Mailing List
Home
Forum Home
MySQL General - General MySQL discussion
MySQL++ - Programming with the C++ API to MySQL
MaxDB - Everything about MaxDB, formerly known as SAP DB
ODBC - ODBC with the MySQL Connector/ODBC driver
MySQL on Win32 - Runing MySQL on Windows 9x/Me/NT/2000/XP
Java Help - Mostly related to the MySQL Connector/J driver
Perl - Perl support for MySQL with DBI and DBD::mysql
GUI - MySQL GUI Tools
Announcement
Subjects
mysql openssl Question
ERROR 1045: Access denied for user: 'root@localhost ' (Using
password: NO)
Update one field with more fields from another table
Getting Identity after INSERT
ERROR 2002: Can 't connect to local MySQL server through socket
mysql test 4 1 fails with the gis test
MySQL Cluster Software
Downgrade Mysql from 4 to 3 23
Mysql 4 0 Oracle Stored Procedure Trigger Conversion
Can 't access mysql after kernel upgrade
Executing MySQL Commands From Within C Program
Comparing and writing out BLOBS
Preventing Duplicate Entries
FULLTEXT query format question
Strange behavior, Table Level Permission
Does the binary log enabling affect the MySQL performances?
mysql:it 's a db not a dbms how it 's possible?!
mysql have same function mthod as Oracle decode()
 
-none-

-none-

2007-10-08       - By Dan Rogart

 Back
Frank-

I've had the exact same issue crop up in our prod servers - it was very
frustrating, as it was intermittent and would affect some of our slaves,
but not all.

We had a lot of back and forth with MySQL support without really being
able to consistently pin down or reproduce the issue.

Ultimately we had to perform a RESET SLAVE (back up those relay logs
first, just in case) and reset the master log position (see Baron's
CHANGE MASTER TO statements below) to the point where it failed.  We
also increased the max allowed packet size on both the master and the
slave, as it seemed like the issue was occurring with large transactions
or large single rows the most.  Doing those two things seemed to fix the
issue.

Baron's checksum script is excellent and I can recommend using it if you
haven't rolled your own script.  One caveat is that if your slave is
using different engine types (to use full text indexes, say), I think
the checksums are different.  But you may not have that problem.

I believe your assertion about temp tables is correct, according to
this:

http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.0/en/reset-slave.html

Good luck,

Dan

-- --Original Message-- --
From: Frank Bottone [mailto:fbottone@(protected)]
Sent: Monday, October 08, 2007 3:49 PM
To: Baron Schwartz
Cc: mysql@(protected)
Subject: Re: Problem with repeated replication corruption - Could not
parse relay log event entry

Baron,

Thanks for the quick response. I do have the binlogs still on the
master, so I should be able to do that - however I saw a post somewhere
(lost the link at this time) saying that resetting the slave will drop
any temporary tables which could cause issues. I'm not sure at this
point if that would affect me or not. It is definitely worth a shot I
guess, since worst case I will still need to resync from the master.

I will try this and give the checksum tool a try as well (although, I
think I might have crippled myself from the earlier issues we've been
having. They only occurred in a spam-related table and we were able to
prove out that the messages were clearly spam and could be left out of
the slave/backup by just skipping that transaction. The issue was
happening frequently enough that digging through the binlogs to get the
query to manually replicate became more effort than it was worth, so the

systems might be slightly out of sync. Perhaps I can just ignore the
checksum differences for that particular table...

I'll let you know the results.

Thanks,

Frank

Baron Schwartz wrote:
> Frank,
>
> Frank Bottone wrote:
>> I've been having trouble with my master/slave server - recently I was

>> having a few repeated issues where the mysql slave would stop due to
>> "invalid sql syntax", but the queries executed fine on the master. I
>> would have to manually dig through the logs and then find the query
>> to manually execute on the slave, then use skip_counter to resume the

>> replication skipping the corrupted statement on the slave. I thought
>> it might be hardware related since it was only affecting the slave,
>> so I moved it to a different blade (both the servers are blades).
>>
>> However, today I was greeted with a nagios alert that the slave had
>> stopped again. This time, it seems like the relay log is definitely
>> corrupt. I was able to run mysqlbinlog > /dev/null on all the master
>> logs, none are corrupt (including the one it had read up to on the
>> slave). The relay log on the slave is though - it reports
>> "[root@(protected) mysql]# mysqlbinlog mysql02-relay-bin.010923 >
/dev/null
>> ERROR: Error in Log_event::read_log_event(): 'read error', data_len:
>> 38210134, event_type: 0
>> Could not read entry at offset 618730:Error in log format or read
error"
>>
>> _Nothing too much different in the logs either:
>>
>> _071006 11:18:52 [Note] Slave I/O thread: connected to master
>> 'replica@(protected)
>> 4:3306',  replication started in log 'mysql-bin.000104' at position
>> 906124600
>> 071008  9:07:12 [ERROR] Error reading packet from server: Lost
>> connection to MySQL server during query ( server_errno 13)
>> 071008  9:07:13 [Note] Slave I/O thread: Failed reading log event,
>
> ... snip ...
>
>> their names by issuing 'SHOW SLAVE STATUS' on this slave. Error_code:
0
>> 071008 12:15:33 [ERROR] Error running query, slave SQL thread
>> aborted. Fix the problem, and restart the slave SQL thread with
>> "SLAVE START". We stopped
>> at log 'mysql-bin.000105' position 893425700
>>
>>
>> Any help or ideas tracking this down would be appreciated - I think
>> we are going to have to take down the production database to resync
>> the two and get replication going again. We mainly use the replica
>> for backup purposes in order to avoid downtime during the backup and
>> in the event of a hardware issue with the master.
>
> No need to take down the master or re-initialize the slave, given what

> I've seen so far.  Just tell the slave to throw away its relay logs
> and re-fetch from the master.  From the output you showed,
>
> CHANGE MASTER TO MASTER_LOG_FILE='mysql-bin.000105',
> MASTER_LOG_POS?3425700;
>
> This will discard the relay logs and re-fetch them.  As long as that
> master log hasn't been purged on the master, you might be OK.
>
> You might want to take a look at mysql-table-checksum.  Your data
> could be fine, but it might also be different on the slave.  But
> there's no need to worry about it until you prove it:
>
> http://mysqltoolkit.sourceforge.net/
>
> Your corruption in the relay logs could be caused by any number of
> things -- bad network, bad hardware, software bug...  You could add
> your voice to an outstanding bug request:
>
> http://bugs.mysql.com/bug.php?id%737
>
> Hope that helps
> Baron
>



--
The sender of this email subscribes to Perimeter eSecurity's email
anti-virus service. This email has been scanned for malicious code and
is
believed to be virus free. For more information on email security
please
visit: http://www.perimeterusa.com/email-defense-content.html
This communication is confidential, intended only for the named
recipient(s)
above and may contain trade secrets or other information that is exempt
from
disclosure under applicable law. Any use, dissemination, distribution
or
copying of this communication by anyone other than the named
recipient(s) is
strictly prohibited. If you have received this communication in error,
please
delete the email and immediately notify our Command Center at
203-541-3444.

Thanks

--
MySQL General Mailing List
For list archives: http://lists.mysql.com/mysql
To unsubscribe:
http://lists.mysql.com/mysql?unsub?n.rogart@(protected)



--
MySQL General Mailing List
For list archives: http://lists.mysql.com/mysql
To unsubscribe:    http://lists.mysql.com/mysql?unsub=mysql@(protected)