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  3. Able to clean up binlog.###### files in /var/lib/mysql directory?

Able to clean up binlog.###### files in /var/lib/mysql directory?

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  • d19dotcaD d19dotca

    I ran the following commands to temporarily reclaim the disk space (which was 14 GB today, so about 2 GB higher in just 24 hours).

    1. mysql -uroot -ppassword
    2. PURGE BINARY LOGS BEFORE '2021-02-21 23:00:00'; (replace the date with today's date of course when running it in the future for anyone stumbling across this post)

    Running the above gave me over 13 GB back, with the /var/lib/mysql directory taking up just over 600 MB now instead fo the 14 GB.

    Of course, I expect this will be an issue going forward still and will need to find a more permanent solution.

    Screenshots for reference on disk space usage before & after:
    Screen Shot 2021-02-21 at 8.38.31 PM.png
    Screen Shot 2021-02-21 at 8.38.46 PM.png

    girishG Do not disturb
    girishG Do not disturb
    girish
    Staff
    wrote on last edited by
    #9

    @d19dotca do you still see it growing after you cleaned up? We haven't had any other reports like this.

    d19dotcaD 1 Reply Last reply
    0
    • girishG girish

      @d19dotca do you still see it growing after you cleaned up? We haven't had any other reports like this.

      d19dotcaD Offline
      d19dotcaD Offline
      d19dotca
      wrote on last edited by
      #10

      @girish Yes, the issue is still present. Here's the current output:

      -rw-r-----  1 mysql mysql 101M Feb 21 23:23  binlog.000145
      -rw-r-----  1 mysql mysql  38M Feb 22 00:00  binlog.000146
      -rw-r-----  1 mysql mysql 101M Feb 22 01:36  binlog.000147
      -rw-r-----  1 mysql mysql 101M Feb 22 03:13  binlog.000148
      -rw-r-----  1 mysql mysql 101M Feb 22 04:50  binlog.000149
      -rw-r-----  1 mysql mysql 101M Feb 22 06:32  binlog.000150
      -rw-r-----  1 mysql mysql 101M Feb 22 08:18  binlog.000151
      -rw-r-----  1 mysql mysql 101M Feb 22 10:05  binlog.000152
      -rw-r-----  1 mysql mysql 101M Feb 22 11:52  binlog.000153
      -rw-r-----  1 mysql mysql 101M Feb 22 13:38  binlog.000154
      -rw-r-----  1 mysql mysql 101M Feb 22 15:25  binlog.000155
      -rw-r-----  1 mysql mysql 101M Feb 22 17:12  binlog.000156
      -rw-r-----  1 mysql mysql 101M Feb 22 18:58  binlog.000157
      -rw-r-----  1 mysql mysql 101M Feb 22 20:42  binlog.000158
      -rw-r-----  1 mysql mysql 101M Feb 22 22:23  binlog.000159
      -rw-r-----  1 mysql mysql  98M Feb 23 00:00  binlog.000160
      -rw-r-----  1 mysql mysql 101M Feb 23 01:38  binlog.000161
      -rw-r-----  1 mysql mysql 101M Feb 23 03:14  binlog.000162
      -rw-r-----  1 mysql mysql 101M Feb 23 04:52  binlog.000163
      -rw-r-----  1 mysql mysql 101M Feb 23 06:32  binlog.000164
      -rw-r-----  1 mysql mysql 101M Feb 23 08:13  binlog.000165
      -rw-r-----  1 mysql mysql 101M Feb 23 09:53  binlog.000166
      -rw-r-----  1 mysql mysql 101M Feb 23 11:33  binlog.000167
      -rw-r-----  1 mysql mysql 101M Feb 23 13:13  binlog.000168
      -rw-r-----  1 mysql mysql 101M Feb 23 14:53  binlog.000169
      -rw-r-----  1 mysql mysql 101M Feb 23 16:33  binlog.000170
      -rw-r-----  1 mysql mysql 101M Feb 23 18:12  binlog.000171
      -rw-r-----  1 mysql mysql 101M Feb 23 19:51  binlog.000172
      -rw-r-----  1 mysql mysql 101M Feb 23 21:31  binlog.000173
      -rw-r-----  1 mysql mysql 8.0M Feb 23 21:38  binlog.000174
      

      Is it possible to grab a copy of your MySQL my.cnf file so I can compare? Maybe it's something weird about the default Ubuntu 20.04 image at OVH.

      --
      Dustin Dauncey
      www.d19.ca

      1 Reply Last reply
      0
      • d19dotcaD Offline
        d19dotcaD Offline
        d19dotca
        wrote on last edited by d19dotca
        #11

        Found this... I may test this out: https://dba.stackexchange.com/questions/226269/disable-binary-logs-in-mysql-8-0

        Curious, do you have skip-log-bin in your my.cnf file? Because I do not and suspect this is the root cause.

        Here's the contents of my my.cnf file:

        ubuntu@cloudron:~$ cat /etc/mysql/my.cnf
        !includedir /etc/mysql/conf.d/
        !includedir /etc/mysql/mysql.conf.d/
        
        # http://bugs.mysql.com/bug.php?id=68514
        [mysqld]
        performance_schema=OFF
        max_connections=50
        # on ec2, without this we get a sporadic connection drop when doing the initial migration
        max_allowed_packet=64M
        
        # https://mathiasbynens.be/notes/mysql-utf8mb4
        character-set-server = utf8mb4
        collation-server = utf8mb4_unicode_ci
        
        # set timezone to UTC
        default_time_zone='+00:00'
        
        [mysqldump]
        quick
        quote-names
        max_allowed_packet  = 16M
        default-character-set = utf8mb4
        
        [mysql]
        default-character-set = utf8mb4
        
        [client]
        default-character-set = utf8mb4
        

        All of that is the default setup, I haven't manually changed any of it.

        --
        Dustin Dauncey
        www.d19.ca

        girishG 2 Replies Last reply
        0
        • d19dotcaD d19dotca

          Found this... I may test this out: https://dba.stackexchange.com/questions/226269/disable-binary-logs-in-mysql-8-0

          Curious, do you have skip-log-bin in your my.cnf file? Because I do not and suspect this is the root cause.

          Here's the contents of my my.cnf file:

          ubuntu@cloudron:~$ cat /etc/mysql/my.cnf
          !includedir /etc/mysql/conf.d/
          !includedir /etc/mysql/mysql.conf.d/
          
          # http://bugs.mysql.com/bug.php?id=68514
          [mysqld]
          performance_schema=OFF
          max_connections=50
          # on ec2, without this we get a sporadic connection drop when doing the initial migration
          max_allowed_packet=64M
          
          # https://mathiasbynens.be/notes/mysql-utf8mb4
          character-set-server = utf8mb4
          collation-server = utf8mb4_unicode_ci
          
          # set timezone to UTC
          default_time_zone='+00:00'
          
          [mysqldump]
          quick
          quote-names
          max_allowed_packet  = 16M
          default-character-set = utf8mb4
          
          [mysql]
          default-character-set = utf8mb4
          
          [client]
          default-character-set = utf8mb4
          

          All of that is the default setup, I haven't manually changed any of it.

          girishG Do not disturb
          girishG Do not disturb
          girish
          Staff
          wrote on last edited by
          #12

          @d19dotca mysql conf should be the same on all the servers - https://git.cloudron.io/cloudron/box/-/blob/master/setup/start/mysql.cnf

          1 Reply Last reply
          0
          • d19dotcaD d19dotca

            Found this... I may test this out: https://dba.stackexchange.com/questions/226269/disable-binary-logs-in-mysql-8-0

            Curious, do you have skip-log-bin in your my.cnf file? Because I do not and suspect this is the root cause.

            Here's the contents of my my.cnf file:

            ubuntu@cloudron:~$ cat /etc/mysql/my.cnf
            !includedir /etc/mysql/conf.d/
            !includedir /etc/mysql/mysql.conf.d/
            
            # http://bugs.mysql.com/bug.php?id=68514
            [mysqld]
            performance_schema=OFF
            max_connections=50
            # on ec2, without this we get a sporadic connection drop when doing the initial migration
            max_allowed_packet=64M
            
            # https://mathiasbynens.be/notes/mysql-utf8mb4
            character-set-server = utf8mb4
            collation-server = utf8mb4_unicode_ci
            
            # set timezone to UTC
            default_time_zone='+00:00'
            
            [mysqldump]
            quick
            quote-names
            max_allowed_packet  = 16M
            default-character-set = utf8mb4
            
            [mysql]
            default-character-set = utf8mb4
            
            [client]
            default-character-set = utf8mb4
            

            All of that is the default setup, I haven't manually changed any of it.

            girishG Do not disturb
            girishG Do not disturb
            girish
            Staff
            wrote on last edited by
            #13

            @d19dotca Ah, this seems to be a some MySQL 8/Ubuntu 20 thing. It generates these binlogs for me on my test cloudron.

            -rw-r----- 1 mysql mysql  179 Feb 15 20:42  binlog.000001
            -rw-r----- 1 mysql mysql  179 Feb 15 20:45  binlog.000002
            -rw-r----- 1 mysql mysql 116K Feb 15 20:45  binlog.000003
            -rw-r----- 1 mysql mysql  13M Feb 17 00:00  binlog.000004
            -rw-r----- 1 mysql mysql  43M Feb 18 00:00  binlog.000005
            -rw-r----- 1 mysql mysql  43M Feb 19 00:00  binlog.000006
            -rw-r----- 1 mysql mysql  13M Feb 20 00:00  binlog.000007
            -rw-r----- 1 mysql mysql  28M Feb 21 00:00  binlog.000008
            -rw-r----- 1 mysql mysql 2.8M Feb 22 00:00  binlog.000009
            -rw-r----- 1 mysql mysql  13M Feb 23 00:00  binlog.000010
            -rw-r----- 1 mysql mysql  14M Feb 23 21:41  binlog.000011
            -rw-r----- 1 mysql mysql  176 Feb 23 00:00  binlog.index
            
            d19dotcaD 1 Reply Last reply
            1
            • girishG girish

              @d19dotca Ah, this seems to be a some MySQL 8/Ubuntu 20 thing. It generates these binlogs for me on my test cloudron.

              -rw-r----- 1 mysql mysql  179 Feb 15 20:42  binlog.000001
              -rw-r----- 1 mysql mysql  179 Feb 15 20:45  binlog.000002
              -rw-r----- 1 mysql mysql 116K Feb 15 20:45  binlog.000003
              -rw-r----- 1 mysql mysql  13M Feb 17 00:00  binlog.000004
              -rw-r----- 1 mysql mysql  43M Feb 18 00:00  binlog.000005
              -rw-r----- 1 mysql mysql  43M Feb 19 00:00  binlog.000006
              -rw-r----- 1 mysql mysql  13M Feb 20 00:00  binlog.000007
              -rw-r----- 1 mysql mysql  28M Feb 21 00:00  binlog.000008
              -rw-r----- 1 mysql mysql 2.8M Feb 22 00:00  binlog.000009
              -rw-r----- 1 mysql mysql  13M Feb 23 00:00  binlog.000010
              -rw-r----- 1 mysql mysql  14M Feb 23 21:41  binlog.000011
              -rw-r----- 1 mysql mysql  176 Feb 23 00:00  binlog.index
              
              d19dotcaD Offline
              d19dotcaD Offline
              d19dotca
              wrote on last edited by d19dotca
              #14

              @girish Right. Yeah I figured it was a weird issue in MySQL or Ubuntu 20.04 since both of those changed after I moved servers earlier last week. I suspect the skip-log-bin option should be added to the my.cnf file, my gut tells me that should do the trick.

              This seems to be explained too in the actual documentation. One answer highlighted this in that post earlier... https://dba.stackexchange.com/a/228959

              In fact, when I compare the MySQL documentation between 5.7 and 8.0, it seems that binlogs became default enabled in 8.0, was not a default in 5.7.

              --
              Dustin Dauncey
              www.d19.ca

              girishG 1 Reply Last reply
              1
              • d19dotcaD d19dotca

                @girish Right. Yeah I figured it was a weird issue in MySQL or Ubuntu 20.04 since both of those changed after I moved servers earlier last week. I suspect the skip-log-bin option should be added to the my.cnf file, my gut tells me that should do the trick.

                This seems to be explained too in the actual documentation. One answer highlighted this in that post earlier... https://dba.stackexchange.com/a/228959

                In fact, when I compare the MySQL documentation between 5.7 and 8.0, it seems that binlogs became default enabled in 8.0, was not a default in 5.7.

                girishG Do not disturb
                girishG Do not disturb
                girish
                Staff
                wrote on last edited by girish
                #15

                @d19dotca We can't skip the binlog because it's used for db recovery. But in the mysql addon we set max_binlog_size = 100M and also expire_logs_days = 10. So, I will put this in the main mysql config as well.

                See https://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/8.0/en/binary-log.html for importance of binlog.

                edit: it's binlog_expire_log_seconds now - https://dev.mysql.com/worklog/task/?id=10924

                d19dotcaD 1 Reply Last reply
                2
                • girishG girish

                  @d19dotca We can't skip the binlog because it's used for db recovery. But in the mysql addon we set max_binlog_size = 100M and also expire_logs_days = 10. So, I will put this in the main mysql config as well.

                  See https://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/8.0/en/binary-log.html for importance of binlog.

                  edit: it's binlog_expire_log_seconds now - https://dev.mysql.com/worklog/task/?id=10924

                  d19dotcaD Offline
                  d19dotcaD Offline
                  d19dotca
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #16

                  @girish Sounds good. I'm surprised that binlogs is needed for database recovery in a non-replicated scenario. In my day-job if we need to recover a database we just use the mysqldump created and then use the mysql command to import, nothing needed on the binlog side of things. Maybe you guys do it differently though than I'm used to.

                  If I edit the my.cnf file, will a future Cloudron update overwrite it? Trying to see if I should add it in now or just wait for the update so I don't mess up the update part at all.

                  --
                  Dustin Dauncey
                  www.d19.ca

                  girishG 1 Reply Last reply
                  0
                  • d19dotcaD d19dotca

                    @girish Sounds good. I'm surprised that binlogs is needed for database recovery in a non-replicated scenario. In my day-job if we need to recover a database we just use the mysqldump created and then use the mysql command to import, nothing needed on the binlog side of things. Maybe you guys do it differently though than I'm used to.

                    If I edit the my.cnf file, will a future Cloudron update overwrite it? Trying to see if I should add it in now or just wait for the update so I don't mess up the update part at all.

                    girishG Do not disturb
                    girishG Do not disturb
                    girish
                    Staff
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #17

                    @d19dotca Same. We also always use only mysqldump for recovery and major mysql upgrades (like the upcoming one from 5.7 to 8.0). Generally, I don't trust those direct data directory upgrade procedures 🙂 But the recovery stuff is sometimes useful when the disk goes corrupt and we want to recover quickly.

                    From what I can make out, this issue has surfaced because expire_logs_days which was 10 is now deprecated and replaced with this log_seconds variable which has a default of 30 days...

                    If I edit the my.cnf file, will a future Cloudron update overwrite it? Trying to see if I should add it in now or just wait for the update so I don't mess up the update part at all.

                    Yes, the my.cnf will be overwritten. You can just add it it's fine, the update will merely overwrite it with the same config... Currently, I am testing with 100M max_binlog_size and 432000 (5 days) as expire_log_days.

                    d19dotcaD 1 Reply Last reply
                    2
                    • girishG Do not disturb
                      girishG Do not disturb
                      girish
                      Staff
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #18

                      https://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/8.0/en/point-in-time-recovery-binlog.html has the recovery procedure (disclaimer: i have never had to use this).

                      1 Reply Last reply
                      0
                      • d19dotcaD Offline
                        d19dotcaD Offline
                        d19dotca
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #19

                        Okay this seems to have worked. I took what you did in the git but made it 6 hours (21600 seconds) instead as at least a test. Restarted the mysql service and now many of the binlogs are gone.

                        Side question: I tried that earlier and restarted mysql but from the Cloudron Services page, and it didn't seem to work. However when I restarted mysql on the command line, it worked. Is there a difference in that process?

                        --
                        Dustin Dauncey
                        www.d19.ca

                        1 Reply Last reply
                        0
                        • girishG girish

                          @d19dotca Same. We also always use only mysqldump for recovery and major mysql upgrades (like the upcoming one from 5.7 to 8.0). Generally, I don't trust those direct data directory upgrade procedures 🙂 But the recovery stuff is sometimes useful when the disk goes corrupt and we want to recover quickly.

                          From what I can make out, this issue has surfaced because expire_logs_days which was 10 is now deprecated and replaced with this log_seconds variable which has a default of 30 days...

                          If I edit the my.cnf file, will a future Cloudron update overwrite it? Trying to see if I should add it in now or just wait for the update so I don't mess up the update part at all.

                          Yes, the my.cnf will be overwritten. You can just add it it's fine, the update will merely overwrite it with the same config... Currently, I am testing with 100M max_binlog_size and 432000 (5 days) as expire_log_days.

                          d19dotcaD Offline
                          d19dotcaD Offline
                          d19dotca
                          wrote on last edited by d19dotca
                          #20

                          @girish said in Able to clean up binlog.###### files in /var/lib/mysql directory?:

                          432000 (5 days) as expire_log_days

                          Out of curiosity, is there a need to have 10 days of binlogs? Just curious, because I was seeing issues before the 10 days, so I'm worried that setting won't work for me (and presumably at least a few others with well-used Cloudron's on servers with limited local disk space). I guess I can overwrite it though in my instance using something in the .d directories that are included, or do those get overwritten too? If it can be a lot less (like 3 days or something) that'd be best I'd think, but maybe more time is needed for most environments and mine is just a fringe scenario given my limited disk space.

                          --
                          Dustin Dauncey
                          www.d19.ca

                          nebulonN 1 Reply Last reply
                          0
                          • d19dotcaD d19dotca

                            @girish said in Able to clean up binlog.###### files in /var/lib/mysql directory?:

                            432000 (5 days) as expire_log_days

                            Out of curiosity, is there a need to have 10 days of binlogs? Just curious, because I was seeing issues before the 10 days, so I'm worried that setting won't work for me (and presumably at least a few others with well-used Cloudron's on servers with limited local disk space). I guess I can overwrite it though in my instance using something in the .d directories that are included, or do those get overwritten too? If it can be a lot less (like 3 days or something) that'd be best I'd think, but maybe more time is needed for most environments and mine is just a fringe scenario given my limited disk space.

                            nebulonN Offline
                            nebulonN Offline
                            nebulon
                            Staff
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #21

                            @d19dotca as far as I understand the situation, it makes not too much sense to keep binlogs for db recovery for longer than the last backup (which contains the mysqldump for restore)

                            girishG 1 Reply Last reply
                            5
                            • nebulonN nebulon

                              @d19dotca as far as I understand the situation, it makes not too much sense to keep binlogs for db recovery for longer than the last backup (which contains the mysqldump for restore)

                              girishG Do not disturb
                              girishG Do not disturb
                              girish
                              Staff
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #22

                              @nebulon that's correct. but not sure how we can make the mysql.cnf configuration based on that? the cnf is installed at update time with a static number.

                              1 Reply Last reply
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                              • nebulonN Offline
                                nebulonN Offline
                                nebulon
                                Staff
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #23

                                I guess setting it to something more reasonable for us like a couple of days should be plenty

                                d19dotcaD 1 Reply Last reply
                                1
                                • nebulonN nebulon

                                  I guess setting it to something more reasonable for us like a couple of days should be plenty

                                  d19dotcaD Offline
                                  d19dotcaD Offline
                                  d19dotca
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #24

                                  @nebulon said in Able to clean up binlog.###### files in /var/lib/mysql directory?:

                                  I guess setting it to something more reasonable for us like a couple of days should be plenty

                                  Exactly, yes. I think it should basically be the minimal number possible / reasonable, especially when a well-used Cloudron like mine seems to generate 1-2 GB of them in just a 24 hour period. If we kept that as 10 days that'd be anywheres from 10 GB to 20 GB which is far too much disk space consumed for that, IMO. I thinking keeping them for just two days would be sufficient, heck even maybe just one day.

                                  --
                                  Dustin Dauncey
                                  www.d19.ca

                                  1 Reply Last reply
                                  1
                                  • d19dotcaD d19dotca

                                    Thinking out loud here but a couple things I'm wondering about (and will try to test what I can):

                                    1. Is this issue unique to only my instance, or happening to instances of Cloudron?
                                    2. If happening to other instances, is the commonality being on Ubuntu 20.04 or MySQL 8.x?
                                    3. If others have this issue, then I'd suspect we need to enable something during Cloudron setup to handle this out of the box, or ideally just disable bin logs (if possible).
                                    P Offline
                                    P Offline
                                    p44
                                    translator
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #25

                                    @d19dotca Probably I had the same problem, yesterday one instance alerted that disk was full. I didn't have time yet to check inside.

                                    d19dotcaD 1 Reply Last reply
                                    0
                                    • P p44

                                      @d19dotca Probably I had the same problem, yesterday one instance alerted that disk was full. I didn't have time yet to check inside.

                                      d19dotcaD Offline
                                      d19dotcaD Offline
                                      d19dotca
                                      wrote on last edited by d19dotca
                                      #26

                                      @p44 Yeah probably. I'm honestly very surprised how many people seemingly haven't run into this issue yet. I guess most using Cloudron are still on Ubuntu 18.04 rather than 20.04, or those on 20.04 have plenty of disk space where it's not a concern at all (unfortunately I don't have that luxury, haha) or they just don't use their Cloudrons nearly as much as some of us do which means they have far less writes to the database thus less binlog entries. Guess it's a "fringe" scenario for now haha but definitely still a valid one that we need to fix. I think the changes coming from Girish & Nebulon will have a great impact on that and prevent issues like I and you were running into where the disk usage goes insane from binlog files. Keeping the binlogs to just 1 or 2 days should be plenty for actively used Cloudron servers.

                                      --
                                      Dustin Dauncey
                                      www.d19.ca

                                      girishG P 2 Replies Last reply
                                      1
                                      • girishG Do not disturb
                                        girishG Do not disturb
                                        girish
                                        Staff
                                        wrote on last edited by girish
                                        #27

                                        All our managed instances (our old business) are on Ubuntu 20 and they don't seem to accumulate as much data. It's around 100MB everyday and so it's < 1GB for 10 days. I guess the deal is we have the luxury of extra space. What I noticed is that it seems if you start afresh on Ubuntu 20 the behavior appears different from if you migrate from Ubuntu 18. I haven't really tinkered with the combinations of upgrades.

                                        In any case, binlog is at 2 days for both the mysql addon and the main mysql server now.

                                        1 Reply Last reply
                                        1
                                        • d19dotcaD d19dotca

                                          @p44 Yeah probably. I'm honestly very surprised how many people seemingly haven't run into this issue yet. I guess most using Cloudron are still on Ubuntu 18.04 rather than 20.04, or those on 20.04 have plenty of disk space where it's not a concern at all (unfortunately I don't have that luxury, haha) or they just don't use their Cloudrons nearly as much as some of us do which means they have far less writes to the database thus less binlog entries. Guess it's a "fringe" scenario for now haha but definitely still a valid one that we need to fix. I think the changes coming from Girish & Nebulon will have a great impact on that and prevent issues like I and you were running into where the disk usage goes insane from binlog files. Keeping the binlogs to just 1 or 2 days should be plenty for actively used Cloudron servers.

                                          girishG Do not disturb
                                          girishG Do not disturb
                                          girish
                                          Staff
                                          wrote on last edited by girish
                                          #28

                                          @d19dotca So reading a bit more, I think you might be right that it's of minimal use when not replicating and for replaying commands in that mode... So, I will disable it altogether. It got turned on in MySQL 8 by default but was off in MySQL 5.7.

                                          d19dotcaD 1 Reply Last reply
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