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Displaying posts with tag: MySQL (reset)
MySQL Swapping With Fsync

One problem that’s a lot less common these days is swapping. Most of the issues that cause swapping with MySQL have been nailed down to several different key configuration points, either in the OS or MySQL, or issues like the swap insanity issue documented by Jeremy Cole back in 2010. As such, it’s usually pretty easy to resolve these issues and keep MySQL out of swap space. Recently, however, we had tried all of the usual tricks but had an issue where MySQL was still swapping.

The server with the issue was a VM running with a single CPU socket (multiple cores), so we knew it wasn’t NUMA. Swappiness and MySQL were both configured correctly and when you checked the output of free -m it showed 4735M of memory available.

[sylvester@host~]$ free -m
              total        used        free      shared  buff/cache   available …
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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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What To Do When MySQL Runs Out of Memory: Troubleshooting Guide

Troubleshooting crashes is never a fun task, especially if MySQL does not report the cause of the crash. For example, when MySQL runs out of memory. Peter Zaitsev wrote a blog post in 2012: Troubleshooting MySQL Memory Usage with a lots of useful tips. With the new versions of MySQL (5.7+) and performance_schema we have the ability to troubleshoot MySQL memory allocation much more easily.

In this blog post I will show you how to use it.

First of all, there are 3 major cases when MySQL will crash due to running out of memory:

  1. MySQL tries to allocate more memory than available because we specifically told it to do so. For example: you did not set innodb_buffer_pool_size correctly. This is very easy to fix
  2. There is some other process(es) on the server that allocates RAM. It can be the application …
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Scale-with-Maxscale-part5 (Multi-Master)

This is the 5th blog in series of Maxscale blog, Below is the list of our previous blogs, Which provides deep insight for Maxscale and its use cases for different architectures.

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Percona Monitoring and Management 1.12.0 Is Now Available

PMM (Percona Monitoring and Management) is a free and open-source platform for managing and monitoring MySQL and MongoDB performance. You can run PMM in your own environment for maximum security and reliability. It provides thorough time-based analysis for MySQL and MongoDB servers to ensure that your data works as efficiently as possible.

In release 1.12, we invested our efforts in the following areas:

  • Visual Explain in Query Analytics – Gain insight into MySQL’s query optimizer for your queries
  • New Dashboard – InnoDB Compression Metrics – Evaluate effectiveness of InnoDB Compression
  • New Dashboard – MySQL Command/Handler Compare – Contrast MySQL instances side by side
  • Updated …
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Webinar 6/28: Securing Database Servers From External Attacks

Please join Percona’s Chief Evangelist Colin Charles on Thursday, June 28th, 2018, as he presents Securing Database Servers From External attacks at 7:00 AM PDT (UTC-7) / 10:00 AM EDT (UTC-4).

Register Now

 

A critical piece of your infrastructure is the database tier, yet people don’t pay enough attention to it judging by how many are bitten via poorly chosen defaults, or just a lack understanding of running a secure database tier. In this talk, I’ll focus on MySQL/MariaDB, PostgreSQL, and MongoDB, and cover external authentication, auditing, encryption, SSL, firewalls, replication, and more gems from over a decade of consulting in this space from Percona’s 4,000+ …

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MySQL InnoDB Cluster : MySQL Shell and the AdminAPI

As promised, here is a post more detailed on how to create a MySQL InnoDB Cluster using MySQL Shell and the AdminAPI.

First of all, as a good practice is never enough repeated, whatever the version of MySQL you are using, please use the latest MySQL Shell ! So if you are using 5.7, please use MySQL Shell 8.0.11. See this compatibility matrix or this official one.

dba class

The AdminAPI can be accessed by the MySQL Shell via the dba object. The reference manual for this class is here. The Shell …

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Extended Connectivity in dbForge Tools for MySQL

We are excited to inform our users that we have released new versions of dbForge Schema Compare for MySQL, dbForge Data Compare for MySQL, dbForge Query Builder for MySQL, dbForge Data Generator for MySQL, and dbForge Documenter for MySQL. We have introduced brand new connectivity features, including support for the latest MySQL Server, v8.0, and […]

Encrypting an existing MySQL/MariaDB RDS Instance

Often it is necessary to convert an unencrypted RDS instance into an encrypted one. And it is usually expected that this process is done with minimum or no downtime. Unfortunately, one can only enable encryption when the instance is created. However, there is still hope, as there are a couple of workarounds to encrypt your existing data.

In this article, I will discuss two different solutions to achieve this result.

Solution 1: Create a snapshot and copy the snapshot to a new encrypted snapshot:

  • Create a manual snapshot of the unencrypted RDS instance
  • Go to Snapshots from the left panel and choose the snapshot just created
  • From the Actions, choose Copy snapshot option and enable encryption
  • Select the new encrypted snapshot
  • Go to Actions and …
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