'ERROR 2002 (HY000): Can't connect to local MySQL server through socket '/var/run/mysqld/mysqld.sock' (2)
I installed LAMP on Ubuntu 12.04 LTS (Precise Pangolin) and then set root password on phpMyAdmin. I forgot the password and now I am unable to login. When I try to change password through terminal I get:
ERROR 2002 (HY000): Can't connect to local MySQL server through socket '/var/run/mysqld/mysqld.sock' (2)
How can I fix this? I am unable to open LAMP, uninstall it or reinstall it.
Solution 1:[1]
I once had this problem and solved it by installing mysql-server, so make sure that you have installed the mysql-server, not the mysql-client or something else.
That error means the file /var/run/mysqld/mysqld.sock doesn't exists, if you didn't install mysql-server, then the file would not exist. So in that case, install it with
sudo apt-get install mysql-server
But if the mysql-server is already installed and is running, then you need to check the config files.
The config files are:
/etc/my.cnf
/etc/mysql/my.cnf
/var/lib/mysql/my.cnf
In /etc/my.cnf, the socket file config may be /tmp/mysql.sock and in /etc/mysql/my.cnf the socket file config may be /var/run/mysqld/mysqld.sock. So, remove or rename /etc/mysql/my.cnf, let mysql use /etc/my.cnf, then the problem may solved.
Solution 2:[2]
Try this:
mysql -h 127.0.0.1 -P 3306 -u root -p <database>
Also (to see if it's running):
telnet 127.0.0.1 3306
Probably it is just a misconfiguration in the my.cnf file, in /etc/somewhere (depending on the Linux distribution).
Solution 3:[3]
I am seeing all these answers, but none offer the option to reset the password and no accepted answer. The actual question being he forgot his password, so he needs to reset, not see if it's running or not (installed or not) as most of these answers imply.
To reset the password
Follow these steps (can be helpful if you really forget your password and you can try it anytime, even if you're not in the situation at the moment):
Stop
mysqlsudo /etc/init.d/mysql stopOr for other distribution versions:
sudo /etc/init.d/mysqld stopStart MySQL in safe mode
sudo mysqld_safe --skip-grant-tables &Log into MySQL using root
mysql -u rootSelect the MySQL database to use
use mysql;Reset the password
-- MySQL version < 5.7 update user set password=PASSWORD("mynewpassword") where User='root'; -- MySQL 5.7, mysql.user table "password" field -> "authentication_string" update user set authentication_string=password('mynewpassword') where user='root';Flush the privileges
flush privileges;Restart the server
quitStop and start the server again
Ubuntu and Debian:
sudo /etc/init.d/mysql stop ... sudo /etc/init.d/mysql start
On CentOS, Fedora, and RHEL:
sudo /etc/init.d/mysqld stop
...
sudo /etc/init.d/mysqld start
Login with a new password
mysql -u root -pType the new password and enjoy your server again like nothing happened
This was taken from Reset a MySQL root password.
Solution 4:[4]
I tried the following steps:
- Log in as
super useror usesudo - Open
/etc/mysql/my.cnfusing gedit - Find
bind-address, and change its value to the database server host machine's IP address. For me, it waslocalhostor127.0.0.1 - Save and close the file.
- Come back to terminal and execute
sudo service mysql start
And it worked for me.
Solution 5:[5]
In my case it was that the disk was full and mysqld couldn't start anymore.
Try to restart mysql service.
> service mysql restart
or
> service mysql stop
> service mysql start
If it doesn't recognize stop command then it's definitely the disk space. You should make some space in the partition mysql is allocated or make the disk larger.
Check the disk space with
> df -h
Solution 6:[6]
I fixed this problem by executing the following command:
mysql.server start
And if you are on a mac and used brew to install mysql, simply use:
brew services start mysql
Solution 7:[7]
I had a similar problem. mysql wouldn't start:
sudo service mysql start
start: Job failed to start
If I disabled apparmor:
sudo aa-complain /etc/apparmor.d/*
the problem went away. The issue was that mysqld was trying to access /run/mysqld/mysqld.sock but the apparmor profile only gave permission to /var/run/mysqld/mysqld.sock (/var/run is symlinked to /run, so these are actually the same). Not sure why mysqld isn't using the var path since that's what's set in all the configuration files, but you can fix the problem by adding the following to /etc/apparmor.d/usr.sbin.mysqld
/run/mysqld/mysqld.pid rw,
/run/mysqld/mysqld.sock rw,
Solution 8:[8]
I solved this by killing the mysql process:
ps -ef | grep mysql
kill [the id]
And then I started the server again with:
sudo /etc/init.d/mysql restart
But start works as well:
sudo /etc/init.d/mysql start
Then I logged in as admin, and I was done.
Solution 9:[9]
Somehow the MySQL server process did not create the socket, or the client is looking for the socket in the wrong place.
My first suggestion would be to check if the MySQL server is running. Second suggestion might be, is the MySQL server running on another host? If so, add the -h <hostname> flag to your MySQL client in the terminal.
If MySQL is indeed running, and running locally, check your my.cnf file. There should be a line like
socket = /var/run/mysqld/mysqld.sock
See if that matches the socket location that you mentioned in your post.
From experience, I would say the most likely scenario is your MySQL server either is not running at all or is not running on the same host as where you run your MySQL client from the terminal.
Solution 10:[10]
I just experienced the same issue after I had to restart my production server. I am running Debian 8.1 (Jessie) on a DigitalOcean droplet.
This is what I did to resolve my issue:
Check if the file
/var/run/mysqld/mysqld.sockexists. If it doesn't, manually create it by enteringtouch /var/run/mysqld/mysqld.sock(which is what I had to do).So the MySQL process can use this file. Change ownership of said file by entering
chown mysql /var/run/mysqld/mysqld.sock.Once '2' has been done, restart the MySQL service by entering
service mysql restartor/etc/init.d/mysql restart.
After going through the above steps, my issue was solved. I rarely have this issue, and there is probably a better way, so by all means provide constructive feedback if need be :).
Solution 11:[11]
Check the "bind-adress" parameter in my.cnf.
Else try with the command:
mysql -h 127.0.0.1 -P 3306 -u root -p
-h for host
127.0.0.1, that is, localhost-P (notice -P as uppercase) for port
3306, that is, the default port for MySQL
Solution 12:[12]
Your mysql-server might not be running. Ensure it runs by typing mysql.server start into the terminal.
Solution 13:[13]
I think whenever you get the error
ERROR 2002 (HY000): Can't connect to local MySQL server through socket '/var/lib/mysql/mysql.sock'
I will recommend first to check whether your mysql daemon is running... Most of the time it will not running by default. You can check it by /etc/init.d/mysqld status.
If it's not running then start it first:
.../etc/init.d/mysqld start.
I bet it will 110% work.
Solution 14:[14]
If you're using Amazon EC2, and you're having this problem on the instance, then you only need to do:
sudo yum install mysql-server
sudo service mysqld restart
Amazon EC2 doesn't have a server installed (only the client is installed), so in case of that you need to install that on your instance, and after that try
mysql -u root -p
to check if that worked.
Solution 15:[15]
Instead of using localhost:
mysql -u myuser -pmypassword -h localhost mydatabase
Use 127.0.0.1
mysql -u myuser -pmypassword -h 127.0.0.1 mydatabase
(also note, no space between -p and mypassword)
Enjoy :)
Solution 16:[16]
Here's what worked for me:
ln -s /var/lib/mysql/mysql.sock /tmp/mysql.sock
service mysql restart
This creates a link.
Solution 17:[17]
Make sure you have backups of important databases and then try uninstall MySQL related stuff:
apt-get remove --purge mysql\*
Then install it again:
apt-get install mysql-server mysql-client
This worked for me and data was kept.
If PHP MySQL shows errors you might have to reinstall PHP MySQL:
apt-get install php5-fpm php5-mysql
Solution 18:[18]
I also facing same problem it will be occur if your mysql server is not running by default it will again stop after some sec so you again run ($ sudo service mysql start ) command you can change if know.
for that use command
$ sudo service mysql start
(put user password if required because we use sudo )
and then run
$ sudo mysql -u root -p (put user password if required )
now you got your database
Solution 19:[19]
I got this problem too, but I just did:
sudo service mysql restart
It worked for me.
Solution 20:[20]
It seems your MYSQL is stopped. use below command to start MySQL again
sudo service mysql start
Solution 21:[21]
I FOUND THE SOLUTION
Before firing the command : mysql_secure_installation
- Step 1:
sudo systemctl stop mariadb - Step 2:
sudo systemctl start mariadb - Step 3:
mysql_secure_installation
Then it will ask root password and you can simply press Enter and set your new root password.
Solution 22:[22]
If your installation was recent, you should to confirm if your installation is the installation SERVER... as mysql-server-5.5.. Maybe you installed only "mysql" .. this is only client instead of the server.
Solution 23:[23]
If you have XAMPP installed on your Linux machine, try to copy your my.cnf file from /opt/lampp/etc/my.cnf to /etc/my.cnf.
Then, run the mysql -u root again... You should now have the correct socket and be able to run the MySQL client.
Solution 24:[24]
In my case, the default port 3306 was being used by some other process and thus it was not starting. After I stopped the other service and did sudo service mysql start, it worked fine. BTW, you can use something like sudo lsof -Pn -iTCP:3306 to see who may be using the port.
Solution 25:[25]
In my case it worked by doing some R&D:
I am able to connect to MySQL using
root-debian#mysql -h 127.0.0.1 -u root -p
But it's not working with mysql -u root -p.
I did not find any bind-address in my.cnf. So I outcommented the parameter socket=/var/lib/mysql/mysqld.sock in my.cnf which was causing me a problem with login.
After restarting the service it went fine:
root@debian:~# mysql -u root -p
Enter password:
Welcome to the MySQL monitor. Commands end with ; or \g.
Your MySQL connection id is 5
Server version: 5.6.19 MySQL Community Server (GPL)
Solution 26:[26]
In my case, It seems like I wasnt really able to kill the mysql process, when I run
sudo service mysql stop
ps -ef | grep mysql
The mysql process was always there, it looks like it was blocking the socket file and new mysql process wasnt able to create it itself.
so this helped
cd /var/run
sudo cp mysqld/ mysqld.bc -rf
sudo chown mysql:mysql mysqld.bc/
sudo service mysql stop
sudo cp mysqld.bc/ mysqld -rf
sudo chown mysql:mysql mysqld -R
sudo /usr/sbin/mysqld --skip-grant-tables --skip-networking &
Now Im able to log in database using
mysql -u root
Then to update root password:
UPDATE user SET authentication_string=password('YOURPASSWORDHERE') WHERE user='root';
FLUSH PRIVILEGES;
PS: I had trouble updating root passwod, seems like problem with "auth_socket" plugin, so I had to create new user with full privileges
insert into user set `Host` = "localhost", `User` = "super", `plugin` = "mysql_native_password", `authentication_string` = NULL, `password_expired` = "N", `password_lifetime` = NULL, `account_locked` = "N", `Select_priv` = "Y",
`Insert_priv` = "Y", `Update_priv` = "Y", `Delete_priv` = "Y", `Create_priv` = "Y", `Drop_priv` = "Y", `Reload_priv` = "Y", `Shutdown_priv` = "Y", `Process_priv` = "Y", `File_priv` = "Y",
`Grant_priv` = "Y", `References_priv` = "Y", `Index_priv` = "Y", `Alter_priv` = "Y", `Show_db_priv` = "Y", `Super_priv` = "Y", `Create_tmp_table_priv` = "Y", `Lock_tables_priv` = "Y",
`Execute_priv` = "Y", `Repl_slave_priv` = "Y", `Repl_client_priv` = "Y", `Create_view_priv` = "Y", `Show_view_priv` = "Y", `Create_routine_priv` = "Y", `Alter_routine_priv` = "Y",
`Create_user_priv` = "Y", `Event_priv` = "Y", `Trigger_priv` = "Y", `Create_tablespace_priv` = "Y";
This creates user "super" with no password and then you can connect with mysql -u super
Solution 27:[27]
On Debian server Jessie, my working solution was to simply do
service mysql restart
service mysql reload
as root user
Solution 28:[28]
i solved this problem with restart mysql
/etc/init.d/mysql stop
and
/etc/init.d/mysql start
that's it.
Solution 29:[29]
By experience I say that you need to check if the server is running first and then try configuring MySQL. The last solution is to re-install MySQL.
Solution 30:[30]
Open the terminal and type:
sudo apt-get purge mysql-client-core-5.6
sudo apt-get autoremove
sudo apt-get autoclean
sudo apt-get install mysql-client-core-5.5
sudo apt-get install mysql-server
Both MySQL database core client and MySQL Server packages will be the same version 5.5. MySQL Client 5.5 and MySQL Server 5.5 are the current "best" versions of these packages in Ubuntu 14.04 as determined by the package maintainers.
If you would rather install MySQL Client 5.6 and MySQL Server 5.6 you can also find the mysql-client-core-5.6 and mysql-server-5.6 packages in the Ubuntu Software Center. The important thing is that the client and server version numbers match in either case.
This worked for me.
Sources
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Source: Stack Overflow
