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Add RSS feeds to your Twitter stream using MySQL and Perl

Adding good content to Twitter can be a pain. I can’t do it during working hours, and I don’t have much time at night. But, the more content you have, the more followers you can gain, and the more your original tweets can be seen (hopefully). I have written several posts about using the latest Perl-Twitter API – Net::Twitter::Lite::WithAPIv1_1, so you might want to check these out as well.

Use MySQL and Perl to automatically find, follow and unfollow twitter users

Using Perl to retrieve direct messages from Twitter, insert messages into a MySQL database and then …

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MySQL Group Replication for MySQL 5.7.9

Hi all, keeping our steady release cycle, it is time again to do another preview release of MySQL Group Replication, the plugin that brings multi-master update everywhere to MySQL, like we described in Hello World post.

We are very proud to do the fifth preview release of MySQL Group Replication, version 0.6.0 based on MySQL Server 5.7.9, which introduces new exciting features, please enjoy the highlights!…

Log Buffer #446: A Carnival of the Vanities for DBAs

This Log Buffer Edition covers some more Oracle, SQL Server and MySQL blog posts from across the world.

Oracle:

  • Should I monitor the MGMTDB database?
  • Connecting MAF Applications to Mobile Cloud Service
  • JRE 6, 7, and 8 now certified with EBS 11i, 12.1, and 12.2
  • The database writer copies data blocks from the buffer cache onto disk. The db_writer_processes initialization parameter determines how many processes will do this task. Its default value is 1 or cpu_count / 8, whichever is greater. I found an Oracle 9 database on a …
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MySQL Connector/J 5.1.37 has been released

I’m pleased to announce: MySQL Connector/J 5.1.37 Maintenance Release is now available.

MySQL Connector/J can be downloaded from the official distribution channels MySQL Downloads and The Central repository. Commercial license version is available for download at My Oracle Support.

As always, we recommend that you check the “CHANGES” file in the
download archive and/or the release notes to be aware of changes in behavior that might affect your application.

MySQL Connector/J 5.1.37 includes several bug fixes and other improvements. I’d like to …

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ClusterControl Tips & Tricks: Updating your MySQL Configuration

Requires ClusterControl 1.2.11 or later. Applies to MySQL based clusters.

From time to time it is necessary to tune and update your configuration. Here we will show you how you can change/update  individual parameters using the ClusterControl UI. Navigate to Manage > Configurations.

Pretend that you want to change max_connections from 200 to 500 on all DB nodes in your cluster.

Click on Change Parameter. Select all MySQL Servers in the DB Instances drop down and select the Group (in this case MYSQLD) where the Parameter that you want to change resides, select the parameter (max_connections), and set the New Value to 500:

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Become a MySQL DBA blog series - Optimizer Hints for faster query execution

MySQL uses a cost-based optimizer to determine the best way to execute a query. It usually does a great job, but not all the time. There are different reasons for that. In some cases, it might not have enough information about the data and plan queries in a non-optimal way.  

The optimizer makes decisions based on statistics and some fixed costs per operation, but it does not understand the differences in hardware. For instance, disk access may have different costs depending on the type of storage used - SSD drives will have quicker access times than spindles, and can perform more operations in a given time. 

However, it is possible to impact how a query will be executed, and this is the topic of today’s blog. 

(Note that in MySQL 5.7, a lot of work has been done in order to improve this - users can modify the cost of different types of operations.)

This is the fourteenth installment in the …

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Loading Arbitary XML documents into MySQL tables with p_load_xml

Many years ago, I wrote about importing XML data into MySQL using ExtractValue(). The reason I'm revisiting the subject now is that I recently received an email request in relation to my old blog post:

I came across one of your blogs on importing XML data to MySQL using ExtractData() and I am trying to do the same using MySQL (5.5) database. However, I am new to this kind of method and would like to seek your expertise on this.

I have an XML file that looks like this:

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
 <wovoml xmlns="http://www.wovodat.org"
 xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance"
 version="1.1.0" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.wovodat.org phread2.xsd">
 <Data>
 <Seismic>
 <SingleStationEventDataset>
  <SingleStationEvent code="VTAG_20160405000000" owner1="169" …
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Use MySQL and Perl to automatically find, follow and unfollow twitter users

A friend of mine asked me how they could automatically follow and unfollow people on Twitter. But they didn’t want to follow just anyone and everyone. He had a Twitter account which they used for recruiting in a very narrow construction industry. He wanted to find people in the same industry and follow them – hoping they would follow him back and learn about his open jobs. When I joined Twitter back in 2008, I wrote a similar program to automatically follow/unfollow users, but the Twitter API has changed quite a bit since then. So I decided to re-write the program with the latest Perl-Twitter API – Net::Twitter::Lite::WithAPIv1_1.

Before you attempt to use these scripts, you will need to register your application with twitter via apps.twitter.com, and obtain the following:

consumer_key
consumer_secret
access_token …
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Oracle OpenWorld 2015 – Bloggers Meetup

Many of you are coming to San Francisco next week for Oracle OpenWorld 2015 and many of you have already booked time on your calendars on Wednesday evening before the appreciation event. You are right — the Annual Oracle Bloggers Meetup, one of your favorite events of the OpenWorld, is happening at usual place and time!

What: Oracle Bloggers Meetup 2015.

When: Wed, 28-Oct-2015, 5:30pm.

Where: Main Dining Room, Jillian’s Billiards @ Metreon, 101 Fourth Street, San Francisco, CA 94103 ( …

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Slow query graphs using Performance Schema and Graphite

I love graphs. They just make things easier when it comes to finding patterns. I also love visibility. Having the ability to known what is going on inside the database is priceless. How about having visibility of the slow queries execution time on a graph? Let’s do it.

We’ve already described how to get query digest using performance schema. Since the MySQL server is already doing the heavy lifting for you with little-to-no overhead, this information is available practically at will. So let’s make some graphs with that data.

To accomplish this I will use the well-known tool Graphite to store and render time-series data. For those who are not familiar with Graphite, it’s actually a 3-piece tool, consisting of:

  • The …
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