On 3/28/06, abe <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>
> Andy Dustman wrote:
> > On 3/28/06, abe <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > >
> > >
> > > Andy Dustman wrote:
> > > > On 3/28/06, abe <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > > >
> > > > > OperationalError: (2002, "Can't connect to local MySQL server through
> > > > > socket '/var/lib/mysql/mysql.sock' (13)")
> > > >
> > > > This indicates your MySQL server isn't running,
> > > I think it is, since the admin site works fine if I use
> > > manage.py runserver , doesn't it also use the server?
> > >
> > > %myproject]# ps -eadf|grep sql
> > > root     18240 18044  0 12:32 pts/2    00:00:00 /bin/sh
> > > /usr/bin/mysqld_safe
> > > mysql    18268 18240  0 12:32 pts/2    00:00:00 /usr/libexec/mysqld
> > > --basedir=/usr --datadir=/var/lib/mysql --user=mysql
> > > --pid-file=/var/run/mysqld/mysqld.pid --skip-locking
> > > --socket=/var/lib/mysql/mysql.sock
> > >
> > > unless 'MYSQL server' means somthing different from mysqld ??
> > >
> > >
> > > > and you are using DATABASE_HOST="localhost".
> > > well I use ='', but that should be the same
> > >
> > > but isn't that correct, since mysqld runs on the same host as django?
> >
> > Make sure apache can read /var/ilbmysql/mysql.sock. I'm a little
> how do I do that? I can't 'become' apache
> from the permissions it looks readable
>
> myproject$ ls -lst /var/lib/mysql/mysql.sock
> 4 srwxrwxrwx  1 mysql mysql 0 Mar 28 12:32 /var/lib/mysql/mysql.sock
> myproject$ ls -lst /tmp/mysql.sock

But is the parent directory world-readable? i.e. ls -ld /var/lib/mysql

> there a link to it in /tmp :
> 4 lrwxrwxrwx  1 mysql mysql 25 Mar 23 16:58 /tmp/mysql.sock ->
> /var/lib/mysql/mysql.sock
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] myproject]$
>
> > surprised to see it put the socket there, since (on Gentoo)
> > /var/lib/mysql is only accessible by the user the mysql server runs
> > as, so it puts the socket (which needs to be world-readable and
> > writable) in /var/run.
>
> >
> > When you run manage.py runserver, are you running as root?
> yes (should I?), but I can also run as myself, doesn't matter

You probably shoudn't run it as root on general principle. Make sure
you can access it as a non-root user. The error indicates it did not
get as far as the authentication phase so I am still leaning towards
filesystem permissions. You're not running a chroot apache by any
chance, are you? SELinux? Some sort of virtualization? I guess you
could try 127.0.0.1 for the database host which will make it use TCP
and see if that makes a difference.
--
The Pythonic Principle: Python works the way it does
because if it didn't, it wouldn't be Python.

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