:: DEVELOPER ZONE
A communication packet is a single SQL statement sent to the MySQL server or a single row that is sent to the client.
In MySQL 3.23, the largest possible packet is 16MB, due to limits in the client/server protocol. In MySQL 4.0.1 and up, the limit is 1GB.
When a MySQL client or the mysqld server receives
a packet bigger than max_allowed_packet bytes, it
issues a Packet too large error and closes the
connection. With some clients, you may also get a Lost
connection to MySQL server during query error if the
communication packet is too large.
Both the client and the server have their own
max_allowed_packet variable, so if you want to
handle big packets, you must increase this variable both in the
client and in the server.
If you are using the mysql client program, its
default max_allowed_packet variable is 16MB. That
is also the maximum value before MySQL 4.0. To set a larger value
from 4.0 on, start mysql like this:
mysql> mysql --max_allowed_packet=32M
That sets the packet size to 32MB.
The server's default max_allowed_packet value is
1MB. You can increase this if the server needs to handle big queries
(for example, if you are working with big BLOB
columns). For example, to set the variable to 16MB, start the server
like this:
mysql> mysqld --max_allowed_packet=16M
Before MySQL 4.0, use this syntax instead:
mysql> mysqld --set-variable=max_allowed_packet=16M
You can also use an option file to set
max_allowed_packet. For example, to set the size
for the server to 16MB, add the following lines in an option file:
[mysqld] max_allowed_packet=16M
Before MySQL 4.0, use this syntax instead:
[mysqld] set-variable = max_allowed_packet=16M
It's safe to increase the value of this variable because the extra memory is allocated only when needed. For example, mysqld allocates more memory only when you issue a long query or when mysqld must return a large result row. The small default value of the variable is a precaution to catch incorrect packets between the client and server and also to ensure that you don't run out of memory by using large packets accidentally.
You can also get strange problems with large packets if you are
using large BLOB values but have not given
mysqld access to enough memory to handle the
query. If you suspect this is the case, try adding ulimit
-d 256000 to the beginning of the
mysqld_safe script and restarting
mysqld.
© 1995-2005 MySQL AB. All rights reserved.

User Comments
Warning: query failed: Unknown column 'user.firstname' in 'field list' in /data0/sites/live/web-main/lib/mysql-cxn.php on line 69
Warning: mysql_fetch_array(): supplied argument is not a valid MySQL result resource in /data0/sites/live/web-main/lib/docbook.php on line 245
Add your own comment.