FLUSH [NO_WRITE_TO_BINLOG | LOCAL]
flush_option [, flush_option] ...
The FLUSH statement clears or
reloads various internal caches used by MySQL. One variant
acquires a lock. To execute
FLUSH, you must have the
RELOAD privilege.
Before MySQL 4.1.1, FLUSH
statements are not written to the binary log. As of MySQL 4.1.1,
FLUSH statements are written to
the binary log so that they will be replicated to replication
slaves. Logging can be suppressed with the optional
NO_WRITE_TO_BINLOG keyword or its alias
LOCAL.
FLUSH LOGS,
FLUSH MASTER,
FLUSH SLAVE,
and FLUSH TABLES WITH
READ LOCK are not written to the binary log in any
case because they would cause problems if replicated to a
slave.
The RESET statement is similar to
FLUSH. See
Section 12.4.6.5, “RESET Syntax”, for information about using the
RESET statement with replication.
flush_option can be any of the
following items:
DES_KEY_FILE
Reloads the DES keys from the file that was specified with
the --des-key-file option at
server startup time.
HOSTS
Empties the host cache tables. You should flush the host
tables if some of your hosts change IP number or if you get
the error message Host
'.
When more than
host_name' is blockedmax_connect_errors errors
occur successively for a given host while connecting to the
MySQL server, MySQL assumes that something is wrong and
blocks the host from further connection requests. Flushing
the host tables enables further connection attempts from the
host. See Section A.5.2.6, “Host '”. You can start
mysqld with
host_name' is
blocked--max_connect_errors=999999999
to avoid this error message.
LOGS
Closes and reopens all log files. If you have specified an
update log file or a binary log file without an extension,
the extension number of the log file is incremented by one
relative to the previous file. If you have used an extension
in the file name, MySQL closes and reopens the update log or
binary log file. See Section 5.3.4, “The Binary Log”. On Unix,
this is the same thing as sending a
SIGHUP signal to the
mysqld server (except on some Mac OS X
10.3 versions where mysqld ignores
SIGHUP and SIGQUIT).
Beginning with MySQL 4.0.10, if the server was started with
the --log-error option),
FLUSH LOGS
causes it to rename the current error log file with a suffix
of -old and create a new empty log file.
No renaming occurs if the server is not writing to a named
file (for example, if it is writing errors to the console).
MASTER
Deletes all binary logs, resets the binary log index file
and creates a new binary log.
FLUSH
MASTER is deprecated in favor of
RESET MASTER, and is
supported for backward compatibility only. See
Section 12.5.1.2, “RESET MASTER Syntax”.
PRIVILEGES
Reloads the privileges from the grant tables in the
mysql database. On Unix, this also occurs
if the server receives a SIGHUP signal.
The server caches information in memory as a result of
GRANT statements. This memory
is not released by the corresponding
REVOKE statements, so for a
server that executes many instances of the statements that
cause caching, there will be an increase in memory use. This
cached memory can be freed with
FLUSH
PRIVILEGES.
QUERY CACHE
Defragment the query cache to better utilize its memory.
FLUSH QUERY
CACHE does not remove any queries from the cache,
unlike FLUSH
TABLES or RESET QUERY CACHE.
SLAVE
Resets all replication slave parameters, including relay log
files and replication position in the master's binary logs.
FLUSH SLAVE
is deprecated in favor of RESET
SLAVE, and is supported for backward compatibility
only. See Section 12.5.2.5, “RESET SLAVE Syntax”.
STATUS
Resets most status variables to zero. This is something you should use only when debugging a query. See Section 1.8, “How to Report Bugs or Problems”.
TABLES
FLUSH
TABLES has several variant forms.
FLUSH TABLE
is a synonym for
FLUSH
TABLES, except that TABLE does
not work with the WITH READ LOCK variant.
FLUSH TABLES
Closes all open tables, forces all tables in use to be
closed, and flushes the query cache.
FLUSH
TABLES also removes all query results from the
query cache, like the RESET QUERY
CACHE statement.
FLUSH TABLES
tbl_name [,
tbl_name] ...
With a list of one or more comma-separated table names,
this is like
FLUSH
TABLES with no names except that the server
flushes only the named tables. No error occurs if a
named table does not exist.
FLUSH TABLES WITH READ LOCK
Closes all open tables and locks all tables for all
databases with a global read lock until you explicitly
release the lock by executing
UNLOCK
TABLES. This is a very convenient way to get
backups if you have a file system such as Veritas or ZFS
that can take snapshots in time.
FLUSH TABLES WITH
READ LOCK acquires a global read lock and not
table locks, so it is not subject to the same behavior
as LOCK TABLES and
UNLOCK
TABLES with respect to table locking and
implicit commits:
UNLOCK
TABLES implicitly commits any active
transaction only if any tables currently have been
locked with LOCK
TABLES. The commit does not occur for
UNLOCK
TABLES following
FLUSH TABLES
WITH READ LOCK because the latter
statement does not acquire table locks.
Beginning a transaction causes table locks acquired
with LOCK TABLES to
be released, as though you had executed
UNLOCK
TABLES. Beginning a transaction does not
release a global read lock acquired with
FLUSH TABLES
WITH READ LOCK.
USER_RESOURCES
Resets all per-hour user resources to zero. This enables
clients that have reached their hourly connection, query, or
update limits to resume activity immediately.
FLUSH
USER_RESOURCES does not apply to the limit on
maximum simultaneous connections. See
Section 5.6.4, “Setting Account Resource Limits”.
The mysqladmin utility provides a
command-line interface to some flush operations, via commands
such as flush-hosts,
flush-logs,
flush-privileges,
flush-status, and
flush-tables.

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