If you install MySQL using an RPM or Debian package on the following Linux platforms, server startup and shutdown is managed by systemd:
RPM package platforms:
Enterprise Linux variants version 7 and higher
SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 12 and higher
Fedora 29 and higher
Debian family platforms:
Debian platforms
Ubuntu platforms
If you install MySQL from a generic binary distribution on a platform that uses systemd, you can manually configure systemd support for MySQL following the instructions provided in the post-installation setup section of the MySQL 8.4 Secure Deployment Guide.
If you install MySQL from a source distribution on a platform that
uses systemd, obtain systemd support for MySQL by configuring the
distribution using the
-DWITH_SYSTEMD=1
CMake option. See
Section 2.8.7, “MySQL Source-Configuration Options”.
The following discussion covers these topics:
On platforms for which systemd support for MySQL is installed, scripts such as mysqld_safe and the System V initialization script are unnecessary and are not installed. For example, mysqld_safe can handle server restarts, but systemd provides the same capability, and does so in a manner consistent with management of other services rather than by using an application-specific program.
One implication of the non-use of mysqld_safe
on platforms that use systemd for server management is that use
of [mysqld_safe]
or
[safe_mysqld]
sections in option files is not
supported and might lead to unexpected behavior.
Because systemd has the capability of managing multiple MySQL instances on platforms for which systemd support for MySQL is installed, mysqld_multi and mysqld_multi.server are unnecessary and are not installed.
systemd provides automatic MySQL server startup and shutdown. It also enables manual server management using the systemctl command. For example:
$> systemctl {start|stop|restart|status} mysqld
Alternatively, use the service command (with the arguments reversed), which is compatible with System V systems:
$> service mysqld {start|stop|restart|status}
For the systemctl command (and the
alternative service command), if the MySQL
service name is not mysqld
then use the
appropriate name. For example, use mysql
rather than mysqld
on Debian-based and SLES
systems.
Support for systemd includes these files:
mysqld.service
(RPM platforms),mysql.service
(Debian platforms): systemd service unit configuration file, with details about the MySQL service.mysqld@.service
(RPM platforms),mysql@.service
(Debian platforms): Likemysqld.service
ormysql.service
, but used for managing multiple MySQL instances.mysqld.tmpfiles.d
: File containing information to support thetmpfiles
feature. This file is installed under the namemysql.conf
.mysqld_pre_systemd
(RPM platforms),mysql-system-start
(Debian platforms): Support script for the unit file. This script assists in creating the error log file only if the log location matches a pattern (/var/log/mysql*.log
for RPM platforms,/var/log/mysql/*.log
for Debian platforms). In other cases, the error log directory must be writable or the error log must be present and writable for the user running the mysqld process.
To add or change systemd options for MySQL, these methods are available:
Use a localized systemd configuration file.
Arrange for systemd to set environment variables for the MySQL server process.
Set the
MYSQLD_OPTS
systemd variable.
To use a localized systemd configuration file, create the
/etc/systemd/system/mysqld.service.d
directory if it does not exist. In that directory, create a file
that contains a [Service]
section listing the
desired settings. For example:
[Service]
LimitNOFILE=max_open_files
Nice=nice_level
LimitCore=core_file_limit
Environment="LD_PRELOAD=/path/to/malloc/library"
Environment="TZ=time_zone_setting"
The discussion here uses override.conf
as
the name of this file. Newer versions of systemd support the
following command, which opens an editor and permits you to edit
the file:
systemctl edit mysqld # RPM platforms
systemctl edit mysql # Debian platforms
Whenever you create or change
override.conf
, reload the systemd
configuration, then tell systemd to restart the MySQL service:
systemctl daemon-reload
systemctl restart mysqld # RPM platforms
systemctl restart mysql # Debian platforms
With systemd, the override.conf
configuration method must be used for certain parameters, rather
than settings in a [mysqld]
,
[mysqld_safe]
, or
[safe_mysqld]
group in a MySQL option file:
For some parameters,
override.conf
must be used because systemd itself must know their values and it cannot read MySQL option files to get them.Parameters that specify values otherwise settable only using options known to mysqld_safe must be specified using systemd because there is no corresponding mysqld parameter.
For additional information about using systemd rather than mysqld_safe, see Migrating from mysqld_safe to systemd.
You can set the following parameters in
override.conf
:
To set the number of file descriptors available to the MySQL server, use
LimitNOFILE
inoverride.conf
rather than theopen_files_limit
system variable for mysqld or--open-files-limit
option for mysqld_safe.To set the maximum core file size, use
LimitCore
inoverride.conf
rather than the--core-file-size
option for mysqld_safe.To set the scheduling priority for the MySQL server, use
Nice
inoverride.conf
rather than the--nice
option for mysqld_safe.
Some MySQL parameters are configured using environment variables:
LD_PRELOAD
: Set this variable if the MySQL server should use a specific memory-allocation library.NOTIFY_SOCKET
: This environment variable specifies the socket that mysqld uses to communicate notification of startup completion and service status change with systemd. It is set by systemd when the mysqld service is started. The mysqld service reads the variable setting and writes to the defined location.In MySQL 9.0, mysqld uses the
Type=notify
process startup type. (Type=forking
was used in MySQL 5.7.) WithType=notify
, systemd automatically configures a socket file and exports the path to theNOTIFY_SOCKET
environment variable.TZ
: Set this variable to specify the default time zone for the server.
There are multiple ways to specify environment variable values for use by the MySQL server process managed by systemd:
Use
Environment
lines in theoverride.conf
file. For the syntax, see the example in the preceding discussion that describes how to use this file.Specify the values in the
/etc/sysconfig/mysql
file (create the file if it does not exist). Assign values using the following syntax:LD_PRELOAD=/path/to/malloc/library TZ=time_zone_setting
After modifying
/etc/sysconfig/mysql
, restart the server to make the changes effective:systemctl restart mysqld # RPM platforms systemctl restart mysql # Debian platforms
To specify options for mysqld without
modifying systemd configuration files directly, set or unset the
MYSQLD_OPTS
systemd variable. For example:
systemctl set-environment MYSQLD_OPTS="--general_log=1"
systemctl unset-environment MYSQLD_OPTS
MYSQLD_OPTS
can also be set in the
/etc/sysconfig/mysql
file.
After modifying the systemd environment, restart the server to make the changes effective:
systemctl restart mysqld # RPM platforms
systemctl restart mysql # Debian platforms
For platforms that use systemd, the data directory is
initialized if empty at server startup. This might be a problem
if the data directory is a remote mount that has temporarily
disappeared: The mount point would appear to be an empty data
directory, which then would be initialized as a new data
directory. To suppress this automatic initialization behavior,
specify the following line in the
/etc/sysconfig/mysql
file (create the file
if it does not exist):
NO_INIT=true
This section describes how to configure systemd for multiple instances of MySQL.
Because systemd has the capability of managing multiple MySQL instances on platforms for which systemd support is installed, mysqld_multi and mysqld_multi.server are unnecessary and are not installed.
To use multiple-instance capability, modify the
my.cnf
option file to include configuration
of key options for each instance. These file locations are
typical:
/etc/my.cnf
or/etc/mysql/my.cnf
(RPM platforms)/etc/mysql/mysql.conf.d/mysqld.cnf
(Debian platforms)
For example, to manage two instances named
replica01
and replica02
,
add something like this to the option file:
RPM platforms:
[mysqld@replica01]
datadir=/var/lib/mysql-replica01
socket=/var/lib/mysql-replica01/mysql.sock
port=3307
log-error=/var/log/mysqld-replica01.log
[mysqld@replica02]
datadir=/var/lib/mysql-replica02
socket=/var/lib/mysql-replica02/mysql.sock
port=3308
log-error=/var/log/mysqld-replica02.log
Debian platforms:
[mysqld@replica01]
datadir=/var/lib/mysql-replica01
socket=/var/lib/mysql-replica01/mysql.sock
port=3307
log-error=/var/log/mysql/replica01.log
[mysqld@replica02]
datadir=/var/lib/mysql-replica02
socket=/var/lib/mysql-replica02/mysql.sock
port=3308
log-error=/var/log/mysql/replica02.log
The replica names shown here use @
as the
delimiter because that is the only delimiter supported by
systemd.
Instances then are managed by normal systemd commands, such as:
systemctl start mysqld@replica01
systemctl start mysqld@replica02
To enable instances to run at boot time, do this:
systemctl enable mysqld@replica01
systemctl enable mysqld@replica02
Use of wildcards is also supported. For example, this command displays the status of all replica instances:
systemctl status 'mysqld@replica*'
For management of multiple MySQL instances on the same machine, systemd automatically uses a different unit file:
mysqld@.service
rather thanmysqld.service
(RPM platforms)mysql@.service
rather thanmysql.service
(Debian platforms)
In the unit file, %I
and
%i
reference the parameter passed in after
the @
marker and are used to manage the
specific instance. For a command such as this:
systemctl start mysqld@replica01
systemd starts the server using a command such as this:
mysqld --defaults-group-suffix=@%I ...
The result is that the [server]
,
[mysqld]
, and
[mysqld@replica01]
option groups are read and
used for that instance of the service.
On Debian platforms, AppArmor prevents the server from reading
or writing /var/lib/mysql-replica*
, or
anything other than the default locations. To address this,
you must customize or disable the profile in
/etc/apparmor.d/usr.sbin.mysqld
.
On Debian platforms, the packaging scripts for MySQL
uninstallation cannot currently handle
mysqld@
instances. Before removing or
upgrading the package, you must stop any extra instances
manually first.
Because mysqld_safe is not installed on
platforms that use systemd to manage MySQL, options previously
specified for that program (for example, in an
[mysqld_safe]
or
[safe_mysqld]
option group) must be specified
another way:
Some mysqld_safe options are also understood by mysqld and can be moved from the
[mysqld_safe]
or[safe_mysqld]
option group to the[mysqld]
group. This does not include--pid-file
,--open-files-limit
, or--nice
. To specify those options, use theoverride.conf
systemd file, described previously.NoteOn systemd platforms, use of
[mysqld_safe]
and[safe_mysqld]
option groups is not supported and may lead to unexpected behavior.For some mysqld_safe options, there are alternative mysqld procedures. For example, the mysqld_safe option for enabling
syslog
logging is--syslog
, which is deprecated. To write error log output to the system log, use the instructions at Section 7.4.2.8, “Error Logging to the System Log”.mysqld_safe options not understood by mysqld can be specified in
override.conf
or environment variables. For example, with mysqld_safe, if the server should use a specific memory allocation library, this is specified using the--malloc-lib
option. For installations that manage the server with systemd, arrange to set theLD_PRELOAD
environment variable instead, as described previously.