What should mysqld.sock contain, why don't I have it?
Does anyone know why my /var/run/mysqld/mysqld.sock
socket file would not be on my computer when I install (or reinstall) MySQL 5.1?
Right now, when I try to start up a server with mysqld, I get errors like Can't connect to local MySQL server through socket '/var/run/mysqld/mysqld.sock' (2) when trying to connect
, but creating a blank file with that name (as suggested on the ubuntu forums) was unsuccessful.
I had both mysql and postgres serving fine until I upgraded to natty a little while ago; I have spent hours walking through both databases trying to figure out what is going on. I can give up on postgres, but I cannot work without a working copy of mysql.
The weirdest part: I use Kubuntu, and my understanding is that KDE uses mysql to store user permissions, etc. I am not experiencing any weird permissions issues; can I take this to mean that (somehow?) MySQL is actually working?
Maybe these socket files live in a different place in natty? Would it be easier to just reinstall the os fresh? At this point, I am open to any suggestions that will stop wasting my time.
Solution 1:
A socket file doesnt actually contain data, it transports it.. It is a special, unusual type of file created with special system calls/commands. It is not an ordinary file.
It is like a pipe the server and the clients can use to connect and exchange requests and data. Also, it is only used locally. Its significance is merely as an agreed rendezvous location in the filesystem.
Creating a plain old file and putting it in that location may actually interfere with the server creating it... and thereby prevent local clients from connecting to the server.
My recommendation is to remove any file you put in the location. The special socket file is created by the server.
Solution 2:
When you specify host=localhost
, mysql client will try to login to mysql server using unix named pipe which requires a .sock
file.
This can be bypassed by specifying host=127.0.0.1. This will make mysql client use TCP to connect to the server.
Taken from MySQL's documentation:
mysql --host=127.0.0.1 --port=3306 --user=your_uname --password=your_pass
Solution 3:
A socket is a special pseudo-file used for data transmission by reading and writing, not data storage.
The socket file is created when the service is started and removed when the service is terminated. The location of the file is defined in /etc/my.cnf
like so:
[mysqld]
socket=/var/run/mysql/mysql.sock
Solution 4:
In my case, running mysqld_safe
created a new mysqld.sock
file.
$ cd /etc/init.d/
$ mysqld_safe
You'll probably won't get prompt back, but if you restart your session, a mysqld.sock file will be somewhere. Find it with
$ sudo find / -type s | grep mysqld.sock