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Displaying posts with tag: MariaDB 10.3 (reset)
Debian 10 released with MariaDB 10.3

The Debian project announced their 15th release, code name Buster, on July 6th 2019. Debian 10 ships with MariaDB 10.3 and Galera. There is no separate MariaDB Connector C package, but instead MariaDB 10.3 includes MariaDB Connector C 3.0. Like most other popular Linux distributions, Debian prefers MariaDB over the Oracle owned alternative and this […]

The post Debian 10 released with MariaDB 10.3 appeared first on MariaDB.org.

MariaDB 10.3.15, MariaDB Connector/C 3.0.10, MariaDB Connector/Node.js 2.0.5 and MariaDB Connector/ODBC 3.1.1 Now Available

The MariaDB Foundation is pleased to announce the availability of MariaDB 10.3.15, the latest stable release in the MariaDB 10.3 series, as well as MariaDB Connector/C 3.0.10, MariaDB Connector/ODBC 3.1.1 and MariaDB Connector/Node.js 2.0.5, the latest MariaDB Connector releases. See the release notes and changelogs for details. Download MariaDB 10.3.15 Release Notes Changelog What is […]

The post MariaDB 10.3.15, MariaDB Connector/C 3.0.10, MariaDB Connector/Node.js 2.0.5 and MariaDB Connector/ODBC 3.1.1 Now Available appeared first on MariaDB.org.

MariaDB 10.3.13 and MariaDB Connector/C 3.0.9 now available

The MariaDB Foundation is pleased to announce the availability of MariaDB 10.3.13, the latest stable release in the MariaDB 10.3 series, as well as MariaDB Connector/C 3.0.9, the latest stable release in the MariaDB Connector/ODBC series. See the release notes and changelogs for details. Download MariaDB 10.3.13 Release Notes Changelog What is MariaDB 10.3? MariaDB […]

The post MariaDB 10.3.13 and MariaDB Connector/C 3.0.9 now available appeared first on MariaDB.org.

MariaDB 10.3.12 and MariaDB Connector/C 3.0.8 now available

The MariaDB Foundation is pleased to announce the availability of MariaDB 10.3.12, the latest stable release in the MariaDB 10.3 series, as well as MariaDB Connector/ODBC 3.0.8, the latest stable release in the MariaDB Connector/ODBC series. See the release notes and changelogs for details. Download MariaDB 10.3.12 Release Notes Changelog What is MariaDB 10.3? MariaDB […]

The post MariaDB 10.3.12 and MariaDB Connector/C 3.0.8 now available appeared first on MariaDB.org.

MariaDB 10.3.11, and MariaDB Connector/C 3.0.7, Connector/ODBC 3.0.7 and Connector/Node.js 2.0.1 now available

The MariaDB Foundation is pleased to announce the availability of MariaDB 10.3.11, the latest stable release in the MariaDB 10.3 series, as well as MariaDB Connector/C 3.0.7 and MariaDB Connector/ODBC 3.0.7, both stable releases, and MariaDB Connector/Node.js 2.0.1, the first beta release of the new 100% JavaScript non-blocking MariaDB client for Node.js, compatible with Node.js […]

The post MariaDB 10.3.11, and MariaDB Connector/C 3.0.7, Connector/ODBC 3.0.7 and Connector/Node.js 2.0.1 now available appeared first on MariaDB.org.

Webinar Wed 8/29: Databases in the Hosted Cloud

Please join Percona’s Chief Evangelist, Colin Charles on Wednesday, August 29th, 2018, as he presents Databases in the Hosted Cloud at 7:00 AM PDT (UTC-7) / 10:00 AM EDT (UTC-4).

Register Now

 

Nearly everyone today uses some form of database in the hosted cloud. You can use hosted MySQL, MariaDB, Percona Server, and PostgreSQL in several cloud providers as a database as a service (DBaaS).

In this webinar, Colin Charles explores how to efficiently deploy a cloud database configured for optimal performance, with a particular focus on MySQL.

You’ll learn the differences between the various public cloud offerings for Amazon RDS including Aurora, Google Cloud SQL, Rackspace OpenStack …

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Webinar Tues 8/21: MariaDB 10.3 vs. MySQL 8.0

Please join Percona’s Chief Evangelist, Colin Charles on Tuesday, August 21st, 2018, as he presents MariaDB 10.3 vs. MySQL 8.0 at 7:00 AM PDT (UTC-7) / 10:00 PM EDT (UTC-4).

Register Now

Are they syntactically similar? Where do these two languages differ? Why would I use one over the other?

MariaDB 10.3 is on the path of gradually diverging from MySQL 8.0. One obvious example is the internal data dictionary currently under development for MySQL 8.0. This is a major change to the way metadata is stored and used within the server: MariaDB doesn’t have an equivalent feature. Implementing this feature could mark the end of datafile-level compatibility between MySQL and MariaDB.

There are also non-technical …

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Webinar Wed 7/18: MariaDB 10.3 vs. MySQL 8.0

Please join Percona’s Chief Evangelist, Colin Charles as he presents as he presents MariaDB 10.3 vs. MySQL 8.0 on Wednesday, July 18th, 2018, at 9:00 AM PDT (UTC-7) / 12:00 PM EDT (UTC-4).

Register Now

 

Technical considerations

Are they syntactically similar? Where do these two databases differ? Why would I use one over the other?

MariaDB 10.3 is on the path of gradually diverging from MySQL 8.0. One obvious example is the internal data dictionary currently under development for MySQL 8.0. This is a major change to the way metadata is stored and used within the server, and MariaDB doesn’t have an equivalent feature. Implementing this feature could mark the end of datafile-level compatibility between …

[Read more]
JFG Posted on the Percona Community Blog - A Nice Feature in MariaDB 10.3: no InnoDB Buffer Pool in Core Dumps

I just posted an article on the Percona Community Blog.  You can access it following this link:

A Nice Feature in MariaDB 10.3: no InnoDB Buffer Pool in Core Dumps

I do not know if I will stop publishing posts on my personal blog or use both, I will see how things go.  In the rest of this post, I will share why I published there and how things went in the process.

So there is a Percona

A Nice Feature in MariaDB 10.3: no InnoDB Buffer Pool in Core Dumps

MariaDB 10.3 is now generally available (10.3.7 was released GA on 2018-05-25). The article What’s New in MariaDB Server 10.3 by the MariaDB Corporation lists three key improvements in 10.3: temporal data processing, Oracle compatibility features, and purpose-built storage engines. Even if I am excited about MyRocks and curious on Spider, I am also very interested in less flashy but still very important changes that make running the database in production easier. This post describes such improvement: no InnoDB Buffer Pool in core dumps.

Hidden in the …

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