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8.12.4.1 How MySQL Handles Client Connections
This section describes aspects of how the MySQL server manages client connections.
Network Interfaces and Connection Manager Threads
The server is capable of listening for client connections on multiple network interfaces. Connection manager threads handle client connection requests on the network interfaces that the server listens to:
On all platforms, one manager thread handles TCP/IP connection requests.
On Unix, the same manager thread also handles Unix socket file connection requests.
On Windows, a manager thread handles shared-memory connection requests, and another handles named-pipe connection requests.
On all platforms, an additional network interface may be enabled to accept administrative TCP/IP connection requests. This interface can use the manager thread that handles “ordinary” TCP/IP requests, or a separate thread.
The server does not create threads to handle interfaces that it does not listen to. For example, a Windows server that does not have support for named-pipe connections enabled does not create a thread to handle them.
Connection manager threads associate each client connection with a thread dedicated to it that handles authentication and request processing for that connection. Manager threads create a new thread when necessary but try to avoid doing so by consulting the thread cache first to see whether it contains a thread that can be used for the connection. When a connection ends, its thread is returned to the thread cache if the cache is not full.
In this connection thread model, there are as many threads as there are clients currently connected, which has some disadvantages when server workload must scale to handle large numbers of connections. For example, thread creation and disposal becomes expensive. Also, each thread requires server and kernel resources, such as stack space. To accommodate a large number of simultaneous connections, the stack size per thread must be kept small, leading to a situation where it is either too small or the server consumes large amounts of memory. Exhaustion of other resources can occur as well, and scheduling overhead can become significant.
MySQL Enterprise Edition includes a thread pool plugin that provides an alternative thread-handling model designed to reduce overhead and improve performance. It implements a thread pool that increases server performance by efficiently managing statement execution threads for large numbers of client connections. See Section 5.6.3, “MySQL Enterprise Thread Pool”.
To control and monitor how the server manages threads that handle client connections, several system and status variables are relevant. (See Section 5.1.8, “Server System Variables”, and Section 5.1.10, “Server Status Variables”.)
The thread_cache_size
system variable determines the thread cache size. By
default, the server autosizes the value at startup, but it
can be set explicitly to override this default. A value of 0
disables caching, which causes a thread to be set up for
each new connection and disposed of when the connection
terminates. To enable N
inactive
connection threads to be cached, set
thread_cache_size
to
N
at server startup or at
runtime. A connection thread becomes inactive when the
client connection with which it was associated terminates.
To monitor the number of threads in the cache and how many
threads have been created because a thread could not be
taken from the cache, check the
Threads_cached
and
Threads_created
status
variables.
When the thread stack is too small, this limits the
complexity of the SQL statements which the server can
handle, the recursion depth of stored procedures, and other
memory-consuming actions. To set a stack size of
N
bytes for each thread, start
the server with
thread_stack
. set to
N
at server startup.
To control the maximum number of clients the server permits
to connect simultaneously, set the
max_connections
system
variable at server startup or at runtime. It may be
necessary to increase
max_connections
if more
clients attempt to connect simultaneously then the server is
configured to handle (see
Section B.6.2.6, “Too many connections”).
mysqld actually permits
max_connections
+ 1 client connections. The extra connection is reserved for
use by accounts that have the
CONNECTION_ADMIN
or
SUPER
privilege. By granting
the privilege to administrators and not to normal users (who
should not need it), an administrator can connect to the
server and use SHOW
PROCESSLIST
to diagnose problems even if the
maximum number of unprivileged clients are connected. See
Section 13.7.6.29, “SHOW PROCESSLIST Syntax”. (The server also permits
administrative connections on a dedicated interface. See
Administrative Connection Management.)
If the server refuses a connection because the
max_connections
limit is
reached, it increments the
Connection_errors_max_connections
status variable.
The maximum number of connections MySQL supports (that is,
the maximum value to which
max_connections
can be set)
depends on several factors:
The quality of the thread library on a given platform.
The amount of RAM available.
The amount of RAM is used for each connection.
The workload from each connection.
The desired response time.
The number of file descriptors available.
Linux or Solaris should be able to support at least 500 to 1000 simultaneous connections routinely and as many as 10,000 connections if you have many gigabytes of RAM available and the workload from each is low or the response time target undemanding.
Increasing the
max_connections
value
increases the number of file descriptors that
mysqld requires. If the required number
of descriptors are not available, the server reduces the
value of max_connections
.
For comments on file descriptor limits, see
Section 8.4.3.1, “How MySQL Opens and Closes Tables”.
Increasing --open-files-limit
may be necessary, which may also require raising the
operating system limit on how many file descriptors can be
used by MySQL. Consult your operating system documentation
to determine whether it is possible to increase the limit
and how to do so. See also
Section B.6.2.17, “File Not Found and Similar Errors”.
As of MySQL 8.0.14, the server permits a TCP/IP port to be
configured specifically for administrative connections. This
provides an alternative to the single administrative
connection that is permitted on the network interfaces used
for ordinary connections even when
max_connections
connections
are already established (see
Connection Volume Management).
The administrative network interface has these characteristics:
The interface is available only if the
admin_address
system variable is set at startup to indicate the IP address for the administrative interface. If noadmin_address
value value is specified, the server maintains no administrative interface.The
admin_port
system variable specifies the interface TCP/IP port number (default 33062).There is no limit on the number of administrative connections.
Connections are permitted only by users who have the
SERVICE_CONNECTION_ADMIN
privilege.
The
create_admin_listener_thread
system variable enables DBAs to choose at startup whether
the administrative interface is implemented using the
listener thread used for ordinary connections, or has its
own separate thread. The default is to implement the
administrative interface using the listener thread used for
ordinary connections.
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