If you get a Too many connections
error
when you try to connect to the mysqld
server, this means that all available connections are in use
by other clients.
The number of connections permitted is controlled by the
max_connections
system
variable. The default value is 151 to improve performance when
MySQL is used with the Apache Web server. (Previously, the
default was 100.) If you need to support more connections, you
should set a larger value for this variable.
mysqld actually permits
max_connections+1
clients to connect. The extra connection is reserved for use
by accounts that have the SUPER
privilege. By granting the
SUPER
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 12.4.5.30, “SHOW PROCESSLIST
Syntax”.
The maximum number of connections MySQL can support depends on the quality of the thread library on a given platform, the amount of RAM available, how much RAM is used for each connection, the workload from each connection, and the desired response time. Linux or Solaris should be able to support at 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. Windows is limited to (open tables × 2 + open connections) < 2048 due to the Posix compatibility layer used on that platform.
Increasing open-files-limit
may
be necessary. Also see Section 2.5, “Installing MySQL on Linux”,
for how to raise the operating system limit on how many
handles can be used by MySQL.