MySQL 9.3 Reference Manual Including MySQL NDB Cluster 9.3
On Unix and Unix-like systems, a process can be the recipient of
signals sent to it by the root
system account
or the system account that owns the process. Signals can be sent
using the kill command. Some command
interpreters associate certain key sequences with signals, such as
Control+C to send a SIGINT
signal. This section describes how the MySQL server and client
programs respond to signals.
mysqld responds to signals as follows:
SIGTERM
causes the server to shut down.
This is like executing a
SHUTDOWN
statement without
having to connect to the server (which for shutdown requires
an account that has the
SHUTDOWN
privilege).
SIGHUP
causes the server to reload the
grant tables and to flush tables, logs, the thread cache,
and the host cache. These actions are like various forms of
the FLUSH
statement. Sending
the signal enables the flush operations to be performed
without having to connect to the server, which requires a
MySQL account that has privileges sufficient for those
operations.
This behavior is deprecated, and is subject to removal in a future version of MySQL.
SIGUSR1
causes the server to flush the
error log, general query log, and slow query log. One use
for SIGUSR1
is to implement log rotation
without having to connect to the server, which requires a
MySQL account that has privileges sufficient for those
operations. For information about log rotation, see
Section 7.4.6, “Server Log Maintenance”.
The server response to SIGUSR1
is a
subset of the response to SIGHUP
,
enabling SIGUSR1
to be used as a more
“lightweight” signal that flushes certain logs
without the other SIGHUP
effects such as
flushing the thread and host caches and writing a status
report to the error log.
SIGINT
normally is ignored by the server.
Starting the server with the
--gdb
option installs an
interrupt handler for SIGINT
for
debugging purposes. See
Section 7.9.1.4, “Debugging mysqld under gdb”.
MySQL client programs respond to signals as follows:
The mysql client interprets
SIGINT
(typically the result of typing
Control+C) as instruction to interrupt the
current statement if there is one, or to cancel any partial
input line otherwise. This behavior can be disabled using
the --sigint-ignore
option to
ignore SIGINT
signals.
Client programs that use the MySQL client library block
SIGPIPE
signals by default. These
variations are possible:
Client can install their own SIGPIPE
handler to override the default behavior. See
Writing C API Threaded Client Programs.
Clients can prevent installation of
SIGPIPE
handlers by specifying the
CLIENT_IGNORE_SIGPIPE
option to
mysql_real_connect()
at
connect time. See mysql_real_connect().