Table of Contents
This appendix lists common problems and errors that may occur and potential resolutions, in addition to listing the errors that may appear when you call MySQL from any host language. The first section covers problems and resolutions. Detailed information on errors is provided; The first list displays server error messages. The second list displays client program messages.
There are several sources of error information in MySQL:
Each SQL statement executed results in an error code, an SQLSTATE value, and an error message, as described in Section C.2, “Types of Error Values”. These errors are returned from the server side; see Section C.3, “Server Error Codes and Messages”.
Errors can occur on the client side, usually involving problems communicating with the server; see Section C.4, “Client Error Codes and Messages”.
SQL statement warning and error information is available
through the SHOW WARNINGS and
SHOW ERRORS statements. The
warning_count and
error_count system variables
provide counts of the number of warnings and errors.
SHOW SLAVE STATUS statement
output includes information about replication errors occurring
on the slave side.
SHOW ENGINE
INNODB STATUS statement output includes information
about the most recent foreign key error if a
CREATE TABLE statement for an
InnoDB table fails.
The perror program provides information from the command line about error numbers. See Section 4.8.1, “perror — Explain Error Codes”.
Descriptions of server and client errors are provided later in
this Appendix. For information about errors related to
InnoDB, see
Section 13.6.12, “InnoDB Error Handling”.
When an error occurs in MySQL, the server returns two types of error values:
A MySQL-specific error code. This value is numeric. It is not portable to other database systems.
An SQLSTATE value. The value is a five-character string (for
example, '42S02'). The values are specified
by ANSI SQL and ODBC and are more standardized.
A message string that provides a textual description of the error is also available.
When an error occurs, you can access the MySQL error code, the SQLSTATE value, and the message string using C API functions:
MySQL error code: Call
mysql_errno()
SQLSTATE value: Call
mysql_sqlstate()
Error message: Call
mysql_error()
For prepared statements, the corresponding error functions are
mysql_stmt_errno(),
mysql_stmt_sqlstate(), and
mysql_stmt_error(). All error
functions are described in Section 21.9, “MySQL C API”.
The first two characters of an SQLSTATE value indicate the error class:
'00' indicates success.
'01' indicates a warning.
'02' indicates “not found.”
These values are relevant only within the context of cursors
and are used to control what happens when a cursor reaches the
end of a data set.
Other values indicate an exception.
MySQL programs have access to several types of error information when the server returns an error. For example, the mysql client program displays errors using the following format:
shell> SELECT * FROM no_such_table;
ERROR 1146 (42S02): Table 'test.no_such_table' doesn't exist
The message displayed contains three types of information:
A numeric error code (1146). This number is
MySQL-specific and is not portable to other database systems.
A five-character SQLSTATE value ('42S02').
The values are specified by ANSI SQL and ODBC and are more
standardized. Not all MySQL error numbers are mapped to
SQLSTATE error codes. The value 'HY000'
(general error) is used for unmapped errors.
A message string that provides a textual description of the error.
Server error information comes from the following source files. For details about the way that error information is defined, see the MySQL Internals manual, available at http://dev.mysql.com/doc/.
Error message information is listed in the
share/errmsg.txt file.
%d and %s represent
numbers and strings, respectively, that are substituted into
the Message values when they are displayed.
The Error values listed in
share/errmsg.txt are used to generate the
definitions in the include/mysqld_error.h
and include/mysqld_ername.h MySQL source
files.
The SQLSTATE values listed in
share/errmsg.txt are used to generate the
definitions in the include/sql_state.h
MySQL source file.
Because updates are frequent, it is possible that those files will contain additional error information not listed here.
Error: 1000 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_HASHCHK)
Message: hashchk
Error: 1001 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_NISAMCHK)
Message: isamchk
Error: 1002 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_NO)
Message: NO
Error: 1003 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_YES)
Message: YES
Error: 1004 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_CANT_CREATE_FILE)
Message: Can't create file '%s' (errno: %d)
Error: 1005 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_CANT_CREATE_TABLE)
Message: Can't create table '%s' (errno: %d)
Error: 1006 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_CANT_CREATE_DB)
Message: Can't create database '%s' (errno: %d)
Error: 1007 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_DB_CREATE_EXISTS)
Message: Can't create database '%s'; database exists
Error: 1008 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_DB_DROP_EXISTS)
Message: Can't drop database '%s'; database doesn't exist
Error: 1009 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_DB_DROP_DELETE)
Message: Error dropping database (can't delete '%s', errno: %d)
Error: 1010 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_DB_DROP_RMDIR)
Message: Error dropping database (can't rmdir '%s', errno: %d)
Error: 1011 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_CANT_DELETE_FILE)
Message: Error on delete of '%s' (errno: %d)
Error: 1012 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_CANT_FIND_SYSTEM_REC)
Message: Can't read record in system table
Error: 1013 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_CANT_GET_STAT)
Message: Can't get status of '%s' (errno: %d)
Error: 1014 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_CANT_GET_WD)
Message: Can't get working directory (errno: %d)
Error: 1015 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_CANT_LOCK)
Message: Can't lock file (errno: %d)
Error: 1016 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_CANT_OPEN_FILE)
Message: Can't open file: '%s' (errno: %d)
Error: 1017 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_FILE_NOT_FOUND)
Message: Can't find file: '%s' (errno: %d)
Error: 1018 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_CANT_READ_DIR)
Message: Can't read dir of '%s' (errno: %d)
Error: 1019 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_CANT_SET_WD)
Message: Can't change dir to '%s' (errno: %d)
Error: 1020 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_CHECKREAD)
Message: Record has changed since last read in table '%s'
Error: 1021 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_DISK_FULL)
Message: Disk full (%s); waiting for someone to free some space...
Error: 1022 SQLSTATE: 23000
(ER_DUP_KEY)
Message: Can't write; duplicate key in table '%s'
Error: 1023 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_ERROR_ON_CLOSE)
Message: Error on close of '%s' (errno: %d)
Error: 1024 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_ERROR_ON_READ)
Message: Error reading file '%s' (errno: %d)
Error: 1025 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_ERROR_ON_RENAME)
Message: Error on rename of '%s' to '%s' (errno: %d)
Error: 1026 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_ERROR_ON_WRITE)
Message: Error writing file '%s' (errno: %d)
Error: 1027 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_FILE_USED)
Message: '%s' is locked against change
Error: 1028 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_FILSORT_ABORT)
Message: Sort aborted
Error: 1029 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_FORM_NOT_FOUND)
Message: View '%s' doesn't exist for '%s'
Error: 1030 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_GET_ERRNO)
Message: Got error %d from storage engine
Error: 1031 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_ILLEGAL_HA)
Message: Table storage engine for '%s' doesn't have this option
Error: 1032 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_KEY_NOT_FOUND)
Message: Can't find record in '%s'
Error: 1033 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_NOT_FORM_FILE)
Message: Incorrect information in file: '%s'
Error: 1034 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_NOT_KEYFILE)
Message: Incorrect key file for table '%s'; try to repair it
Error: 1035 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_OLD_KEYFILE)
Message: Old key file for table '%s'; repair it!
Error: 1036 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_OPEN_AS_READONLY)
Message: Table '%s' is read only
Error: 1037 SQLSTATE: HY001
(ER_OUTOFMEMORY)
Message: Out of memory; restart server and try again (needed %d bytes)
Error: 1038 SQLSTATE: HY001
(ER_OUT_OF_SORTMEMORY)
Message: Out of sort memory; increase server sort buffer size
Error: 1039 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_UNEXPECTED_EOF)
Message: Unexpected EOF found when reading file '%s' (errno: %d)
Error: 1040 SQLSTATE: 08004
(ER_CON_COUNT_ERROR)
Message: Too many connections
Error: 1041 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_OUT_OF_RESOURCES)
Message: Out of memory; check if mysqld or some other process uses all available memory; if not, you may have to use 'ulimit' to allow mysqld to use more memory or you can add more swap space
Error: 1042 SQLSTATE: 08S01
(ER_BAD_HOST_ERROR)
Message: Can't get hostname for your address
Error: 1043 SQLSTATE: 08S01
(ER_HANDSHAKE_ERROR)
Message: Bad handshake
Error: 1044 SQLSTATE: 42000
(ER_DBACCESS_DENIED_ERROR)
Message: Access denied for user '%s'@'%s' to database '%s'
Error: 1045 SQLSTATE: 28000
(ER_ACCESS_DENIED_ERROR)
Message: Access denied for user '%s'@'%s' (using password: %s)
Error: 1046 SQLSTATE: 3D000
(ER_NO_DB_ERROR)
Message: No database selected
Error: 1047 SQLSTATE: 08S01
(ER_UNKNOWN_COM_ERROR)
Message: Unknown command
Error: 1048 SQLSTATE: 23000
(ER_BAD_NULL_ERROR)
Message: Column '%s' cannot be null
Error: 1049 SQLSTATE: 42000
(ER_BAD_DB_ERROR)
Message: Unknown database '%s'
Error: 1050 SQLSTATE: 42S01
(ER_TABLE_EXISTS_ERROR)
Message: Table '%s' already exists
Error: 1051 SQLSTATE: 42S02
(ER_BAD_TABLE_ERROR)
Message: Unknown table '%s'
Error: 1052 SQLSTATE: 23000
(ER_NON_UNIQ_ERROR)
Message: Column '%s' in %s is ambiguous
Error: 1053 SQLSTATE: 08S01
(ER_SERVER_SHUTDOWN)
Message: Server shutdown in progress
Error: 1054 SQLSTATE: 42S22
(ER_BAD_FIELD_ERROR)
Message: Unknown column '%s' in '%s'
Error: 1055 SQLSTATE: 42000
(ER_WRONG_FIELD_WITH_GROUP)
Message: '%s' isn't in GROUP BY
Error: 1056 SQLSTATE: 42000
(ER_WRONG_GROUP_FIELD)
Message: Can't group on '%s'
Error: 1057 SQLSTATE: 42000
(ER_WRONG_SUM_SELECT)
Message: Statement has sum functions and columns in same statement
Error: 1058 SQLSTATE: 21S01
(ER_WRONG_VALUE_COUNT)
Message: Column count doesn't match value count
Error: 1059 SQLSTATE: 42000
(ER_TOO_LONG_IDENT)
Message: Identifier name '%s' is too long
Error: 1060 SQLSTATE: 42S21
(ER_DUP_FIELDNAME)
Message: Duplicate column name '%s'
Error: 1061 SQLSTATE: 42000
(ER_DUP_KEYNAME)
Message: Duplicate key name '%s'
Error: 1062 SQLSTATE: 23000
(ER_DUP_ENTRY)
Message: Duplicate entry '%s' for key %d
Error: 1063 SQLSTATE: 42000
(ER_WRONG_FIELD_SPEC)
Message: Incorrect column specifier for column '%s'
Error: 1064 SQLSTATE: 42000
(ER_PARSE_ERROR)
Message: %s near '%s' at line %d
Error: 1065 SQLSTATE: 42000
(ER_EMPTY_QUERY)
Message: Query was empty
Error: 1066 SQLSTATE: 42000
(ER_NONUNIQ_TABLE)
Message: Not unique table/alias: '%s'
Error: 1067 SQLSTATE: 42000
(ER_INVALID_DEFAULT)
Message: Invalid default value for '%s'
Error: 1068 SQLSTATE: 42000
(ER_MULTIPLE_PRI_KEY)
Message: Multiple primary key defined
Error: 1069 SQLSTATE: 42000
(ER_TOO_MANY_KEYS)
Message: Too many keys specified; max %d keys allowed
Error: 1070 SQLSTATE: 42000
(ER_TOO_MANY_KEY_PARTS)
Message: Too many key parts specified; max %d parts allowed
Error: 1071 SQLSTATE: 42000
(ER_TOO_LONG_KEY)
Message: Specified key was too long; max key length is %d bytes
Error: 1072 SQLSTATE: 42000
(ER_KEY_COLUMN_DOES_NOT_EXITS)
Message: Key column '%s' doesn't exist in table
Error: 1073 SQLSTATE: 42000
(ER_BLOB_USED_AS_KEY)
Message: BLOB column '%s' can't be used in key specification with the used table type
Error: 1074 SQLSTATE: 42000
(ER_TOO_BIG_FIELDLENGTH)
Message: Column length too big for column '%s' (max = %lu); use BLOB or TEXT instead
Error: 1075 SQLSTATE: 42000
(ER_WRONG_AUTO_KEY)
Message: Incorrect table definition; there can be only one auto column and it must be defined as a key
Error: 1076 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_READY)
Message: %s: ready for connections. Version: '%s' socket: '%s' port: %d
Error: 1077 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_NORMAL_SHUTDOWN)
Message: %s: Normal shutdown
Error: 1078 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_GOT_SIGNAL)
Message: %s: Got signal %d. Aborting!
Error: 1079 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_SHUTDOWN_COMPLETE)
Message: %s: Shutdown complete
Error: 1080 SQLSTATE: 08S01
(ER_FORCING_CLOSE)
Message: %s: Forcing close of thread %ld user: '%s'
Error: 1081 SQLSTATE: 08S01
(ER_IPSOCK_ERROR)
Message: Can't create IP socket
Error: 1082 SQLSTATE: 42S12
(ER_NO_SUCH_INDEX)
Message: Table '%s' has no index like the one used in CREATE INDEX; recreate the table
Error: 1083 SQLSTATE: 42000
(ER_WRONG_FIELD_TERMINATORS)
Message: Field separator argument is not what is expected; check the manual
Error: 1084 SQLSTATE: 42000
(ER_BLOBS_AND_NO_TERMINATED)
Message: You can't use fixed rowlength with BLOBs; please use 'fields terminated by'
Error: 1085 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_TEXTFILE_NOT_READABLE)
Message: The file '%s' must be in the database directory or be readable by all
Error: 1086 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_FILE_EXISTS_ERROR)
Message: File '%s' already exists
Error: 1087 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_LOAD_INFO)
Message: Records: %ld Deleted: %ld Skipped: %ld Warnings: %ld
Error: 1088 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_ALTER_INFO)
Message: Records: %ld Duplicates: %ld
Error: 1089 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_WRONG_SUB_KEY)
Message: Incorrect prefix key; the used key part isn't a string, the used length is longer than the key part, or the storage engine doesn't support unique prefix keys
Error: 1090 SQLSTATE: 42000
(ER_CANT_REMOVE_ALL_FIELDS)
Message: You can't delete all columns with ALTER TABLE; use DROP TABLE instead
Error: 1091 SQLSTATE: 42000
(ER_CANT_DROP_FIELD_OR_KEY)
Message: Can't DROP '%s'; check that column/key exists
Error: 1092 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_INSERT_INFO)
Message: Records: %ld Duplicates: %ld Warnings: %ld
Error: 1093 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_UPDATE_TABLE_USED)
Message: You can't specify target table '%s' for update in FROM clause
Error: 1094 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_NO_SUCH_THREAD)
Message: Unknown thread id: %lu
Error: 1095 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_KILL_DENIED_ERROR)
Message: You are not owner of thread %lu
Error: 1096 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_NO_TABLES_USED)
Message: No tables used
Error: 1097 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_TOO_BIG_SET)
Message: Too many strings for column %s and SET
Error: 1098 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_NO_UNIQUE_LOGFILE)
Message: Can't generate a unique log-filename %s.(1-999)
Error: 1099 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_TABLE_NOT_LOCKED_FOR_WRITE)
Message: Table '%s' was locked with a READ lock and can't be updated
Error: 1100 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_TABLE_NOT_LOCKED)
Message: Table '%s' was not locked with LOCK TABLES
Error: 1101 SQLSTATE: 42000
(ER_BLOB_CANT_HAVE_DEFAULT)
Message: BLOB/TEXT column '%s' can't have a default value
Error: 1102 SQLSTATE: 42000
(ER_WRONG_DB_NAME)
Message: Incorrect database name '%s'
Error: 1103 SQLSTATE: 42000
(ER_WRONG_TABLE_NAME)
Message: Incorrect table name '%s'
Error: 1104 SQLSTATE: 42000
(ER_TOO_BIG_SELECT)
Message: The SELECT would examine more than MAX_JOIN_SIZE rows; check your WHERE and use SET SQL_BIG_SELECTS=1 or SET SQL_MAX_JOIN_SIZE=# if the SELECT is okay
Error: 1105 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_UNKNOWN_ERROR)
Message: Unknown error
Error: 1106 SQLSTATE: 42000
(ER_UNKNOWN_PROCEDURE)
Message: Unknown procedure '%s'
Error: 1107 SQLSTATE: 42000
(ER_WRONG_PARAMCOUNT_TO_PROCEDURE)
Message: Incorrect parameter count to procedure '%s'
Error: 1108 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_WRONG_PARAMETERS_TO_PROCEDURE)
Message: Incorrect parameters to procedure '%s'
Error: 1109 SQLSTATE: 42S02
(ER_UNKNOWN_TABLE)
Message: Unknown table '%s' in %s
Error: 1110 SQLSTATE: 42000
(ER_FIELD_SPECIFIED_TWICE)
Message: Column '%s' specified twice
Error: 1111 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_INVALID_GROUP_FUNC_USE)
Message: Invalid use of group function
Error: 1112 SQLSTATE: 42000
(ER_UNSUPPORTED_EXTENSION)
Message: Table '%s' uses an extension that doesn't exist in this MySQL version
Error: 1113 SQLSTATE: 42000
(ER_TABLE_MUST_HAVE_COLUMNS)
Message: A table must have at least 1 column
Error: 1114 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_RECORD_FILE_FULL)
Message: The table '%s' is full
Error: 1115 SQLSTATE: 42000
(ER_UNKNOWN_CHARACTER_SET)
Message: Unknown character set: '%s'
Error: 1116 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_TOO_MANY_TABLES)
Message: Too many tables; MySQL can only use %d tables in a join
Error: 1117 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_TOO_MANY_FIELDS)
Message: Too many columns
Error: 1118 SQLSTATE: 42000
(ER_TOO_BIG_ROWSIZE)
Message: Row size too large. The maximum row size for the used table type, not counting BLOBs, is %ld. You have to change some columns to TEXT or BLOBs
Error: 1119 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_STACK_OVERRUN)
Message: Thread stack overrun: Used: %ld of a %ld stack. Use 'mysqld -O thread_stack=#' to specify a bigger stack if needed
Error: 1120 SQLSTATE: 42000
(ER_WRONG_OUTER_JOIN)
Message: Cross dependency found in OUTER JOIN; examine your ON conditions
Error: 1121 SQLSTATE: 42000
(ER_NULL_COLUMN_IN_INDEX)
Message: Table handler doesn't support NULL in given index. Please change column '%s' to be NOT NULL or use another handler
Error: 1122 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_CANT_FIND_UDF)
Message: Can't load function '%s'
Error: 1123 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_CANT_INITIALIZE_UDF)
Message: Can't initialize function '%s'; %s
Error: 1124 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_UDF_NO_PATHS)
Message: No paths allowed for shared library
Error: 1125 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_UDF_EXISTS)
Message: Function '%s' already exists
Error: 1126 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_CANT_OPEN_LIBRARY)
Message: Can't open shared library '%s' (errno: %d %s)
Error: 1127 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_CANT_FIND_DL_ENTRY)
Message: Can't find symbol '%s' in library
Error: 1128 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_FUNCTION_NOT_DEFINED)
Message: Function '%s' is not defined
Error: 1129 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_HOST_IS_BLOCKED)
Message: Host '%s' is blocked because of many connection errors; unblock with 'mysqladmin flush-hosts'
Error: 1130 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_HOST_NOT_PRIVILEGED)
Message: Host '%s' is not allowed to connect to this MySQL server
Error: 1131 SQLSTATE: 42000
(ER_PASSWORD_ANONYMOUS_USER)
Message: You are using MySQL as an anonymous user and anonymous users are not allowed to change passwords
Error: 1132 SQLSTATE: 42000
(ER_PASSWORD_NOT_ALLOWED)
Message: You must have privileges to update tables in the mysql database to be able to change passwords for others
Error: 1133 SQLSTATE: 42000
(ER_PASSWORD_NO_MATCH)
Message: Can't find any matching row in the user table
Error: 1134 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_UPDATE_INFO)
Message: Rows matched: %ld Changed: %ld Warnings: %ld
Error: 1135 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_CANT_CREATE_THREAD)
Message: Can't create a new thread (errno %d); if you are not out of available memory, you can consult the manual for a possible OS-dependent bug
Error: 1136 SQLSTATE: 21S01
(ER_WRONG_VALUE_COUNT_ON_ROW)
Message: Column count doesn't match value count at row %ld
Error: 1137 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_CANT_REOPEN_TABLE)
Message: Can't reopen table: '%s'
Error: 1138 SQLSTATE: 22004
(ER_INVALID_USE_OF_NULL)
Message: Invalid use of NULL value
Error: 1139 SQLSTATE: 42000
(ER_REGEXP_ERROR)
Message: Got error '%s' from regexp
Error: 1140 SQLSTATE: 42000
(ER_MIX_OF_GROUP_FUNC_AND_FIELDS)
Message: Mixing of GROUP columns (MIN(),MAX(),COUNT(),...) with no GROUP columns is illegal if there is no GROUP BY clause
Error: 1141 SQLSTATE: 42000
(ER_NONEXISTING_GRANT)
Message: There is no such grant defined for user '%s' on host '%s'
Error: 1142 SQLSTATE: 42000
(ER_TABLEACCESS_DENIED_ERROR)
Message: %s command denied to user '%s'@'%s' for table '%s'
Error: 1143 SQLSTATE: 42000
(ER_COLUMNACCESS_DENIED_ERROR)
Message: %s command denied to user '%s'@'%s' for column '%s' in table '%s'
Error: 1144 SQLSTATE: 42000
(ER_ILLEGAL_GRANT_FOR_TABLE)
Message: Illegal GRANT/REVOKE command; please consult the manual to see which privileges can be used
Error: 1145 SQLSTATE: 42000
(ER_GRANT_WRONG_HOST_OR_USER)
Message: The host or user argument to GRANT is too long
Error: 1146 SQLSTATE: 42S02
(ER_NO_SUCH_TABLE)
Message: Table '%s.%s' doesn't exist
Error: 1147 SQLSTATE: 42000
(ER_NONEXISTING_TABLE_GRANT)
Message: There is no such grant defined for user '%s' on host '%s' on table '%s'
Error: 1148 SQLSTATE: 42000
(ER_NOT_ALLOWED_COMMAND)
Message: The used command is not allowed with this MySQL version
Error: 1149 SQLSTATE: 42000
(ER_SYNTAX_ERROR)
Message: You have an error in your SQL syntax; check the manual that corresponds to your MySQL server version for the right syntax to use
Error: 1150 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_DELAYED_CANT_CHANGE_LOCK)
Message: Delayed insert thread couldn't get requested lock for table %s
Error: 1151 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_TOO_MANY_DELAYED_THREADS)
Message: Too many delayed threads in use
Error: 1152 SQLSTATE: 08S01
(ER_ABORTING_CONNECTION)
Message: Aborted connection %ld to db: '%s' user: '%s' (%s)
Error: 1153 SQLSTATE: 08S01
(ER_NET_PACKET_TOO_LARGE)
Message: Got a packet bigger than 'max_allowed_packet' bytes
Error: 1154 SQLSTATE: 08S01
(ER_NET_READ_ERROR_FROM_PIPE)
Message: Got a read error from the connection pipe
Error: 1155 SQLSTATE: 08S01
(ER_NET_FCNTL_ERROR)
Message: Got an error from fcntl()
Error: 1156 SQLSTATE: 08S01
(ER_NET_PACKETS_OUT_OF_ORDER)
Message: Got packets out of order
Error: 1157 SQLSTATE: 08S01
(ER_NET_UNCOMPRESS_ERROR)
Message: Couldn't uncompress communication packet
Error: 1158 SQLSTATE: 08S01
(ER_NET_READ_ERROR)
Message: Got an error reading communication packets
Error: 1159 SQLSTATE: 08S01
(ER_NET_READ_INTERRUPTED)
Message: Got timeout reading communication packets
Error: 1160 SQLSTATE: 08S01
(ER_NET_ERROR_ON_WRITE)
Message: Got an error writing communication packets
Error: 1161 SQLSTATE: 08S01
(ER_NET_WRITE_INTERRUPTED)
Message: Got timeout writing communication packets
Error: 1162 SQLSTATE: 42000
(ER_TOO_LONG_STRING)
Message: Result string is longer than 'max_allowed_packet' bytes
Error: 1163 SQLSTATE: 42000
(ER_TABLE_CANT_HANDLE_BLOB)
Message: The used table type doesn't support BLOB/TEXT columns
Error: 1164 SQLSTATE: 42000
(ER_TABLE_CANT_HANDLE_AUTO_INCREMENT)
Message: The used table type doesn't support AUTO_INCREMENT columns
Error: 1165 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_DELAYED_INSERT_TABLE_LOCKED)
Message: INSERT DELAYED can't be used with table '%s' because it is locked with LOCK TABLES
Error: 1166 SQLSTATE: 42000
(ER_WRONG_COLUMN_NAME)
Message: Incorrect column name '%s'
Error: 1167 SQLSTATE: 42000
(ER_WRONG_KEY_COLUMN)
Message: The used storage engine can't index column '%s'
Error: 1168 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_WRONG_MRG_TABLE)
Message: Unable to open underlying table which is differently defined or of non-MyISAM type or doesn't exist
Error: 1169 SQLSTATE: 23000
(ER_DUP_UNIQUE)
Message: Can't write, because of unique constraint, to table '%s'
Error: 1170 SQLSTATE: 42000
(ER_BLOB_KEY_WITHOUT_LENGTH)
Message: BLOB/TEXT column '%s' used in key specification without a key length
Error: 1171 SQLSTATE: 42000
(ER_PRIMARY_CANT_HAVE_NULL)
Message: All parts of a PRIMARY KEY must be NOT NULL; if you need NULL in a key, use UNIQUE instead
Error: 1172 SQLSTATE: 42000
(ER_TOO_MANY_ROWS)
Message: Result consisted of more than one row
Error: 1173 SQLSTATE: 42000
(ER_REQUIRES_PRIMARY_KEY)
Message: This table type requires a primary key
Error: 1174 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_NO_RAID_COMPILED)
Message: This version of MySQL is not compiled with RAID support
Error: 1175 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_UPDATE_WITHOUT_KEY_IN_SAFE_MODE)
Message: You are using safe update mode and you tried to update a table without a WHERE that uses a KEY column
Error: 1176 SQLSTATE: 42000
(ER_KEY_DOES_NOT_EXITS)
Message: Key '%s' doesn't exist in table '%s'
Error: 1177 SQLSTATE: 42000
(ER_CHECK_NO_SUCH_TABLE)
Message: Can't open table
Error: 1178 SQLSTATE: 42000
(ER_CHECK_NOT_IMPLEMENTED)
Message: The storage engine for the table doesn't support %s
Error: 1179 SQLSTATE: 25000
(ER_CANT_DO_THIS_DURING_AN_TRANSACTION)
Message: You are not allowed to execute this command in a transaction
Error: 1180 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_ERROR_DURING_COMMIT)
Message: Got error %d during COMMIT
Error: 1181 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_ERROR_DURING_ROLLBACK)
Message: Got error %d during ROLLBACK
Error: 1182 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_ERROR_DURING_FLUSH_LOGS)
Message: Got error %d during FLUSH_LOGS
Error: 1183 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_ERROR_DURING_CHECKPOINT)
Message: Got error %d during CHECKPOINT
Error: 1184 SQLSTATE: 08S01
(ER_NEW_ABORTING_CONNECTION)
Message: Aborted connection %ld to db: '%s' user: '%s' host: '%s' (%s)
Error: 1185 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_DUMP_NOT_IMPLEMENTED)
Message: The storage engine for the table does not support binary table dump
Error: 1186 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_FLUSH_MASTER_BINLOG_CLOSED)
Message: Binlog closed, cannot RESET MASTER
Error: 1187 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_INDEX_REBUILD)
Message: Failed rebuilding the index of dumped table '%s'
Error: 1188 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_MASTER)
Message: Error from master: '%s'
Error: 1189 SQLSTATE: 08S01
(ER_MASTER_NET_READ)
Message: Net error reading from master
Error: 1190 SQLSTATE: 08S01
(ER_MASTER_NET_WRITE)
Message: Net error writing to master
Error: 1191 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_FT_MATCHING_KEY_NOT_FOUND)
Message: Can't find FULLTEXT index matching the column list
Error: 1192 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_LOCK_OR_ACTIVE_TRANSACTION)
Message: Can't execute the given command because you have active locked tables or an active transaction
Error: 1193 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_UNKNOWN_SYSTEM_VARIABLE)
Message: Unknown system variable '%s'
Error: 1194 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_CRASHED_ON_USAGE)
Message: Table '%s' is marked as crashed and should be repaired
Error: 1195 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_CRASHED_ON_REPAIR)
Message: Table '%s' is marked as crashed and last (automatic?) repair failed
Error: 1196 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_WARNING_NOT_COMPLETE_ROLLBACK)
Message: Some non-transactional changed tables couldn't be rolled back
Error: 1197 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_TRANS_CACHE_FULL)
Message: Multi-statement transaction required more than 'max_binlog_cache_size' bytes of storage; increase this mysqld variable and try again
Error: 1198 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_SLAVE_MUST_STOP)
Message: This operation cannot be performed with a running slave; run STOP SLAVE first
Error: 1199 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_SLAVE_NOT_RUNNING)
Message: This operation requires a running slave; configure slave and do START SLAVE
Error: 1200 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_BAD_SLAVE)
Message: The server is not configured as slave; fix in config file or with CHANGE MASTER TO
Error: 1201 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_MASTER_INFO)
Message: Could not initialize master info structure; more error messages can be found in the MySQL error log
Error: 1202 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_SLAVE_THREAD)
Message: Could not create slave thread; check system resources
Error: 1203 SQLSTATE: 42000
(ER_TOO_MANY_USER_CONNECTIONS)
Message: User %s already has more than 'max_user_connections' active connections
Error: 1204 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_SET_CONSTANTS_ONLY)
Message: You may only use constant expressions with SET
Error: 1205 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_LOCK_WAIT_TIMEOUT)
Message: Lock wait timeout exceeded; try restarting transaction
Error: 1206 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_LOCK_TABLE_FULL)
Message: The total number of locks exceeds the lock table size
Error: 1207 SQLSTATE: 25000
(ER_READ_ONLY_TRANSACTION)
Message: Update locks cannot be acquired during a READ UNCOMMITTED transaction
Error: 1208 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_DROP_DB_WITH_READ_LOCK)
Message: DROP DATABASE not allowed while thread is holding global read lock
Error: 1209 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_CREATE_DB_WITH_READ_LOCK)
Message: CREATE DATABASE not allowed while thread is holding global read lock
Error: 1210 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_WRONG_ARGUMENTS)
Message: Incorrect arguments to %s
Error: 1211 SQLSTATE: 42000
(ER_NO_PERMISSION_TO_CREATE_USER)
Message: '%s'@'%s' is not allowed to create new users
Error: 1212 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_UNION_TABLES_IN_DIFFERENT_DIR)
Message: Incorrect table definition; all MERGE tables must be in the same database
Error: 1213 SQLSTATE: 40001
(ER_LOCK_DEADLOCK)
Message: Deadlock found when trying to get lock; try restarting transaction
Error: 1214 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_TABLE_CANT_HANDLE_FT)
Message: The used table type doesn't support FULLTEXT indexes
Error: 1215 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_CANNOT_ADD_FOREIGN)
Message: Cannot add foreign key constraint
Error: 1216 SQLSTATE: 23000
(ER_NO_REFERENCED_ROW)
Message: Cannot add or update a child row: a foreign key constraint fails
Error: 1217 SQLSTATE: 23000
(ER_ROW_IS_REFERENCED)
Message: Cannot delete or update a parent row: a foreign key constraint fails
Error: 1218 SQLSTATE: 08S01
(ER_CONNECT_TO_MASTER)
Message: Error connecting to master: %s
Error: 1219 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_QUERY_ON_MASTER)
Message: Error running query on master: %s
Error: 1220 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_ERROR_WHEN_EXECUTING_COMMAND)
Message: Error when executing command %s: %s
Error: 1221 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_WRONG_USAGE)
Message: Incorrect usage of %s and %s
Error: 1222 SQLSTATE: 21000
(ER_WRONG_NUMBER_OF_COLUMNS_IN_SELECT)
Message: The used SELECT statements have a different number of columns
Error: 1223 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_CANT_UPDATE_WITH_READLOCK)
Message: Can't execute the query because you have a conflicting read lock
Error: 1224 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_MIXING_NOT_ALLOWED)
Message: Mixing of transactional and non-transactional tables is disabled
Error: 1225 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_DUP_ARGUMENT)
Message: Option '%s' used twice in statement
Error: 1226 SQLSTATE: 42000
(ER_USER_LIMIT_REACHED)
Message: User '%s' has exceeded the '%s' resource (current value: %ld)
Error: 1227 SQLSTATE: 42000
(ER_SPECIFIC_ACCESS_DENIED_ERROR)
Message: Access denied; you need the %s privilege for this operation
Error: 1228 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_LOCAL_VARIABLE)
Message: Variable '%s' is a SESSION variable and can't be used with SET GLOBAL
Error: 1229 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_GLOBAL_VARIABLE)
Message: Variable '%s' is a GLOBAL variable and should be set with SET GLOBAL
Error: 1230 SQLSTATE: 42000
(ER_NO_DEFAULT)
Message: Variable '%s' doesn't have a default value
Error: 1231 SQLSTATE: 42000
(ER_WRONG_VALUE_FOR_VAR)
Message: Variable '%s' can't be set to the value of '%s'
Error: 1232 SQLSTATE: 42000
(ER_WRONG_TYPE_FOR_VAR)
Message: Incorrect argument type to variable '%s'
Error: 1233 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_VAR_CANT_BE_READ)
Message: Variable '%s' can only be set, not read
Error: 1234 SQLSTATE: 42000
(ER_CANT_USE_OPTION_HERE)
Message: Incorrect usage/placement of '%s'
Error: 1235 SQLSTATE: 42000
(ER_NOT_SUPPORTED_YET)
Message: This version of MySQL doesn't yet support '%s'
Error: 1236 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_MASTER_FATAL_ERROR_READING_BINLOG)
Message: Got fatal error %d from master when reading data from binary log: '%s'
Error: 1237 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_SLAVE_IGNORED_TABLE)
Message: Slave SQL thread ignored the query because of replicate-*-table rules
Error: 1238 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_INCORRECT_GLOBAL_LOCAL_VAR)
Message: Variable '%s' is a %s variable
Error: 1239 SQLSTATE: 42000
(ER_WRONG_FK_DEF)
Message: Incorrect foreign key definition for '%s': %s
Error: 1240 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_KEY_REF_DO_NOT_MATCH_TABLE_REF)
Message: Key reference and table reference don't match
Error: 1241 SQLSTATE: 21000
(ER_OPERAND_COLUMNS)
Message: Operand should contain %d column(s)
Error: 1242 SQLSTATE: 21000
(ER_SUBQUERY_NO_1_ROW)
Message: Subquery returns more than 1 row
Error: 1243 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_UNKNOWN_STMT_HANDLER)
Message: Unknown prepared statement handler (%.*s) given to %s
Error: 1244 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_CORRUPT_HELP_DB)
Message: Help database is corrupt or does not exist
Error: 1245 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_CYCLIC_REFERENCE)
Message: Cyclic reference on subqueries
Error: 1246 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_AUTO_CONVERT)
Message: Converting column '%s' from %s to %s
Error: 1247 SQLSTATE: 42S22
(ER_ILLEGAL_REFERENCE)
Message: Reference '%s' not supported (%s)
Error: 1248 SQLSTATE: 42000
(ER_DERIVED_MUST_HAVE_ALIAS)
Message: Every derived table must have its own alias
Error: 1249 SQLSTATE: 01000
(ER_SELECT_REDUCED)
Message: Select %u was reduced during optimization
Error: 1250 SQLSTATE: 42000
(ER_TABLENAME_NOT_ALLOWED_HERE)
Message: Table '%s' from one of the SELECTs cannot be used in %s
Error: 1251 SQLSTATE: 08004
(ER_NOT_SUPPORTED_AUTH_MODE)
Message: Client does not support authentication protocol requested by server; consider upgrading MySQL client
Error: 1252 SQLSTATE: 42000
(ER_SPATIAL_CANT_HAVE_NULL)
Message: All parts of a SPATIAL index must be NOT NULL
Error: 1253 SQLSTATE: 42000
(ER_COLLATION_CHARSET_MISMATCH)
Message: COLLATION '%s' is not valid for CHARACTER SET '%s'
Error: 1254 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_SLAVE_WAS_RUNNING)
Message: Slave is already running
Error: 1255 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_SLAVE_WAS_NOT_RUNNING)
Message: Slave already has been stopped
Error: 1256 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_TOO_BIG_FOR_UNCOMPRESS)
Message: Uncompressed data size too large; the maximum size is %d (probably, length of uncompressed data was corrupted)
Error: 1257 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_ZLIB_Z_MEM_ERROR)
Message: ZLIB: Not enough memory
Error: 1258 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_ZLIB_Z_BUF_ERROR)
Message: ZLIB: Not enough room in the output buffer (probably, length of uncompressed data was corrupted)
Error: 1259 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_ZLIB_Z_DATA_ERROR)
Message: ZLIB: Input data corrupted
Error: 1260 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_CUT_VALUE_GROUP_CONCAT)
Message: %d line(s) were cut by GROUP_CONCAT()
Error: 1261 SQLSTATE: 01000
(ER_WARN_TOO_FEW_RECORDS)
Message: Row %ld doesn't contain data for all columns
Error: 1262 SQLSTATE: 01000
(ER_WARN_TOO_MANY_RECORDS)
Message: Row %ld was truncated; it contained more data than there were input columns
Error: 1263 SQLSTATE: 22004
(ER_WARN_NULL_TO_NOTNULL)
Message: Column set to default value; NULL supplied to NOT NULL column '%s' at row %ld
Error: 1264 SQLSTATE: 22003
(ER_WARN_DATA_OUT_OF_RANGE)
Message: Out of range value for column '%s' at row %ld
Error: 1265 SQLSTATE: 01000
(WARN_DATA_TRUNCATED)
Message: Data truncated for column '%s' at row %ld
Error: 1266 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_WARN_USING_OTHER_HANDLER)
Message: Using storage engine %s for table '%s'
Error: 1267 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_CANT_AGGREGATE_2COLLATIONS)
Message: Illegal mix of collations (%s,%s) and (%s,%s) for operation '%s'
Error: 1268 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_DROP_USER)
Message: Cannot drop one or more of the requested users
Error: 1269 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_REVOKE_GRANTS)
Message: Can't revoke all privileges for one or more of the requested users
Error: 1270 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_CANT_AGGREGATE_3COLLATIONS)
Message: Illegal mix of collations (%s,%s), (%s,%s), (%s,%s) for operation '%s'
Error: 1271 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_CANT_AGGREGATE_NCOLLATIONS)
Message: Illegal mix of collations for operation '%s'
Error: 1272 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_VARIABLE_IS_NOT_STRUCT)
Message: Variable '%s' is not a variable component (can't be used as XXXX.variable_name)
Error: 1273 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_UNKNOWN_COLLATION)
Message: Unknown collation: '%s'
Error: 1274 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_SLAVE_IGNORED_SSL_PARAMS)
Message: SSL parameters in CHANGE MASTER are ignored because this MySQL slave was compiled without SSL support; they can be used later if MySQL slave with SSL is started
Error: 1275 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_SERVER_IS_IN_SECURE_AUTH_MODE)
Message: Server is running in --secure-auth mode, but '%s'@'%s' has a password in the old format; please change the password to the new format
Error: 1276 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_WARN_FIELD_RESOLVED)
Message: Field or reference '%s%s%s%s%s' of SELECT #%d was resolved in SELECT #%d
Error: 1277 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_BAD_SLAVE_UNTIL_COND)
Message: Incorrect parameter or combination of parameters for START SLAVE UNTIL
Error: 1278 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_MISSING_SKIP_SLAVE)
Message: It is recommended to use --skip-slave-start when doing step-by-step replication with START SLAVE UNTIL; otherwise, you will get problems if you get an unexpected slave's mysqld restart
Error: 1279 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_UNTIL_COND_IGNORED)
Message: SQL thread is not to be started so UNTIL options are ignored
Error: 1280 SQLSTATE: 42000
(ER_WRONG_NAME_FOR_INDEX)
Message: Incorrect index name '%s'
Error: 1281 SQLSTATE: 42000
(ER_WRONG_NAME_FOR_CATALOG)
Message: Incorrect catalog name '%s'
Error: 1282 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_WARN_QC_RESIZE)
Message: Query cache failed to set size %lu; new query cache size is %lu
Error: 1283 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_BAD_FT_COLUMN)
Message: Column '%s' cannot be part of FULLTEXT index
Error: 1284 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_UNKNOWN_KEY_CACHE)
Message: Unknown key cache '%s'
Error: 1285 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_WARN_HOSTNAME_WONT_WORK)
Message: MySQL is started in --skip-name-resolve mode; you must restart it without this switch for this grant to work
Error: 1286 SQLSTATE: 42000
(ER_UNKNOWN_STORAGE_ENGINE)
Message: Unknown table engine '%s'
Error: 1287 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_WARN_DEPRECATED_SYNTAX)
Message: '%s' is deprecated and will be removed in a future release. Please use %s instead
Error: 1288 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_NON_UPDATABLE_TABLE)
Message: The target table %s of the %s is not updatable
Error: 1289 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_FEATURE_DISABLED)
Message: The '%s' feature is disabled; you need MySQL built with '%s' to have it working
Error: 1290 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_OPTION_PREVENTS_STATEMENT)
Message: The MySQL server is running with the %s option so it cannot execute this statement
Error: 1291 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_DUPLICATED_VALUE_IN_TYPE)
Message: Column '%s' has duplicated value '%s' in %s
Error: 1292 SQLSTATE: 22007
(ER_TRUNCATED_WRONG_VALUE)
Message: Truncated incorrect %s value: '%s'
Error: 1293 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_TOO_MUCH_AUTO_TIMESTAMP_COLS)
Message: Incorrect table definition; there can be only one TIMESTAMP column with CURRENT_TIMESTAMP in DEFAULT or ON UPDATE clause
Error: 1294 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_INVALID_ON_UPDATE)
Message: Invalid ON UPDATE clause for '%s' column
Error: 1295 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_UNSUPPORTED_PS)
Message: This command is not supported in the prepared statement protocol yet
Error: 1296 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_GET_ERRMSG)
Message: Got error %d '%s' from %s
Error: 1297 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_GET_TEMPORARY_ERRMSG)
Message: Got temporary error %d '%s' from %s
Error: 1298 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_UNKNOWN_TIME_ZONE)
Message: Unknown or incorrect time zone: '%s'
Error: 1299 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_WARN_INVALID_TIMESTAMP)
Message: Invalid TIMESTAMP value in column '%s' at row %ld
Error: 1300 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_INVALID_CHARACTER_STRING)
Message: Invalid %s character string: '%s'
Error: 1301 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_WARN_ALLOWED_PACKET_OVERFLOWED)
Message: Result of %s() was larger than max_allowed_packet (%ld) - truncated
Error: 1302 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_CONFLICTING_DECLARATIONS)
Message: Conflicting declarations: '%s%s' and '%s%s'
Error: 1303 SQLSTATE: 2F003
(ER_SP_NO_RECURSIVE_CREATE)
Message: Can't create a %s from within another stored routine
Error: 1304 SQLSTATE: 42000
(ER_SP_ALREADY_EXISTS)
Message: %s %s already exists
Error: 1305 SQLSTATE: 42000
(ER_SP_DOES_NOT_EXIST)
Message: %s %s does not exist
Error: 1306 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_SP_DROP_FAILED)
Message: Failed to DROP %s %s
Error: 1307 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_SP_STORE_FAILED)
Message: Failed to CREATE %s %s
Error: 1308 SQLSTATE: 42000
(ER_SP_LILABEL_MISMATCH)
Message: %s with no matching label: %s
Error: 1309 SQLSTATE: 42000
(ER_SP_LABEL_REDEFINE)
Message: Redefining label %s
Error: 1310 SQLSTATE: 42000
(ER_SP_LABEL_MISMATCH)
Message: End-label %s without match
Error: 1311 SQLSTATE: 01000
(ER_SP_UNINIT_VAR)
Message: Referring to uninitialized variable %s
Error: 1312 SQLSTATE: 0A000
(ER_SP_BADSELECT)
Message: PROCEDURE %s can't return a result set in the given context
Error: 1313 SQLSTATE: 42000
(ER_SP_BADRETURN)
Message: RETURN is only allowed in a FUNCTION
Error: 1314 SQLSTATE: 0A000
(ER_SP_BADSTATEMENT)
Message: %s is not allowed in stored procedures
Error: 1315 SQLSTATE: 42000
(ER_UPDATE_LOG_DEPRECATED_IGNORED)
Message: The update log is deprecated and replaced by the binary log; SET SQL_LOG_UPDATE has been ignored. This option will be removed in MySQL 5.6.
Error: 1316 SQLSTATE: 42000
(ER_UPDATE_LOG_DEPRECATED_TRANSLATED)
Message: The update log is deprecated and replaced by the binary log; SET SQL_LOG_UPDATE has been translated to SET SQL_LOG_BIN. This option will be removed in MySQL 5.6.
Error: 1317 SQLSTATE: 70100
(ER_QUERY_INTERRUPTED)
Message: Query execution was interrupted
Error: 1318 SQLSTATE: 42000
(ER_SP_WRONG_NO_OF_ARGS)
Message: Incorrect number of arguments for %s %s; expected %u, got %u
Error: 1319 SQLSTATE: 42000
(ER_SP_COND_MISMATCH)
Message: Undefined CONDITION: %s
Error: 1320 SQLSTATE: 42000
(ER_SP_NORETURN)
Message: No RETURN found in FUNCTION %s
Error: 1321 SQLSTATE: 2F005
(ER_SP_NORETURNEND)
Message: FUNCTION %s ended without RETURN
Error: 1322 SQLSTATE: 42000
(ER_SP_BAD_CURSOR_QUERY)
Message: Cursor statement must be a SELECT
Error: 1323 SQLSTATE: 42000
(ER_SP_BAD_CURSOR_SELECT)
Message: Cursor SELECT must not have INTO
Error: 1324 SQLSTATE: 42000
(ER_SP_CURSOR_MISMATCH)
Message: Undefined CURSOR: %s
Error: 1325 SQLSTATE: 24000
(ER_SP_CURSOR_ALREADY_OPEN)
Message: Cursor is already open
Error: 1326 SQLSTATE: 24000
(ER_SP_CURSOR_NOT_OPEN)
Message: Cursor is not open
Error: 1327 SQLSTATE: 42000
(ER_SP_UNDECLARED_VAR)
Message: Undeclared variable: %s
Error: 1328 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_SP_WRONG_NO_OF_FETCH_ARGS)
Message: Incorrect number of FETCH variables
Error: 1329 SQLSTATE: 02000
(ER_SP_FETCH_NO_DATA)
Message: No data - zero rows fetched, selected, or processed
Error: 1330 SQLSTATE: 42000
(ER_SP_DUP_PARAM)
Message: Duplicate parameter: %s
Error: 1331 SQLSTATE: 42000
(ER_SP_DUP_VAR)
Message: Duplicate variable: %s
Error: 1332 SQLSTATE: 42000
(ER_SP_DUP_COND)
Message: Duplicate condition: %s
Error: 1333 SQLSTATE: 42000
(ER_SP_DUP_CURS)
Message: Duplicate cursor: %s
Error: 1334 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_SP_CANT_ALTER)
Message: Failed to ALTER %s %s
Error: 1335 SQLSTATE: 0A000
(ER_SP_SUBSELECT_NYI)
Message: Subquery value not supported
Error: 1336 SQLSTATE: 0A000
(ER_STMT_NOT_ALLOWED_IN_SF_OR_TRG)
Message: %s is not allowed in stored function or trigger
Error: 1337 SQLSTATE: 42000
(ER_SP_VARCOND_AFTER_CURSHNDLR)
Message: Variable or condition declaration after cursor or handler declaration
Error: 1338 SQLSTATE: 42000
(ER_SP_CURSOR_AFTER_HANDLER)
Message: Cursor declaration after handler declaration
Error: 1339 SQLSTATE: 20000
(ER_SP_CASE_NOT_FOUND)
Message: Case not found for CASE statement
Error: 1340 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_FPARSER_TOO_BIG_FILE)
Message: Configuration file '%s' is too big
Error: 1341 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_FPARSER_BAD_HEADER)
Message: Malformed file type header in file '%s'
Error: 1342 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_FPARSER_EOF_IN_COMMENT)
Message: Unexpected end of file while parsing comment '%s'
Error: 1343 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_FPARSER_ERROR_IN_PARAMETER)
Message: Error while parsing parameter '%s' (line: '%s')
Error: 1344 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_FPARSER_EOF_IN_UNKNOWN_PARAMETER)
Message: Unexpected end of file while skipping unknown parameter '%s'
Error: 1345 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_VIEW_NO_EXPLAIN)
Message: EXPLAIN/SHOW can not be issued; lacking privileges for underlying table
Error: 1346 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_FRM_UNKNOWN_TYPE)
Message: File '%s' has unknown type '%s' in its header
Error: 1347 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_WRONG_OBJECT)
Message: '%s.%s' is not %s
Error: 1348 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_NONUPDATEABLE_COLUMN)
Message: Column '%s' is not updatable
Error: 1349 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_VIEW_SELECT_DERIVED)
Message: View's SELECT contains a subquery in the FROM clause
Error: 1350 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_VIEW_SELECT_CLAUSE)
Message: View's SELECT contains a '%s' clause
Error: 1351 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_VIEW_SELECT_VARIABLE)
Message: View's SELECT contains a variable or parameter
Error: 1352 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_VIEW_SELECT_TMPTABLE)
Message: View's SELECT refers to a temporary table '%s'
Error: 1353 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_VIEW_WRONG_LIST)
Message: View's SELECT and view's field list have different column counts
Error: 1354 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_WARN_VIEW_MERGE)
Message: View merge algorithm can't be used here for now (assumed undefined algorithm)
Error: 1355 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_WARN_VIEW_WITHOUT_KEY)
Message: View being updated does not have complete key of underlying table in it
Error: 1356 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_VIEW_INVALID)
Message: View '%s.%s' references invalid table(s) or column(s) or function(s) or definer/invoker of view lack rights to use them
Error: 1357 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_SP_NO_DROP_SP)
Message: Can't drop or alter a %s from within another stored routine
Error: 1358 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_SP_GOTO_IN_HNDLR)
Message: GOTO is not allowed in a stored procedure handler
Error: 1359 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_TRG_ALREADY_EXISTS)
Message: Trigger already exists
Error: 1360 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_TRG_DOES_NOT_EXIST)
Message: Trigger does not exist
Error: 1361 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_TRG_ON_VIEW_OR_TEMP_TABLE)
Message: Trigger's '%s' is view or temporary table
Error: 1362 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_TRG_CANT_CHANGE_ROW)
Message: Updating of %s row is not allowed in %strigger
Error: 1363 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_TRG_NO_SUCH_ROW_IN_TRG)
Message: There is no %s row in %s trigger
Error: 1364 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_NO_DEFAULT_FOR_FIELD)
Message: Field '%s' doesn't have a default value
Error: 1365 SQLSTATE: 22012
(ER_DIVISION_BY_ZERO)
Message: Division by 0
Error: 1366 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_TRUNCATED_WRONG_VALUE_FOR_FIELD)
Message: Incorrect %s value: '%s' for column '%s' at row %ld
Error: 1367 SQLSTATE: 22007
(ER_ILLEGAL_VALUE_FOR_TYPE)
Message: Illegal %s '%s' value found during parsing
Error: 1368 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_VIEW_NONUPD_CHECK)
Message: CHECK OPTION on non-updatable view '%s.%s'
Error: 1369 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_VIEW_CHECK_FAILED)
Message: CHECK OPTION failed '%s.%s'
Error: 1370 SQLSTATE: 42000
(ER_PROCACCESS_DENIED_ERROR)
Message: %s command denied to user '%s'@'%s' for routine '%s'
Error: 1371 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_RELAY_LOG_FAIL)
Message: Failed purging old relay logs: %s
Error: 1372 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_PASSWD_LENGTH)
Message: Password hash should be a %d-digit hexadecimal number
Error: 1373 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_UNKNOWN_TARGET_BINLOG)
Message: Target log not found in binlog index
Error: 1374 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_IO_ERR_LOG_INDEX_READ)
Message: I/O error reading log index file
Error: 1375 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_BINLOG_PURGE_PROHIBITED)
Message: Server configuration does not permit binlog purge
Error: 1376 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_FSEEK_FAIL)
Message: Failed on fseek()
Error: 1377 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_BINLOG_PURGE_FATAL_ERR)
Message: Fatal error during log purge
Error: 1378 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_LOG_IN_USE)
Message: A purgeable log is in use, will not purge
Error: 1379 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_LOG_PURGE_UNKNOWN_ERR)
Message: Unknown error during log purge
Error: 1380 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_RELAY_LOG_INIT)
Message: Failed initializing relay log position: %s
Error: 1381 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_NO_BINARY_LOGGING)
Message: You are not using binary logging
Error: 1382 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_RESERVED_SYNTAX)
Message: The '%s' syntax is reserved for purposes internal to the MySQL server
Error: 1383 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_WSAS_FAILED)
Message: WSAStartup Failed
Error: 1384 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_DIFF_GROUPS_PROC)
Message: Can't handle procedures with different groups yet
Error: 1385 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_NO_GROUP_FOR_PROC)
Message: Select must have a group with this procedure
Error: 1386 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_ORDER_WITH_PROC)
Message: Can't use ORDER clause with this procedure
Error: 1387 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_LOGGING_PROHIBIT_CHANGING_OF)
Message: Binary logging and replication forbid changing the global server %s
Error: 1388 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_NO_FILE_MAPPING)
Message: Can't map file: %s, errno: %d
Error: 1389 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_WRONG_MAGIC)
Message: Wrong magic in %s
Error: 1390 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_PS_MANY_PARAM)
Message: Prepared statement contains too many placeholders
Error: 1391 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_KEY_PART_0)
Message: Key part '%s' length cannot be 0
Error: 1392 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_VIEW_CHECKSUM)
Message: View text checksum failed
Error: 1393 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_VIEW_MULTIUPDATE)
Message: Can not modify more than one base table through a join view '%s.%s'
Error: 1394 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_VIEW_NO_INSERT_FIELD_LIST)
Message: Can not insert into join view '%s.%s' without fields list
Error: 1395 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_VIEW_DELETE_MERGE_VIEW)
Message: Can not delete from join view '%s.%s'
Error: 1396 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_CANNOT_USER)
Message: Operation %s failed for %s
Error: 1397 SQLSTATE: XAE04
(ER_XAER_NOTA)
Message: XAER_NOTA: Unknown XID
Error: 1398 SQLSTATE: XAE05
(ER_XAER_INVAL)
Message: XAER_INVAL: Invalid arguments (or unsupported command)
Error: 1399 SQLSTATE: XAE07
(ER_XAER_RMFAIL)
Message: XAER_RMFAIL: The command cannot be executed when global transaction is in the %s state
Error: 1400 SQLSTATE: XAE09
(ER_XAER_OUTSIDE)
Message: XAER_OUTSIDE: Some work is done outside global transaction
Error: 1401 SQLSTATE: XAE03
(ER_XAER_RMERR)
Message: XAER_RMERR: Fatal error occurred in the transaction branch - check your data for consistency
Error: 1402 SQLSTATE: XA100
(ER_XA_RBROLLBACK)
Message: XA_RBROLLBACK: Transaction branch was rolled back
Error: 1403 SQLSTATE: 42000
(ER_NONEXISTING_PROC_GRANT)
Message: There is no such grant defined for user '%s' on host '%s' on routine '%s'
Error: 1404 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_PROC_AUTO_GRANT_FAIL)
Message: Failed to grant EXECUTE and ALTER ROUTINE privileges
Error: 1405 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_PROC_AUTO_REVOKE_FAIL)
Message: Failed to revoke all privileges to dropped routine
Error: 1406 SQLSTATE: 22001
(ER_DATA_TOO_LONG)
Message: Data too long for column '%s' at row %ld
Error: 1407 SQLSTATE: 42000
(ER_SP_BAD_SQLSTATE)
Message: Bad SQLSTATE: '%s'
Error: 1408 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_STARTUP)
Message: %s: ready for connections. Version: '%s' socket: '%s' port: %d %s
Error: 1409 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_LOAD_FROM_FIXED_SIZE_ROWS_TO_VAR)
Message: Can't load value from file with fixed size rows to variable
Error: 1410 SQLSTATE: 42000
(ER_CANT_CREATE_USER_WITH_GRANT)
Message: You are not allowed to create a user with GRANT
Error: 1411 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_WRONG_VALUE_FOR_TYPE)
Message: Incorrect %s value: '%s' for function %s
Error: 1412 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_TABLE_DEF_CHANGED)
Message: Table definition has changed, please retry transaction
Error: 1413 SQLSTATE: 42000
(ER_SP_DUP_HANDLER)
Message: Duplicate handler declared in the same block
Error: 1414 SQLSTATE: 42000
(ER_SP_NOT_VAR_ARG)
Message: OUT or INOUT argument %d for routine %s is not a variable or NEW pseudo-variable in BEFORE trigger
Error: 1415 SQLSTATE: 0A000
(ER_SP_NO_RETSET)
Message: Not allowed to return a result set from a %s
Error: 1416 SQLSTATE: 22003
(ER_CANT_CREATE_GEOMETRY_OBJECT)
Message: Cannot get geometry object from data you send to the GEOMETRY field
Error: 1417 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_FAILED_ROUTINE_BREAK_BINLOG)
Message: A routine failed and has neither NO SQL nor READS SQL DATA in its declaration and binary logging is enabled; if non-transactional tables were updated, the binary log will miss their changes
Error: 1418 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_BINLOG_UNSAFE_ROUTINE)
Message: This function has none of DETERMINISTIC, NO SQL, or READS SQL DATA in its declaration and binary logging is enabled (you *might* want to use the less safe log_bin_trust_function_creators variable)
Error: 1419 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_BINLOG_CREATE_ROUTINE_NEED_SUPER)
Message: You do not have the SUPER privilege and binary logging is enabled (you *might* want to use the less safe log_bin_trust_function_creators variable)
Error: 1420 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_EXEC_STMT_WITH_OPEN_CURSOR)
Message: You can't execute a prepared statement which has an open cursor associated with it. Reset the statement to re-execute it.
Error: 1421 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_STMT_HAS_NO_OPEN_CURSOR)
Message: The statement (%lu) has no open cursor.
Error: 1422 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_COMMIT_NOT_ALLOWED_IN_SF_OR_TRG)
Message: Explicit or implicit commit is not allowed in stored function or trigger.
Error: 1423 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_NO_DEFAULT_FOR_VIEW_FIELD)
Message: Field of view '%s.%s' underlying table doesn't have a default value
Error: 1424 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_SP_NO_RECURSION)
Message: Recursive stored functions and triggers are not allowed.
Error: 1425 SQLSTATE: 42000
(ER_TOO_BIG_SCALE)
Message: Too big scale %d specified for column '%s'. Maximum is %lu.
Error: 1426 SQLSTATE: 42000
(ER_TOO_BIG_PRECISION)
Message: Too big precision %d specified for column '%s'. Maximum is %lu.
Error: 1427 SQLSTATE: 42000
(ER_M_BIGGER_THAN_D)
Message: For float(M,D), double(M,D) or decimal(M,D), M must be >= D (column '%s').
Error: 1428 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_WRONG_LOCK_OF_SYSTEM_TABLE)
Message: You can't combine write-locking of system tables with other tables or lock types
Error: 1429 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_CONNECT_TO_FOREIGN_DATA_SOURCE)
Message: Unable to connect to foreign data source: %s
Error: 1430 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_QUERY_ON_FOREIGN_DATA_SOURCE)
Message: There was a problem processing the query on the foreign data source. Data source error: %s
Error: 1431 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_FOREIGN_DATA_SOURCE_DOESNT_EXIST)
Message: The foreign data source you are trying to reference does not exist. Data source error: %s
Error: 1432 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_FOREIGN_DATA_STRING_INVALID_CANT_CREATE)
Message: Can't create federated table. The data source connection string '%s' is not in the correct format
Error: 1433 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_FOREIGN_DATA_STRING_INVALID)
Message: The data source connection string '%s' is not in the correct format
Error: 1434 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_CANT_CREATE_FEDERATED_TABLE)
Message: Can't create federated table. Foreign data src error: %s
Error: 1435 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_TRG_IN_WRONG_SCHEMA)
Message: Trigger in wrong schema
Error: 1436 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_STACK_OVERRUN_NEED_MORE)
Message: Thread stack overrun: %ld bytes used of a %ld byte stack, and %ld bytes needed. Use 'mysqld -O thread_stack=#' to specify a bigger stack.
Error: 1437 SQLSTATE: 42000
(ER_TOO_LONG_BODY)
Message: Routine body for '%s' is too long
Error: 1438 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_WARN_CANT_DROP_DEFAULT_KEYCACHE)
Message: Cannot drop default keycache
Error: 1439 SQLSTATE: 42000
(ER_TOO_BIG_DISPLAYWIDTH)
Message: Display width out of range for column '%s' (max = %lu)
Error: 1440 SQLSTATE: XAE08
(ER_XAER_DUPID)
Message: XAER_DUPID: The XID already exists
Error: 1441 SQLSTATE: 22008
(ER_DATETIME_FUNCTION_OVERFLOW)
Message: Datetime function: %s field overflow
Error: 1442 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_CANT_UPDATE_USED_TABLE_IN_SF_OR_TRG)
Message: Can't update table '%s' in stored function/trigger because it is already used by statement which invoked this stored function/trigger.
Error: 1443 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_VIEW_PREVENT_UPDATE)
Message: The definition of table '%s' prevents operation %s on table '%s'.
Error: 1444 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_PS_NO_RECURSION)
Message: The prepared statement contains a stored routine call that refers to that same statement. It's not allowed to execute a prepared statement in such a recursive manner
Error: 1445 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_SP_CANT_SET_AUTOCOMMIT)
Message: Not allowed to set autocommit from a stored function or trigger
Error: 1446 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_MALFORMED_DEFINER)
Message: Definer is not fully qualified
Error: 1447 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_VIEW_FRM_NO_USER)
Message: View '%s'.'%s' has no definer information (old table format). Current user is used as definer. Please recreate the view!
Error: 1448 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_VIEW_OTHER_USER)
Message: You need the SUPER privilege for creation view with '%s'@'%s' definer
Error: 1449 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_NO_SUCH_USER)
Message: The user specified as a definer ('%s'@'%s') does not exist
Error: 1450 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_FORBID_SCHEMA_CHANGE)
Message: Changing schema from '%s' to '%s' is not allowed.
Error: 1451 SQLSTATE: 23000
(ER_ROW_IS_REFERENCED_2)
Message: Cannot delete or update a parent row: a foreign key constraint fails (%s)
Error: 1452 SQLSTATE: 23000
(ER_NO_REFERENCED_ROW_2)
Message: Cannot add or update a child row: a foreign key constraint fails (%s)
Error: 1453 SQLSTATE: 42000
(ER_SP_BAD_VAR_SHADOW)
Message: Variable '%s' must be quoted with `...`, or renamed
Error: 1454 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_TRG_NO_DEFINER)
Message: No definer attribute for trigger '%s'.'%s'. The trigger will be activated under the authorization of the invoker, which may have insufficient privileges. Please recreate the trigger.
Error: 1455 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_OLD_FILE_FORMAT)
Message: '%s' has an old format, you should re-create the '%s' object(s)
Error: 1456 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_SP_RECURSION_LIMIT)
Message: Recursive limit %d (as set by the max_sp_recursion_depth variable) was exceeded for routine %s
Error: 1457 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_SP_PROC_TABLE_CORRUPT)
Message: Failed to load routine %s. The table mysql.proc is missing, corrupt, or contains bad data (internal code %d)
Error: 1458 SQLSTATE: 42000
(ER_SP_WRONG_NAME)
Message: Incorrect routine name '%s'
Error: 1459 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_TABLE_NEEDS_UPGRADE)
Message: Table upgrade required. Please do "REPAIR TABLE `%s`" or dump/reload to fix it!
Error: 1460 SQLSTATE: 42000
(ER_SP_NO_AGGREGATE)
Message: AGGREGATE is not supported for stored functions
Error: 1461 SQLSTATE: 42000
(ER_MAX_PREPARED_STMT_COUNT_REACHED)
Message: Can't create more than max_prepared_stmt_count statements (current value: %lu)
Error: 1462 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_VIEW_RECURSIVE)
Message: `%s`.`%s` contains view recursion
Error: 1463 SQLSTATE: 42000
(ER_NON_GROUPING_FIELD_USED)
Message: non-grouping field '%s' is used in %s clause
Error: 1464 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_TABLE_CANT_HANDLE_SPKEYS)
Message: The used table type doesn't support SPATIAL indexes
Error: 1465 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_NO_TRIGGERS_ON_SYSTEM_SCHEMA)
Message: Triggers can not be created on system tables
Error: 1466 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_REMOVED_SPACES)
Message: Leading spaces are removed from name '%s'
Error: 1467 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_AUTOINC_READ_FAILED)
Message: Failed to read auto-increment value from storage engine
Error: 1468 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_USERNAME)
Message: user name
Error: 1469 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_HOSTNAME)
Message: host name
Error: 1470 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_WRONG_STRING_LENGTH)
Message: String '%s' is too long for %s (should be no longer than %d)
Error: 1471 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_NON_INSERTABLE_TABLE)
Message: The target table %s of the %s is not insertable-into
Error: 1472 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_ADMIN_WRONG_MRG_TABLE)
Message: Table '%s' is differently defined or of non-MyISAM type or doesn't exist
Error: 1473 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_TOO_HIGH_LEVEL_OF_NESTING_FOR_SELECT)
Message: Too high level of nesting for select
Error: 1474 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_NAME_BECOMES_EMPTY)
Message: Name '%s' has become ''
Error: 1475 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_AMBIGUOUS_FIELD_TERM)
Message: First character of the FIELDS TERMINATED string is ambiguous; please use non-optional and non-empty FIELDS ENCLOSED BY
Error: 1476 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_FOREIGN_SERVER_EXISTS)
Message: The foreign server, %s, you are trying to create already exists.
Error: 1477 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_FOREIGN_SERVER_DOESNT_EXIST)
Message: The foreign server name you are trying to reference does not exist. Data source error: %s
Error: 1478 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_ILLEGAL_HA_CREATE_OPTION)
Message: Table storage engine '%s' does not support the create option '%s'
Error: 1479 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_PARTITION_REQUIRES_VALUES_ERROR)
Message: Syntax error: %s PARTITIONING requires definition of VALUES %s for each partition
Error: 1480 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_PARTITION_WRONG_VALUES_ERROR)
Message: Only %s PARTITIONING can use VALUES %s in partition definition
Error: 1481 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_PARTITION_MAXVALUE_ERROR)
Message: MAXVALUE can only be used in last partition definition
Error: 1482 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_PARTITION_SUBPARTITION_ERROR)
Message: Subpartitions can only be hash partitions and by key
Error: 1483 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_PARTITION_SUBPART_MIX_ERROR)
Message: Must define subpartitions on all partitions if on one partition
Error: 1484 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_PARTITION_WRONG_NO_PART_ERROR)
Message: Wrong number of partitions defined, mismatch with previous setting
Error: 1485 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_PARTITION_WRONG_NO_SUBPART_ERROR)
Message: Wrong number of subpartitions defined, mismatch with previous setting
Error: 1486 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_WRONG_EXPR_IN_PARTITION_FUNC_ERROR)
Message: Constant, random or timezone-dependent expressions in (sub)partitioning function are not allowed
Error: 1487 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_NO_CONST_EXPR_IN_RANGE_OR_LIST_ERROR)
Message: Expression in RANGE/LIST VALUES must be constant
Error: 1488 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_FIELD_NOT_FOUND_PART_ERROR)
Message: Field in list of fields for partition function not found in table
Error: 1489 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_LIST_OF_FIELDS_ONLY_IN_HASH_ERROR)
Message: List of fields is only allowed in KEY partitions
Error: 1490 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_INCONSISTENT_PARTITION_INFO_ERROR)
Message: The partition info in the frm file is not consistent with what can be written into the frm file
Error: 1491 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_PARTITION_FUNC_NOT_ALLOWED_ERROR)
Message: The %s function returns the wrong type
Error: 1492 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_PARTITIONS_MUST_BE_DEFINED_ERROR)
Message: For %s partitions each partition must be defined
Error: 1493 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_RANGE_NOT_INCREASING_ERROR)
Message: VALUES LESS THAN value must be strictly increasing for each partition
Error: 1494 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_INCONSISTENT_TYPE_OF_FUNCTIONS_ERROR)
Message: VALUES value must be of same type as partition function
Error: 1495 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_MULTIPLE_DEF_CONST_IN_LIST_PART_ERROR)
Message: Multiple definition of same constant in list partitioning
Error: 1496 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_PARTITION_ENTRY_ERROR)
Message: Partitioning can not be used stand-alone in query
Error: 1497 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_MIX_HANDLER_ERROR)
Message: The mix of handlers in the partitions is not allowed in this version of MySQL
Error: 1498 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_PARTITION_NOT_DEFINED_ERROR)
Message: For the partitioned engine it is necessary to define all %s
Error: 1499 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_TOO_MANY_PARTITIONS_ERROR)
Message: Too many partitions (including subpartitions) were defined
Error: 1500 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_SUBPARTITION_ERROR)
Message: It is only possible to mix RANGE/LIST partitioning with HASH/KEY partitioning for subpartitioning
Error: 1501 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_CANT_CREATE_HANDLER_FILE)
Message: Failed to create specific handler file
Error: 1502 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_BLOB_FIELD_IN_PART_FUNC_ERROR)
Message: A BLOB field is not allowed in partition function
Error: 1503 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_UNIQUE_KEY_NEED_ALL_FIELDS_IN_PF)
Message: A %s must include all columns in the table's partitioning function
Error: 1504 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_NO_PARTS_ERROR)
Message: Number of %s = 0 is not an allowed value
Error: 1505 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_PARTITION_MGMT_ON_NONPARTITIONED)
Message: Partition management on a not partitioned table is not possible
Error: 1506 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_FOREIGN_KEY_ON_PARTITIONED)
Message: Foreign key clause is not yet supported in conjunction with partitioning
Error: 1507 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_DROP_PARTITION_NON_EXISTENT)
Message: Error in list of partitions to %s
Error: 1508 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_DROP_LAST_PARTITION)
Message: Cannot remove all partitions, use DROP TABLE instead
Error: 1509 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_COALESCE_ONLY_ON_HASH_PARTITION)
Message: COALESCE PARTITION can only be used on HASH/KEY partitions
Error: 1510 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_REORG_HASH_ONLY_ON_SAME_NO)
Message: REORGANIZE PARTITION can only be used to reorganize partitions not to change their numbers
Error: 1511 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_REORG_NO_PARAM_ERROR)
Message: REORGANIZE PARTITION without parameters can only be used on auto-partitioned tables using HASH PARTITIONs
Error: 1512 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_ONLY_ON_RANGE_LIST_PARTITION)
Message: %s PARTITION can only be used on RANGE/LIST partitions
Error: 1513 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_ADD_PARTITION_SUBPART_ERROR)
Message: Trying to Add partition(s) with wrong number of subpartitions
Error: 1514 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_ADD_PARTITION_NO_NEW_PARTITION)
Message: At least one partition must be added
Error: 1515 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_COALESCE_PARTITION_NO_PARTITION)
Message: At least one partition must be coalesced
Error: 1516 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_REORG_PARTITION_NOT_EXIST)
Message: More partitions to reorganize than there are partitions
Error: 1517 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_SAME_NAME_PARTITION)
Message: Duplicate partition name %s
Error: 1518 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_NO_BINLOG_ERROR)
Message: It is not allowed to shut off binlog on this command
Error: 1519 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_CONSECUTIVE_REORG_PARTITIONS)
Message: When reorganizing a set of partitions they must be in consecutive order
Error: 1520 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_REORG_OUTSIDE_RANGE)
Message: Reorganize of range partitions cannot change total ranges except for last partition where it can extend the range
Error: 1521 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_PARTITION_FUNCTION_FAILURE)
Message: Partition function not supported in this version for this handler
Error: 1522 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_PART_STATE_ERROR)
Message: Partition state cannot be defined from CREATE/ALTER TABLE
Error: 1523 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_LIMITED_PART_RANGE)
Message: The %s handler only supports 32 bit integers in VALUES
Error: 1524 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_PLUGIN_IS_NOT_LOADED)
Message: Plugin '%s' is not loaded
Error: 1525 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_WRONG_VALUE)
Message: Incorrect %s value: '%s'
Error: 1526 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_NO_PARTITION_FOR_GIVEN_VALUE)
Message: Table has no partition for value %s
Error: 1527 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_FILEGROUP_OPTION_ONLY_ONCE)
Message: It is not allowed to specify %s more than once
Error: 1528 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_CREATE_FILEGROUP_FAILED)
Message: Failed to create %s
Error: 1529 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_DROP_FILEGROUP_FAILED)
Message: Failed to drop %s
Error: 1530 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_TABLESPACE_AUTO_EXTEND_ERROR)
Message: The handler doesn't support autoextend of tablespaces
Error: 1531 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_WRONG_SIZE_NUMBER)
Message: A size parameter was incorrectly specified, either number or on the form 10M
Error: 1532 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_SIZE_OVERFLOW_ERROR)
Message: The size number was correct but we don't allow the digit part to be more than 2 billion
Error: 1533 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_ALTER_FILEGROUP_FAILED)
Message: Failed to alter: %s
Error: 1534 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_BINLOG_ROW_LOGGING_FAILED)
Message: Writing one row to the row-based binary log failed
Error: 1535 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_BINLOG_ROW_WRONG_TABLE_DEF)
Message: Table definition on master and slave does not match: %s
Error: 1536 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_BINLOG_ROW_RBR_TO_SBR)
Message: Slave running with --log-slave-updates must use row-based binary logging to be able to replicate row-based binary log events
Error: 1537 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_EVENT_ALREADY_EXISTS)
Message: Event '%s' already exists
Error: 1538 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_EVENT_STORE_FAILED)
Message: Failed to store event %s. Error code %d from storage engine.
Error: 1539 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_EVENT_DOES_NOT_EXIST)
Message: Unknown event '%s'
Error: 1540 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_EVENT_CANT_ALTER)
Message: Failed to alter event '%s'
Error: 1541 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_EVENT_DROP_FAILED)
Message: Failed to drop %s
Error: 1542 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_EVENT_INTERVAL_NOT_POSITIVE_OR_TOO_BIG)
Message: INTERVAL is either not positive or too big
Error: 1543 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_EVENT_ENDS_BEFORE_STARTS)
Message: ENDS is either invalid or before STARTS
Error: 1544 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_EVENT_EXEC_TIME_IN_THE_PAST)
Message: Event execution time is in the past. Event has been disabled
Error: 1545 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_EVENT_OPEN_TABLE_FAILED)
Message: Failed to open mysql.event
Error: 1546 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_EVENT_NEITHER_M_EXPR_NOR_M_AT)
Message: No datetime expression provided
Error: 1547 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_COL_COUNT_DOESNT_MATCH_CORRUPTED)
Message: Column count of mysql.%s is wrong. Expected %d, found %d. The table is probably corrupted
Error: 1548 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_CANNOT_LOAD_FROM_TABLE)
Message: Cannot load from mysql.%s. The table is probably corrupted
Error: 1549 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_EVENT_CANNOT_DELETE)
Message: Failed to delete the event from mysql.event
Error: 1550 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_EVENT_COMPILE_ERROR)
Message: Error during compilation of event's body
Error: 1551 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_EVENT_SAME_NAME)
Message: Same old and new event name
Error: 1552 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_EVENT_DATA_TOO_LONG)
Message: Data for column '%s' too long
Error: 1553 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_DROP_INDEX_FK)
Message: Cannot drop index '%s': needed in a foreign key constraint
Error: 1554 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_WARN_DEPRECATED_SYNTAX_WITH_VER)
Message: The syntax '%s' is deprecated and will be removed in MySQL %s. Please use %s instead
Error: 1555 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_CANT_WRITE_LOCK_LOG_TABLE)
Message: You can't write-lock a log table. Only read access is possible
Error: 1556 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_CANT_LOCK_LOG_TABLE)
Message: You can't use locks with log tables.
Error: 1557 SQLSTATE: 23000
(ER_FOREIGN_DUPLICATE_KEY)
Message: Upholding foreign key constraints for table '%s', entry '%s', key %d would lead to a duplicate entry
Error: 1558 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_COL_COUNT_DOESNT_MATCH_PLEASE_UPDATE)
Message: Column count of mysql.%s is wrong. Expected %d, found %d. Created with MySQL %d, now running %d. Please use mysql_upgrade to fix this error.
Error: 1559 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_TEMP_TABLE_PREVENTS_SWITCH_OUT_OF_RBR)
Message: Cannot switch out of the row-based binary log format when the session has open temporary tables
Error: 1560 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_STORED_FUNCTION_PREVENTS_SWITCH_BINLOG_FORMAT)
Message: Cannot change the binary logging format inside a stored function or trigger
Error: 1561 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_NDB_CANT_SWITCH_BINLOG_FORMAT)
Message: The NDB cluster engine does not support changing the binlog format on the fly yet
Error: 1562 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_PARTITION_NO_TEMPORARY)
Message: Cannot create temporary table with partitions
Error: 1563 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_PARTITION_CONST_DOMAIN_ERROR)
Message: Partition constant is out of partition function domain
Error: 1564 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_PARTITION_FUNCTION_IS_NOT_ALLOWED)
Message: This partition function is not allowed
Error: 1565 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_DDL_LOG_ERROR)
Message: Error in DDL log
Error: 1566 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_NULL_IN_VALUES_LESS_THAN)
Message: Not allowed to use NULL value in VALUES LESS THAN
Error: 1567 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_WRONG_PARTITION_NAME)
Message: Incorrect partition name
Error: 1568 SQLSTATE: 25001
(ER_CANT_CHANGE_TX_ISOLATION)
Message: Transaction isolation level can't be changed while a transaction is in progress
Error: 1569 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_DUP_ENTRY_AUTOINCREMENT_CASE)
Message: ALTER TABLE causes auto_increment resequencing, resulting in duplicate entry '%s' for key '%s'
Error: 1570 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_EVENT_MODIFY_QUEUE_ERROR)
Message: Internal scheduler error %d
Error: 1571 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_EVENT_SET_VAR_ERROR)
Message: Error during starting/stopping of the scheduler. Error code %u
Error: 1572 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_PARTITION_MERGE_ERROR)
Message: Engine cannot be used in partitioned tables
Error: 1573 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_CANT_ACTIVATE_LOG)
Message: Cannot activate '%s' log
Error: 1574 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_RBR_NOT_AVAILABLE)
Message: The server was not built with row-based replication
Error: 1575 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_BASE64_DECODE_ERROR)
Message: Decoding of base64 string failed
Error: 1576 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_EVENT_RECURSION_FORBIDDEN)
Message: Recursion of EVENT DDL statements is forbidden when body is present
Error: 1577 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_EVENTS_DB_ERROR)
Message: Cannot proceed because system tables used by Event Scheduler were found damaged at server start
Error: 1578 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_ONLY_INTEGERS_ALLOWED)
Message: Only integers allowed as number here
Error: 1579 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_UNSUPORTED_LOG_ENGINE)
Message: This storage engine cannot be used for log tables"
Error: 1580 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_BAD_LOG_STATEMENT)
Message: You cannot '%s' a log table if logging is enabled
Error: 1581 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_CANT_RENAME_LOG_TABLE)
Message: Cannot rename '%s'. When logging enabled, rename to/from log table must rename two tables: the log table to an archive table and another table back to '%s'
Error: 1582 SQLSTATE: 42000
(ER_WRONG_PARAMCOUNT_TO_NATIVE_FCT)
Message: Incorrect parameter count in the call to native function '%s'
Error: 1583 SQLSTATE: 42000
(ER_WRONG_PARAMETERS_TO_NATIVE_FCT)
Message: Incorrect parameters in the call to native function '%s'
Error: 1584 SQLSTATE: 42000
(ER_WRONG_PARAMETERS_TO_STORED_FCT)
Message: Incorrect parameters in the call to stored function '%s'
Error: 1585 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_NATIVE_FCT_NAME_COLLISION)
Message: This function '%s' has the same name as a native function
Error: 1586 SQLSTATE: 23000
(ER_DUP_ENTRY_WITH_KEY_NAME)
Message: Duplicate entry '%s' for key '%s'
Error: 1587 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_BINLOG_PURGE_EMFILE)
Message: Too many files opened, please execute the command again
Error: 1588 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_EVENT_CANNOT_CREATE_IN_THE_PAST)
Message: Event execution time is in the past and ON COMPLETION NOT PRESERVE is set. The event was dropped immediately after creation.
Error: 1589 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_EVENT_CANNOT_ALTER_IN_THE_PAST)
Message: Event execution time is in the past and ON COMPLETION NOT PRESERVE is set. The event was dropped immediately after creation.
Error: 1590 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_SLAVE_INCIDENT)
Message: The incident %s occured on the master. Message: %s
Error: 1591 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_NO_PARTITION_FOR_GIVEN_VALUE_SILENT)
Message: Table has no partition for some existing values
Error: 1592 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_BINLOG_UNSAFE_STATEMENT)
Message: Statement may not be safe to log in statement format.
Error: 1593 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_SLAVE_FATAL_ERROR)
Message: Fatal error: %s
Error: 1594 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_SLAVE_RELAY_LOG_READ_FAILURE)
Message: Relay log read failure: %s
Error: 1595 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_SLAVE_RELAY_LOG_WRITE_FAILURE)
Message: Relay log write failure: %s
Error: 1596 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_SLAVE_CREATE_EVENT_FAILURE)
Message: Failed to create %s
Error: 1597 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_SLAVE_MASTER_COM_FAILURE)
Message: Master command %s failed: %s
Error: 1598 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_BINLOG_LOGGING_IMPOSSIBLE)
Message: Binary logging not possible. Message: %s
Error: 1599 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_VIEW_NO_CREATION_CTX)
Message: View `%s`.`%s` has no creation context
Error: 1600 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_VIEW_INVALID_CREATION_CTX)
Message: Creation context of view `%s`.`%s' is invalid
Error: 1601 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_SR_INVALID_CREATION_CTX)
Message: Creation context of stored routine `%s`.`%s` is invalid
Error: 1602 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_TRG_CORRUPTED_FILE)
Message: Corrupted TRG file for table `%s`.`%s`
Error: 1603 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_TRG_NO_CREATION_CTX)
Message: Triggers for table `%s`.`%s` have no creation context
Error: 1604 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_TRG_INVALID_CREATION_CTX)
Message: Trigger creation context of table `%s`.`%s` is invalid
Error: 1605 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_EVENT_INVALID_CREATION_CTX)
Message: Creation context of event `%s`.`%s` is invalid
Error: 1606 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_TRG_CANT_OPEN_TABLE)
Message: Cannot open table for trigger `%s`.`%s`
Error: 1607 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_CANT_CREATE_SROUTINE)
Message: Cannot create stored routine `%s`. Check warnings
Error: 1608 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_SLAVE_AMBIGOUS_EXEC_MODE)
Message: Ambiguous slave modes combination. %s
Error: 1609 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_NO_FORMAT_DESCRIPTION_EVENT_BEFORE_BINLOG_STATEMENT)
Message: The BINLOG statement of type `%s` was not preceded by a format description BINLOG statement.
Error: 1610 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_SLAVE_CORRUPT_EVENT)
Message: Corrupted replication event was detected
Error: 1611 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_LOAD_DATA_INVALID_COLUMN)
Message: Invalid column reference (%s) in LOAD DATA
Error: 1612 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_LOG_PURGE_NO_FILE)
Message: Being purged log %s was not found
Error: 1613 SQLSTATE: XA106
(ER_XA_RBTIMEOUT)
Message: XA_RBTIMEOUT: Transaction branch was rolled back: took too long
Error: 1614 SQLSTATE: XA102
(ER_XA_RBDEADLOCK)
Message: XA_RBDEADLOCK: Transaction branch was rolled back: deadlock was detected
Error: 1615 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_NEED_REPREPARE)
Message: Prepared statement needs to be re-prepared
Error: 1616 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_DELAYED_NOT_SUPPORTED)
Message: DELAYED option not supported for table '%s'
Error: 1617 SQLSTATE: HY000
(WARN_NO_MASTER_INFO)
Message: The master info structure does not exist
Error: 1618 SQLSTATE: HY000
(WARN_OPTION_IGNORED)
Message: <%s> option ignored
Error: 1619 SQLSTATE: HY000
(WARN_PLUGIN_DELETE_BUILTIN)
Message: Built-in plugins cannot be deleted
Error: 1620 SQLSTATE: HY000
(WARN_PLUGIN_BUSY)
Message: Plugin is busy and will be uninstalled on shutdown
Error: 1621 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_VARIABLE_IS_READONLY)
Message: %s variable '%s' is read-only. Use SET %s to assign the value
Error: 1622 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_WARN_ENGINE_TRANSACTION_ROLLBACK)
Message: Storage engine %s does not support rollback for this statement. Transaction rolled back and must be restarted
Error: 1623 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_SLAVE_HEARTBEAT_FAILURE)
Message: Unexpected master's heartbeat data: %s
Error: 1624 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_SLAVE_HEARTBEAT_VALUE_OUT_OF_RANGE)
Message: The requested value for the heartbeat period %s %s
Error: 1625 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_NDB_REPLICATION_SCHEMA_ERROR)
Message: Bad schema for mysql.ndb_replication table. Message: %s
Error: 1626 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_CONFLICT_FN_PARSE_ERROR)
Message: Error in parsing conflict function. Message: %s
Error: 1627 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_EXCEPTIONS_WRITE_ERROR)
Message: Write to exceptions table failed. Message: %s"
Error: 1628 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_TOO_LONG_TABLE_COMMENT)
Message: Comment for table '%s' is too long (max = %lu)
Error: 1629 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_TOO_LONG_FIELD_COMMENT)
Message: Comment for field '%s' is too long (max = %lu)
Error: 1630 SQLSTATE: 42000
(ER_FUNC_INEXISTENT_NAME_COLLISION)
Message: FUNCTION %s does not exist. Check the 'Function Name Parsing and Resolution' section in the Reference Manual
Error: 1631 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_DATABASE_NAME)
Message: Database
Error: 1632 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_TABLE_NAME)
Message: Table
Error: 1633 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_PARTITION_NAME)
Message: Partition
Error: 1634 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_SUBPARTITION_NAME)
Message: Subpartition
Error: 1635 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_TEMPORARY_NAME)
Message: Temporary
Error: 1636 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_RENAMED_NAME)
Message: Renamed
Error: 1637 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_TOO_MANY_CONCURRENT_TRXS)
Message: Too many active concurrent transactions
Error: 1638 SQLSTATE: HY000
(WARN_NON_ASCII_SEPARATOR_NOT_IMPLEMENTED)
Message: Non-ASCII separator arguments are not fully supported
Error: 1639 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_DEBUG_SYNC_TIMEOUT)
Message: debug sync point wait timed out
Error: 1640 SQLSTATE: HY000
(ER_DEBUG_SYNC_HIT_LIMIT)
Message: debug sync point hit limit reached
Client error information comes from the following source files:
The Error values and the symbols in parentheses correspond to
definitions in the include/errmsg.h MySQL
source file.
The Message values correspond to the error messages that are
listed in the libmysql/errmsg.c file.
%d and %s represent
numbers and strings, respectively, that are substituted into
the messages when they are displayed.
Because updates are frequent, it is possible that those files will contain additional error information not listed here.
Error: 2000
(CR_UNKNOWN_ERROR)
Message: Unknown MySQL error
Error: 2001
(CR_SOCKET_CREATE_ERROR)
Message: Can't create UNIX socket (%d)
Error: 2002
(CR_CONNECTION_ERROR)
Message: Can't connect to local MySQL server through socket '%s' (%d)
Error: 2003
(CR_CONN_HOST_ERROR)
Message: Can't connect to MySQL server on '%s' (%d)
Error: 2004
(CR_IPSOCK_ERROR)
Message: Can't create TCP/IP socket (%d)
Error: 2005
(CR_UNKNOWN_HOST)
Message: Unknown MySQL server host '%s' (%d)
Error: 2006
(CR_SERVER_GONE_ERROR)
Message: MySQL server has gone away
Error: 2007
(CR_VERSION_ERROR)
Message: Protocol mismatch; server version = %d, client version = %d
Error: 2008
(CR_OUT_OF_MEMORY)
Message: MySQL client ran out of memory
Error: 2009
(CR_WRONG_HOST_INFO)
Message: Wrong host info
Error: 2010
(CR_LOCALHOST_CONNECTION)
Message: Localhost via UNIX socket
Error: 2011
(CR_TCP_CONNECTION)
Message: %s via TCP/IP
Error: 2012
(CR_SERVER_HANDSHAKE_ERR)
Message: Error in server handshake
Error: 2013
(CR_SERVER_LOST)
Message: Lost connection to MySQL server during query
Error: 2014
(CR_COMMANDS_OUT_OF_SYNC)
Message: Commands out of sync; you can't run this command now
Error: 2015
(CR_NAMEDPIPE_CONNECTION)
Message: Named pipe: %s
Error: 2016
(CR_NAMEDPIPEWAIT_ERROR)
Message: Can't wait for named pipe to host: %s pipe: %s (%lu)
Error: 2017
(CR_NAMEDPIPEOPEN_ERROR)
Message: Can't open named pipe to host: %s pipe: %s (%lu)
Error: 2018
(CR_NAMEDPIPESETSTATE_ERROR)
Message: Can't set state of named pipe to host: %s pipe: %s (%lu)
Error: 2019
(CR_CANT_READ_CHARSET)
Message: Can't initialize character set %s (path: %s)
Error: 2020
(CR_NET_PACKET_TOO_LARGE)
Message: Got packet bigger than 'max_allowed_packet' bytes
Error: 2021
(CR_EMBEDDED_CONNECTION)
Message: Embedded server
Error: 2022
(CR_PROBE_SLAVE_STATUS)
Message: Error on SHOW SLAVE STATUS:
Error: 2023
(CR_PROBE_SLAVE_HOSTS)
Message: Error on SHOW SLAVE HOSTS:
Error: 2024
(CR_PROBE_SLAVE_CONNECT)
Message: Error connecting to slave:
Error: 2025
(CR_PROBE_MASTER_CONNECT)
Message: Error connecting to master:
Error: 2026
(CR_SSL_CONNECTION_ERROR)
Message: SSL connection error
Error: 2027
(CR_MALFORMED_PACKET)
Message: Malformed packet
Error: 2028
(CR_WRONG_LICENSE)
Message: This client library is licensed only for use with MySQL servers having '%s' license
Error: 2029
(CR_NULL_POINTER)
Message: Invalid use of null pointer
Error: 2030
(CR_NO_PREPARE_STMT)
Message: Statement not prepared
Error: 2031
(CR_PARAMS_NOT_BOUND)
Message: No data supplied for parameters in prepared statement
Error: 2032
(CR_DATA_TRUNCATED)
Message: Data truncated
Error: 2033
(CR_NO_PARAMETERS_EXISTS)
Message: No parameters exist in the statement
Error: 2034
(CR_INVALID_PARAMETER_NO)
Message: Invalid parameter number
Error: 2035
(CR_INVALID_BUFFER_USE)
Message: Can't send long data for non-string/non-binary data types (parameter: %d)
Error: 2036
(CR_UNSUPPORTED_PARAM_TYPE)
Message: Using unsupported buffer type: %d (parameter: %d)
Error: 2037
(CR_SHARED_MEMORY_CONNECTION)
Message: Shared memory: %s
Error: 2038
(CR_SHARED_MEMORY_CONNECT_REQUEST_ERROR)
Message: Can't open shared memory; client could not create request event (%lu)
Error: 2039
(CR_SHARED_MEMORY_CONNECT_ANSWER_ERROR)
Message: Can't open shared memory; no answer event received from server (%lu)
Error: 2040
(CR_SHARED_MEMORY_CONNECT_FILE_MAP_ERROR)
Message: Can't open shared memory; server could not allocate file mapping (%lu)
Error: 2041
(CR_SHARED_MEMORY_CONNECT_MAP_ERROR)
Message: Can't open shared memory; server could not get pointer to file mapping (%lu)
Error: 2042
(CR_SHARED_MEMORY_FILE_MAP_ERROR)
Message: Can't open shared memory; client could not allocate file mapping (%lu)
Error: 2043
(CR_SHARED_MEMORY_MAP_ERROR)
Message: Can't open shared memory; client could not get pointer to file mapping (%lu)
Error: 2044
(CR_SHARED_MEMORY_EVENT_ERROR)
Message: Can't open shared memory; client could not create %s event (%lu)
Error: 2045
(CR_SHARED_MEMORY_CONNECT_ABANDONED_ERROR)
Message: Can't open shared memory; no answer from server (%lu)
Error: 2046
(CR_SHARED_MEMORY_CONNECT_SET_ERROR)
Message: Can't open shared memory; cannot send request event to server (%lu)
Error: 2047
(CR_CONN_UNKNOW_PROTOCOL)
Message: Wrong or unknown protocol
Error: 2048
(CR_INVALID_CONN_HANDLE)
Message: Invalid connection handle
Error: 2049
(CR_SECURE_AUTH)
Message: Connection using old (pre-4.1.1) authentication protocol refused (client option 'secure_auth' enabled)
Error: 2050
(CR_FETCH_CANCELED)
Message: Row retrieval was canceled by mysql_stmt_close() call
Error: 2051
(CR_NO_DATA)
Message: Attempt to read column without prior row fetch
Error: 2052
(CR_NO_STMT_METADATA)
Message: Prepared statement contains no metadata
Error: 2053
(CR_NO_RESULT_SET)
Message: Attempt to read a row while there is no result set associated with the statement
Error: 2054
(CR_NOT_IMPLEMENTED)
Message: This feature is not implemented yet
Error: 2055
(CR_SERVER_LOST_EXTENDED)
Message: Lost connection to MySQL server at '%s', system error: %d
Error: 2056
(CR_STMT_CLOSED)
Message: Statement closed indirectly because of a preceeding %s() call
Error: 2057
(CR_NEW_STMT_METADATA)
Message: The number of columns in the result set differs from the number of bound buffers. You must reset the statement, rebind the result set columns, and execute the statement again
This section lists some common problems and error messages that you may encounter. It describes how to determine the causes of the problems and what to do to solve them.
When you run into a problem, the first thing you should do is to find out which program or piece of equipment is causing it:
If you have one of the following symptoms, then it is probably a hardware problems (such as memory, motherboard, CPU, or hard disk) or kernel problem:
The keyboard doesn't work. This can normally be checked by pressing the Caps Lock key. If the Caps Lock light doesn't change, you have to replace your keyboard. (Before doing this, you should try to restart your computer and check all cables to the keyboard.)
The mouse pointer doesn't move.
The machine doesn't answer to a remote machine's pings.
Other programs that are not related to MySQL don't behave correctly.
Your system restarted unexpectedly. (A faulty user-level program should never be able to take down your system.)
In this case, you should start by checking all your cables
and run some diagnostic tool to check your hardware! You
should also check whether there are any patches, updates, or
service packs for your operating system that could likely
solve your problem. Check also that all your libraries (such
as glibc) are up to date.
It is always good to use a machine with ECC memory to discover memory problems early.
If your keyboard is locked up, you may be able to recover by
logging in to your machine from another machine and
executing kbd_mode -a.
Please examine your system log file
(/var/log/messages or similar) for
reasons for your problem. If you think the problem is in
MySQL, you should also examine MySQL's log files. See
Section 5.2, “MySQL Server Logs”.
If you don't think you have hardware problems, you should try to find out which program is causing problems. Try using top, ps, Task Manager, or some similar program, to check which program is taking all CPU or is locking the machine.
Use top, df, or a similar program to check whether you are out of memory, disk space, file descriptors, or some other critical resource.
If the problem is some runaway process, you can always try to kill it. If it doesn't want to die, there is probably a bug in the operating system.
If after you have examined all other possibilities and you have concluded that the MySQL server or a MySQL client is causing the problem, it is time to create a bug report for our mailing list or our support team. In the bug report, try to give a very detailed description of how the system is behaving and what you think is happening. You should also state why you think that MySQL is causing the problem. Take into consideration all the situations in this chapter. State any problems exactly how they appear when you examine your system. Use the “copy and paste” method for any output and error messages from programs and log files.
Try to describe in detail which program is not working and all symptoms you see. We have in the past received many bug reports that state only “the system doesn't work.” This doesn't provide us with any information about what could be the problem.
If a program fails, it is always useful to know the following information:
Has the program in question made a segmentation fault (did it dump core)?
Is the program taking up all available CPU time? Check with top. Let the program run for a while, it may simply be evaluating something computationally intensive.
If the mysqld server is causing problems, can you get any response from it with mysqladmin -u root ping or mysqladmin -u root processlist?
What does a client program say when you try to connect to the MySQL server? (Try with mysql, for example.) Does the client jam? Do you get any output from the program?
When sending a bug report, you should follow the outline described in Section 1.7, “How to Report Bugs or Problems”.
Access deniedCan't connect to [local] MySQL serverLost connection to MySQL serverClient does not support authentication protocolHost 'host_name' is
blockedToo many connectionsOut of memoryMySQL server has gone awayPacket too largeThe table is fullCan't create/write to fileCommands out of syncIgnoring userTable 'tbl_name' doesn't
existCan't initialize character setFile' Not Found and
Similar ErrorsThis section lists some errors that users frequently encounter when running MySQL programs. Although the problems show up when you try to run client programs, the solutions to many of the problems involves changing the configuration of the MySQL server.
An Access denied error can have many
causes. Often the problem is related to the MySQL accounts
that the server permits client programs to use when
connecting. See Section 5.4, “The MySQL Access Privilege System”, and
Section 5.4.7, “Causes of Access-Denied Errors”.
A MySQL client on Unix can connect to the
mysqld server in two different ways: By
using a Unix socket file to connect through a file in the file
system (default /tmp/mysql.sock), or by
using TCP/IP, which connects through a port number. A Unix
socket file connection is faster than TCP/IP, but can be used
only when connecting to a server on the same computer. A Unix
socket file is used if you don't specify a host name or if you
specify the special host name localhost.
If the MySQL server is running on Windows, you can connect
using TCP/IP. If the server is started with the
--enable-named-pipe option, you
can also connect with named pipes if you run the client on the
host where the server is running. The name of the named pipe
is MySQL by default. If you don't give a
host name when connecting to mysqld, a
MySQL client first tries to connect to the named pipe. If that
doesn't work, it connects to the TCP/IP port. You can force
the use of named pipes on Windows by using
. as the host name.
The error (2002) Can't connect to ...
normally means that there is no MySQL server running on the
system or that you are using an incorrect Unix socket file
name or TCP/IP port number when trying to connect to the
server. You should also check that the TCP/IP port you are
using has not been blocked by a firewall or port blocking
service.
The error (2003) Can't connect to MySQL server on
'
indicates that the network connection has been refused. You
should check that there is a MySQL server running, that it has
network connections enabled, and that the network port you
specified is the one configured on the server.
server' (10061)
Start by checking whether there is a process named mysqld running on your server host. (Use ps xa | grep mysqld on Unix or the Task Manager on Windows.) If there is no such process, you should start the server. See Section 2.12.1.3, “Starting and Troubleshooting the MySQL Server”.
If a mysqld process is running, you can
check it by trying the following commands. The port number or
Unix socket file name might be different in your setup.
host_ip represents the IP number of the
machine where the server is running.
shell>mysqladmin versionshell>mysqladmin variablesshell>mysqladmin -h `hostname` version variablesshell>mysqladmin -h `hostname` --port=3306 versionshell>mysqladmin -h host_ip versionshell>mysqladmin --protocol=SOCKET --socket=/tmp/mysql.sock version
Note the use of backticks rather than forward quotation marks
with the hostname command; these cause the
output of hostname (that is, the current
host name) to be substituted into the
mysqladmin command. If you have no
hostname command or are running on Windows,
you can manually type the host name of your machine (without
backticks) following the -h option. You can
also try -h 127.0.0.1 to connect with
TCP/IP to the local host.
Make sure that the server has not been configured to ignore
network connections or (if you are attempting to connect
remotely) that it has not been configured to listen only
locally on its network interfaces. If the server was started
with --skip-networking, it will
not accept TCP/IP connections at all. If the server was
started with
--bind-address=127.0.0.1, it
will listen for TCP/IP connections only locally on the
loopback interface and will not accept remote connections.
Check to make sure that there is no firewall blocking access to MySQL. Your firewall may be configured on the basis of the application being executed, or the port number used by MySQL for communication (3306 by default). Under Linux or Unix, check your IP tables (or similar) configuration to ensure that the port has not been blocked. Under Windows, applications such as ZoneAlarm or the Windows XP personal firewall may need to be configured not to block the MySQL port.
Here are some reasons the Can't connect to local
MySQL server error might occur:
mysqld is not running on the local host. Check your operating system's process list to ensure the mysqld process is present.
You're running a MySQL server on Windows with many TCP/IP
connections to it. If you're experiencing that quite often
your clients get that error, you can find a workaround
here:
Section C.5.2.2.1, “Connection to MySQL Server Failing on Windows”.
Someone has removed the Unix socket file that
mysqld uses
(/tmp/mysql.sock by default). For
example, you might have a cron job that
removes old files from the /tmp
directory. You can always run mysqladmin
version to check whether the Unix socket file
that mysqladmin is trying to use really
exists. The fix in this case is to change the
cron job to not remove
mysql.sock or to place the socket
file somewhere else. See
Section C.5.4.5, “How to Protect or Change the MySQL Unix Socket File”.
You have started the mysqld server with
the
--socket=/path/to/socket
option, but forgotten to tell client programs the new name
of the socket file. If you change the socket path name for
the server, you must also notify the MySQL clients. You
can do this by providing the same
--socket option when you
run client programs. You also need to ensure that clients
have permission to access the
mysql.sock file. To find out where
the socket file is, you can do:
shell> netstat -ln | grep mysql
See Section C.5.4.5, “How to Protect or Change the MySQL Unix Socket File”.
You are using Linux and one server thread has died (dumped core). In this case, you must kill the other mysqld threads (for example, with kill or with the mysql_zap script) before you can restart the MySQL server. See Section C.5.4.2, “What to Do If MySQL Keeps Crashing”.
The server or client program might not have the proper
access privileges for the directory that holds the Unix
socket file or the socket file itself. In this case, you
must either change the access privileges for the directory
or socket file so that the server and clients can access
them, or restart mysqld with a
--socket option that
specifies a socket file name in a directory where the
server can create it and where client programs can access
it.
If you get the error message Can't connect to MySQL
server on some_host, you can try the following
things to find out what the problem is:
Check whether the server is running on that host by
executing telnet some_host 3306 and
pressing the Enter key a couple of times. (3306 is the
default MySQL port number. Change the value if your server
is listening to a different port.) If there is a MySQL
server running and listening to the port, you should get a
response that includes the server's version number. If you
get an error such as telnet: Unable to connect to
remote host: Connection refused, then there is
no server running on the given port.
If the server is running on the local host, try using
mysqladmin -h localhost variables to
connect using the Unix socket file. Verify the TCP/IP port
number that the server is configured to listen to (it is
the value of the port
variable.)
If you are running under Linux and Security-Enhanced Linux
(SELinux) is enabled, make sure you have disabled SELinux
protection for the mysqld process.
When you're running a MySQL server on Windows with many
TCP/IP connections to it, and you're experiencing that quite
often your clients get a Can't connect to MySQL
server error, the reason might be that Windows
does not allow for enough ephemeral (short-lived) ports to
serve those connections.
The purpose of TIME_WAIT is to keep a
connection accepting packets even after the connection has
been closed. This is because Internet routing can cause a
packet to take a slow route to its destination and it may
arrive after both sides have agreed to close. If the port is
in use for a new connection, that packet from the old
connection could break the protocol or compromise personal
information from the original connection. The
TIME_WAIT delay prevents this by ensuring
that the port cannot be reused until after some time has
been permitted for those delayed packets to arrive.
It is safe to reduce TIME_WAIT greatly on
LAN connections because there is little chance of packets
arriving at very long delays, as they could through the
Internet with its comparatively large distances and
latencies.
Windows permits ephemeral (short-lived) TCP ports to the
user. After any port is closed it will remain in a
TIME_WAIT status for 120 seconds. The
port will not be available again until this time expires.
The default range of port numbers depends on the version of
WIndows, with a more limited number of ports in older
versions:
Windows through Server 2003: Ports in range 1025–5000
Windows Vista and Server 2008: Ports in range 49152–65535
With a small stack of available TCP ports (5000) and a high
number of TCP ports being open and closed over a short
period of time along with the TIME_WAIT
status you have a good chance for running out of ports.
There are two ways to address this problem:
Reduce the number of TCP ports consumed quickly by investigating connection pooling or persistent connections where possible
Tune some settings in the Windows registry (see below)
IMPORTANT: The following procedure involves modifying the Windows registry. Before you modify the registry, make sure to back it up and make sure that you understand how to restore the registry if a problem occurs. For information about how to back up, restore, and edit the registry, view the following article in the Microsoft Knowledge Base: http://support.microsoft.com/kb/256986/EN-US/.
Start Registry Editor
(Regedt32.exe).
Locate the following key in the registry:
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Services\Tcpip\Parameters
On the Edit menu, click Add
Value, and then add the following registry
value:
Value Name: MaxUserPort Data Type: REG_DWORD Value: 65534
This sets the number of ephemeral ports available to any user. The valid range is between 5000 and 65534 (decimal). The default value is 0x1388 (5000 decimal).
On the Edit menu, click Add
Value, and then add the following registry
value:
Value Name: TcpTimedWaitDelay Data Type: REG_DWORD Value: 30
This sets the number of seconds to hold a TCP port
connection in TIME_WAIT state before
closing. The valid range is between 0 (zero) and 300
(decimal). The default value is 0x78 (120 decimal).
Quit Registry Editor.
Reboot the machine.
Note: Undoing the above should be as simple as deleting the registry entries you've created.
There are three likely causes for this error message.
Usually it indicates network connectivity trouble and you should check the condition of your network if this error occurs frequently. If the error message includes “during query,” this is probably the case you are experiencing.
Sometimes the “during query” form happens when
millions of rows are being sent as part of one or more
queries. If you know that this is happening, you should try
increasing net_read_timeout
from its default of 30 seconds to 60 seconds or longer,
sufficient for the data transfer to complete.
More rarely, it can happen when the client is attempting the
initial connection to the server. In this case, if your
connect_timeout value is set
to only a few seconds, you may be able to resolve the problem
by increasing it to ten seconds, perhaps more if you have a
very long distance or slow connection. You can determine
whether you are experiencing this more uncommon cause by using
SHOW GLOBAL STATUS LIKE 'Aborted_connects'.
It will increase by one for each initial connection attempt
that the server aborts. You may see “reading
authorization packet” as part of the error message; if
so, that also suggests that this is the solution that you
need.
If the cause is none of those just described, you may be
experiencing a problem with
BLOB values that are larger
than max_allowed_packet,
which can cause this error with some clients. Sometime you may
see “packet too large” as part of the error
message, and that confirms that you need to increase
max_allowed_packet.
MySQL 5.1 uses an authentication protocol based on a password hashing algorithm that is incompatible with that used by older (pre-4.1) clients. If you upgrade the server from 4.0, attempts to connect to it with an older client may fail with the following message:
shell> mysql
Client does not support authentication protocol requested
by server; consider upgrading MySQL client
To solve this problem, you should use one of the following approaches:
Upgrade all client programs to use a 4.1.1 or newer client library.
When connecting to the server with a pre-4.1 client program, use an account that still has a pre-4.1-style password.
Reset the password to pre-4.1 style for each user that
needs to use a pre-4.1 client program. This can be done
using the SET PASSWORD
statement and the
OLD_PASSWORD() function:
mysql>SET PASSWORD FOR->'some_user'@'some_host' = OLD_PASSWORD('newpwd');
Alternatively, use UPDATE
and FLUSH
PRIVILEGES:
mysql>UPDATE mysql.user SET Password = OLD_PASSWORD('->newpwd')WHERE Host = 'mysql>some_host' AND User = 'some_user';FLUSH PRIVILEGES;
Substitute the password you want to use for
“newpwd” in the
preceding examples. MySQL cannot tell you what the
original password was, so you'll need to pick a new one.
Tell the server to use the older password hashing algorithm:
Start mysqld with the
--old-passwords option.
Assign an old-format password to each account that has had its password updated to the longer 4.1 format. You can identify these accounts with the following query:
mysql>SELECT Host, User, Password FROM mysql.user->WHERE LENGTH(Password) > 16;
For each account record displayed by the query, use
the Host and
User values and assign a password
using the
OLD_PASSWORD() function
and either SET PASSWORD
or UPDATE, as described
earlier.
In older versions of PHP, the mysql
extension does not support the authentication protocol in
MySQL 4.1.1 and higher. This is true regardless of the PHP
version being used. If you wish to use the
mysql extension with MySQL 4.1 or newer,
you may need to follow one of the options discussed above
for configuring MySQL to work with old clients. The
mysqli extension (stands for "MySQL,
Improved"; added in PHP 5) is compatible with the improved
password hashing employed in MySQL 4.1 and higher, and no
special configuration of MySQL need be done to use this
MySQL client library. For more information about the
mysqli extension, see
http://php.net/mysqli.
It may also be possible to compile the older
mysql extension against the new MySQL
client library. This is beyond the scope of this Manual;
consult the PHP documentation for more information. You also
be able to obtain assistance with these issues in our
MySQL with PHP
forum.
For additional background on password hashing and authentication, see Section 5.3.2.3, “Password Hashing in MySQL”.
MySQL client programs prompt for a password when invoked with
a --password or
-p option that has no following password
value:
shell> mysql -u user_name -p
Enter password:
On some systems, you may find that your password works when
specified in an option file or on the command line, but not
when you enter it interactively at the Enter
password: prompt. This occurs when the library
provided by the system to read passwords limits password
values to a small number of characters (typically eight). That
is a problem with the system library, not with MySQL. To work
around it, change your MySQL password to a value that is eight
or fewer characters long, or put your password in an option
file.
If you get the following error, it means that
mysqld has received many connect requests
from the host
' that
have been interrupted in the middle:
host_name'
Host 'host_name' is blocked because of many connection errors.
Unblock with 'mysqladmin flush-hosts'
The number of interrupted connect requests permitted is
determined by the value of the
max_connect_errors system
variable. After
max_connect_errors failed
requests, mysqld assumes that something is
wrong (for example, that someone is trying to break in), and
blocks the host from further connections until you execute a
mysqladmin flush-hosts command or issue a
FLUSH HOSTS
statement. See Section 5.1.4, “Server System Variables”.
By default, mysqld blocks a host after 10 connection errors. You can adjust the value by starting the server like this:
shell> mysqld_safe --max_connect_errors=10000 &
If you get this error message for a given host, you should
first verify that there isn't anything wrong with TCP/IP
connections from that host. If you are having network
problems, it does you no good to increase the value of the
max_connect_errors variable.
If you get a Too many connections error
when you try to connect to the mysqld
server, this means that all available connections are in use
by other clients.
The number of connections permitted is controlled by the
max_connections system
variable. Beginning with MySQL 5.1.15, its default value is
151 to improve performance when MySQL is used with the Apache
Web server. (Previously, the default was 100.) If you need to
support more connections, you should set a larger value for
this variable.
mysqld actually permits
max_connections+1
clients to connect. The extra connection is reserved for use
by accounts that have the SUPER
privilege. By granting the
SUPER privilege to
administrators and not to normal users (who should not need
it), an administrator can connect to the server and use
SHOW PROCESSLIST to diagnose
problems even if the maximum number of unprivileged clients
are connected. See Section 12.4.5.31, “SHOW PROCESSLIST Syntax”.
The maximum number of connections MySQL can support depends on the quality of the thread library on a given platform, the amount of RAM available, how much RAM is used for each connection, the workload from each connection, and the desired response time. Linux or Solaris should be able to support at 500 to 1000 simultaneous connections routinely and as many as 10,000 connections if you have many gigabytes of RAM available and the workload from each is low or the response time target undemanding. Windows is limited to (open tables × 2 + open connections) < 2048 due to the Posix compatibility layer used on that platform.
Increasing open-files-limit may
be necessary. Also see Section 2.5, “Installing MySQL on Linux”,
for how to raise the operating system limit on how many
handles can be used by MySQL.
If you issue a query using the mysql client program and receive an error like the following one, it means that mysql does not have enough memory to store the entire query result:
mysql: Out of memory at line 42, 'malloc.c' mysql: needed 8136 byte (8k), memory in use: 12481367 bytes (12189k) ERROR 2008: MySQL client ran out of memory
To remedy the problem, first check whether your query is
correct. Is it reasonable that it should return so many rows?
If not, correct the query and try again. Otherwise, you can
invoke mysql with the
--quick option. This causes it
to use the mysql_use_result()
C API function to retrieve the result set, which places less
of a load on the client (but more on the server).
This section also covers the related Lost connection
to server during query error.
The most common reason for the MySQL server has gone
away error is that the server timed out and closed
the connection. In this case, you normally get one of the
following error codes (which one you get is operating
system-dependent).
| Error Code | Description |
|---|---|
CR_SERVER_GONE_ERROR | The client couldn't send a question to the server. |
CR_SERVER_LOST | The client didn't get an error when writing to the server, but it didn't get a full answer (or any answer) to the question. |
By default, the server closes the connection after eight hours
if nothing has happened. You can change the time limit by
setting the wait_timeout
variable when you start mysqld. See
Section 5.1.4, “Server System Variables”.
If you have a script, you just have to issue the query again
for the client to do an automatic reconnection. This assumes
that you have automatic reconnection in the client enabled
(which is the default for the mysql
command-line client).
Some other common reasons for the MySQL server has
gone away error are:
You (or the db administrator) has killed the running
thread with a KILL
statement or a mysqladmin kill command.
You tried to run a query after closing the connection to the server. This indicates a logic error in the application that should be corrected.
A client application running on a different host does not have the necessary privileges to connect to the MySQL server from that host.
You got a timeout from the TCP/IP connection on the client
side. This may happen if you have been using the commands:
mysql_options(...,
MYSQL_OPT_READ_TIMEOUT,...) or
mysql_options(...,
MYSQL_OPT_WRITE_TIMEOUT,...). In this case
increasing the timeout may help solve the problem.
You have encountered a timeout on the server side and the
automatic reconnection in the client is disabled (the
reconnect flag in the
MYSQL structure is equal to 0).
You are using a Windows client and the server had dropped
the connection (probably because
wait_timeout expired)
before the command was issued.
The problem on Windows is that in some cases MySQL doesn't get an error from the OS when writing to the TCP/IP connection to the server, but instead gets the error when trying to read the answer from the connection.
Prior to MySQL 5.1.8, even if the
reconnect flag in the
MYSQL structure is equal to 1, MySQL
does not automatically reconnect and re-issue the query as
it doesn't know if the server did get the original query
or not.
The solution to this is to either do a
mysql_ping() on the
connection if there has been a long time since the last
query (this is what MyODBC does) or set
wait_timeout on the
mysqld server so high that it in
practice never times out.
You can also get these errors if you send a query to the
server that is incorrect or too large. If
mysqld receives a packet that is too
large or out of order, it assumes that something has gone
wrong with the client and closes the connection. If you
need big queries (for example, if you are working with big
BLOB columns), you can
increase the query limit by setting the server's
max_allowed_packet
variable, which has a default value of 1MB. You may also
need to increase the maximum packet size on the client
end. More information on setting the packet size is given
in Section C.5.2.10, “Packet too large”.
An INSERT or
REPLACE statement that
inserts a great many rows can also cause these sorts of
errors. Either one of these statements sends a single
request to the server irrespective of the number of rows
to be inserted; thus, you can often avoid the error by
reducing the number of rows sent per
INSERT or
REPLACE.
You also get a lost connection if you are sending a packet 16MB or larger if your client is older than 4.0.8 and your server is 4.0.8 and above, or the other way around.
It is also possible to see this error if host name lookups fail (for example, if the DNS server on which your server or network relies goes down). This is because MySQL is dependent on the host system for name resolution, but has no way of knowing whether it is working—from MySQL's point of view the problem is indistinguishable from any other network timeout.
You may also see the MySQL server has gone
away error if MySQL is started with the
--skip-networking option.
Another networking issue that can cause this error occurs if the MySQL port (default 3306) is blocked by your firewall, thus preventing any connections at all to the MySQL server.
You can also encounter this error with applications that fork child processes, all of which try to use the same connection to the MySQL server. This can be avoided by using a separate connection for each child process.
You have encountered a bug where the server died while executing the query.
You can check whether the MySQL server died and restarted by executing mysqladmin version and examining the server's uptime. If the client connection was broken because mysqld crashed and restarted, you should concentrate on finding the reason for the crash. Start by checking whether issuing the query again kills the server again. See Section C.5.4.2, “What to Do If MySQL Keeps Crashing”.
You can get more information about the lost connections by
starting mysqld with the
--log-warnings=2 option. This
logs some of the disconnected errors in the
hostname.err file. See
Section 5.2.2, “The Error Log”.
If you want to create a bug report regarding this problem, be sure that you include the following information:
Indicate whether the MySQL server died. You can find information about this in the server error log. See Section C.5.4.2, “What to Do If MySQL Keeps Crashing”.
If a specific query kills mysqld and
the tables involved were checked with
CHECK TABLE before you ran
the query, can you provide a reproducible test case? See
MySQL
Internals: Porting.
What is the value of the
wait_timeout system
variable in the MySQL server? (mysqladmin
variables gives you the value of this variable.)
Have you tried to run mysqld with the general query log enabled to determine whether the problem query appears in the log? (See Section 5.2.3, “The General Query Log”.)
See also Section C.5.2.11, “Communication Errors and Aborted Connections”, and Section 1.7, “How to Report Bugs or Problems”.
A communication packet is a single SQL statement sent to the MySQL server, a single row that is sent to the client, or a binary log event sent from a master replication server to a slave.
The largest possible packet that can be transmitted to or from a MySQL 5.1 server or client is 1GB.
When a MySQL client or the mysqld server
receives a packet bigger than
max_allowed_packet bytes, it
issues a Packet too large error and closes
the connection. With some clients, you may also get a
Lost connection to MySQL server during
query error if the communication packet is too
large.
Both the client and the server have their own
max_allowed_packet variable,
so if you want to handle big packets, you must increase this
variable both in the client and in the server.
If you are using the mysql client program,
its default
max_allowed_packet variable
is 16MB. To set a larger value, start mysql
like this:
shell> mysql --max_allowed_packet=32M
That sets the packet size to 32MB.
The server's default
max_allowed_packet value is
1MB. You can increase this if the server needs to handle big
queries (for example, if you are working with big
BLOB columns). For example, to
set the variable to 16MB, start the server like this:
shell> mysqld --max_allowed_packet=16M
You can also use an option file to set
max_allowed_packet. For
example, to set the size for the server to 16MB, add the
following lines in an option file:
[mysqld] max_allowed_packet=16M
It is safe to increase the value of this variable because the extra memory is allocated only when needed. For example, mysqld allocates more memory only when you issue a long query or when mysqld must return a large result row. The small default value of the variable is a precaution to catch incorrect packets between the client and server and also to ensure that you do not run out of memory by using large packets accidentally.
You can also get strange problems with large packets if you
are using large BLOB values but
have not given mysqld access to enough
memory to handle the query. If you suspect this is the case,
try adding ulimit -d 256000 to the
beginning of the mysqld_safe script and
restarting mysqld.
The server error log can be a useful source of information
about connection problems. See Section 5.2.2, “The Error Log”. If
you start the server with the
--log-warnings option, you
might find messages like this in your error log:
010301 14:38:23 Aborted connection 854 to db: 'users' user: 'josh'
If a client successfully connects but later disconnects
improperly or is terminated, the server increments the
Aborted_clients status
variable, and logs an Aborted
connection message to the error log. The cause can
be any of the following:
The client program did not call
mysql_close() before
exiting.
The client had been sleeping more than
wait_timeout or
interactive_timeout
seconds without issuing any requests to the server. See
Section 5.1.4, “Server System Variables”.
The client program ended abruptly in the middle of a data transfer.
If a client is unable even to connect, the server increments
the Aborted_connects status
variable. Unsuccessful connect attempts can occur for the
following reasons:
A client doesn't have privileges to connect to a database.
A client uses an incorrect password.
A connection packet doesn't contain the right information.
It takes more than
connect_timeout seconds
to get a connect packet. See
Section 5.1.4, “Server System Variables”.
If these kinds of things happen, it might indicate that someone is trying to break into your server! Messages for these types of problems are logged to the general query log if it is enabled.
Other reasons for problems with aborted clients or aborted connections:
Use of Ethernet protocol with Linux, both half and full duplex. Many Linux Ethernet drivers have this bug. You should test for this bug by transferring a huge file using FTP between the client and server machines. If a transfer goes in burst-pause-burst-pause mode, you are experiencing a Linux duplex syndrome. The only solution is switching the duplex mode for both your network card and hub/switch to either full duplex or to half duplex and testing the results to determine the best setting.
Some problem with the thread library that causes interrupts on reads.
Badly configured TCP/IP.
Faulty Ethernets, hubs, switches, cables, and so forth. This can be diagnosed properly only by replacing hardware.
The max_allowed_packet
variable value is too small or queries require more memory
than you have allocated for mysqld. See
Section C.5.2.10, “Packet too large”.
The effective maximum table size for MySQL databases is usually determined by operating system constraints on file sizes, not by MySQL internal limits. The following table lists some examples of operating system file-size limits. This is only a rough guide and is not intended to be definitive. For the most up-to-date information, be sure to check the documentation specific to your operating system.
| Operating System | File-size Limit |
|---|---|
| Win32 w/ FAT/FAT32 | 2GB/4GB |
| Win32 w/ NTFS | 2TB (possibly larger) |
| Linux 2.2-Intel 32-bit | 2GB (LFS: 4GB) |
| Linux 2.4+ | (using ext3 file system) 4TB |
| Solaris 9/10 | 16TB |
| MacOS X w/ HFS+ | 2TB |
| NetWare w/NSS file system | 8TB |
Windows users, please note that FAT and VFAT (FAT32) are not considered suitable for production use with MySQL. Use NTFS instead.
On Linux 2.2, you can get MyISAM tables
larger than 2GB in size by using the Large File Support (LFS)
patch for the ext2 file system. Most current Linux
distributions are based on kernel 2.4 or higher and include
all the required LFS patches. On Linux 2.4, patches also exist
for ReiserFS to get support for big files (up to 2TB). With
JFS and XFS, petabyte and larger files are possible on Linux.
For a detailed overview about LFS in Linux, have a look at Andreas Jaeger's Large File Support in Linux page at http://www.suse.de/~aj/linux_lfs.html.
If you do encounter a full-table error, there are several reasons why it might have occurred:
The InnoDB storage engine maintains
InnoDB tables within a tablespace that
can be created from several files. This enables a table to
exceed the maximum individual file size. The tablespace
can include raw disk partitions, which permits extremely
large tables. The maximum tablespace size is 64TB.
If you are using InnoDB tables and run
out of room in the InnoDB tablespace.
In this case, the solution is to extend the
InnoDB tablespace. See
Section 13.6.5, “Adding, Removing, or Resizing InnoDB Data and Log
Files”.
You are using MyISAM tables on an
operating system that supports files only up to 2GB in
size and you have hit this limit for the data file or
index file.
You are using a MyISAM table and the
space required for the table exceeds what is permitted by
the internal pointer size. MyISAM
permits data and index files to grow up to 256TB by
default, but this limit can be changed up to the maximum
permissible size of 65,536TB
(2567 – 1 bytes).
If you need a MyISAM table that is
larger than the default limit and your operating system
supports large files, the CREATE
TABLE statement supports
AVG_ROW_LENGTH and
MAX_ROWS options. See
Section 12.1.17, “CREATE TABLE Syntax”. The server uses these
options to determine how large a table to permit.
If the pointer size is too small for an existing table,
you can change the options with ALTER
TABLE to increase a table's maximum permissible
size. See Section 12.1.7, “ALTER TABLE Syntax”.
ALTER TABLEtbl_nameMAX_ROWS=1000000000 AVG_ROW_LENGTH=nnn;
You have to specify AVG_ROW_LENGTH only
for tables with BLOB or
TEXT columns; in this case,
MySQL can't optimize the space required based only on the
number of rows.
To change the default size limit for
MyISAM tables, set the
myisam_data_pointer_size,
which sets the number of bytes used for internal row
pointers. The value is used to set the pointer size for
new tables if you do not specify the
MAX_ROWS option. The value of
myisam_data_pointer_size
can be from 2 to 7. A value of 4 permits tables up to 4GB;
a value of 6 permits tables up to 256TB.
You can check the maximum data and index sizes by using this statement:
SHOW TABLE STATUS FROMdb_nameLIKE 'tbl_name';
You also can use myisamchk -dv
/path/to/table-index-file. See
Section 12.4.5, “SHOW Syntax”, or Section 4.6.3, “myisamchk — MyISAM Table-Maintenance Utility”.
Other ways to work around file-size limits for
MyISAM tables are as follows:
If your large table is read only, you can use myisampack to compress it. myisampack usually compresses a table by at least 50%, so you can have, in effect, much bigger tables. myisampack also can merge multiple tables into a single table. See Section 4.6.5, “myisampack — Generate Compressed, Read-Only MyISAM Tables”.
MySQL includes a MERGE library that
enables you to handle a collection of
MyISAM tables that have identical
structure as a single MERGE table.
See Section 13.8, “The MERGE Storage Engine”.
You are using the NDB storage
engine, in which case you need to increase the values for
the DataMemory and
IndexMemory configuration parameters in
your config.ini file. See
Section 17.3.3.1, “MySQL Cluster Data Node Configuration Parameters”.
You are using the MEMORY
(HEAP) storage engine; in this case you
need to increase the value of the
max_heap_table_size
system variable. See
Section 5.1.4, “Server System Variables”.
If you get an error of the following type for some queries, it means that MySQL cannot create a temporary file for the result set in the temporary directory:
Can't create/write to file '\\sqla3fe_0.ism'.
The preceding error is a typical message for Windows; the Unix message is similar.
One fix is to start mysqld with the
--tmpdir option or to add the
option to the [mysqld] section of your
option file. For example, to specify a directory of
C:\temp, use these lines:
[mysqld] tmpdir=C:/temp
The C:\temp directory must exist and have
sufficient space for the MySQL server to write to. See
Section 4.2.3.3, “Using Option Files”.
Another cause of this error can be permissions issues. Make
sure that the MySQL server can write to the
tmpdir directory.
Check also the error code that you get with perror. One reason the server cannot write to a table is that the file system is full:
shell> perror 28
OS error code 28: No space left on device
If you get an error of the following type during startup, it indicates that the file system or directory used for storing data files is write protected. Providing the write error is to a test file, This error is not serious and can be safely ignored.
Can't create test file /usr/local/mysql/data/master.lower-test
If you get Commands out of sync; you can't run this
command now in your client code, you are calling
client functions in the wrong order.
This can happen, for example, if you are using
mysql_use_result() and try to
execute a new query before you have called
mysql_free_result(). It can
also happen if you try to execute two queries that return data
without calling
mysql_use_result() or
mysql_store_result() in
between.
If you get the following error, it means that when
mysqld was started or when it reloaded the
grant tables, it found an account in the
user table that had an invalid password.
Found wrong password for user
'
some_user'@'some_host';
ignoring user
As a result, the account is simply ignored by the permission system.
The following list indicates possible causes of and fixes for this problem:
You may be running a new version of
mysqld with an old
user table. You can check this by
executing mysqlshow mysql user to see
whether the Password column is shorter
than 16 characters. If so, you can correct this condition
by running the
scripts/add_long_password script.
The account has an old password (eight characters long).
Update the account in the user table to
have a new password.
You have specified a password in the
user table without using the
PASSWORD() function. Use
mysql to update the account in the
user table with a new password, making
sure to use the PASSWORD()
function:
mysql>UPDATE user SET Password=PASSWORD('->newpwd')WHERE User='some_user' AND Host='some_host';
If you get either of the following errors, it usually means that no table exists in the default database with the given name:
Table 'tbl_name' doesn't exist Can't find file: 'tbl_name' (errno: 2)
In some cases, it may be that the table does exist but that you are referring to it incorrectly:
Because MySQL uses directories and files to store databases and tables, database and table names are case sensitive if they are located on a file system that has case-sensitive file names.
Even for file systems that are not case sensitive, such as on Windows, all references to a given table within a query must use the same lettercase.
You can check which tables are in the default database with
SHOW TABLES. See
Section 12.4.5, “SHOW Syntax”.
You might see an error like this if you have character set problems:
MySQL Connection Failed: Can't initialize character set charset_name
This error can have any of the following causes:
The character set is a multi-byte character set and you
have no support for the character set in the client. In
this case, you need to recompile the client by running
configure with the
--with-charset=
or
charset_name--with-extra-charsets=
option. See Section 2.11.3, “Typical configure Options”.
charset_name
All standard MySQL binaries are compiled with
--with-extra-charsets=complex,
which enables support for all multi-byte character sets.
See Section 2.11.3, “Typical configure Options”.
The character set is a simple character set that is not compiled into mysqld, and the character set definition files are not in the place where the client expects to find them.
In this case, you need to use one of the following methods to solve the problem:
Recompile the client with support for the character set. See Section 2.11.3, “Typical configure Options”.
Specify to the client the directory where the
character set definition files are located. For many
clients, you can do this with the
--character-sets-dir option.
Copy the character definition files to the path where the client expects them to be.
If you get ERROR '...' not found (errno:
23), Can't open file: ... (errno:
24), or any other error with errno
23 or errno 24 from MySQL, it
means that you haven't allocated enough file descriptors for
the MySQL server. You can use the perror
utility to get a description of what the error number means:
shell>perror 23OS error code 23: File table overflow shell>perror 24OS error code 24: Too many open files shell>perror 11OS error code 11: Resource temporarily unavailable
The problem here is that mysqld is trying to keep open too many files simultaneously. You can either tell mysqld not to open so many files at once or increase the number of file descriptors available to mysqld.
To tell mysqld to keep open fewer files at
a time, you can make the table cache smaller by reducing the
value of the table_open_cache
system variable (the default value is 64). This may not
entirely prevent running out of file descriptors because in
some circumstances the server may attempt to extend the cache
size temporarily, as described in
Section 7.8.2, “How MySQL Opens and Closes Tables”. Reducing the value of
max_connections also reduces
the number of open files (the default value is 100).
To change the number of file descriptors available to
mysqld, you can use the
--open-files-limit option
to mysqld_safe or set the
open_files_limit system
variable. See Section 5.1.4, “Server System Variables”. The
easiest way to set these values is to add an option to your
option file. See Section 4.2.3.3, “Using Option Files”. If you have
an old version of mysqld that doesn't
support setting the open files limit, you can edit the
mysqld_safe script. There is a
commented-out line ulimit -n 256 in the
script. You can remove the “#”
character to uncomment this line, and change the number
256 to set the number of file descriptors
to be made available to mysqld.
--open-files-limit and
ulimit can increase the number of file
descriptors, but only up to the limit imposed by the operating
system. There is also a “hard” limit that can be
overridden only if you start mysqld_safe or
mysqld as root (just
remember that you also need to start the server with the
--user option in this case so
that it does not continue to run as root
after it starts up). If you need to increase the operating
system limit on the number of file descriptors available to
each process, consult the documentation for your system.
If you run the tcsh shell, ulimit does not work! tcsh also reports incorrect values when you ask for the current limits. In this case, you should start mysqld_safe using sh.
If you have started mysqld with
--myisam-recover, MySQL
automatically checks and tries to repair
MyISAM tables if they are marked as 'not
closed properly' or 'crashed'. If this happens, MySQL writes
an entry in the hostname.err file
'Warning: Checking table ...' which is
followed by Warning: Repairing table if the
table needs to be repaired. If you get a lot of these errors,
without mysqld having died unexpectedly
just before, then something is wrong and needs to be
investigated further.
See also Section 5.1.2, “Server Command Options”, and Section 22.5.1.7, “Making a Test Case If You Experience Table Corruption”.
When you are linking an application program to use the MySQL
client library, you might get undefined reference errors for
symbols that start with mysql_, such as
those shown here:
/tmp/ccFKsdPa.o: In function `main': /tmp/ccFKsdPa.o(.text+0xb): undefined reference to `mysql_init' /tmp/ccFKsdPa.o(.text+0x31): undefined reference to `mysql_real_connect' /tmp/ccFKsdPa.o(.text+0x57): undefined reference to `mysql_real_connect' /tmp/ccFKsdPa.o(.text+0x69): undefined reference to `mysql_error' /tmp/ccFKsdPa.o(.text+0x9a): undefined reference to `mysql_close'
You should be able to solve this problem by adding
-Ldir_path -lmysqlclient at the end of your
link command, where dir_path represents the
path name of the directory where the client library is
located. To determine the correct directory, try this command:
shell> mysql_config --libs
The output from mysql_config might indicate other libraries that should be specified on the link command as well.
If you get undefined reference errors for
the uncompress or
compress function, add
-lz to the end of your link command and try
again.
If you get undefined reference errors for a
function that should exist on your system, such as
connect, check the manual page for the
function in question to determine which libraries you should
add to the link command.
You might get undefined reference errors
such as the following for functions that don't exist on your
system:
mf_format.o(.text+0x201): undefined reference to `__lxstat'
This usually means that your MySQL client library was compiled on a system that is not 100% compatible with yours. In this case, you should download the latest MySQL source distribution and compile MySQL yourself. See Section 2.11, “Installing MySQL from a Source Distribution”.
You might get undefined reference errors at runtime when you
try to execute a MySQL program. If these errors specify
symbols that start with mysql_ or indicate
that the mysqlclient library can't be
found, it means that your system can't find the shared
libmysqlclient.so library. The fix for
this is to tell your system to search for shared libraries
where the library is located. Use whichever of the following
methods is appropriate for your system:
Add the path to the directory where
libmysqlclient.so is located to the
LD_LIBRARY_PATH environment variable.
Add the path to the directory where
libmysqlclient.so is located to the
LD_LIBRARY environment variable.
Copy libmysqlclient.so to some
directory that is searched by your system, such as
/lib, and update the shared library
information by executing ldconfig.
Another way to solve this problem is by linking your program
statically with the -static option, or by
removing the dynamic MySQL libraries before linking your code.
Before trying the second method, you should be sure that no
other programs are using the dynamic libraries.
If you have problems with file permissions, the
UMASK environment variable might be set
incorrectly when mysqld starts. For
example, MySQL might issue the following error message when
you create a table:
ERROR: Can't find file: 'path/with/filename.frm' (Errcode: 13)
The default UMASK value is
0660. You can change this behavior by
starting mysqld_safe as follows:
shell>UMASK=384 # = 600 in octalshell>export UMASKshell>mysqld_safe &
By default, MySQL creates database directories with an access
permission value of 0700. You can modify
this behavior by setting the UMASK_DIR
variable. If you set its value, new directories are created
with the combined UMASK and
UMASK_DIR values. For example, if you want
to give group access to all new directories, you can do this:
shell>UMASK_DIR=504 # = 770 in octalshell>export UMASK_DIRshell>mysqld_safe &
MySQL assumes that the value for UMASK or
UMASK_DIR is in octal if it starts with a
zero.
If you have never set a root password for
MySQL, the server does not require a password at all for
connecting as root. However, this is
insecure. For instructions on assigning passwords, see
Section 2.12.2, “Securing the Initial MySQL Accounts”.
If you know the root password, but want to
change it, see Section 12.4.1.6, “SET PASSWORD Syntax”.
If you set a root password previously, but
have forgotten it, you can set a new password. The following
sections provide instructions for Windows and Unix systems, as
well as generic instructions that apply to any system.
On Windows, use the following procedure to reset the
password for all MySQL root accounts:
Log on to your system as Administrator.
Stop the MySQL server if it is running. For a server that is running as a Windows service, go to the Services manager: From the menu, select , then , then . Find the MySQL service in the list and stop it.
If your server is not running as a service, you may need to use the Task Manager to force it to stop.
Create a text file containing the following statements. Replace the password with the password that you want to use.
UPDATE mysql.user SET Password=PASSWORD('MyNewPass') WHERE User='root';
FLUSH PRIVILEGES;
Write the UPDATE and
FLUSH statements each on
a single line. The UPDATE
statement resets the password for all
root accounts, and the
FLUSH statement tells the
server to reload the grant tables into memory so that it
notices the password change.
Save the file. For this example, the file will be named
C:\mysql-init.txt.
Open a console window to get to the command prompt: From the menu, select , then enter cmd as the command to be run.
Start the MySQL server with the special
--init-file option
(notice that the backslash in the option value is
doubled):
C:\> C:\mysql\bin\mysqld --init-file=C:\\mysql-init.txt
If you installed MySQL to a location other than
C:\mysql, adjust the command
accordingly.
The server executes the contents of the file named by
the --init-file option at
startup, changing each root account
password.
You can also add the
--console option to the
command if you want server output to appear in the
console window rather than in a log file.
If you installed MySQL using the MySQL Installation
Wizard, you may need to specify a
--defaults-file option:
C:\>"C:\Program Files\MySQL\MySQL Server 5.1\bin\mysqld.exe"--defaults-file="C:\\Program Files\\MySQL\\MySQL Server 5.1\\my.ini"--init-file=C:\\mysql-init.txt
The appropriate
--defaults-file setting
can be found using the Services Manager: From the
menu, select
, then
, then
. Find the MySQL
service in the list, right-click it, and choose the
Properties option. The Path
to executable field contains the
--defaults-file setting.
After the server has started successfully, delete
C:\mysql-init.txt.
You should now be able to connect to the MySQL server as
root using the new password. Stop the
MySQL server, then restart it in normal mode again. If you
run the server as a service, start it from the Windows
Services window. If you start the server manually, use
whatever command you normally use.
On Unix, use the following procedure to reset the password
for all MySQL root accounts. The
instructions assume that you will start the server so that
it runs using the Unix login account that you normally use
for running the server. For example, if you run the server
using the mysql login account, you should
log in as mysql before using the
instructions. Alternatively, you can log in as
root, but in this case you
must start mysqld
with the --user=mysql option.
If you start the server as root without
using --user=mysql, the
server may create root-owned files in the
data directory, such as log files, and these may cause
permission-related problems for future server startups. If
that happens, you will need to either change the ownership
of the files to mysql or remove them.
Log on to your system as the Unix user that the
mysqld server runs as (for example,
mysql).
Locate the .pid file that contains
the server's process ID. The exact location and name of
this file depend on your distribution, host name, and
configuration. Common locations are
/var/lib/mysql/,
/var/run/mysqld/, and
/usr/local/mysql/data/. Generally,
the file name has an extension of
.pid and begins with either
mysqld or your system's host name.
You can stop the MySQL server by sending a normal
kill (not kill -9)
to the mysqld process, using the path
name of the .pid file in the
following command:
shell> kill `cat /mysql-data-directory/host_name.pid`
Use backticks (not forward quotation marks) with the
cat command. These cause the output
of cat to be substituted into the
kill command.
Create a text file containing the following statements. Replace the password with the password that you want to use.
UPDATE mysql.user SET Password=PASSWORD('MyNewPass') WHERE User='root';
FLUSH PRIVILEGES;
Write the UPDATE and
FLUSH statements each on
a single line. The UPDATE
statement resets the password for all
root accounts, and the
FLUSH statement tells the
server to reload the grant tables into memory so that it
notices the password change.
Save the file. For this example, the file will be named
/home/me/mysql-init. The file
contains the password, so it should not be saved where
it can be read by other users.
Start the MySQL server with the special
--init-file option:
shell> mysqld_safe --init-file=/home/me/mysql-init &
The server executes the contents of the file named by
the --init-file option at
startup, changing each root account
password.
After the server has started successfully, delete
/home/me/mysql-init.
You should now be able to connect to the MySQL server as
root using the new password. Stop the
server and restart it normally.
The preceding sections provide password-resetting instructions for Windows and Unix systems. Alternatively, on any platform, you can set the new password using the mysql client (but this approach is less secure):
Stop mysqld and restart it with the
--skip-grant-tables
option. This enables anyone to connect without a
password and with all privileges.
Connect to the mysqld server with this command:
shell> mysql
Issue the following statements in the mysql client. Replace the password with the password that you want to use.
mysql>UPDATE mysql.user SET Password=PASSWORD('MyNewPass')->WHERE User='root';mysql>FLUSH PRIVILEGES;
The FLUSH statement tells
the server to reload the grant tables into memory so
that it notices the password change.
You should now be able to connect to the MySQL server as
root using the new password. Stop the
server and restart it normally (without the
--skip-grant-tables option).
Each MySQL version is tested on many platforms before it is released. This doesn't mean that there are no bugs in MySQL, but if there are bugs, they should be very few and can be hard to find. If you have a problem, it always helps if you try to find out exactly what crashes your system, because you have a much better chance of getting the problem fixed quickly.
First, you should try to find out whether the problem is that the mysqld server dies or whether your problem has to do with your client. You can check how long your mysqld server has been up by executing mysqladmin version. If mysqld has died and restarted, you may find the reason by looking in the server's error log. See Section 5.2.2, “The Error Log”.
On some systems, you can find in the error log a stack trace
of where mysqld died that you can resolve
with the resolve_stack_dump program. See
MySQL
Internals: Porting. Note that the variable values
written in the error log may not always be 100% correct.
Many server crashes are caused by corrupted data files or
index files. MySQL updates the files on disk with the
write() system call after every SQL
statement and before the client is notified about the result.
(This is not true if you are running with
--delay-key-write, in which
case data files are written but not index files.) This means
that data file contents are safe even if
mysqld crashes, because the operating
system ensures that the unflushed data is written to disk. You
can force MySQL to flush everything to disk after every SQL
statement by starting mysqld with the
--flush option.
The preceding means that normally you should not get corrupted tables unless one of the following happens:
The MySQL server or the server host was killed in the middle of an update.
You have found a bug in mysqld that caused it to die in the middle of an update.
Some external program is manipulating data files or index files at the same time as mysqld without locking the table properly.
You are running many mysqld servers
using the same data directory on a system that doesn't
support good file system locks (normally handled by the
lockd lock manager), or you are running
multiple servers with external locking disabled.
You have a crashed data file or index file that contains very corrupt data that confused mysqld.
You have found a bug in the data storage code. This isn't
likely, but it is at least possible. In this case, you can
try to change the storage engine to another engine by
using ALTER TABLE on a
repaired copy of the table.
Because it is very difficult to know why something is crashing, first try to check whether things that work for others crash for you. Please try the following things:
Stop the mysqld server with
mysqladmin shutdown, run
myisamchk --silent --force */*.MYI from
the data directory to check all MyISAM
tables, and restart mysqld. This
ensures that you are running from a clean state. See
Chapter 5, MySQL Server Administration.
Start mysqld with the general query log enabled (see Section 5.2.3, “The General Query Log”). Then try to determine from the information written to the log whether some specific query kills the server. About 95% of all bugs are related to a particular query. Normally, this is one of the last queries in the log file just before the server restarts. See Section 5.2.3, “The General Query Log”. If you can repeatedly kill MySQL with a specific query, even when you have checked all tables just before issuing it, then you have been able to locate the bug and should submit a bug report for it. See Section 1.7, “How to Report Bugs or Problems”.
Try to make a test case that we can use to repeat the problem. See MySQL Internals: Porting.
Try running the tests in the
mysql-test directory and the MySQL
benchmarks. See Section 22.1.2, “MySQL Test Suite”. They
should test MySQL rather well. You can also add code to
the benchmarks that simulates your application. The
benchmarks can be found in the
sql-bench directory in a source
distribution or, for a binary distribution, in the
sql-bench directory under your MySQL
installation directory.
Try the fork_big.pl script. (It is
located in the tests directory of
source distributions.)
If you configure MySQL for debugging, it is much easier to
gather information about possible errors if something goes
wrong. Configuring MySQL for debugging causes a safe
memory allocator to be included that can find some errors.
It also provides a lot of output about what is happening.
Reconfigure MySQL with the
--with-debug or
--with-debug=full option
to configure and then recompile. See
MySQL
Internals: Porting.
Make sure that you have applied the latest patches for your operating system.
Use the
--skip-external-locking
option to mysqld. On some systems, the
lockd lock manager does not work
properly; the
--skip-external-locking
option tells mysqld not to use external
locking. (This means that you cannot run two
mysqld servers on the same data
directory and that you must be careful if you use
myisamchk. Nevertheless, it may be
instructive to try the option as a test.)
Have you tried mysqladmin -u root processlist when mysqld appears to be running but not responding? Sometimes mysqld is not comatose even though you might think so. The problem may be that all connections are in use, or there may be some internal lock problem. mysqladmin -u root processlist usually is able to make a connection even in these cases, and can provide useful information about the current number of connections and their status.
Run the command mysqladmin -i 5 status or mysqladmin -i 5 -r status in a separate window to produce statistics while you run your other queries.
Try the following:
Start mysqld from gdb (or another debugger). See MySQL Internals: Porting.
Run your test scripts.
Print the backtrace and the local variables at the three lowest levels. In gdb, you can do this with the following commands when mysqld has crashed inside gdb:
backtrace info local up info local up info local
With gdb, you can also examine
which threads exist with info
threads and switch to a specific thread with
thread
, where
NN is the thread ID.
Try to simulate your application with a Perl script to force MySQL to crash or misbehave.
Send a normal bug report. See Section 1.7, “How to Report Bugs or Problems”. Be even more detailed than usual. Because MySQL works for many people, it may be that the crash results from something that exists only on your computer (for example, an error that is related to your particular system libraries).
If you have a problem with tables containing
dynamic-length rows and you are using only
VARCHAR columns (not
BLOB or
TEXT columns), you can try
to change all VARCHAR to
CHAR with
ALTER TABLE. This forces
MySQL to use fixed-size rows. Fixed-size rows take a
little extra space, but are much more tolerant to
corruption.
The current dynamic row code has been in use for several years with very few problems, but dynamic-length rows are by nature more prone to errors, so it may be a good idea to try this strategy to see whether it helps.
Do not rule out your server hardware when diagnosing problems. Defective hardware can be the cause of data corruption. Particular attention should be paid to your memory and disk subsystems when troubleshooting hardware.
This section describes how MySQL responds to disk-full errors (such as “no space left on device”), and to quota-exceeded errors (such as “write failed” or “user block limit reached”).
This section is relevant for writes to
MyISAM tables. It also applies for writes
to binary log files and binary log index file, except that
references to “row” and “record”
should be understood to mean “event.”
When a disk-full condition occurs, MySQL does the following:
It checks once every minute to see whether there is enough space to write the current row. If there is enough space, it continues as if nothing had happened.
Every 10 minutes it writes an entry to the log file, warning about the disk-full condition.
To alleviate the problem, you can take the following actions:
To continue, you only have to free enough disk space to insert all records.
To abort the thread, you must use mysqladmin kill. The thread is aborted the next time it checks the disk (in one minute).
Other threads might be waiting for the table that caused the disk-full condition. If you have several “locked” threads, killing the one thread that is waiting on the disk-full condition enables the other threads to continue.
Exceptions to the preceding behavior are when you use
REPAIR TABLE or
OPTIMIZE TABLE or when the
indexes are created in a batch after
LOAD DATA
INFILE or after an ALTER
TABLE statement. All of these statements may create
large temporary files that, if left to themselves, would cause
big problems for the rest of the system. If the disk becomes
full while MySQL is doing any of these operations, it removes
the big temporary files and mark the table as crashed. The
exception is that for ALTER
TABLE, the old table is left unchanged.
On Unix, MySQL uses the value of the TMPDIR
environment variable as the path name of the directory in
which to store temporary files. If TMPDIR
is not set, MySQL uses the system default, which is usually
/tmp, /var/tmp, or
/usr/tmp.
On Windows, Netware and OS2, MySQL checks in order the values
of the TMPDIR, TEMP, and
TMP environment variables. For the first
one found to be set, MySQL uses it and does not check those
remaining. If none of TMPDIR,
TEMP, or TMP are set,
MySQL uses the Windows system default, which is usually
C:\windows\temp\.
If the file system containing your temporary file directory is
too small, you can use the
--tmpdir option to
mysqld to specify a directory in a file
system where you have enough space.
In MySQL 5.1, the
--tmpdir option can be set to a
list of several paths that are used in round-robin fashion.
Paths should be separated by colon characters
(“:”) on Unix and semicolon
characters (“;”) on Windows,
NetWare, and OS/2.
To spread the load effectively, these paths should be located on different physical disks, not different partitions of the same disk.
If the MySQL server is acting as a replication slave, you
should not set --tmpdir to
point to a directory on a memory-based file system or to a
directory that is cleared when the server host restarts. A
replication slave needs some of its temporary files to survive
a machine restart so that it can replicate temporary tables or
LOAD DATA
INFILE operations. If files in the temporary file
directory are lost when the server restarts, replication
fails.
MySQL creates all temporary files as hidden files. This ensures that the temporary files are removed if mysqld is terminated. The disadvantage of using hidden files is that you do not see a big temporary file that fills up the file system in which the temporary file directory is located.
When sorting (ORDER BY or GROUP
BY), MySQL normally uses one or two temporary files.
The maximum disk space required is determined by the following
expression:
(length of what is sorted + sizeof(row pointer)) * number of matched rows * 2
The row pointer size is usually four bytes, but may grow in the future for really big tables.
For some SELECT queries, MySQL
also creates temporary SQL tables. These are not hidden and
have names of the form SQL_*.
ALTER TABLE creates a temporary
table in the same directory as the original table.
The default location for the Unix socket file that the server
uses for communication with local clients is
/tmp/mysql.sock. (For some distribution
formats, the directory might be different, such as
/var/lib/mysql for RPMs.)
On some versions of Unix, anyone can delete files in the
/tmp directory or other similar
directories used for temporary files. If the socket file is
located in such a directory on your system, this might cause
problems.
On most versions of Unix, you can protect your
/tmp directory so that files can be
deleted only by their owners or the superuser
(root). To do this, set the
sticky bit on the /tmp
directory by logging in as root and using
the following command:
shell> chmod +t /tmp
You can check whether the sticky bit is set
by executing ls -ld /tmp. If the last
permission character is t, the bit is set.
Another approach is to change the place where the server creates the Unix socket file. If you do this, you should also let client programs know the new location of the file. You can specify the file location in several ways:
Specify the path in a global or local option file. For
example, put the following lines in
/etc/my.cnf:
[mysqld] socket=/path/to/socket [client] socket=/path/to/socket
Specify a --socket option
on the command line to mysqld_safe and
when you run client programs.
Set the MYSQL_UNIX_PORT environment
variable to the path of the Unix socket file.
Recompile MySQL from source to use a different default
Unix socket file location. Define the path to the file
with the
--with-unix-socket-path
option when you run configure. See
Section 2.11.3, “Typical configure Options”.
You can test whether the new socket location works by attempting to connect to the server with this command:
shell> mysqladmin --socket=/path/to/socket version
If you have a problem with SELECT NOW()
returning values in UTC and not your local time, you have to
tell the server your current time zone. The same applies if
UNIX_TIMESTAMP() returns the
wrong value. This should be done for the environment in which
the server runs; for example, in
mysqld_safe or
mysql.server. See
Section 2.14, “Environment Variables”.
You can set the time zone for the server with the
--timezone=
option to mysqld_safe. You can also set it
by setting the timezone_nameTZ environment variable
before you start mysqld.
The permissible values for
--timezone or
TZ are system dependent. Consult your
operating system documentation to see what values are
acceptable.
DATE ColumnsNULL Values
For nonbinary strings (CHAR,
VARCHAR,
TEXT), string searches use the
collation of the comparison operands. For binary strings
(BINARY,
VARBINARY,
BLOB), comparisons use the
numeric values of the bytes in the operands; this means that
for alphabetic characters, comparisons will be case sensitive.
A comparison between a nonbinary string and binary string is treated as a comparison of binary strings.
Simple comparison operations (>=, >, =, <,
<=, sorting, and grouping) are based on each
character's “sort value.” Characters with the
same sort value are treated as the same character. For
example, if “e” and
“é” have the same sort
value in a given collation, they compare as equal.
The default character set and collation are
latin1 and
latin1_swedish_ci, so nonbinary string
comparisons are case insensitive by default. This means that
if you search with
, you get all column values that start with
col_name LIKE
'a%'A or a. To make this
search case sensitive, make sure that one of the operands has
a case sensitive or binary collation. For example, if you are
comparing a column and a string that both have the
latin1 character set, you can use the
COLLATE operator to cause either operand to
have the latin1_general_cs or
latin1_bin collation:
col_nameCOLLATE latin1_general_cs LIKE 'a%'col_nameLIKE 'a%' COLLATE latin1_general_cscol_nameCOLLATE latin1_bin LIKE 'a%'col_nameLIKE 'a%' COLLATE latin1_bin
If you want a column always to be treated in case-sensitive
fashion, declare it with a case sensitive or binary collation.
See Section 12.1.17, “CREATE TABLE Syntax”.
To cause a case-sensitive comparison of nonbinary strings to
be case insensitive, use COLLATE to name a
case-insensitive collation. The strings in the following
example normally are case sensitive, but
COLLATE changes the comparison to be case
insensitive:
mysql>SET @s1 = 'MySQL' COLLATE latin1_bin,->@s2 = 'mysql' COLLATE latin1_bin;mysql>SELECT @s1 = @s2;+-----------+ | @s1 = @s2 | +-----------+ | 0 | +-----------+ mysql>SELECT @s1 COLLATE latin1_swedish_ci = @s2;+-------------------------------------+ | @s1 COLLATE latin1_swedish_ci = @s2 | +-------------------------------------+ | 1 | +-------------------------------------+
A binary string is case sensitive in comparisons. To compare
the string as case insensitive, convert it to a nonbinary
string and use COLLATE to name a
case-insensitive collation:
mysql>SET @s = BINARY 'MySQL';mysql>SELECT @s = 'mysql';+--------------+ | @s = 'mysql' | +--------------+ | 0 | +--------------+ mysql>SELECT CONVERT(@s USING latin1) COLLATE latin1_swedish_ci = 'mysql';+--------------------------------------------------------------+ | CONVERT(@s USING latin1) COLLATE latin1_swedish_ci = 'mysql' | +--------------------------------------------------------------+ | 1 | +--------------------------------------------------------------+
To determine whether a value will compare as a nonbinary or
binary string, use the
COLLATION() function. This
example shows that VERSION()
returns a string that has a case-insensitive collation, so
comparisons are case insensitive:
mysql> SELECT COLLATION(VERSION());
+----------------------+
| COLLATION(VERSION()) |
+----------------------+
| utf8_general_ci |
+----------------------+
For binary strings, the collation value is
binary, so comparisons will be case
sensitive. One context in which you will see
binary is for compression and encryption
functions, which return binary strings as a general rule:
string:
mysql> SELECT COLLATION(ENCRYPT('x')), COLLATION(SHA1('x'));
+-------------------------+----------------------+
| COLLATION(ENCRYPT('x')) | COLLATION(SHA1('x')) |
+-------------------------+----------------------+
| binary | binary |
+-------------------------+----------------------+
The format of a DATE value is
'YYYY-MM-DD'. According to standard SQL, no
other format is permitted. You should use this format in
UPDATE expressions and in the
WHERE clause of
SELECT statements. For example:
mysql> SELECT * FROM tbl_name WHERE date >= '2003-05-05';
As a convenience, MySQL automatically converts a date to a
number if the date is used in a numeric context (and vice
versa). It is also smart enough to permit a
“relaxed” string form when updating and in a
WHERE clause that compares a date to a
TIMESTAMP,
DATE, or
DATETIME column.
(“Relaxed form” means that any punctuation
character may be used as the separator between parts. For
example, '2004-08-15' and
'2004#08#15' are equivalent.) MySQL can
also convert a string containing no separators (such as
'20040815'), provided it makes sense as a
date.
When you compare a DATE,
TIME,
DATETIME, or
TIMESTAMP to a constant string
with the <, <=,
=, >=,
>, or BETWEEN
operators, MySQL normally converts the string to an internal
long integer for faster comparison (and also for a bit more
“relaxed” string checking). However, this
conversion is subject to the following exceptions:
For these exceptional cases, the comparison is done by converting the objects to strings and performing a string comparison.
To keep things safe, assume that strings are compared as strings and use the appropriate string functions if you want to compare a temporal value to a string.
The special date '0000-00-00' can be stored
and retrieved as '0000-00-00'. When using a
'0000-00-00' date through MyODBC, it is
automatically converted to NULL in MyODBC
2.50.12 and above, because ODBC can't handle this kind of
date.
Because MySQL performs the conversions described above, the following statements work:
mysql>INSERT INTOmysql>tbl_name(idate) VALUES (19970505);INSERT INTOmysql>tbl_name(idate) VALUES ('19970505');INSERT INTOmysql>tbl_name(idate) VALUES ('97-05-05');INSERT INTOmysql>tbl_name(idate) VALUES ('1997.05.05');INSERT INTOmysql>tbl_name(idate) VALUES ('1997 05 05');INSERT INTOmysql>tbl_name(idate) VALUES ('0000-00-00');SELECT idate FROMmysql>tbl_nameWHERE idate >= '1997-05-05';SELECT idate FROMmysql>tbl_nameWHERE idate >= 19970505;SELECT MOD(idate,100) FROMmysql>tbl_nameWHERE idate >= 19970505;SELECT idate FROMtbl_nameWHERE idate >= '19970505';
However, the following does not work:
mysql> SELECT idate FROM tbl_name WHERE STRCMP(idate,'20030505')=0;
STRCMP() is a string function,
so it converts idate to a string in
'YYYY-MM-DD' format and performs a string
comparison. It does not convert '20030505'
to the date '2003-05-05' and perform a date
comparison.
If you are using the
ALLOW_INVALID_DATES SQL
mode, MySQL permits you to store dates that are given only
limited checking: MySQL requires only that the day is in the
range from 1 to 31 and the month is in the range from 1 to 12.
This makes MySQL very convenient for Web applications where you obtain year, month, and day in three different fields and you want to store exactly what the user inserted (without date validation).
If you are not using the
NO_ZERO_IN_DATE SQL mode,
the day or month part can be zero. This is convenient if you
want to store a birthdate in a
DATE column and you know only
part of the date.
If you are not using the
NO_ZERO_DATE SQL mode, MySQL
also permits you to store '0000-00-00' as a
“dummy date.” This is in some cases more
convenient than using NULL values.
If the date cannot be converted to any reasonable value, a
0 is stored in the
DATE column, which is retrieved
as '0000-00-00'. This is both a speed and a
convenience issue. We believe that the database server's
responsibility is to retrieve the same date you stored (even
if the data was not logically correct in all cases). We think
it is up to the application and not the server to check the
dates.
If you want MySQL to check all dates and accept only legal
dates (unless overridden by IGNORE), you should set
sql_mode to
"NO_ZERO_IN_DATE,NO_ZERO_DATE".
The concept of the NULL value is a common
source of confusion for newcomers to SQL, who often think that
NULL is the same thing as an empty string
''. This is not the case. For example, the
following statements are completely different:
mysql>INSERT INTO my_table (phone) VALUES (NULL);mysql>INSERT INTO my_table (phone) VALUES ('');
Both statements insert a value into the
phone column, but the first inserts a
NULL value and the second inserts an empty
string. The meaning of the first can be regarded as
“phone number is not known” and the meaning of
the second can be regarded as “the person is known to
have no phone, and thus no phone number.”
To help with NULL handling, you can use the
IS NULL and IS
NOT NULL operators and the
IFNULL() function.
In SQL, the NULL value is never true in
comparison to any other value, even NULL.
An expression that contains NULL always
produces a NULL value unless otherwise
indicated in the documentation for the operators and functions
involved in the expression. All columns in the following
example return NULL:
mysql> SELECT NULL, 1+NULL, CONCAT('Invisible',NULL);
If you want to search for column values that are
NULL, you cannot use an expr =
NULL test. The following statement returns no rows,
because expr = NULL is never true for any
expression:
mysql> SELECT * FROM my_table WHERE phone = NULL;
To look for NULL values, you must use the
IS NULL test. The following
statements show how to find the NULL phone
number and the empty phone number:
mysql>SELECT * FROM my_table WHERE phone IS NULL;mysql>SELECT * FROM my_table WHERE phone = '';
See Section 3.3.4.6, “Working with NULL Values”, for additional
information and examples.
You can add an index on a column that can have
NULL values if you are using the
MyISAM, InnoDB, or
MEMORY storage engine. Otherwise, you must
declare an indexed column NOT NULL, and you
cannot insert NULL into the column.
When reading data with
LOAD DATA
INFILE, empty or missing columns are updated with
''. If you want a NULL
value in a column, you should use \N in the
data file. The literal word
“NULL” may also be used under
some circumstances. See Section 12.2.6, “LOAD DATA INFILE
Syntax”.
When using DISTINCT, GROUP
BY, or ORDER BY, all
NULL values are regarded as equal.
When using ORDER BY,
NULL values are presented first, or last if
you specify DESC to sort in descending
order.
Aggregate (summary) functions such as
COUNT(),
MIN(), and
SUM() ignore
NULL values. The exception to this is
COUNT(*), which counts rows and
not individual column values. For example, the following
statement produces two counts. The first is a count of the
number of rows in the table, and the second is a count of the
number of non-NULL values in the
age column:
mysql> SELECT COUNT(*), COUNT(age) FROM person;
For some data types, MySQL handles NULL
values specially. If you insert NULL into a
TIMESTAMP column, the current
date and time is inserted. If you insert
NULL into an integer or floating-point
column that has the AUTO_INCREMENT
attribute, the next number in the sequence is inserted.
An alias can be used in a query select list to give a column a
different name. You can use the alias in GROUP
BY, ORDER BY, or
HAVING clauses to refer to the column:
SELECT SQRT(a*b) AS root FROMtbl_nameGROUP BY root HAVING root > 0; SELECT id, COUNT(*) AS cnt FROMtbl_nameGROUP BY id HAVING cnt > 0; SELECT id AS 'Customer identity' FROMtbl_name;
Standard SQL disallows references to column aliases in a
WHERE clause. This restriction is imposed
because when the WHERE clause is evaluated,
the column value may not yet have been determined. For
example, the following query is illegal:
SELECT id, COUNT(*) AS cnt FROM tbl_name
WHERE cnt > 0 GROUP BY id;
The WHERE clause determines which rows
should be included in the GROUP BY clause,
but it refers to the alias of a column value that is not known
until after the rows have been selected, and grouped by the
GROUP BY.
In the select list of a query, a quoted column alias can be specified using identifier or string quoting characters:
SELECT 1 AS `one`, 2 AS 'two';
Elsewhere in the statement, quoted references to the alias
must use identifier quoting or the reference is treated as a
string literal. For example, this statement groups by the
values in column id, referenced using the
alias `a`:
SELECT id AS 'a', COUNT(*) AS cnt FROM tbl_name
GROUP BY `a`;
But this statement groups by the literal string
'a' and will not work as expected:
SELECT id AS 'a', COUNT(*) AS cnt FROM tbl_name
GROUP BY 'a';
If you receive the following message when trying to perform a
ROLLBACK, it
means that one or more of the tables you used in the
transaction do not support transactions:
Warning: Some non-transactional changed tables couldn't be rolled back
These nontransactional tables are not affected by the
ROLLBACK
statement.
If you were not deliberately mixing transactional and
nontransactional tables within the transaction, the most
likely cause for this message is that a table you thought was
transactional actually is not. This can happen if you try to
create a table using a transactional storage engine that is
not supported by your mysqld server (or
that was disabled with a startup option). If
mysqld doesn't support a storage engine, it
instead creates the table as a MyISAM
table, which is nontransactional.
You can check the storage engine for a table by using either of these statements:
SHOW TABLE STATUS LIKE 'tbl_name'; SHOW CREATE TABLEtbl_name;
See Section 12.4.5.38, “SHOW TABLE STATUS Syntax”, and
Section 12.4.5.12, “SHOW CREATE TABLE Syntax”.
You can check which storage engines your mysqld server supports by using this statement:
SHOW ENGINES;
You can also use the following statement, and check the value of the variable that is associated with the storage engine in which you are interested:
SHOW VARIABLES LIKE 'have_%';
For example, to determine whether the
InnoDB storage engine is available, check
the value of the have_innodb
variable.
See Section 12.4.5.17, “SHOW ENGINES Syntax”, and
Section 12.4.5.41, “SHOW VARIABLES Syntax”.
If the total length of the
DELETE statement for
related_table is more than 1MB (the default
value of the
max_allowed_packet system
variable), you should split it into smaller parts and execute
multiple DELETE statements. You
probably get the fastest DELETE
by specifying only 100 to 1,000
related_column values per statement if the
related_column is indexed. If the
related_column isn't indexed, the speed is
independent of the number of arguments in the
IN clause.
If you have a complicated query that uses many tables but that doesn't return any rows, you should use the following procedure to find out what is wrong:
Test the query with EXPLAIN
to check whether you can find something that is obviously
wrong. See Section 12.8.2, “EXPLAIN Syntax”.
Select only those columns that are used in the
WHERE clause.
Remove one table at a time from the query until it returns
some rows. If the tables are large, it is a good idea to
use LIMIT 10 with the query.
Issue a SELECT for the
column that should have matched a row against the table
that was last removed from the query.
If you are comparing FLOAT
or DOUBLE columns with
numbers that have decimals, you can't use equality
(=) comparisons. This problem is common
in most computer languages because not all floating-point
values can be stored with exact precision. In some cases,
changing the FLOAT to a
DOUBLE fixes this. See
Section C.5.5.8, “Problems with Floating-Point Values”.
If you still can't figure out what is wrong, create a
minimal test that can be run with mysql test <
query.sql that shows your problems. You can
create a test file by dumping the tables with
mysqldump --quick db_name
tbl_name_1 ...
tbl_name_n >
query.sql. Open the file in an editor, remove
some insert lines (if there are more than needed to
demonstrate the problem), and add your
SELECT statement at the end
of the file.
Verify that the test file demonstrates the problem by executing these commands:
shell>mysqladmin create test2shell>mysql test2 < query.sql
Attach the test file to a bug report, which you can file using the instructions in Section 1.7, “How to Report Bugs or Problems”.
Floating-point numbers sometimes cause confusion because they
are approximate and not stored as exact values. A
floating-point value as written in an SQL statement may not be
the same as the value represented internally. Attempts to
treat floating-point values as exact in comparisons may lead
to problems. They are also subject to platform or
implementation dependencies. The
FLOAT and
DOUBLE data types are subject
to these issues. For DECIMAL
columns, MySQL performs operations with a precision of 65
decimal digits, which should solve most common inaccuracy
problems.
The following example uses
DOUBLE to demonstrate how
calculations that are done using floating-point operations are
subject to floating-point error.
mysql>CREATE TABLE t1 (i INT, d1 DOUBLE, d2 DOUBLE);mysql>INSERT INTO t1 VALUES (1, 101.40, 21.40), (1, -80.00, 0.00),->(2, 0.00, 0.00), (2, -13.20, 0.00), (2, 59.60, 46.40),->(2, 30.40, 30.40), (3, 37.00, 7.40), (3, -29.60, 0.00),->(4, 60.00, 15.40), (4, -10.60, 0.00), (4, -34.00, 0.00),->(5, 33.00, 0.00), (5, -25.80, 0.00), (5, 0.00, 7.20),->(6, 0.00, 0.00), (6, -51.40, 0.00);mysql>SELECT i, SUM(d1) AS a, SUM(d2) AS b->FROM t1 GROUP BY i HAVING a <> b;+------+-------+------+ | i | a | b | +------+-------+------+ | 1 | 21.4 | 21.4 | | 2 | 76.8 | 76.8 | | 3 | 7.4 | 7.4 | | 4 | 15.4 | 15.4 | | 5 | 7.2 | 7.2 | | 6 | -51.4 | 0 | +------+-------+------+
The result is correct. Although the first five records look
like they should not satisfy the comparison (the values of
a and b do not appear to
be different), they may do so because the difference between
the numbers shows up around the tenth decimal or so, depending
on factors such as computer architecture or the compiler
version or optimization level. For example, different CPUs may
evaluate floating-point numbers differently.
If columns d1 and d2 had
been defined as DECIMAL rather
than DOUBLE, the result of the
SELECT query would have
contained only one row—the last one shown above.
The correct way to do floating-point number comparison is to first decide on an acceptable tolerance for differences between the numbers and then do the comparison against the tolerance value. For example, if we agree that floating-point numbers should be regarded the same if they are same within a precision of one in ten thousand (0.0001), the comparison should be written to find differences larger than the tolerance value:
mysql>SELECT i, SUM(d1) AS a, SUM(d2) AS b FROM t1->GROUP BY i HAVING ABS(a - b) > 0.0001;+------+-------+------+ | i | a | b | +------+-------+------+ | 6 | -51.4 | 0 | +------+-------+------+ 1 row in set (0.00 sec)
Conversely, to get rows where the numbers are the same, the test should find differences within the tolerance value:
mysql>SELECT i, SUM(d1) AS a, SUM(d2) AS b FROM t1->GROUP BY i HAVING ABS(a - b) <= 0.0001;+------+------+------+ | i | a | b | +------+------+------+ | 1 | 21.4 | 21.4 | | 2 | 76.8 | 76.8 | | 3 | 7.4 | 7.4 | | 4 | 15.4 | 15.4 | | 5 | 7.2 | 7.2 | +------+------+------+ 5 rows in set (0.03 sec)
Floating-point values are subject to platform or implementation dependencies. Suppose that you execute the following statements:
CREATE TABLE t1(c1 FLOAT(53,0), c2 FLOAT(53,0));
INSERT INTO t1 VALUES('1e+52','-1e+52');
SELECT * FROM t1;
On some platforms, the SELECT statement
returns inf and -inf.
Other others, it returns 0 and
-0.
An implication of the preceding issues is that if you attempt to create a replication slave by dumping table contents with mysqldump on the master and reloading the dump file into the slave, tables containing floating-point columns might differ between the two hosts.
MySQL uses a cost-based optimizer to determine the best way to resolve a query. In many cases, MySQL can calculate the best possible query plan, but sometimes MySQL doesn't have enough information about the data at hand and has to make “educated” guesses about the data.
For the cases when MySQL does not do the "right" thing, tools that you have available to help MySQL are:
Use the EXPLAIN statement to
get information about how MySQL processes a query. To use
it, just add the keyword
EXPLAIN to the front of your
SELECT statement:
mysql> EXPLAIN SELECT * FROM t1, t2 WHERE t1.i = t2.i;
EXPLAIN is discussed in more
detail in Section 12.8.2, “EXPLAIN Syntax”.
Use ANALYZE TABLE
to update the
key distributions for the scanned table. See
Section 12.4.2.1, “tbl_nameANALYZE TABLE Syntax”.
Use FORCE INDEX for the scanned table to
tell MySQL that table scans are very expensive compared to
using the given index:
SELECT * FROM t1, t2 FORCE INDEX (index_for_column) WHERE t1.col_name=t2.col_name;
USE INDEX and IGNORE
INDEX may also be useful. See
Section 12.2.8.2, “Index Hint Syntax”.
Global and table-level STRAIGHT_JOIN. See
Section 12.2.8, “SELECT Syntax”.
You can tune global or thread-specific system variables. For
example, Start mysqld with the
--max-seeks-for-key=1000
option or use SET max_seeks_for_key=1000
to tell the optimizer to assume that no key scan causes more
than 1,000 key seeks. See
Section 5.1.4, “Server System Variables”.
If you get a duplicate-key error when using
ALTER TABLE to change the
character set or collation of a character column, the cause is
either that the new column collation maps two keys to the same
value or that the table is corrupted. In the latter case, you
should run REPAIR TABLE on the
table.
If ALTER TABLE dies with the
following error, the problem may be that MySQL crashed during
an earlier ALTER TABLE
operation and there is an old table named
A- or
xxxB- lying
around:
xxx
Error on rename of './database/name.frm'
to './database/B-xxx.frm' (Errcode: 17)
In this case, go to the MySQL data directory and delete all
files that have names starting with A- or
B-. (You may want to move them elsewhere
instead of deleting them.)
ALTER TABLE works in the
following way:
Create a new table named
A- with
the requested structural changes.
xxx
Copy all rows from the original table to
A-.
xxx
Rename the original table to
B-.
xxx
Rename
A- to
your original table name.
xxx
Delete
B-.
xxx
If something goes wrong with the renaming operation, MySQL
tries to undo the changes. If something goes seriously wrong
(although this shouldn't happen), MySQL may leave the old
table as
B-. A
simple rename of the table files at the system level should
get your data back.
xxx
If you use ALTER TABLE on a
transactional table or if you are using Windows or OS/2,
ALTER TABLE unlocks the table
if you had done a
LOCK
TABLE on it. This is done because
InnoDB and these operating systems cannot
drop a table that is in use.
The following list indicates limitations on the use of
TEMPORARY tables:
A TEMPORARY table can only be of type
MEMORY, MyISAM,
MERGE, or InnoDB.
Temporary tables are not supported for MySQL Cluster.
You cannot refer to a TEMPORARY table
more than once in the same query. For example, the
following does not work:
mysql> SELECT * FROM temp_table, temp_table AS t2;
ERROR 1137: Can't reopen table: 'temp_table'
This error also occurs if you refer to a temporary table multiple times in a stored function under different aliases, even if the references occur in different statements within the function.
The SHOW TABLES statement
does not list TEMPORARY tables.
You cannot use RENAME to rename a
TEMPORARY table. However, you can use
ALTER TABLE instead:
mysql> ALTER TABLE orig_name RENAME new_name;
There are known issues in using temporary tables with replication. See Section 16.4.1, “Replication Features and Issues”, for more information.
This section lists known issues in recent versions of MySQL.
For information about platform-specific issues, see the installation and porting instructions in Section 2.1, “General Installation Guidance”, and MySQL Internals: Porting.
The following problems are known:
Subquery optimization for IN is not as
effective as for =.
Even if you use lower_case_table_names=2
(which enables MySQL to remember the case used for databases
and table names), MySQL does not remember the case used for
database names for the function
DATABASE() or within the
various logs (on case-insensitive systems).
Dropping a FOREIGN KEY constraint doesn't
work in replication because the constraint may have another
name on the slave.
REPLACE (and
LOAD DATA with the
REPLACE option) does not
trigger ON DELETE CASCADE.
DISTINCT with ORDER BY
doesn't work inside
GROUP_CONCAT() if you don't
use all and only those columns that are in the
DISTINCT list.
If one user has a long-running transaction and another user
drops a table that is updated in the transaction, there is
small chance that the binary log may contain the
DROP TABLE statement before
the table is used in the transaction itself. We plan to fix
this by having the DROP TABLE
statement wait until the table is not being used in any
transaction.
When inserting a big integer value (between 263 and 264–1) into a decimal or string column, it is inserted as a negative value because the number is evaluated in a signed integer context.
FLUSH TABLES WITH
READ LOCK does not block
COMMIT if the server is
running without binary logging, which may cause a problem
(of consistency between tables) when doing a full backup.
ANALYZE TABLE,
OPTIMIZE TABLE, and
REPAIR TABLE may cause
problems on tables for which you are using
INSERT DELAYED.
Performing LOCK TABLE ... and
FLUSH TABLES ... doesn't guarantee that
there isn't a half-finished transaction in progress on the
table.
Replication uses query-level logging: The master writes the executed queries to the binary log. This is a very fast, compact, and efficient logging method that works perfectly in most cases.
It is possible for the data on the master and slave to become different if a query is designed in such a way that the data modification is nondeterministic (generally not a recommended practice, even outside of replication).
For example:
CREATE
TABLE ... SELECT or
INSERT
... SELECT statements that insert zero or
NULL values into an
AUTO_INCREMENT column.
DELETE if you are
deleting rows from a table that has foreign keys with
ON DELETE CASCADE properties.
REPLACE ...
SELECT, INSERT IGNORE ...
SELECT if you have duplicate key values in the
inserted data.
If and only if the preceding queries
have no ORDER BY clause guaranteeing a
deterministic order.
For example, for
INSERT ...
SELECT with no ORDER BY, the
SELECT may return rows in a
different order (which results in a row having different
ranks, hence getting a different number in the
AUTO_INCREMENT column), depending on the
choices made by the optimizers on the master and slave.
A query is optimized differently on the master and slave only if:
The table is stored using a different storage engine on
the master than on the slave. (It is possible to use
different storage engines on the master and slave. For
example, you can use InnoDB on the
master, but MyISAM on the slave if
the slave has less available disk space.)
MySQL buffer sizes
(key_buffer_size, and
so on) are different on the master and slave.
The master and slave run different MySQL versions, and the optimizer code differs between these versions.
This problem may also affect database restoration using mysqlbinlog|mysql.
The easiest way to avoid this problem is to add an
ORDER BY clause to the aforementioned
nondeterministic queries to ensure that the rows are always
stored or modified in the same order.
In future MySQL versions, we will automatically add an
ORDER BY clause when needed.
The following issues are known and will be fixed in due time:
Log file names are based on the server host name (if you
don't specify a file name with the startup option). You have
to use options such as
--log-bin=
if you change your host name to something else. Another
option is to rename the old files to reflect your host name
change (if these are binary logs, you need to edit the
binary log index file and fix the binary log file names
there as well). See Section 5.1.2, “Server Command Options”.
old_host_name-bin
mysqlbinlog does not delete temporary
files left after a
LOAD DATA
INFILE statement. See
Section 4.6.7, “mysqlbinlog — Utility for Processing Binary Log Files”.
RENAME doesn't work with
TEMPORARY tables or tables used in a
MERGE table.
Due to the way table format (.frm)
files are stored, you cannot use character 255
(CHAR(255)) in table names, column names,
or enumerations. This is scheduled to be fixed in version
5.1 when we implement new table definition format files.
When using SET CHARACTER SET, you can't
use translated characters in database, table, and column
names.
You can't use “_” or
“%” with
ESCAPE in
LIKE ...
ESCAPE.
BLOB and
TEXT values can't reliably be
used in GROUP BY, ORDER
BY or DISTINCT. Only the first
max_sort_length bytes are
used when comparing BLOB
values in these cases. The default value of
max_sort_length is 1024 and
can be changed at server startup time or at runtime.
Numeric calculations are done with
BIGINT or
DOUBLE (both are normally 64
bits long). Which precision you get depends on the function.
The general rule is that bit functions are performed with
BIGINT precision,
IF() and
ELT() with
BIGINT or
DOUBLE precision, and the
rest with DOUBLE precision.
You should try to avoid using unsigned long long values if
they resolve to be larger than 63 bits (9223372036854775807)
for anything other than bit fields.
In MIN(),
MAX(), and other aggregate
functions, MySQL currently compares
ENUM and
SET columns by their string
value rather than by the string's relative position in the
set.
mysqld_safe redirects all messages from
mysqld to the mysqld
log. One problem with this is that if you execute
mysqladmin refresh to close and reopen
the log, stdout and
stderr are still redirected to the old
log. If you use the general query log extensively, you
should edit mysqld_safe to log to
instead of
host_name.err
so that you can easily reclaim the space for the old log by
deleting it and executing mysqladmin
refresh.
host_name.log
In an UPDATE statement,
columns are updated from left to right. If you refer to an
updated column, you get the updated value instead of the
original value. For example, the following statement
increments KEY by 2,
not 1:
mysql> UPDATE tbl_name SET KEY=KEY+1,KEY=KEY+1;
You can refer to multiple temporary tables in the same query, but you cannot refer to any given temporary table more than once. For example, the following doesn't work:
mysql> SELECT * FROM temp_table, temp_table AS t2;
ERROR 1137: Can't reopen table: 'temp_table'
The optimizer may handle DISTINCT
differently when you are using “hidden” columns
in a join than when you are not. In a join, hidden columns
are counted as part of the result (even if they are not
shown), whereas in normal queries, hidden columns don't
participate in the DISTINCT comparison.
We will probably change this in the future to never compare
the hidden columns when executing
DISTINCT.
An example of this is:
SELECT DISTINCT mp3id FROM band_downloads
WHERE userid = 9 ORDER BY id DESC;
and
SELECT DISTINCT band_downloads.mp3id
FROM band_downloads,band_mp3
WHERE band_downloads.userid = 9
AND band_mp3.id = band_downloads.mp3id
ORDER BY band_downloads.id DESC;
In the second case, using MySQL Server 3.23.x, you may get
two identical rows in the result set (because the values in
the hidden id column may differ).
Note that this happens only for queries where that do not
have the ORDER BY columns in the result.
If you execute a PROCEDURE on a query
that returns an empty set, in some cases the
PROCEDURE does not transform the columns.
Creation of a table of type MERGE doesn't
check whether the underlying tables are compatible types.
If you use ALTER TABLE to add
a UNIQUE index to a table used in a
MERGE table and then add a normal index
on the MERGE table, the key order is
different for the tables if there was an old,
non-UNIQUE key in the table. This is
because ALTER TABLE puts
UNIQUE indexes before normal indexes to
be able to detect duplicate keys as early as possible.