MySQL 9.3 Reference Manual Including MySQL NDB Cluster 9.3
A schema mismatch in a MySQL 9.2 instance
between the .frm
file of a table and the
InnoDB
data dictionary can cause an upgrade
to MySQL 9.3 to fail. Such mismatches may be due
to .frm
file corruption. To address this
issue, dump and restore affected tables before attempting the
upgrade again.
If problems occur, such as that the new
mysqld server does not start, verify that
you do not have an old my.cnf
file from
your previous installation. You can check this with the
--print-defaults
option (for
example, mysqld --print-defaults). If this
command displays anything other than the program name, you
have an active my.cnf
file that affects
server or client operation.
If, after an upgrade, you experience problems with compiled
client programs, such as Commands out of
sync
or unexpected core dumps, you probably have
used old header or library files when compiling your programs.
In this case, check the date for your
mysql.h
file and
libmysqlclient.a
library to verify that
they are from the new MySQL distribution. If not, recompile
your programs with the new headers and libraries.
Recompilation might also be necessary for programs compiled
against the shared client library if the library major version
number has changed (for example, from
libmysqlclient.so.20
to
libmysqlclient.so.21
).
If you have created a loadable function with a given name and
upgrade MySQL to a version that implements a new built-in
function with the same name, the loadable function becomes
inaccessible. To correct this, use DROP
FUNCTION
to drop the loadable function, and then use
CREATE FUNCTION
to re-create
the loadable function with a different nonconflicting name.
The same is true if the new version of MySQL implements a
built-in function with the same name as an existing stored
function. See Section 11.2.5, “Function Name Parsing and Resolution”, for the
rules describing how the server interprets references to
different kinds of functions.
If upgrade to MySQL 9.3 fails due to any of the
issues outlined in Section 3.6, “Preparing Your Installation for Upgrade”,
the server reverts all changes to the data directory. In this
case, remove all redo log files and restart the MySQL
9.2 server on the existing data directory to
address the errors. The redo log files
(ib_logfile*
) reside in the MySQL data
directory by default. After the errors are fixed, perform a
slow shutdown (by setting
innodb_fast_shutdown=0
)
before attempting the upgrade again.