There are three likely causes for this error message.
Usually it indicates network connectivity trouble and you should check the condition of your network if this error occurs frequently. If the error message includes “during query,” this is probably the case you are experiencing.
          Sometimes the “during query” form happens when
          millions of rows are being sent as part of one or more
          queries. If you know that this is happening, you should try
          increasing net_read_timeout
          from its default of 30 seconds to 60 seconds or longer,
          sufficient for the data transfer to complete.
        
          More rarely, it can happen when the client is attempting the
          initial connection to the server. In this case, if your
          connect_timeout value is set
          to only a few seconds, you may be able to resolve the problem
          by increasing it to ten seconds, perhaps more if you have a
          very long distance or slow connection. You can determine
          whether you are experiencing this more uncommon cause by using
          SHOW GLOBAL STATUS LIKE 'Aborted_connects'.
          It will increase by one for each initial connection attempt
          that the server aborts. You may see “reading
          authorization packet” as part of the error message; if
          so, that also suggests that this is the solution that you
          need.
        
          If the cause is none of those just described, you may be
          experiencing a problem with
          BLOB values that are larger
          than max_allowed_packet,
          which can cause this error with some clients. Sometime you may
          see “packet too large” as part of the error
          message, and that confirms that you need to increase
          max_allowed_packet.
        


User Comments
Add your own comment.