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Percona Server on the Nexus 7: Your own MySQL Database Server on an Android Tablet

Percona Server on the Nexus 7: Your own MySQL Database Server on an Android Tablet

Following Roel’s post, Percona Server on the Raspberry Pi: Your own MySQL Database Server , I thought what other crazy gadget can I run Percona Server on? And having an Asus Nexus 7 Android tablet I decided to give it a try.

Anything below contains a risk that you break your tablet if you do not know what you are doing, so be advised.

First, we need rooted tablet, most likely with custom ROM. I personally use …

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Installing Apache2 With PHP5 And MySQL Support On Scientific Linux 6.3 (LAMP)

Installing Apache2 With PHP5 And MySQL Support On Scientific Linux 6.3 (LAMP)

LAMP is short for Linux, Apache, MySQL, PHP. This tutorial shows how you can install an Apache2 webserver on a Scientific Linux 6.3 server with PHP5 support (mod_php) and MySQL support.

Percona Live Conference Recommendations

While many attendees are repeat offenders, if 2013 is your first MySQL conference and you are relatively new with MySQL (say < 2 years experience), it can be daunting to determine which of the 8 or more concurrent sessions you should attend during the conference.

Here are my top recommendations that give you a good grounding in the various conference topics and a wealth of experience from known MySQL authorities, on important topics.

  1. A backup today saves you tomorrow by Ben Mildred at Pythian. Losing your data is a terrible experience. Learn what is needed to keep your data safe and you system highly available.
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MySQL Performance: Analyzing Benchmarks, part-2 : MDL contentions and PFS overhead in MySQL 5.6

Following the previous post, this article is focused on performance problems reported by Mark Callaghan during MySQL 5.6 GA testings, which was initially about MDL contentions, and then also Performance Schema (PFS) overhead observed within the same OLTP Read-Only workload..

Let's split these 2 problems in 2 parts, and start with MDL related contentions first.

MDL in MySQL 5.5 and 5.6
What is MDL?.. - I'm strongly inviting you to read Dmitry Lenev's comments within the same bug report to get familiar with MDL feature and its implementation design ( …

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MySQL Events

The last MySQL User Group NL meeting was last Friday. It's always nice to learn about MySQL and meet other MySQL users. There were two presentations: one about MySQL User Defined Functions (UDF's) and one about MySQL TCO. The slides are available from the meetup page.

There are already a number of MySQL events announced for the next few months. I'll only list events in the Netherlands and Virtual events.

MySQL Virtual Developer Days
This is a virtual event which will take place on March 19 (EMEA region, NA event is on March 12). There are many interesting topics: Performance Schema, New 5.6 Features, Replication, MySQL Enterprise Monitor
The eVite

SkySQL and MariaDB roadshow
21 March 2013 in Amsterdam
This event  have …

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MySQL 5.5 lock_wait_timeout: patience is a virtue, and a locked server

MySQL 5.5 lock_wait_timeout: patience is a virtue, and a locked server

Like Ovais said in Implications of Metadata Locking Changes in MySQL 5.5, the hot topic these days is MySQL 5.6, but there was an important metadata locking change in MySQL 5.5.  As I began to dig into the Percona Toolkit bug he reported concerning this change apropos pt-online-schema-change, I discovered something about lock_wait_timeout …

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OpenVZ and Amazon S3: how to solve the dreaded connection throttle failure

Sometimes we encounter odd application responses that seem to make no sense. One of these such issues is related to running virtual server instances (OS Containers not Para-Virtualized VMs) and attempting to back up their data to Amazon’s S3 cloud storage. For moderately sized virtual machines running MySQL databases or Python/PHP based websites and code repositories this can be an inexpensive, quickly provisioned, and easy way to provide disaster recovery backups in numerous geographic locations, since we generally want DR content to be located in a physically distant location. Nevertheless, we can encounter errors if using an S3 mount in a distance location from our server if the timezone/sync data is incorrect.

The commonly seen error is as follows – and it doesn’t give much information for troubleshooting and resolution.

WARNING: Upload failed:  ([Errno 32] Broken pipe)
WARNING: Retrying on lower speed (throttle=0.00) …
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How To Skip Certain Errors In MySQL Replication

How To Skip Certain Errors In MySQL Replication

MySQL replication is nice, however it can happen that it stops because of an error, and restoring a working replication can be hard - you need to set locks on the master to get a consistent MySQL dump, and during that time websites are not accessible. However there's a way to make the MySQL slave ignore certain errors using the slave-skip-errors directive.

MySQL documentation writer wanted

As MySQL is thriving and growing, we're looking for an experienced technical writer located in Europe or North America to join the MySQL documentation team.

For this job, we need the best and most dedicated people around. You will be part of a geographically distributed documentation team responsible for the technical documentation of all MySQL products. Team members are expected to work independently, requiring discipline and excellent time-management skills as well as the technical facilities to communicate across the Internet.

Candidates should be prepared to work intensively with our engineers and support personnel. The overall team is highly distributed across different geographies and time zones. Our source format is DocBook XML. We're not just writing documentation, but also handling publication. This means you should be familiar with DocBook, and willing to learn our publication infrastructure.

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MongoDB + Fractal Tree Indexes = High Compression

One doesn’t have to look far to see that there is strong interest in MongoDB compression. MongoDB has an open ticket from 2009 titled “Option to Store Data Compressed” with Fix Version/s planned but not scheduled. The ticket has a lot of comments, mostly from MongoDB users explaining their use-cases for the feature. For example, Khalid Salomão notes that “Compression would be very good to reduce storage cost and improve IO performance” and Andy notes that “SSD is getting more and more common for servers. They are very fast. The problems are high costs and low capacity.” There are many …

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