13

Getting numerous results in my error logs like the one listed below. All tables in the database are innodb and as far as any interaction with those tables everything is pdo with prepared statements.

As I said, all the errors are almost identical to the one listed below, but happen for a few different pages. Regardless of the page, the error line ALWAYS points to the point where I start a new statement... for instance $stmt = $db->prepare("........ The statements themselves work perfectly fine with no errors so I am a little bit baffled as to what is causing this.

Multiple errors like this for different pages :

[25-Sep-2014 10:19:09 America/Chicago] Failed to connect to database: SQLSTATE[HY000] [2002] Resource temporarily unavailable [25-Sep-2014 10:19:09 America/Chicago] PHP Fatal error: Call to a member function prepare() on a non-object in /home/test/public_html/add_log.php on line 28

Example stmt the error points to - in this case $stmt = $db->prepare(" line specifically. It always points to the line starting a new prepared statement.

$stmt = $db->prepare("
    SELECT 
        accounts.account_id,
        computers.computer_id,
        computers.status,
        users.user_id
    FROM accounts
    LEFT JOIN computers
        ON computers.account_id = accounts.account_id AND computers.computer_uid = :computer_uid
    LEFT JOIN users
        ON users.computer_id = computers.computer_id AND users.username = :username
    WHERE accounts.account_key = :account_key
");

//bindings
$binding = array(
    'account_key' => $_POST['account_key'],
    'computer_uid' => $_POST['computer_uid'],
    'username' => $_POST['username']
);
$stmt->execute($binding);   
//result (can only be one or none)
$result = $stmt->fetch(PDO::FETCH_ASSOC);

connect script :

<?php

if(!defined('INCLUDE_CHECK')) die('You are not allowed to execute this file directly');

// db config
$db_host        = 'localhost';
$db_database    = '*******';
$db_user        = '*******';
$db_pass        = '*******';

//db connection
try {
    $db = new PDO("mysql:host=$db_host;dbname=$db_database;charset=utf8", $db_user, $db_pass, array(PDO::ATTR_EMULATE_PREPARES => false, PDO::ATTR_ERRMODE => PDO::ERRMODE_EXCEPTION, PDO::ATTR_PERSISTENT => true));
}
catch(PDOException $e) {
    error_log("Failed to connect to database: ".$e->getMessage());
}

?>

Things that have crossed my mind:

  • This particular script runs a lot... at times it can be called multiple times in one second.

  • On this site I use the same format for all my prepared statements... $stmt = ... $result or $results = ... I am not closing the cursor, however, from my research it is not needed as the driver is MySQL and it is done so automatically.

  • I have set PDO::ATTR_PERSISTENT to true in my connection settings - would this have any bearing on this error?

What is going on here with all these errors? Anyone?

EDIT - more info :

  • I have changed localhost to 127.0.0.1 explicitly
  • I have turned persistent connections off/false

Since doing the above the error has changed to SQLSTATE[HY000] [2002] Connection timed out. Is this actually an issue with the person/comp connecting to 'me' or actually an issue with my server/db?

EDIT 2 :

Is it possible that my use of $_SERVER['DOCUMENT_ROOT'] could be causing an issue? Since this file is 'hit' so often it is also requiring the connect script just as often by the line below. I require my connection script as follows on each page it is needed :

require $_SERVER['DOCUMENT_ROOT'].'/custom/functions/connect.php';

6
  • I am assuming you have a line like this: $db = new PDO("mysql:host=localhost;dbname=mydatabase", "username", "password"); Check that the host name, database name, username and password are correct!
    – kums
    Sep 27, 2014 at 5:30
  • That is not the problem - everything works fine, but these errors are showing in the logs and I have no idea why. The 'error' above runs absolutely fine... it is just every now and then the error I listed is triggered... I want to find out why they are.
    – user756659
    Sep 27, 2014 at 5:58
  • Do you have all your POSTed values not empty?
    – revo
    Oct 2, 2014 at 20:22
  • Yes, the script itself works perfectly fine... I can never 'catch' when it happens nor see anything go wrong other than these errors. The script does run a lot at times (multiple times in a second even) so wondering if this is a performance issue of some sort?
    – user756659
    Oct 2, 2014 at 20:51
  • you might need to check your sql server. If you have full authority for that DB, you can try to check the session if its locked when you executing your code. Also check your available memory and db traffic.
    – zxcvc
    Oct 7, 2014 at 5:50

5 Answers 5

9
+150

I'm going to point out @MrGomez topic on this subject, which is mostly a concise but yet descriptive on the error you stated. This is not PDO related problem but MySQL specific.

Reasons of getting "Resource temporarily unavailable"

  1. Running out of MySQL available memory
  2. Running out of MySQL file descriptors under current user
  3. Running into a livelock or a deadlock
  4. Running out of resources on an upstream proxy
  5. Running out of PIDs avaiable to fork

However, your logs should have more things to let you know what's happening. Like determining if a there is any lock on any file.

4

It's not actually pointing to that line.

The error in your log

[25-Sep-2014 10:19:09 America/Chicago] Failed to connect to database: SQLSTATE[HY000] [2002] Resource temporarily unavailable

looks like it is getting written by the catch statement here:

try {
    $db = new PDO("mysql:host=$db_host;dbname=$db_database;charset=utf8", $db_user, $db_pass, array(PDO::ATTR_EMULATE_PREPARES => false, PDO::ATTR_ERRMODE => PDO::ERRMODE_EXCEPTION, PDO::ATTR_PERSISTENT => true));
}
catch(PDOException $e) {
    error_log("Failed to connect to database: ".$e->getMessage()); // ERROR HERE
}

Note: $db is not set in the catch statement.

Your script then goes on executing, until it hits the $db->prepare line. As $db is null, it outputs another error, this time with the line of the file.

Beyond that - see revo's answer for why you might be getting the "Resource temporarily unavailable" error.

3

Increase your max_connections in my.cnf:

max_connections                 = 1000

Check file descriptors available for mysql:

ulimit -n

If it's value default like 1024, change to 65535 or more

ulimit -n 65535

restart mysqld

0

Just a thought - are you able to store the DB connection in memory so you don't have to keep re-creating new ones? Also in terms of your include DIR magic constant is great (I've only fully realised it today). Hope that helps.

0

Usually means that you need to specify TCP/IP:

"mysql:host=127.0.0.1" or 
"mysql:host=localhost;port=3306"

In your case:

$db_host        = 'localhost';
$db_port        = '3306';

maybe something like this:

try {
    $db = new PDO("mysql:host=$db_host;port=$db_port;dbname=$db_database;charset=utf8", $db_user, $db_pass, array(PDO::ATTR_EMULATE_PREPARES => false, PDO::ATTR_ERRMODE => PDO::ERRMODE_EXCEPTION, PDO::ATTR_PERSISTENT => true));
}
catch(PDOException $e) {
    error_log("Failed to connect to database: ".$e->getMessage()); // ERROR HERE
}

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.