MySQL 9.3 Reference Manual Including MySQL NDB Cluster 9.3
The troubleshooting steps for InnoDB
I/O
problems depend on when the problem occurs: during startup of the
MySQL server, or during normal operations when a DML or DDL
statement fails due to problems at the file system level.
If something goes wrong when InnoDB
attempts to
initialize its tablespace or its log files, delete all files
created by InnoDB
: all
ibdata
files and all redo log files
(#ib_redo
files).
If you created any N
InnoDB
tables, also delete
any .ibd
files from the MySQL database
directories. Then try initializing InnoDB
again. For easiest troubleshooting, start the MySQL server from a
command prompt so that you see what is happening.
If InnoDB
prints an operating system error
during a file operation, usually the problem has one of the
following solutions:
Make sure the InnoDB
data file directory
and the InnoDB
log directory exist.
Make sure mysqld has access rights to create files in those directories.
Make sure mysqld can read the proper
my.cnf
or my.ini
option file, so that it starts with the options that you
specified.
Make sure the disk is not full and you are not exceeding any disk quota.
Make sure that the names you specify for subdirectories and data files do not clash.
Doublecheck the syntax of the
innodb_data_home_dir
and
innodb_data_file_path
values.
In particular, any MAX
value in the
innodb_data_file_path
option
is a hard limit, and exceeding that limit causes a fatal
error.