Hi!
"Time" == Time Less <timelessness@gmail.com> writes:
I think it is very likely that you are hitting this bug:
Time> Ah, yes, could be. Though my strace was different than this bug shows.
The problem is that MySQL/MariaDB is using select() to accept new connections. But select() has a hard-coded limit of 1024 on the max number of open files it can support. It seems PBXT uses an open file descriptor per table,
Time> Not two per table? It has it looks like many log files, then also a data and Time> index file per table. On my system where I'm trying to use 1,000 tables, I Time> expect about 2,000+[mumble] file handles.
Maybe MariaDB should backport the fix, it is actually a buffer overflow (though it is hard to see how it could be exploitable), but perhaps more relevant it is a rather nasty state for the server to get into, and not really clear how to get it out of it again :-(.
Time> You can't get out of the state again. The server won't accept connections, Time> so you can't drop any tables. You just have to wipe the DB and start over. Time> If PBXT is resilient to its tables disappearing between server restarts, you Time> could rm files from the data directory. I didn't know that PBXT would open up all files at startup. If that's the case, we should switch to use poll in MariaDB 5.3 ASAP (and provide a patch for those that wants it for MariaDB 5.1). Paul, can you verify the above is the case for PBXT (ie, that PBXT uses one file descriptor per table and don't free these at all?) Regards, Monty