RESTART
This statement stops and restarts the MySQL server. It requires
the SHUTDOWN
privilege.
One use for RESTART
is when it is
not possible or convenient to gain command-line access to the
MySQL server on the server host to restart it. For example,
SET
PERSIST_ONLY
can be used at runtime to make
configuration changes to system variables that can be set only
at server startup, but the server must still be restarted for
those changes to take effect. The
RESTART
statement provides a way
to do so from within client sessions, without requiring
command-line access on the server host.
After executing a RESTART
statement, the client can expect the current connection to be
lost. If auto-reconnect is enabled, the connection is
reestablished after the server restarts. Otherwise, the
connection must be reestablished manually.
A successful RESTART
operation
requires mysqld to be running in an
environment that has a monitoring process available to detect a
server shutdown performed for restart purposes:
These platforms provide the necessary monitoring support for the
RESTART
statement:
Windows, when mysqld is started as a Windows service or standalone. (mysqld forks, and one process acts as a monitor to the other, which acts as the server.)
Unix and Unix-like systems that use systemd or mysqld_safe to manage mysqld.
To configure a monitoring environment such that
mysqld enables the
RESTART
statement:
Set the
MYSQLD_PARENT_PID
environment variable to the value of the process ID of the process that starts mysqld, before starting mysqld.When mysqld performs a shutdown due to use of the
RESTART
statement, it returns exit code 16.When the monitoring process detects an exit code of 16, it starts mysqld again. Otherwise, it exits.
Here is a minimal example as implemented in the bash shell:
#!/bin/bash
export MYSQLD_PARENT_PID=$$
export MYSQLD_RESTART_EXIT=16
while true ; do
bin/mysqld mysqld options here
if [ $? -ne $MYSQLD_RESTART_EXIT ]; then
break
fi
done
On Windows, the forking used to implement
RESTART
makes determining the
server process to attach to for debugging more difficult. To
alleviate this, starting the server with
--gdb
suppresses forking, in
addition to its other actions done to set up a debugging
environment. In non-debug settings,
--no-monitor
may be used for the
sole purpose of suppressing forking the monitor process. For a
server started with either --gdb
or --no-monitor
, executing
RESTART
causes the server to
simply exit without restarting.
The
Com_restart
status variable tracks the number of
RESTART
statements. Because
status variables are initialized for each server startup and do
not persist across restarts, Com_restart
normally has a value of zero, but can be nonzero if
RESTART
statements were executed
but failed.