I came across PHP way of doing the trick:
my_bool reconnect = 1;
mysql_options(&mysql, MYSQL_OPT_RECONNECT, &reconnect);
but no luck with MySQLdb (python-mysql).
Can anybody please give a clue? Thanks.
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I solved this problem by creating a function that wraps the
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Hmm, transactions are only an issue if you use InnoDB and transactions! The python-mysqldb people have made a political, not technical decision to remove this option. Screws people over who actually use this feature. |
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I had a similar problem with MySQL and Python, and the solution that worked for me was to upgrade MySQL to 5.0.27 (on Fedora Core 6; your system may work fine with a different version). I tried a lot of other things, including patching the Python libraries, but upgrading the database was a lot easier and (I think) a better decision. |
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You other bet it to work around dropped connections yourself with code. One way to do it would be the following:
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If you are using ubuntu Linux there was a patch added to the python-mysql package that added the ability to set that same MYSQL_OPT_RECONNECT option (see here). I have not tried it though. Unfortunately, the patch was later removed due to a conflict with autoconnect and transations (described here). The comments from that page say: 1.2.2-7 Published in intrepid-release on 2008-06-19 python-mysqldb (1.2.2-7) unstable; urgency=low [ Sandro Tosi ] * debian/control - list items lines in description starts with 2 space, to avoid reformat on webpages (Closes: #480341) [ Bernd Zeimetz ] * debian/patches/02_reconnect.dpatch: - Dropping patch: Comment in Storm which explains the problem:
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