Hi, mySQL 3.23.49 on Debian GNU/Linux 3.0, Kernel 2.4.19 on a Xeon 2 Ghz (1 CPU) and 2 GB DDR-RAM. The following problem arises:
All mysqld processes (UNIX) consume too much CPU power. There are usually a 4-10 active processes that want 30% to 99.9% of CPU power - EACH of them. "top" just showed me 8 mySQL procs with each demanding 30% of CPU. The load average of the system is at 20 right now. It also came to my attention that there are plenty of mySQL-processes (processes within mySQL) simply sleeping and never closing. I did the following to investigate the problem: - "mysqladmin processlist" always brought up "Too many connections". Therefore I changed the max_connections value to 500 for a test. However, that would basically take the system down or bring it into a unusable state as mySQL processes would build up and build up even more and never close (especially the ones marked as "Sleep"). After a couple minutes almost all 500 connections were used up. Load average was beyond 20. - Test-wise I switched "wait_timeout" and "interactive_timeout" from 8 days (default value) to 60 seconds. Thereby the Sleep processes would not stay open but instead get shut down by the system after 60 seconds - this took some load away from the system (I thought). - Now, with the timeout values set to only 10 seconds and the max_connections to 100 I still have a unusable system. mySQL keeps consuming more and more CPU and has plenty of processes (both UNIX and within mySQL) open. The websites that access mySQL through PHP will only load after 10 seconds, 30 seconds or sometimes never - depending on the load. Would it be possible that a single PHP website that executes plenty of queries can produce so much load to mySQL? "mysqladmin status" shows: Uptime: 1685 Threads: 8 Questions: 27156 Slow queries: 672 Opens: 10787 Flush tables: 1 Open tables: 65 Queries per second avg: 16.116 All PHP (PHP 4.1.2 on Apache 1.3.26) is encoded by zend, so I cannot really say what the code is like. However, I have a logfile that shows all queries to mySQL. Does this sound like a flaw in the programming layout to you? Or rather a configuration error somewhere? Any hints are greatly appreciated! Thanks, Markus --------------------------------------------------------------------- Before posting, please check: http://www.mysql.com/manual.php (the manual) http://lists.mysql.com/ (the list archive) To request this thread, e-mail <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To unsubscribe, e-mail <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Trouble unsubscribing? Try: http://lists.mysql.com/php/unsubscribe.php