In this release we’ve added another option to the hypernode-api. You can now configure your Hypernode to use a large MySQL thread_stack. While on Hypernode you have full admin privileges on your entire MySQL database, it is not possible to change root-owned MySQL related config files. This means that you can configure any runtime setting, but settings that go in the mysqld.conf
and need to be defined at start-up time or settings that you don’t want to re-apply every time MySQL is restarted sometimes can’t be set by the unprivileged app
user.
To facilitate some type of flexibility regarding these settings anyway we have a set of MySQL related opt-in settings that can be set using the hypernode-api or using the hypernode-systemctl
command-line tool (which implements this API).
We’ve noticed that for some larger Shopware installations the default thread_stack
size can become an issue. If you have the memory to spare changing the MySQL thread_stack
from the default 192K
to 512K
might be a good solution (or at least quick fix to identify your problem).
In Shopware the search index & keywords tables have been seen to require a larger thread_stack
in some configurations. We’ve seen issues where queries on these aggregate tables started to cause issues in shops with north of 40K SKU’s during a search reindexation.
If you encounter these types of errors:
SQLSTATE[HY000]: General error: 1436 Thread stack overrun: 180608 bytes used of a 196608 byte stack, and 16000 bytes needed. Use 'mysqld --thread_stack=#' to specify a bigger stack.
It might be a good idea to enable this feature and see if this setting addresses your issue.
On a Hypernode you can enable the larger thread_stack
by running this command as the app
user:
$ hypernode-systemctl settings mysql_enable_large_thread_stack --value True
You can then check the progress of your change by running:
hypernode-log # or 'livelog' for an auto-updating variant of that command
Once the setting has been activated you will see the configuration file change on disk:
# Before
$ cat /etc/mysql/conf.d/mysql-master.cnf | grep thread
thread_cache_size = 256
innodb_read_io_threads = 8
innodb_write_io_threads = 8
# After
$ cat /etc/mysql/conf.d/mysql-master.cnf | grep thread
thread_cache_size = 256
thread_stack = 512K
innodb_read_io_threads = 8
innodb_write_io_threads = 8
You might need to restart MySQL to load the new configuration:
$ hypernode-servicectl restart mysql
To check the size of your active thread_stack
you can run this MySQL query:
# Before
$ mysql -e "SHOW GLOBAL VARIABLES LIKE 'thread_stack';"
+---------------+--------+
| Variable_name | Value |
+---------------+--------+
| thread_stack | 196608 |
+---------------+--------+
# After
$ mysql -e "SHOW GLOBAL VARIABLES LIKE 'thread_stack';"
+---------------+--------+
| Variable_name | Value |
+---------------+--------+
| thread_stack | 524288 |
+---------------+--------+
Note that if you want to change this setting in a hypernode-docker instead of on your production Hypernode you will not be able to use the hypernode-systemctl
command-line tool, as that tool talks to the hypernode-api
which for obvious reasons is not connected to your local Docker environment. If you would like to change this setting in your local Docker as well, you can simply edit /etc/mysql/conf.d/mysql-master.cnf
as the root
user and add the thread_stack
line and restart the services.