On Mon, 14 Feb 2005, Jeremy Cole wrote: > AFAIK, the log file name is not known by the slave unless it either > receives a rotate log event (go to next log) or you have started it > against a particular log file. If you start replication "from the > beginning" (not specifying a log file) against a master, the first > filename is not passed down. > > In order to force a filename to be displayed you could either: FLUSH > LOGS on the master, or specify the log file name in the CHANGE MASTER on > the slave. >
Hi Jeremy, If that's the case it would have to mean that the SQL thread knew about it while the IO thread did not, correct? Here's a snip of the SHOW SLAVE STATUS from yesterday: [..] Master_Log_File: db1-bin.248 Read_Master_Log_Pos: 428653772 Relay_Log_File: db9-relay-bin.002 Relay_Log_Pos: 1186147 Relay_Master_Log_File: [..] The way the seeding was done was that the slave got a copy of the replicated DB + master.info from an existing slave. Thanks, Atle -- MySQL General Mailing List For list archives: http://lists.mysql.com/mysql To unsubscribe: http://lists.mysql.com/[EMAIL PROTECTED]