4

I have a MySQL 5.7 server on Ubuntu 18. When the server starts it writes the following warnings in the error.log:

[Warning] Changed limits: max_open_files: 5000 (requested 7500)
[Warning] Changed limits: table_open_cache: 1745 (requested 2000)

Can somebody explain what is causing these warnings (and what I can do to make them go away)?

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  • "what I can do to make them go away" well increase those values? Feb 5, 2019 at 14:39
  • Could you be a little more specific on how and where to do that?
    – Gert-Jan
    Feb 5, 2019 at 14:50
  • will it be reason for mysql crash ?
    – prat
    Dec 22, 2020 at 6:26

1 Answer 1

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Answering my own question. The limit for max open files is defined in the systemd script /lib/systemd/system/mysql.service:

# MySQL systemd service file

[Unit]
Description=MySQL Community Server
After=network.target
....

LimitNOFILE=5000

Increasing the value of LimitNOFILE to 7500 solved both warnings.

1
  • I'm pleased to see that this is not the case with my service file (defaults should be coming from the mysql config files, not from Systemd!), but that leaves the same question. PROBABLY, just upping my limits in the mysql config is the answer, but then what is asking for the higher numbers?
    – Auspex
    Oct 26, 2023 at 15:35

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