

You can use the following information to find out Hope that's ok if not, decrease some variables in the equation.Īttempting backtrace. Key_buffer_size + (read_buffer_size + sort_buffer_size)*max_threads = 68220 K bytes of memory It is possible that mysqld could use up to This error can also be caused by malfunctioning hardware.Īttempting to collect some information that could help diagnose the problem.Īs this is a crash and something is definitely wrong, the information Or one of the libraries it was linked against is corrupt, improperly built, InnoDB: corruption in the InnoDB tablespace.

InnoDB: immediately after the mysqld startup, there may be InnoDB: If you get repeated assertion failures or crashes, even InnoDB: We intentionally generate a memory trap. T17:56:45.739467Z 0 InnoDB: Table flags are 0 in the data dictionary but the flags in file. T17:56:45.723231Z 0 InnoDB: Completed initialization of buffer pool T17:56:45.708737Z 0 InnoDB: Initializing buffer pool, total size = 128M, instances = 1, chunk size = 128M

T17:56:45.706396Z 0 InnoDB: GCC builtin _atomic_thread_fence() is used for memory barrier T17:56:45.706364Z 0 InnoDB: Mutexes and rw_locks use GCC atomic builtins T17:56:45.704301Z 0 Setting lower_case_table_names=2 because file system for /usr/local/var/mysql/ is case insensitive Operations related to importing and exporting data are disabled

Please use -explicit_defaults_for_timestamp server option (see documentation for more details). T17:56:45.699316Z 0 TIMESTAMP with implicit DEFAULT value is deprecated. ERROR 2002 (HY000): Can’t connect to local MySQL server through socket ‘/tmp/mysql.sock’ (2)īut of course that results in the wrong version number.
