On most systems you can also start mysqld from gdb to get more information if mysqld crashes.
With some older gdb versions on Linux you
must use run --one-thread
if you want to be
able to debug mysqld threads. In this case,
you can only have one thread active at a time. We recommend you
to upgrade to gdb 5.1 ASAP as thread debugging works much better
with this version!
NTPL threads (the new thread library on Linux) may cause problems while running mysqld under gdb. Some symptoms are:
mysqld hangs during startup (before it
writes ready for connections
).
mysqld crashes during a
pthread_mutex_lock()
or
pthread_mutex_unlock()
call.
In this case you should set the following environment variable in the shell before starting gdb:
LD_ASSUME_KERNEL=2.4.1 export LD_ASSUME_KERNEL
When running mysqld under
gdb, you should disable the stack trace with
--skip-stack-trace
to be able to catch
segfaults within gdb.
In MySQL 4.0.14 and above you should use the
--gdb
option to mysqld. This installs an
interrupt handler for SIGINT
(needed to stop
mysqld with ^C
to set
breakpoints) and disable stack tracing and core file handling.
It's very hard to debug MySQL under gdb if
you do a lot of new connections the whole time as
gdb doesn't free the memory for old threads.
You can avoid this problem by starting mysqld
with -O thread_cache_size= 'max_connections
+1'
. In most cases just using -O
thread_cache_size=5'
helps a lot!
If you want to get a core dump on Linux if
mysqld dies with a SIGSEGV signal, you can
start mysqld with the
--core-file
option. This core file can be
used to make a backtrace that may help you find out why
mysqld died:
shell> gdb mysqld core gdb> backtrace full gdb> exit
See Sección A.4.2, “Qué hacer si MySQL sigue fallando (crashing)”.
If you are using gdb 4.17.x or above on
Linux, you should install a .gdb
file, with
the following information, in your current directory:
set print sevenbit off handle SIGUSR1 nostop noprint handle SIGUSR2 nostop noprint handle SIGWAITING nostop noprint handle SIGLWP nostop noprint handle SIGPIPE nostop handle SIGALRM nostop handle SIGHUP nostop handle SIGTERM nostop noprint
If you have problems debugging threads with gdb, you should download gdb 5.x and try this instead. The new gdb version has very improved thread handling!
Here is an example how to debug mysqld:
shell> gdb /usr/local/libexec/mysqld gdb> run ... backtrace full # Do this when mysqld crashes
Include the above output in a mail generated with mysqlbug and mail this to the general MySQL mailing list. See Sección 1.6.1.1, “Las listas de correo de MySQL”.
If mysqld hangs you can try to use some
system tools like strace
or
/usr/proc/bin/pstack
to examine where
mysqld has hung.
strace /tmp/log libexec/mysqld
If you are using the Perl DBI
interface, you
can turn on debugging information by using the
trace
method or by setting the
DBI_TRACE
environment variable.
Ésta es una traducción del manual de referencia de MySQL, que puede encontrarse en dev.mysql.com. El manual de referencia original de MySQL está escrito en inglés, y esta traducción no necesariamente está tan actualizada como la versión original. Para cualquier sugerencia sobre la traducción y para señalar errores de cualquier tipo, no dude en dirigirse a mysql-es@vespito.com.