How It Affects Your App
The impact of MySQL 1575 ER_BASE64_DECODE_ERROR on an application is that it prevents the application from decoding base64 encoded data. This can prevent the application from properly displaying images, videos, and other media that are encoded in base64. It can also prevent the application from properly decoding data that is sent to it from other applications. This can lead to data corruption and other errors that can cause the application to malfunction.
How To Fix
1. Check the error log for the MySQL 1575 error:
$ tail -f /var/log/mysql/error.log
2. Check the MySQL configuration file for the max_allowed_packet setting:
$ grep max_allowed_packet /etc/mysql/my.cnf
3. Increase the max_allowed_packet setting to a higher value:
max_allowed_packet = 16M
4. Restart the MySQL server:
$ sudo service mysql restart
5. Check the error log again to make sure the MySQL 1575 error is gone:
$ tail -f /var/log/mysql/error.log
6. Use an automated database observability tool to monitor and fix the MySQL 1575 in question. Automated database observability tools can provide real-time insights into the performance and health of your database, allowing you to quickly identify and address any issues that may arise. They can also provide detailed metrics and logs that can help you troubleshoot and fix any MySQL 1575 errors that may occur.