If the mysqld server doesn't start or if you can cause it to crash quickly, you can try to create a trace file to find the problem.
To do this, you must have a mysqld that has
been compiled with debugging support. You can check this by
executing mysqld -V
. If the version number
ends with -debug
, it's compiled with support
for trace files. (On Windows, the debugging server is named
mysqld-debug rather than
mysqld as of MySQL 4.1.)
Start the mysqld server with a trace log in
/tmp/mysqld.trace
on Unix or
C:\mysqld.trace
on Windows:
shell> mysqld --debug
On Windows, you should also use the
--standalone
flag to not start
mysqld as a service. In a console window, use
this command:
C:\> mysqld-debug --debug --standalone
After this, you can use the mysql.exe
command-line tool in a second console window to reproduce the
problem. You can stop the mysqld server with
mysqladmin shutdown.
Note that the trace file become very big! If you want to generate a smaller trace file, you can use debugging options something like this:
mysqld --debug=d,info,error,query,general,where:O,/tmp/mysqld.trace
This only prints information with the most interesting tags to the trace file.
If you make a bug report about this, please only send the lines from the trace file to the appropriate mailing list where something seems to go wrong! If you can't locate the wrong place, you can ftp the trace file, together with a full bug report, to ftp://ftp.mysql.com/pub/mysql/upload/ so that a MySQL developer can take a look a this.
The trace file is made with the DBUG package by Fred Fish. See Abschnitt E.3, „Das DBUG-Paket“.
Dies ist eine Übersetzung des MySQL-Referenzhandbuchs, das sich auf dev.mysql.com befindet. Das ursprüngliche Referenzhandbuch ist auf Englisch, und diese Übersetzung ist nicht notwendigerweise so aktuell wie die englische Ausgabe. Das vorliegende deutschsprachige Handbuch behandelt MySQL bis zur Version 5.1.