checked when the files are opened.
    
      In this release, when you create a compressed table, or a
      table with ROW_FORMAT=DYNAMIC, the file header
      for the corresponding .ibd file and the table
      type in the InnoDB data dictionary are updated with the
      identifier for the “Barracuda” file format. From that point
      forward, the table cannot be used with a version of InnoDB that
      does not support this new file format. To protect against
      anomalous behavior, InnoDB version 5.0.21 and later performs
      a compatibility check when the table is opened, as described
      below. (Note that the ALTER TABLE command
      in many cases, causes a table to be recreated and thereby
      change its properties. The special case of adding or dropping
      indexes without rebuilding the table is described in
      Chapter 2, Fast Index Creation in the InnoDB Storage Engine.)
    
If a version of InnoDB supports a particular file format (whether or not it is enabled), you can access and even update any table that requires that format or an earlier format. Only the creation of new tables using new features is limited based on the particular file format enabled. Conversely, if a tablespace contains a table or index that uses a file format that is not supported by the currently running software, it cannot be accessed at all, even for read access.
      The only way to “downgrade” an InnoDB
      tablespace to an earlier file format is to copy the data to a new
      table, in a tablespace that uses the earlier format.  This can be
      done with the ALTER TABLE command, as described
      in Section 4.6, “Downgrading the File Format”.
    
      The easiest way to determine the file format of an existing
      InnoDB tablespace is to examine the properties of the table it
      contains, using the SHOW TABLE STATUS command
      or querying the table INFORMATION_SCHEMA.TABLES.
      If the Row_format of the table is reported as
      'Compressed' or 'Dynamic',
      the tablespace containing the table uses the “Barracuda” format.
      Otherwise, it uses the prior InnoDB file format, “Antelope”.
    
This is the User’s Guide for InnoDB Plugin 1.0.6 for MySQL 5.1, generated on March 4, 2010 (rev 673:680M).

