MySQL Will Not Start - mysql

Can't get MySQL to stay up, it might be corrupted data. Cent/cPanel server.
root#net [/etc]# service mysql status
ERROR! MySQL is running but PID file could not be found
Attempted Fix: I edited etc/my.cnf and specified the PID and confirmed it exists.
[mysqld]
local-infile=0
pid-file = /var/run/mysqld/mysqld.pid
max_allowed_packet=268435456
max_connections = 300
max_user_connections = 35
wait_timeout=40
connect_timeout=10
innodb_buffer_pool_size=25165824
open_files_limit=10000
[mysqldump]
max_allowed_packet=16M
Attempted Fix: I tried creating a new pid and specifying it.
pid-file = /var/run/mysqld/mysqld.pid
Create the directory /var/run/mysqld/ and give it proper permissions -
mkdir /var/run/mysqld
touch /var/run/mysqld/mysqld.pid
chown -R mysql:mysql /var/run/mysqld
But still errors
ERROR! MySQL server PID file could not be found! group,v mailproviders/
passwd,v rpm/ trustedmailhosts
Starting MySQL..... ERROR! The server quit without updating PID file (/var/run/mysqld/mysqld.pid).
So at this point the logfile looks pretty gnarly.
MySQL Log
http://pastebin.com/d7uCMKPN
I have set the innodb_force_recovery=3 in my.cnf and it still wont' come up.
Does anyone have any idea's on what else I should try to fix this?

Try to kill all MySQL process in safe mode using following command and start again.
root#net []# killall -9 mysql mysqld
root#net []# /etc/init.d/mysqld start

Due to the level of corruption involved with this error, I was not easily able to fix all errors in the log.
After editing etc/my.cnf and forcing recovery mode (Level 3 was enough) and restarting, I was able to repair many of the tables.
http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.0/en/forcing-innodb-recovery.html
I upgraded/re-installed MySQL and I was also able to copy the databases out and will be installing them on a fresh installation as I believe the corruption is pandemic on the system at this point.

You should check mysql is running if yes try it. Also you can check it from activity monitor for macOS
sudo chown -R mysql mysql-8.0.16-macos10.14-x86_64 // change ownership
cd mysql-8.0.16-macos10.14-x86_64/support-files/
sudo killall mysqld
./mysql.server start

I resolved it by removing the following directory: /var/lib/mysql/mysql
sudo rm -rf /var/lib/mysql/mysql
This leaves your other DB related files in place, only removing the mysql related files.
After running these:
sudo apt-get remove --purge mysql-server mysql-client mysql-common
sudo apt-get autoremove
sudo apt-get autoclean
Then reinstalling mysql:
sudo apt-get install mysql-server
It worked perfectly.

Related

How can I reset MySQL Community Server to default setting in Ubuntu 22.04?

the result of the command journalctl -xeu mysql.servicePlease help I am running Ubuntu 22.04
I had MySQL running perfectly before I installed MariaDB for a project and after I uninstalled MariaDB and installed MySQL but the server won't start.
The first Error I got when I type mysql in the terminal
"ERROR 2002 (HY000): Can't connect to local MySQL server through socket '/var/run/mysqld/mysqld.sock' (2)" in 5 steps How can I fix this MySQL error on Ubuntu 22.04?
I tried to fix this by deleting the mariaDB files I found in the mysqld directory and editing the file mysqld.sock with the following informations
!includedir /etc/mysql/conf.d/
!includedir /etc/mysql/mysql.conf.d/
[mysqld]
socket=/var/run/mysqld/mysqld.sock
[client]
socket=/var/run/mysqld/mysqld.sock
How do I completely uninstall and restore the MySQL server.
I tried to fix this by deleting the mariaDB files I found in the mysqld directory and editing the file mysqld.sock with the following informations
!includedir /etc/mysql/conf.d/
!includedir /etc/mysql/mysql.conf.d/
[mysqld]
socket=/var/run/mysqld/mysqld.sock
[client]
socket=/var/run/mysqld/mysqld.sock
This didn't work and I tried to uninstall and install mysql with the following command.
sudo apt remove --purge mysql-server mysql-client
sudo apt autoremove
sudo apt autoclean
sudo apt install mysql-server
now I got the message during installation.
MySQL has been frozen to prevent damage to your system. Please see /etc/mysql/FROZEN for help.
Then I ran this set of commands:
service mysql start
systemctl unmask mysql.service
service mysql start
journalctl -xeu mysql.service
sudo less /var/log/mysql/error.log
I tried to check the error log but there is no error log file
How do I completely uninstall and restore the MySQL server.
I have been able to solve the problem using these two lines of command
sudo apt remove --purge mysql-\*
sudo apt install mysql-server mysql-client
After this, I continued with the MySQL setup and it was a good as new

Can't connect to local mysql server - error 2002

I have what seems to be a common error, but all of the solutions I've found online aren't working for me.
I've been following a tutorial to display a MySQL table to a website in realtime (found here), and one of the first steps was to edit the MYSQL config file at /etc/mysql/my.cnf
[mysqld]
server-id = 1
log_bin = /var/log/mysql/mysql-bin.log #Or c:/logs/mysql-bin.log
expire_logs_days = 10
max_binlog_size = 100M
binlog-format = row
However, when I inserted this into the config file and restarted the MYSQL server as instructed, the server wouldn't start, throwing me the error:
ERROR 2002 (HY000): Can't connect to local MySQL server through socket '/var/run/mysqld/mysqld.sock' (2)
In hindsight, I should have just taken out the faulty lines of code from my config file, but I instead uninstalled MySQL and MariaDB thinking it was an error on the side of MySQL and reinstalled them. I'll include the lines of code I ran to do this below to ensure I didn't miss anything.
sudo apt remove --purge mysql-server mysql-client mysql-common
sudo apt autoremove
sudo mv -iv /var/lib/mysql /var/tmp/mysql-backup
sudo rm -rf /var/lib/mysql*
sudo apt install mysql-server
I then tried restarting the MySQL server with the following:
service mysql restart
/etc/init.d/mysqld restart
sudo systemctl start mysql
AFter this didn't work, I tried deleting all the contents of /var/lib/mysql and running the following line as instructed in another solution to this issue, which also didn't work.
mysql_install_db --user=mysql --basedir=/usr --datadir=/var/lib/mysql
Even after reinstalling, it appears I am missing the /etc/mysql folder and the my.cnf file. I tried the line below to create it, but it doesn't work:
sudo dpkg-reconfigure mysql-server-5.7
Have I missed a step? Help is definitely appreciated.

MySQL community server suddenly stopped working [duplicate]

My problem started off with me not being able to log in as root any more on my mysql install. I was attempting to run mysql without passwords turned on... but whenever I ran the command
# mysqld_safe --skip-grant-tables &
I would never get the prompt back. I was trying to follow these instructions to recover the password.
The screen just looks like this:
root#jj-SFF-PC:/usr/bin# mysqld_safe --skip-grant-tables
120816 11:40:53 mysqld_safe Logging to syslog.
120816 11:40:53 mysqld_safe Starting mysqld daemon with databases from /var/lib/mysql
and I don't get a prompt to start typing the SQL commands to reset the password.
When I kill it by pressing CTRL + C, I get the following message:
error: 'Can't connect to local MySQL server through socket '/var/run/mysqld/mysqld.sock' (2)'
Check that mysqld is running and that the socket: '/var/run/mysqld/mysqld.sock' exists!
If I retry the command and leave it long enough, I do get the following series of messages:
root#jj-SFF-PC:/run/mysqld# 120816 13:15:02 mysqld_safe Logging to syslog.
120816 13:15:02 mysqld_safe Starting mysqld daemon with databases from /var/lib/mysql
120816 13:16:42 mysqld_safe mysqld from pid file /var/run/mysqld/mysqld.pid ended
[1]+ Done mysqld_safe --skip-grant-tables
root#jj-SFF-PC:/run/mysqld#
But then if I try to log in as root by doing:
# mysql -u root
I get the following error message:
ERROR 2002 (HY000): Can't connect to local MySQL server through socket '/var/run/mysqld/mysqld.sock' (2)
I checked and /var/run/mysqld/mysqld.sock file doesn't not exist. The folder does, but not the file.
Also, I don't know if this helps or not, but I ran find / -name mysqld and it came up with:
/var/run/mysqld - folder
/usr/sbin/mysqld - file
/run/mysqld - folder
I don't know if this is normal or not. But I'm including this info just in case it helps.
I finally decided to uninstall and reinstall mysql.
apt-get remove mysql-server
apt-get remove mysql-client
apt-get remove mysql-common
apt-get remove phpmyadmin
After reinstalling all packages again in the same order as above, during the phpmyadmin install, I got the same error:
ERROR 2002 (HY000): Can't connect to local MySQL server through socket '/var/run/mysqld/mysqld.sock' (2)
So I tried again to uninstall/reinstall. This time, after I uninstalled the packages, I also manually renamed all mysql files and directories to mysql.bad in their respective locations.
/var/lib/mysql
/var/lib/mysql/mysql
/var/log/mysql
/usr/lib/perl5/DBD/mysql
/usr/lib/perl5/auto/DBD/mysql
/usr/lib/mysql
/usr/bin/mysql
/usr/share/mysql
/usr/share/dbconfig-common/internal/mysql
/etc/init.d/mysql
/etc/apparmor.d/abstractions/mysql
/etc/mysql
Then I tried to reinstall mysql-server and mysql-client again. But I've noticed that it doesn't prompt me for a password. Isn't it supposed to ask for an admin password?
Try this command,
sudo service mysql start
To find all socket files on your system run:
sudo find / -type s
My Mysql server system had the socket open at /var/lib/mysql/mysql.sock
Once you find where the socket is being opened, add or edit the line to your /etc/my.cnf file with the path to the socket file:
socket=/var/lib/mysql/mysql.sock
Sometimes the system startup script that launched the command line executable specifies a flag --socket=path. This flag could override the my.cnf location, and that would result in a socket not being found where the my.cnf file indicates it should be. Then when you try to run the mysql command line client, it will read my.cnf to find the socket, but it will not find it since it deviates from where the server created one. So, Unless you care where the socket resides, just changing the my.cnf to match should work.
Then, stop the mysqld process. How you do this will vary by system.
If you're super user in the linux system, try one of the following if you don't know the specific method your Mysql setup uses:
service mysqld stop
/etc/init.d/mysqld stop
mysqladmin -u root -p shutdown
Some systems aren't setup to have an elegant way to stop mysql (or for some reason mysql doesn't respond) and you can force terminate mysql with either:
One step: pkill -9 mysqld
Two step (least preferred):
Find the process id of mysql with either pgrep mysql or ps aux | grep mysql | grep -v grep
Assuming the process id is 4969 terminate with kill -9 4969
After you do this you might want to look for a pid file in /var/run/mysqld/ and delete it
Make sure the permissions on your socket is such that whatever user mysqld is running as can read/write to it. An easy test is to open it up to full read/write and see if it still works:
chmod 777 /var/run/mysqld/mysqld.sock
If that fixes the issue, you can tailor the permissions and ownership of the socket as needed based on your security settings.
Also, the directory the socket resides in has to be reachable by the user running the mysqld process.
This error occurs due to multiple installations of mysql.
Run the command:
ps -A|grep mysql
Kill the process by using:
sudo pkill mysql
and then run command:
ps -A|grep mysqld
Also Kill this process by running:
sudo pkill mysqld
Now you are fully set just run the following commands:
service mysql restart
mysql -u root -p
Have very well working mysql again
The solution is way easier.
First, you have to locate(in Terminal with "sudo find / -type s") where your mysql.sock file is located. In my case it was in /opt/lampp/var/mysql/mysql.sock
Fire up Terminal and issue
sudo Nautilus
This starts your Files manager with super user privileges
From Nautilus navigate to where your mysql.sock file is located
Right click on the file and select Make Link
Rename the Link File to mysqld.sock then Right click on the file and Cut it
Go to /var/run and create a folder called mysqld and enter it
Now right click and Paste the Link File
Voila! You will now have a mysqld.sock file at /var/run/mysqld/mysqld.sock :)
Just Need to Start MySQL Service after installation:
For Ubuntu:
sudo service mysql start;
For CentOS or RHEL:
sudo service mysqld start;
There is a bug on Ubuntu with MySQL 5.6 and 5.7 where var/run/mysqld/ would disappear whenever MySQL service stopped or is rebooted. This prevents MySQL from running at all. Found this workaround, which isn't perfect, but at least it gets it running after stopping/reboot:
mkdir /var/run/mysqld/
chown mysqld /var/run/mysqld/
Make sure your inaccessible socket file path is same as '/var/run/mysqld/mysqld.sock', otherwise change the path as yours.
Stop the mysqld
$ sudo /etc/init.d/mysqld stop
If the process still runing;
$ sudo pkill -9 mysqld
Remove the mysql directory where socket going to create. For me it did not allowed to remove, so I had to forcefully remove.
$ sudo mkdir -p /var/run/mysqld
Set the ownership to the dirctory
$ sudo chown mysql:mysql /var/run/mysqld
Start mysql
$ sudo /etc/init.d/mysql start
Trying to connect mysql
$ sudo mysql -u dbuser -p
Okay just copy and paste these codes: This should be done in the terminal, inside a server, when your mysql database is not properly installed, and when you are getting this error: 'Can't connect to local MySQL server through socket '/var/run/mysqld/mysqld.sock' (2)'.
Stop MySql
sudo /etc/init.d/mysqld stop
Restart it or start it
sudo /etc/init.d/mysqld restart or sudo /etc/init.d/mysqld start
Make a link like this and give it to the system
ln -s /tmp/mysql.sock /var/lib/mysql/mysql.sock
Run a secure installation which guides all the process you need to do to configure mysql
/usr/bin/mysql_secure_installation
I faced same error and found that it was due to upgradation of packages, So after restarting my system I resolved error.
I think due to sql libraries/ packages update that error occured, So try this if you are doing some upgrading :)
There is a lots of reason for this issue, but sometimes just restart the mysql server, it will fix the issue.
sudo service mysql restart
The answer of the user load step worked for me.
Sometimes is need edit the file in /etc/mysql/my.cnf add line to client
[client]
password = your_mysql_root_password
port = 3306
host = 127.0.0.1
socket = /var/lib/mysql/mysql.sock
Using XAMPP on ubuntu:
Create a folder called mysqld inside /var/run directory. You can accomplish that using the command sudo mkdir /var/run/mysqld.
Create a symbolic link to mysql.sock file that is created by the XAMPP server when it is started. You can use the command sudo ln -s /opt/lampp/var/mysql/mysql.sock /var/run/mysqld/mysqld.sock.
Note: The mysql.sock file is created when the server is started and removed when the server is stopped, so sometimes the link you created might appear to be broken but it should work as long as you have started the server using either sudo /opt/lampp/lampp start or any other means.
Start the server if it's not already running and try executing your program again.
Good luck! I hope you'll get away with it this time.
I think your MySQL server has not started. So start the server using one of the following commands.
#services mysql start
or
#/etc/init.d/mysql start
Why getting this error
I received new updates of mysql libraries so i updated my Kubuntu OS after that getting these errors.
Commands i tried and how i fixed it.
MySql-server is running correctly but when i tried to connect its giving
Can't connect to local MySQL server through socket '/var/run/mysqld/mysqld.sock'.
I checked /var/run/mysqld/mysqld.sock'. this directory.
My files did not existed.
I also tried these commands to connect but did not worked for me.
mysql -h 127.0.0.1 -P 3306 -u root -p
sudo service mysql start
After wasting round about 2 hours i found the solution
sudo apt-get clean
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get upgrade -f
After that everything fixed for me.
*Error: 'Can't connect to local MySQL server through socket '/var/run/mysqld/mysqld.sock' (2)'
solutions
finally uninstall and reinstall mysql. **
sudo apt-get remove mysql-server
sudo apt-get remove mysql-client
sudo apt-get remove mysql-common
sudo apt-get remove phpmyadmin
then install again by
sudo apt-get install mysql-server-5.6
After this operation, 164 MB of additional disk space will be used.
Do you want to continue? [Y/n] Y press YES for complete installations
......
.......
At last you will get these lines....
Setting up libhtml-template-perl (2.95-1) ...
Setting up mysql-common-5.6 (5.6.16-1~exp1) ...
Processing triggers for libc-bin (2.19-0ubuntu6)
Processing triggers for ureadahead (0.100.0-16) ...
And then
root#ubuntu1404:~# mysql -u root -p (for every password first u
should use )
Enter password:
Note :Entered password should be same as the installation time
password of mysql(like .root,system,admin,rahul etc...)
Then type
USE rahul_db(database name);
Thanks.**
Temporary Solution
Maybe someone facing this problem. I am using Mysql Workbench on Ubuntu 14 and got this error.
mysqldump: Got error: 2002: Can't connect to local MySQL server through socket '/tmp/mysql.sock' (2) when trying to connect
Find your socket file by running sudo find / -type s, in my case it was /run/mysqld/mysqld.sock
So, I just created a link to this file in tmp directory.
sudo ln -s /var/run/mysqld/mysqld.sock /tmp/mysql.sock
Please note that this is a temporary solution since the file created will be under /tmp. See other answers for a permanent solution.
ERROR 2002 (HY000): Can't connect to local MySQL server through socket '/var/lib/mysql/mysql.sock' (2)
in /etc/my.cnf add this lines:
[client]
socket=/var/lib/mysql/mysql.sock <= this path should be also same as is[mysqld]
And restart the service with:
service mysql restart
this worked for me
This was mentioned a couple of times already, but this worked immediately for me:
service mysql restart
you can find mysqld.sock in /var/run/mysqld if you have already installed mysql-server
by sudo apt-get install mysql-server
I just had this problem on Ubuntu 14.10
Turns that mysql-server was no longer installed (somehow it had been removed) but I couldn't just install it because there were some broken packages and dependency issues/conflicts.
In the end I had to reinstall mysql
sudo apt-get remove mysql-client
sudo apt-get install mysql-server
I had the exactly same issue. After struggling for an hour, I found a way of correcting it without reinstalling mysql-common, mysql-client, mysql-server.
First of all, go to "/var/run/mysqld". You will find that the mysql.sock does not exist. Simply remove the entire mysqld directory and recreate it and provide it necessary privileges.
# rm -rf /var/run/mysqld && mkdir /var/run/mysqld && chown mysql /var/run/mysqld/
Now, Kill the mysql process in it's entirety. It might be possible that it will show you "waiting for page cleaner" on running "/etc/init.d/mysql status" command even after shutting down the service.
To completely close the service, use
# pkill -9 mysqld
Once the process is killed, try starting it again using
# /etc/init.d/mysql start
And you will see that it works good! And also there will be no issue in stopping it too.
In My case two mysqld processes were running..
killed the optional processs by using
pkill -9 mysqld
If you have a lot of databases and tables on your system, and if you have innodb_file_per_table set in my.cnf, then your mysql server might have run out of opened objects / files (or rather the descriptors for these objects)
Set a new max number with
open-files-limit = 2048
and restart mysql.
This approach might help when the socket is not created at all, but really this might not not be the real problem, there is an underlying problem.
My solution;
Ubuntu 18.04 (WSL)
/etc/mysql/my.cnf
!includedir /etc/mysql/conf.d/
!includedir /etc/mysql/mysql.conf.d/
/etc/mysql/mysql.conf.d/mysqld.cnf
[mysqld]
user = mysql
pid-file = /var/run/mysqld/mysqld.pid
socket = /var/run/mysqld/mysqld.sock
port = 3306
I changed the port. It's worked for me. You can write another port. Example 3355
I am using XAMPP on Ubuntu. I found this error when connecting database through terminal. I solve it without any configuration because default socket file path in XAMPP is written in "/opt/lampp/etc/my.cnf" as following:
[client]
#password = your_password
port = 3306
socket = /opt/lampp/var/mysql/mysql.sock
now you can connect just by giving this socket path parameter with mysql command on terminal like:
mysql -u root --socket /opt/lampp/var/mysql/mysql.sock
and it's done without any configuration.
If you don't want to type socket path everytime, then go for changing default path in my.cnf by "/var/run/mysqld/mysqld.sock". Provide permissions and restart mysql server.
Edit:
Recently I've installed Ubuntu 20.04 and trying to install MySQL server but my system were crashing and not working at all. So I've just completely removed MySQL and installed MariaDB. Its working like a charm without any problems.
Changing the host to 127.0.0.1 worked for me.
Edit the file in /etc/mysql/my.cnf and add the below mentioned line to the section: client
[client]
port = 3306
host = 127.0.0.1
socket = /var/lib/mysql/mysql.sock
After you are done with it. Execute the following command.
sudo service mysql start
I had similar problem on a CentOS VPS. If MySQL won't start or keeps crashing right after it starts, try these steps:
1) Find my.cnf file (mine was located in /etc/my.cnf) and add the line:
innodb_force_recovery = X
replacing X with a number from 1 to 6, starting from 1 and then incrementing if MySQL won't start. Setting to 4, 5 or 6 can delete your data so be carefull and read http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.7/en/forcing-innodb-recovery.html before.
2) Restart MySQL service. Only SELECT will run and that's normal at this point.
3) Dump all your databases/schemas with mysqldump one by one, do not compress the dumps because you'd have to uncompress them later anyway.
4) Move (or delete!) only the bd's directories inside /var/lib/mysql, preserving the individual files in the root.
5) Stop MySQL and then uncomment the line added in 1). Start MySQL.
6) Recover all bd's dumped in 3).
Good luck!
I uninstalled mysql in Ubuntu 16.04 https://askubuntu.com/questions/172514/how-do-i-uninstall-mysql
I reinstalled mysql
https://www.digitalocean.com/community/tutorials/how-to-install-mysql-on-ubuntu-16-04
This seemed to work.
First create dir /var/run/mysqld
with command:
mkdir -p /var/run/mysqld
then add rigths to the dir
chown mysql:mysql /var/run/mysqld
after this try
mysql -u root
You must install mysql-server
apt install mysql-server

MySQL Job failed to start

I'm on Kubuntu 12.04, and after installing mysql via an apt-get (mysql ver: 5.5.35), i'm trying to start mysql service, but I got this error:
sudo service mysql start
start: Job failed to start
So I googled this problem, it says i have to go to the /var/log/mysql/error.log
But my error.log file is empty :(
Then I checked the permissions
:
drwxr-s--- 2 mysql adm 4096 Apr 7 11:21 mysql
-rw-r----- 1 mysql adm 0 Apr 7 11:21 error.log
So I don't know what to do... Why this error ? Why is the error file empty ?
First make a backup of your /var/lib/mysql/ directory just to be safe.
sudo mkdir /home/<your username>/mysql/
cd /var/lib/mysql/
sudo cp * /home/<your username>/mysql/ -R
Next purge MySQL (this will remove php5-mysql and phpmyadmin as well as a number of other libraries so be prepared to re-install some items after this.
sudo apt-get purge mysql-server-5.1 mysql-common
Remove the folder /etc/mysql/ and it's contents
sudo rm /etc/mysql/ -R
Next check that your old database files are still in /var/lib/mysql/ if they are not then copy them back in to the folder then chown root:root
(only run these if the files are no longer there)
sudo mkdir /var/lib/mysql/
sudo chown root:root /var/lib/mysql/ -R
cd ~/mysql/
sudo cp * /var/lib/mysql/ -R
Next install mysql server
sudo apt-get install mysql-server
Finally re-install any missing packages like phpmyadmin and php5-mysql.
My problem was running out of memory. Digital ocean has great instruction for adding swap memory for Ubuntu: https://www.digitalocean.com/community/tutorials/how-to-add-swap-on-ubuntu-14-04
This solved the issue and enabled me to restart the Mysql that otherwise would not start.
Reinstallation will works because it will reset all the value to default. It is better to find what the real culprits (my.cnf editing mistake does happens, e.g. bad/outdated parameter suggestion during mysql tuning.)
Here is the mysql diagnosis if you suspect some value is wrong inside my.cnf : Run the mysqld to show you the results.
sudo -u mysql mysqld
Afterwards, fix all the my.cnf key error that pop out from the screen until mysqld startup successfully.
Then restart it using
sudo service mysql restart
In my case, it simply because the disk is full.
Just clear some disk space and restart and everything is fine.
In most cases, just purging the mysql-server package and re-installing it will do the job.
Run,
sudo apt-get purge mysql-server-5.1 mysql-common
followed by
sudo apt-get install mysql-server
This line did solve the issue in my case,
sudo apt clean
In my case, i do:
sudo nano /etc/mysql/my.cnf
search for bind names and IPs
remove the specific, and let only localhost 127.0.0.1 and the hostname
Check the file permissions, if edited
Fail:
$ sudo chmod 776 /etc/mysql/my.cnf
$ sudo service mysql restart
mysql stop/waiting
start: Job failed to start
Ok:
$ sudo chmod 774 /etc/mysql/my.cnf
$ sudo service mysql restart
stop: Unknown instance:
mysql start/running, process 9564
To help others who do not have a full disk to troubleshoot this problem, first inspect your error log (for me the path is given in my /etc/mysql/my.cnf file):
tail /var/log/mysql/error.log
My problem turned out to be a new IP address allocated after some network router reconfiguration, so I needed to change the bind-address variable.
In my case the problem was the /var/log disk full (check with df -h)
Just deleted some log files and mysql started, no big deal!
The given solution requires enough free HDD, the actual problem was the HDD memory shortage. So If you don't have an alternative server or free disk space, you need some other alternative.
I faced this error with my production server (Linode VPS) when I was running a bulk download into MySQL. Its not a proper solution but VERY QUICK FIX, which we often need in production to bring things UP FAST.
Resize our VPS Server to higher Hard Disk size
Start MySQL, it works.
Login to your MySQL instance and make appropriate adjustments that caused this error (e.g. remove some records, table, or take DB backup to your local machine that are not required at production, etc. After all you know, what caused this issue.)
Downgrade your VPS Server to previous package you was already using
In my case:
restart server
restart mysql
create .socket in directory
I had the same problem. But i discover that my hd is full.
$ sudo cat /var/log/upstart/mysql.log
/proc/self/fd/9: ERROR: The partition with /var/lib/mysql is too full!
So, I run
$ df -h
And I got the message
/dev/xvda1 7.8G 7.4G 0 100% /
Then I found out which folder was full by running the following command on the terminal
$ cd /var/www
$ for i in *; do echo $i; find $i |wc -l; done
This give me the number of files on each folder on /var/www. I logged into the folder with most files, and deleted some backup files, and i continued deleting useless files and cache files.
then I run $ sudo /etc/init.d/mysql start and it work again

Fatal error: Can't open and lock privilege tables: Table 'mysql.host' doesn't exist

I am on a server that has afresh install on RHEL 5. I was able to install Apache and PHP just fine., but I am having serious trouble with my MySQL installation. I tried the following:
yum install mysql-server mysql
And didn't get any errors or conflicts. Then I tried to start mysql with the following commands:
chkconfig --levels 235 mysqld on
service mysqld start
And get Timeout error occurred trying to start MySQL Daemon.
I checked my logs and see this error:
[ERROR] Fatal error: Can't open and lock privilege tables: Table 'mysql.host' doesn't exist
I'm not sure where to go from here.
For reference I am using RHEL 5 and installed the latest versions of PHP 5 and Apache.
After chown and chgrp'ing /var/lib/mysql per the answer by #Bad Programmer, you may also have to execute the following command:
sudo mysql_install_db --user=mysql --ldata=/var/lib/mysql
Then restart your mysqld.
Uninstall mysql using yum remove mysql*
Recursively delete /usr/bin/mysql and /var/lib/mysql
Delete the file /etc/my.cnf.rmp
Use ps -e to check the processes to make sure mysql isn't still running.
Reboot server with reboot
Run yum install mysql-server. This also seems to install the mysql client as a dependency.
Give mysql ownership and group priveleges with:
chown -R mysql /var/lib/mysql
chgrp -R mysql /var/lib/mysql
Use service mysqld start to start MySQL Daemon.
I had this issue on arch linux as well. The issue was pacman installed the package in a different location than MySQL was expecting. I was able to fix the issue with this:
sudo mysql_install_db --user=mysql --basedir=/usr/ --ldata=/var/lib/mysql/
Hope this helps someone!
The root of my problem seemed to be selinux, which was turned on (enforcing)
automatically on OS install.
I wanted my mysql in /data.
After verifying that my.cnf had:
datadir=/data/mysql
(and leaving the socket at /var/lib/mysql)
I executed the command to turn off selinux for mysqld
(alternative is to turn it off completely):
setsebool -P mysqld_disable_trans=1
I ran the following commands:
> chown -R mysql .
> chgrp -R mysql .
> mysql_install_db --user=mysql
I started the mysql daemon and everything worked fine after that.
mysql_install_db –-user=mysql --ldata=/var/lib/mysql
Worked for me in Centos 7
initialize mysql before start on windows.
mysqld --initialize
When download mysql zip version, if run mysqld directly, you'll get this error:
2016-02-18T07:23:48.318481Z 0 [ERROR] Fatal error: Can't open and lock privilege tables: Table 'mysql.user' doesn't exist
2016-02-18T07:23:48.319482Z 0 [ERROR] Aborting
You have to run below command first:
mysqld --initialize
Make sure your data folder is empty before this command.
Just this command is enough to do the magic on centos 6.6
mysql_install_db
I just met the same problem with mysql 5.7 on OSX:
rm -rf {datadir}
mysqld --initialize --datadir {datadir}
mysqld --datadir {datadir}
If you move your datadir, you not only need to give the new datadir permissions, but you need to ensure all parent directories have permission.
I moved my datadir to a hard drive, mounted in Ubuntu as:
/media/*user*/Data/
and my datadir was Databases.
I had to set permissions to 771 to each of the media, user and Data directories:
sudo chmod 771 *DIR*
If this does not work, another way you can get mysql to work is to change user in /etc/mysql/my.cnf to root; though there are no doubt some issues with doing that from a security perspective.
For myself, I had to do:
yum remove mysql*
rm -rf /var/lib/mysql/
cp /etc/my.cnf ~/my.cnf.bkup
yum install -y mysql-server mysql-client
mysql_install_db
chown -R mysql:mysql /var/lib/mysql
chown -R mysql:mysql /var/log/mysql
service mysql start
Then I was able to get back into my databases and configure them again after I nuked them the first go around.
In my case the path of MySQL data folder had a special character "ç" and it make me get...
Fatal error: Can't open and lock privilege tables: Table 'mysql.host'
doesn't exist.
I'm have removed all special characters and everything works.
On CentOS EL 6 and perhaps on earlier versions there is one way to get into this same mess.
Install CentOS EL6 with a minimal installation. For example I used kickstart to install the following:
%packages
#core
acpid
bison
cmake
dhcp-common
flex
gcc
gcc-c++
git
libaio-devel
make
man
ncurses-devel
perl
ntp
ntpdate
pciutils
tar
tcpdump
wget
%end
You will find that one of the dependencies of the above list is mysql-libs. I found that my system has a default my.cnf in /etc and this contains:
[mysqld]
dataddir=/var/lib/mysql
socket=/var/lib/mysql/mysql.sock
user=mysql
# Disabling symbolic-links is recommended to prevent assorted security risks
symbolic-links=0
[mysqld_safe]
log-error=/var/log/mysqld.log
pid-file=/var/run/mysqld/mysqld.pid
When you build from the Generic Linux (Architecture Independent), Compressed TAR Archive your default data directory is /usr/local/mysql/data which conflicts with the /etc/my.cnf already present which defines datadir=/var/lib/mysql. Also the pid-file defined in the same file does not have permissions for the mysql user/group to write to it in /var/run/mysqld.
A quick remedy is to mv /etc/my.cnf /etc/my.cnf.old which should get your generic source procedure working.
Of course the experience is different of you use the source RPMs.
I had the same issue in trying to start the server and followed the "checked" solution.
But still had the problem. The issue was the my /etc/my.cnf file was not pointing to my
designated datadir as defined when I executed the mysql_install_db with --datadir defined. Once I updated this, the server started correctly.
If you have a server which used to happily run MySQL, but now gives this error, then an uninstall and re-install of MySQL is overkill.
In my case, the server died and took a few disk blocks with it. This affected a few files, including /var/lib/mysql/mysql/host.frm and /var/lib/mysql/mysql/proc.frm
Luckily, I could copy these from another server, and this got me past that table error.
I got similar error on overlayfs (overlay2) that is the default on Docker for Mac.
The error happens when starting mysql on the image, after creating a image with mysql.
2017-11-15T06:44:22.141481Z 0 [ERROR] Fatal error: Can't open and lock privilege tables: Table storage engine for 'user' doesn't have this option
Switching to "aufs" solved the issue.
(On Docker for Mac, the "daemon.json" can be edited by choosing "Preferences..." menu, and selecting "Daemon" tab, and selecting "Advanced" tab.)
/etc/docker/daemon.json :
{
"storage-driver" : "aufs",
"debug" : true,
"experimental" : true
}
Ref:
https://github.com/moby/moby/issues/35503
https://qiita.com/Hige-Moja/items/7b1208f16997e2aa9028
In Windows run the following commands in the command prompt as adminstrator
Step 1:
mysql_install_db.exe
Step 2:
mysqld --initialize
Step 3:
mysqld --console
Step 4:
In windows
Step 4:
mysqladmin -u root password "XXXXXXX"
Step 5:
mysql -u root -p
My case on Ubuntu 14.04.2 LTS was similar to others with my.cnf, but for me the cause was a ~/.my.cnf that was leftover from a previous installation. After deleting that file and purging/re-installing mysql-server, it worked fine.