Slow query stops apache from getting answer - mysql

I have a problem where I can not query my mysql db until other queries are done. This happens when I run a heavy sql-query (30s) from apache, or when I ran a series of sql-querys from within the same apache-request.
Since my queries are only selects (no updates or modifications and no transactions) I think it should be possible to run simulatanious queries. How can I make this possible?
I am using Zend_Db::factory($config->db->adapter, $dbConfig);
I am not sure if this limits the connections or try to re use same connection always. I manually close the connection between each call in the "serie of calls".
/Peter

You probably have a connection pool set up in Apache which is running out of connections. I'm not sure which module you're using in apache, but if its mod_dbd then check your DBDMax parameter.

Related

Does my sql query continue executing after i been disconnected due to long operation?

If I run a SQL query in MySQL workbench and the connections time out after 30 seconds because it is taking a long time. Does my Query continue executing on the MySQL server even though I am disconnected?
For example, if I am doing an update and the update loops over a billion records. Does the MySQL server disconnect me first then it finishes the query after? Or does it disconnect me and terminate the query?
It does. As Mustafa mentioned, you can see the query still running if you look at "Administration tab" --> Management --> Client Connections.
Also good to remember that you can change the 30sec cap to longer, shorter or none.
Yes, MySQL Workbench can disconnect and the query keeps running. This has been reported as a bug, but it's in the "Verified" state, which means it is not fixed: https://bugs.mysql.com/bug.php?id=78809
See also this related SO thread: MySQL Query running even after losing connection
If you have a long-running query that needs to do a bulk update, you may need to change the MySQL Session timeout options in the MySQL Workbench preferences. Alternatively, don't use MySQL Workbench for long-running jobs, use the mysql command line tool.

Lost connection to MySQL server during query on random simple queries

FINAL UPDATE: We fixed this problem by finding a way to accomplish our goals without forking. But forking was the cause of the problem.
---Original Post---
I'm running a ruby on rails stack, our mysql server is separate, but housed at the same site as our app servers. (we've tried swapping it out for a different mysql server with double the specs, but no improvement was seen.
during business hours we get a handful of these from no particular query.
ActiveRecord::StatementInvalid: Mysql2::Error: Lost connection to MySQL server during query
most of the queries that fail are really simple, and there seems to be no pattern between one query and another. This all started when I upgraded from Rails 4.1 to 4.2.
I'm at a loss as to what to try. Our database server is less than 5% CPU throughout the day. I do get bug reports from users who have random interactions fail due to this, so it's not queries that have been running for hours or anything like that, of course when they retry the exact same thing it works.
Our servers are configured by cloud66.
So in short: our mysql server is going away for some reason, but it's not because of lack of resources, it's also a brand new server as we migrated from another server when this problem started.
this also happens to me on localhost while developing features sometimes, so I don't believe it's a load issue.
We're running the following:
ruby 2.2.5
rails 4.2.6
mysql2 0.4.8
UPDATE: per the first answer below I increased our max_connections variable to 500 last night, and confirmed the increase via
show global variables like 'max_connections';
I'm still getting dropped connection, the first one today was dropped only a few minutes ago....
ActiveRecord::StatementInvalid: Mysql2::Error: Lost connection to MySQL server during query
I ran select * from information_schema.processlist; and I got 36 rows back. Does this mean my app servers were running 36 connections at that moment? or can a process be multiple connections?
UPDATE: I just set net_read_timeout = 60 (it was 30 before) I'll see if that helps
UPDATE: It didn't help, I'm still looking for a solution...
Heres my Database.yml with credentials removed.
production:
adapter: mysql2
encoding: utf8
host: localhost
database:
username:
password:
port: 3306
reconnect: true
The connection to MySQL can be disrupted by a number of means, but I would recommend revisiting Mario Carrion's answer since it's a very wise answer.
It seems likely that connection is disrupted because it's being shared with the other processes, causing communication protocol errors...
...this could easily happen if the connection pool is process bound, which I believe it is, in ActiveRecord, meaning that the same connection could be "checked-out" a number of times simultaneously in different processes.
The solution is that database connections must be established only AFTER the fork statement in the application server.
I'm not sure which server you're using, but if you're using a warmup feature - don't.
If you're running any database calls before the first network request - don't.
Either of these actions could potentially initialize the connection pool before forking occurs, causing the MySQL connection pool to be shared between processes while the locking system isn't.
I'm not saying this is the only possible reason for the issue, as stated by #sloth-jr, there are other options... but most of them seem less likely according to your description.
Sidenote:
I ran select * from information_schema.processlist; and I got 36 rows back. Does this mean my app servers were running 36 connections at that moment? or can a process be multiple connections?
Each process could hold a number of connections. In your case, you might have up to 500X36 connections. (see edit)
In general, the number of connections in the pool can often be the same as the number of threads in each process (it shouldn't be less than the number of thread, or contention will slow you down). Sometimes it's good to add a few more depending on your application.
EDIT:
I apologize for ignoring the fact that the process count was referencing the MySQL data and not the application data.
The process count you showed is the MySQL server data, which seems to use a thread per connection IO scheme. The "Process" data actually counts active connections and not actual processes or threads (although it should translate to the number of threads as well).
This means that out of possible 500 connections per application processes (i.e., if you're using 8 processes for your application, that would be 8X500=4,000 allowed connections) your application only opened 36 connections so far.
This indicates a timeout error. It's usually a general resource or connection error.
I would check your MySQL config for max connections on MySQL console:
show global variables like 'max_connections';
And ensure the number of pooled connections used by Rails database.yml is less than that:
pool: 10
Note that database.yml reflects number of connections that will be pooled by a single Rails process. If you have multiple processes or other servers like Sidekiq, you'll need to add them together.
Increase max_connections if necessary in your MySQL server config (my.cnf), assuming your kit can handle it.
[mysqld]
max_connections = 100
Note other things might be blocking too, e.g. open files, but looking at connections is a good starting point.
You can also monitor active queries:
select * from information_schema.processlist;
as well as monitoring the MySQL slow log.
One issue may be a long-running update command. If you have a slow-running command that affects a lot of records (e.g. a whole table), it might be blocking even the simplest queries. This means you could see random queries timeout, but if you check MySQL status, the real cause is another long-running query.
Things you did not mention but you should take a look:
Are you using unicorn? If so, are your reconnecting and disconnecting in your after_fork and before_fork?
Is reconnect: true set in your database.yml configuration?
Well,at first glance this sounds like your webserver is keeping the mysql sessions open and sometimes a user runs into a timeout. Try disabling the keep mysql sessions alive.
It will be a hog but you only use 5% ...
other tipps:
Enable the mysql "Slow Query Log" and take a look.
write a short script which pulls and logs the mysql processlist every minute and cross check the log with timeouts
look at the pool size in your db connection or set one!
http://guides.rubyonrails.org/configuring.html#database-pooling
should be equal to the max-connections mysql likes to have!
Good luck!
Find out if your database is limited in terms of multiple connections. Because normally a SQL database is supposed to have more than one active connection.
(Contact your network provider)
Would you mind posting some of your queries? The MySQL documentation has this to say about it:
https://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.7/en/error-lost-connection.html
TL;DR:
Network problems; are any of your boxes renewing leases
periodically, or experiencing other network connection errors
(netstat / ss), firewall timeouts, etc. Not sure how managed your
hosts are by cloud66....
Query timed out. This can happen if you've got commands backed up
behind blocking statements (eg, alters/locking backups on MyISAM
tables). How simple are your queries? No cartesian products in-play?
EXPLAIN query could help.
Exceeding MAX_PACKET_SIZE. Are you storing pictures, video content, etc.?
There are lots of possibilities here, and without more information, will be difficult to pinpoint this.
Would look first at mysql_error.log, then work your way from the DB server back to your application.
UPDATE: this didn't work.
Heres the solution, special thanks to #Myst for pointing out that forking can cause issues, I had no idea to look at this particular code. As the errors seemed random because we forked in this fashion in several places.
It turns out that when I was forking processes, rails was using the same database connection for all forked processes, This created a situation where when one of the processes (the parent process?) terminated the database connection, the remaining process would have its connection interrupted.
The solution was to change this code:
def recalculate_completion
Process.fork do
if self.course
self.course.user_groups.includes(user:[:events]).each do |ug|
ug.recalculate_completion
end
end
end
end
into this code:
def recalculate_completion
ActiveRecord::Base.remove_connection
Process.fork do
ActiveRecord::Base.establish_connection
if self.course
self.course.user_groups.includes(user:[:events]).each do |ug|
ug.recalculate_completion
end
end
ActiveRecord::Base.remove_connection
end
ActiveRecord::Base.establish_connection
end
Making this change stopped the errors from our servers and everything appears to be working well now. If anyone has any more info as to why this worked I would be happy to hear it, as I would like to have a deeper understanding of this.
Edit: it turns out this didn't work either.... we still got dropped connections but not as often.
If you have query cache enabled, please reset it and it should work.
RESET QUERY CACHE;

How to close MySQL workbench without killing the running query?

I am running a very long procedure from MySQL workbench 6.1 and it has been running for quite a while now (so I can't just drop it and restart it later) and from my calculations it will probably run for a long while more.
I set the "connection drop" variable to a very big time, however I will have to turn off the computer before the end of that (so I can't just wait for it to time out).
The procedure doesn't return anything, so I don't really care about not receiving its result.
Is there a way to close workbench without having to stop the procedure from running?
Thanks a lot!
Simply said: no, it's not possible.
The running query is bound to a specific context: the connection from the client to server, which includes certain states (e.g. transaction, sql mode and others). Killing the client means to kill the connection. This will ultimatively kill any processing the server is doing for this client connection.

Perl DBI Connect to keep session active after script completed

Is there anyway I could keep the DBI session active even after the script exits?
http://mysqlresources.com/documentation/perl-dbi/connect
Basically I need to call the perl (DBI) script multiple times with different parameters (decide pass/fail after it completes). Each time its called Perl is making new connection to Mysql and destroys while exiting which itself is adding considerable amount of delay.
Just wondering if there is any way I could store and use the session for future?
Your connection and its associated socket is process specific, so there's no way of keeping it alive after your process terminates.
You should be able to better tune your server so that connecting is faster. A common issue is doing a reverse IP lookup by enabling the skip-name-resolve configuration parameter in my.cnf.
Barring that, what you might do is use either MySQL Proxy to keep a pool of warm connections, or to combine all your various operations into a single script that can run several stages without terminating.

Persistent connection to MYSQL

I have a database on a local machine that is queried repeatedly as fast as possible.
Currently I am executing mysql_real_connect() before each query and mysql_close() right after. Since speed is of the essence, connecting and reconnecting creates an unacceptable amount of overhead.
I have done some research and found a mysqli command to create a persistent connection (mysqli_pconnect). Unfortunately I am not using PHP (I am using the mysql50 library in FreePascal/Lazarus) and the mysqli library is not available to me; I have to settle for the standard mysql_* commands.
Does anyone have a solution?