This is a read-only copy of the MariaDB Knowledgebase generated on 2024-11-01. For the latest, interactive version please visit https://mariadb.com/kb/.

Using Healthcheck.sh

The healthcheck.sh script is part of the Docker Official Images of MariaDB Server. The script is part of the repository of the Docker Official Image of MariaDB Server.

The script processes a number of argument and tests, together, in strict order. Arguments pertaining to a test must occur before the test name. If a test fails, no further processing is performed. Both arguments and tests begin with a double-hyphen.

By default, (since 2023-06-27), official images will create healthcheck@localhost, healthcheck@127.0.0.1, healthcheck@::1 users with a random password and USAGE privileges. MARIADB_HEALTHCHECK_GRANTS can be used for --replication where additional grants are required. This is stored in .my-healthcheck.cnf in the datadir of the container and passed as the --defaults-extra-file to the healthcheck.sh script if it exists. The .my-healthcheck.cnf also sets protocol=tcp for the mariadb so --connect is effectively there on all tests.

The MARIADB_AUTO_UPGRADE=1 will regenerate the .my-healthcheck.cnf file if missing and recreate the healthcheck users of the database with a new random password. The current port configuration of the MariaDB container is written into this file.

The MARIADB_MYSQL_LOCALHOST_USER=1, MARIADB_MYSQL_LOCALHOST_GRANTS environment variables can also be used, but with the creation of the healthcheck user, these are backwards compatible.

Compose File Example

An example of a compose file that uses the healthcheck.sh to determine a healthy service as a depedency before starting a wordpress service:

version: "3"
services:
  mariadb:
    image: mariadb:lts
    environment:
      - MARIADB_DATABASE=testdb
      - MARIADB_USER=testuser
      - MARIADB_PASSWORD=password
      - MARIADB_RANDOM_ROOT_PASSWORD=1
    healthcheck:
      test: ["CMD", "healthcheck.sh", "--connect", "--innodb_initialized"]
      start_period: 10s
      interval: 10s
      timeout: 5s
      retries: 3
  wordpress:
    image: wordpress
    environment:
      - WORDPRESS_DB_HOST=mariadb
      - WORDPRESS_DB_NAME=testdb
      - WORDPRESS_DB_USER=testuser
      - WORDPRESS_DB_PASSWORD=password
    depends_on:
      mariadb:
        condition: service_healthy

Tests

--connect

This is active when a external user can connect to the TCP port of MariaDB Server. This strictly tests just the TCP connection and not if any authentication works.

--innodb_initialized

This test is true when InnoDB has completed initializing. This includes any rollback or crash recovery that may be occurring in the background as MariaDB is starting.

The connecting user must have USAGE privileges to perform this test.

--innodb_buffer_pool_loaded

This indicates that the buffer pool dump previously saved has been completed loaded into the InnoDB Buffer Pool and as such the server has a hot cache ready for use. This checks the innodb_buffer_pool_load_status for a "complete" indicator.

This test doesn't check if innodb-system-variables/#innodb_buffer_pool_load_at_startupinnodb_buffer_pool_load_at_startup is set at startup.

The connecting user must have USAGE privileges to perform this test.

--galera_online

This indicates that the galera node is online by the wsrep_local_state variable. This includes states like "joining" and "donor" where it cannot serve SQL queries.

The connecting user must have USAGE privileges to perform this test.

--replication

This tests a replica based on the --replication_* parameters. The replica test must pass all of the subtests to be true. The subtests are:

  • io - the IO thread is running
  • sql - the sql thread is running
  • seconds_behind_master - the replica is less than X seconds behind the master.
  • sql_remaining_delay - the delayed replica is less than X seconds behind the master's execution of the same SQL.

These are tested for all connections, if --replication_all is set (default), or --replication_name.

The connecting user must have REPLICATION_CLIENT if using a version less than MariaDB 10.5, or REPLICA MONITOR for MariaDB 10.5 or later.

--mariadbupgrade

This healthcheck indicates that the mariadb is upgrade to the current version.

Parameters

--replication_all

Checks all replication sources

--replication_name=n

Sets the multisource connection name tested. Unsets --replication_all.

--replication_io

IO thread is running

--replication_sql

SQL thread is running

--replication_seconds_behind_master=n

Less than or equal this seconds of delay

--replication_sql_remaining_delay=n

Less than or equal this seconds of remaining delay

--su=n

Change to this user. Can only be done once as the root user is default for healthchecks.

--su-mysql

Change to the mysql unix user. Like --su this respawns the script so will reset all parameters. Should be the first argument. The MARIADB_MYSQL_LOCALHOST_USER=1 environment variable is designed around usage here.

--datadir=n

For the --mariadbupgrade test where the upgrade file is located.

--no-defaults --defaults-file --defaults-extra-file --defaults-group-suffix

These are passed to mariadb shell for all tests except --mariadbupgrade

Examples

healthcheck.sh --su-mysql --connect --innodb_initialized

Switch to mysql user, and check if can connect and the innodb is initialized.

healthcheck.sh --su-mysql --connect --replication_io --replication_sql --replication_seconds_behind_master=600  --replication_sql_remaining_delay=30 ----replication_name=archive --replication --replication_seconds_behind_master=10  --replication_name=channel1 --replication

Switch to mysql user, check if connections can be made, for the replication channel "archive", ensure io and sql threads are running and the seconds behind master < 600 seconds and the sql remaining delay < 30 seconds. For the "channel1", the seconds behind master is limit to 10 seconds maximum.

Content reproduced on this site is the property of its respective owners, and this content is not reviewed in advance by MariaDB. The views, information and opinions expressed by this content do not necessarily represent those of MariaDB or any other party.