Cloud SQL error messages

This page discusses some of the error messages encountered in Cloud SQL.

Overview

Error messages in Cloud SQL come from many sources and appear in many places. Some error messages come from the database engines themselves, some from the Cloud SQL service, some from client applications, and some are returned by calls to the Cloud SQL Admin API.

This page includes some of the most common errors seen in Cloud SQL. If you do not find the error code or message you are looking for here, you can look for source reference material here:

If you don't find the reference material for the error message that you're seeing, you can also search in some of these places where other users may have relevant experience:

Operational errors

A | B | C | D | E | F | G | I | L | M | N | O | P | Q | R | S | T | U | W

Error message Troubleshooting
Aborted connection xxx to db: DB_NAME. The application isn't ending connections properly.

Check for the following conditions:

  • The application did not call mysql_close() before exiting.
  • Communication errors.
  • The application might have been sleeping more than the number of seconds specified in `wait_timeout` or `interactive_timeout` without issuing any requests to the server. See Section 5.1.7, Server System Variables.
  • The application ended abruptly in the middle of a data transfer.
  • The max_allowed_packet variable value might be too small or queries require more memory than the allocated for mysqld. This can be resolved by raising the max_allowed_packet flag to a much larger number.
Access denied; you need (at least one of) the SUPER privilege(s) for this operation. There could be a view, a function, or a procedure in the source database referencing DEFINER in a way that's not supported by Cloud SQL.

Update the definer in the external databases, for example from root@localhost to root@% or a non-superuser. See Stored Object Access Control for more information.

Access denied for user 'XXX'@'XXX' (using password: XXX) There could be several causes, including:
  • The username (or password) is incorrect.
  • The user is connecting from a URL other than @XXX.
  • The user doesn't have the correct privileges for the database they're trying to connect to.

Try these things ...

  • Verify the username and corresponding password.
  • Check the origin of the connection to see if it matches the URL where the user has access privileges.
  • Check the user's grant privileges in the database.
Allocated IP range not found in network. VPC peerings were not updated after an allocated range was modified or removed.

You need to modify the private connection. Use the following command, and make sure to use the --force argument:

gcloud services vpc-peerings update \
--network=VPC_NETWORK \
--ranges=ALLOCATED_RANGES \
--service=servicenetworking.googleapis.com \
--force
ANY command denied to user 'root'@'%' for table ... The user doesn't have all the permissions it needs for this operation.

Try this:

  1. Connect to the database (for example, using Cloud Shell) and login as root.
  2. Execute USE mysql;.
  3. Grant the following permissions using the syntax:
    GRANT PERMISSION_1,PERMISSION_2 ON *.* TO 'root' WITH GRANT OPTION;
       
    • SELECT
    • INSERT
    • UPDATE
    • DELETE
    • CREATE
    • DROP
    • RELOAD
    • SHUTDOWN
    • PROCESS
    • REFERENCES
    • INDEX
    • ALTER
    • SHOW DATABASES
    • CREATE TEMPORARY TABLES
    • LOCK TABLES
    • EXECUTE
    • REPLICATION SLAVE
    • REPLICATION CLIENT
    • CREATE VIEW
    • SHOW VIEW
    • CREATE ROUTINE
    • ALTER ROUTINE
    • CREATE USER
    • EVENT
    • TRIGGER
    • CREATE TABLESPACE
  4. Execute USE 'Database_Name'; where Database_Name is the database where you're creating the views.
  5. Execute all create views in the session and commit.
Error message Troubleshooting
Bad request. This message can have many causes. Illegal Argument is one of the most common. In this case, the request is using either the wrong argument or an invalid value for the argument. For the many other causes, the error message might contain a useful hint.

For Illegal Argument, check the request to make sure each argument is permissible and each value for the argument is valid. For all other causes, check the log files to see if there is more information there.

Error message Troubleshooting
Cannot modify allocated ranges in CreateConnection. Please use UpdateConnection. VPC peerings were not updated after an allocated range was modified or removed.

You need to modify the private connection. Use the following command, and make sure to use the --force argument:

gcloud services vpc-peerings update \
--network=VPC_NETWORK \
--ranges=ALLOCATED_RANGES \
--service=servicenetworking.googleapis.com \
--force
Connection reset by peer.

If you're trying to perform an export and Cloud Storage doesn't receive any data within a certain time frame, then the connection resets.

Try a manual export using pg_dump.

Constraints/sql.restrictAuthorizedNetworks. The cloning operation is blocked by the Authorized Networks configuration. Authorized Networks are configured for public IP addresses in the Connectivity section of the Google Cloud console, and cloning isn't permitted due to security considerations.

Remove all Authorized Networks entries from the Cloud SQL instance if you can. Otherwise, create a replica without any Authorized Networks entries.

Could not allocate a new page for database database_name because of insufficient disk space in filegroup PRIMARY. The PRIMARY filegroup, which is the main and default filegroup in a database, has run out of space.

Use the sp_helpdb command to get information about the database.

Consider the following solutions:

  • Manually expand the disk space or reduce the data in the database.
  • Ensure that Automatic storage increase is enabled for the database instance.
  • Add more filegroups and move data into them.
  • Ensure that growth is not limited. Use the ALTER DATABASE command to enable autogrowth, if it is not already enabled, and to increase the maximum file size.
  • Manage tempdb files. Use the DBCC OPENTRAN and DBCC SQLPERFcommands to check for open transactions that can cause the tempdb file or the transaction log to grow.
Error message Troubleshooting
Database user does not exist. gcloud sql connect --user only works with the default postgres user.

Connect with the default user and then change users.

Disk is full. The primary instance disk size can become full during replica creation.

Edit the primary instance to upgrade it to a larger disk size.

Error message Troubleshooting
Failed to create subnetwork. No more available addresses in the IP range.

Couldn't find free blocks in allocated IP ranges. Please allocate new ranges for this service provider.

There are no more available addresses in the allocated IP range.

Consider these possible scenarios:

  • The size of the allocated IP range for the private service connection is smaller than /24.
  • The size of the allocated IP range for the private service connection is too small for the number of Cloud SQL instances.
  • The requirement on the size of allocated IP range will be larger if instances are created in multiple regions. See allocated range size

For each of the above scenarios, you can elect to either expand the existing or allocate an additional IP range to the private service connection.

If you're allocating a new range, take care to not create an allocation that overlaps with any existing allocations.

After creating a new IP range, update the VPC peering with the following command:

gcloud services vpc-peerings update \
--service=servicenetworking.googleapis.com
--ranges=OLD_RESERVED_RANGE_NAME,NEW_RESERVED_RANGE_NAME \
--network=VPC_NETWORK
--project=PROJECT_ID \
--force

If you're expanding an existing allocation, take care to only increase the allocation range and not decrease it. For example, if the original allocation was 10.0.10.0/24, make the new allocation at least 10.0.10.0/23.

In general, if starting from a /24 allocation, decrementing the /mask by 1 for each condition (additional instance type group, additional region) is a good rule of thumb. For example, if trying to create both instance type groups on the same allocation, going from /24 to /23 is enough.

After expanding an existing IP range, update the vpc peering with following command:

gcloud services vpc-peerings update \
--service=servicenetworking.googleapis.com
--ranges=RESERVED_RANGE_NAME \
--network=VPC_NETWORK \
--project=PROJECT_ID \
--force
Error message Troubleshooting
(gcloud.sql.connect) It seems your client does not have ipv6 connectivity and the database instance does not have an ipv4 address. You're trying to connect to your private IP instance using Cloud Shell.

Connecting from Cloud Shell to an instance with only a private IP address isn't currently supported.

Got packet bigger than max_allowed_packet bytes when dumping table. The packet was larger than allowed by settings.

Use mysqldump with the max_allowed_packet option.

To learn more about using mysqldump flags for managed import migration, see Allowed and default initial sync flags

Error message Troubleshooting
InnoDB: Write to file ./ibtmp1 failed at offset XXXX, YYYY bytes should have been written, only 0 were written. The instance reached a hard limit when conducting an automated backup.

Check that your OS and file system support files of this size. Check that the disk isn't full or out of disk quota. You can request an increase to your quotas from the Google Cloud console or edit the instance to upgrade it to a larger disk size.

Internal error. The project could be missing the Service Networking service account required for this feature.

To repair service permissions, disable the Service Networking API, wait five minutes and then re-enable it.

Invalid request: Incorrect Service Networking config for instance. Service Networking API isn't enabled in the project.

Enable the Service Networking API in your project. If you see this error when you're trying to assign a private IP address to a Cloud SQL instance, and you're using a Shared VPC, you also need to enable the Service Networking API for the host project.

Error message Troubleshooting
Metadata table locked. Another query, process, or transaction is blocking your query and locked the table.

Find the process that locked the table and stop it:

  1. Diagnose with: sql> show processlist;

    The first item in the list might be the one holding the lock, which the following items are waiting on.

  2. The SHOW INNODB STATUS command can also be helpful.
  3. Run the command KILL <var>PID</var>;
Error message Troubleshooting
Network association failed. The Service Networking API isn't enabled in the project.

Enable the Service Networking API in your project. If you see this error when you're trying to assign a private IP address to a Cloud SQL instance, and you're using a Shared VPC, you also need to enable the Service Networking API for the host project.

Error message Troubleshooting
Operation failed because another operation was already in progress. Most operations in Cloud SQL are synchronous. You can run only one at a time.

Wait for the previous operation to finish before beginning another.

Operation isn't valid for this instance. This error is returned from an API call to instances.restoreBackup, and it means that you cannot restore from backup to an instance with a storage size (XX GB) smaller than the backup size (YY GB).

Edit the target instance to increase its storage size.

Error message Troubleshooting
Password authentication failed for user "postgres". When you create a new Cloud SQL for PostgreSQL instance, the default admin user postgres is created but not the password. You need to set a password for this user before the user can log in.

Error message Troubleshooting
Quota exceeded. You reached the limit of your per-minute or daily quota. Review the quotas and limits for Cloud SQL.

Request an increase to your quotas from the Google Cloud console.

Error message Troubleshooting
Remaining connection slots are reserved. The maximum allowed connections have been reached.

Increase the value of the max_connections flag. See Configuring database flags.

Request is missing a valid API key. You might not have a valid service account key JSON file, or it might not be stored in the expected location.

Verify that you have a valid service account key JSON file in the location stored in the GOOGLE_APPLICATION_CREDENTIALS environment variable and that the variable points to the correct location.

Error message Troubleshooting
Specified key was too long; max key length is 767 bytes. The external primary instance might have the variable innodb_large_prefix set.

Set the innodb_large_prefix flag to ON when creating the replica or update the existing replica with the flag.

SSL error: invalid padding. Server certificate error.

Create a new server certificate and rotate.

System error occurred.
  • The user might not have all the Cloud Storage permissions it needs.
  • The database table might not exist.

Try these things ...

  • Check that you have at least WRITER permissions on the bucket and READER permissions on the export file. For more information on configuring access control in Cloud Storage, see Create and Manage Access Control Lists
  • Ensure the table exists. If the table does exist, confirm that you have the correct permissions on the storage bucket.
Error message Troubleshooting
Table definition changed. During the export process a change occurred in the table.

The dump transaction can fail if you use the following statements during the export operation:

  • ALTER TABLE
  • CREATE TABLE
  • DROP TABLE
  • RENAME TABLE
  • TRUNCATE TABLE

Remove any of these statements from the dump operation.

Temporary file size exceeds temp_file_limit. The temp_file_limit flag is set too low for your database usage.

Increase the temp_file_limit size. See Configuring database flags.

Table db.table doesn't exist If one or more InnoDB table(s) disappeared after a MySQL restart and the MySQL error log has the following warnings at the same time, it is due to the foreign key and referenced key columns being out-of-sync.
[Warning] InnoDB: Load table db.table failed, the table has missing
foreign key indexes. Turn off 'foreign_key_checks' and try again.
[Warning] InnoDB: Cannot open table db/table from the internal data
dictionary of InnoDB though the .frm file for the table exists.
See InnoDB troubleshooting
for more information.
      

After a database restart, MySQL needs to load table(s) into the InnoDB dictionary cache on first access. If it detects the discrepancy, it blocks the access to that table.

mysql> select * from db.table;
ERROR 1146 (42S02): Table db.table doesn't exist
      

Turning off foreign_key_checks for the MySQL session allows access to the table again. Once the table is accessed and loaded into the dictionary cache, InnoDB doesn't check and complain about a foreign key mismatch until the next database restart

The foreign key mismatch should be fixed to avoid any further issues.

  1. Disable the foreign_key_checks for the mysql client session and access the table.
    mysql> SET SESSION FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS=0;
                
  2. Inspect the parent and child tables and identify the mismatches between the foreign key and referenced key columns.
    mysql> SHOW CREATE TABLE parent_table;
    mysql> SHOW CREATE TABLE child_table;
                

    Verify the corresponding columns have similar data types. The size and sign of fixed precision types such as INTEGER and DECIMAL are the same. For nonbinary (character) string columns, the character set and collation must be the same.

  3. Fix the mismatch by using the ALTER TABLE statement. Some operations may require you to drop the foreign key constraint first, apply the change, then add the foreign key back.
  4. Re-enable foreign_key_checks again.
    mysql> SET SESSION FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS=1;
                
(Timeout) during export. CSV and SQL formats do export differently. The SQL format includes the entire database and is likely to take longer to complete.

Use the CSV format and run multiple, smaller export jobs to reduce the size and length of each operation.

Too many connections. Setting the max_connections flag value too high can cause this error. This can also be caused by enabling a flag out of sequence.

Lower the max_connections flag value, or contact customer support to request a flag removal followed by a hard drain. This forces the instance to restart on a different host with a fresh configuration, without the flag or setting.

Error message Troubleshooting
Unauthorized to connect. There can be many causes because authorization occurs at many levels:
  • At the database level, the database user must exist and its password match
  • At the project level, the user might not have the correct IAM permissions, including the serviceusage.services.use or cloudsql.instances.connect permissions.
  • At the network level, if the Cloud SQL instance is using public IP the connection's source IP must be in an authorized network.

Try these things ...

  • Ensure the user exists and its password matches.
  • Assign the Service Usage Consumer role to the user account. This role includes the permission serviceusage.services.use.
  • If using public IP, ensure the source IP is in an authorized network.
Unknown table COLUMN_STATISTICS in information_schema. This happens if you use the mysqldump binary from MySQL 8.0 to dump data from a MySQL 5.7 database and import to a MySQL 8.0 database.

If you dump data from a MySQL 5.7 database and import to a MySQL 8.0 database, make sure to use the mysqldump binary from MySQL 5.7. If you use the mysqldump binary from MySQL 8.0, you need to add the --column-statistics=0 flag.

Error message Troubleshooting
x509: certificate isn't valid for any names. Known issue: The Cloud SQL Proxy Dialer isn't compatible with Go 1.15 at this time.

Until fixed, see this discussion on GitHub, which includes a workaround.

Unknown errors

The following table shows some known cases where an Unknown Error can occur, and lists specific remedies where applicable. However, this is not a complete list. If you don't find your case in the table, check with the public issue tracker for Cloud SQL. If you don't find the issue there, consider submitting a report, or reviewing other support options.

Operation The issue might be... Things to try...
Add user If the user already exists in the database, this error can occur when you try to add them. Check to make sure the user doesn't already exist in the database.
Backup If you see this during automated or manual backups, it's likely the instance disk is full. If the temporary file size is taking up too much space, you can restart the instance to remove the file and free up the disk space. Otherwise, you might need to upgrade your instance to a larger disk size.
Clone This can occur when there is a shortage of resources in the selected zone. Try another zone in the region, or wait and try again later.
Create instance
  • This can occur when you are trying to re-use the same name as a recently-deleted instance.
  • It can also be caused by intermittent connectivity issues.
  • The logs might show that the Service Networking API is not enabled for the project.
  • The error has also been seen when trying to create multiple instances in parallel. For example, Terraform scripts make this attempt possible.
  • Another cause can be that a specific resource is exhausted or a quota limit has been exceeded. Look in the logs for an entry like Quota 'INTERNAL_FORWARDING_RULES_WITH_TARGET_INSTANCE_PER_NETWORK' exceeded. Limit: 100.0 globally
  • This error can occur if subnet creation fails when there are no more available addresses in the IP range.
  • Instance names cannot be re-used until about a week after deletion.
  • In the case of intermittent connectivity issues, the only remedy is to try again.
  • Enable the Service Networking API for the project.
  • Parallel instance creation scripts will only succeed in creating one of the instances. Modify the script to wait until each instance create operation is complete before continuing to the next one.
  • Allocate new ranges.
Export If you see this while trying to export a database to a Cloud Storage bucket, the transfer may be failing due to a bandwidth issue. The Cloud SQL instance may be located in a different region than the Cloud Storage bucket. Reading and writing data from one continent to another involves a lot of network usage, and can cause intermittent issues like this.
Failover (automatic) An automatic failover operation can produce this error message when the service detects that the primary instance is still responsive. There is nothing to be done in this case. The failover won't occur because it isn't needed.
Import The import file may contain statements which require the superuser role. Edit the file to remove any statements which require the superuser role.

Cloud SQL also uses some third-party binaries (for example, mysqld), which can generate unknown error messages. Such errors are internal to the third-party binaries and are outside the scope of Cloud SQL. However, sometimes a more specific error can be found in the Cloud SQL log files at around the same time.

Also, sometimes it is an error code that is unknown. In this case, the complete message can be Unknown Error Code.