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451 CAOS Links - 2006.10.30

MySQL AB Licenses Hyperic IT Management Technology, MySQL (Press Release)

Hyperic Gives ISVs Enterprise-Class IT Management Capability with New OEM Partner Program, Hyperic (Press Release)

Medsphere Expands Management Team To Support Growing Market Interest in OpenVista Electronic Health Record System, Medsphere (Press Release)

Helmi Technologies Joins Open Source Collaborative Eclipse Foundation, Helmi Technologies (Press Release)

Bostech’s New ChainBuilder ESB Enables Communication Between Applications in a …

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Wikipedia leaves $100M on the table - no advertising

Jason McCabe Calacanis (Weblogs) writes about this... Jimmy Wales (Wikipedia) does not want to have *any* advertising, even if all of the proceeds were to go to worthy causes.

Is there anything wrong with that? Jason appears to think so, pleading with Jimmy to reconsider. There'll even be free bandwidth chucked in. But that's a catch... Jimmy does not want to be dependent on anyone else for hardware or bandwidth, Wikipedia has had fab offers from a variety of companies with great infrastructure. Other people are commenting to that blog post also, some reckon that Jimmy might change his mind "for the right price". I'm pondering... is it really so hard to understand -or at least appreciate and respect- that some people have certain guiding principles and actually stick with them - no price? Are we really so …

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MySQL Licenses Hyperic SIGAR Technology

As I hinted at a couple of weeks ago, MySQL has incorporated the SIGAR (System Information Gathering and Reporting) technology into our MySQL Network Monitoring and Advisory Service.  SIGAR gives us a portable way to gether low-level system information so that it can be incorporated into our overall monitoring and advisory service. For example, you can have custom rules and alerts that are based on information from the MySQL Server, from the operating system through SIGAR and so on. 

We've been working with Hyperic for a long time and they have proven to be extremely responsive to any changes needed and in pointing out the best way to leverage the SIGAR API. (That is, they never tell us to …

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Setup XServe G5 with 10.4 Client as MySQL Server

Well, the new Quad Xeon 64-bit Intel XServes are shipping November 2006, so there are deals to be found on PowerPC XServes on eBay. We needed another XServe to add to our few G4 XServes, so we decided to get the fastest machine we could on eBay and use it as our dedicated MySQL server instead of the G4. We got a good deal on a cluster Dual 2.0 GHz G5 on eBay recently. It came with 10.3 Panther Server, but we want to use Tiger and I don't want to pay $499 for OS X Server Tiger right now (I'll wait a year when they are going to be $149 long after Leopard Server has shipped). So we are going to use Tiger 10.4 client on this headless G5 XServe. This article documents some of the details in getting this set up......

Setup XServe G5 with 10.4 Client as MySQL Server

Well, the new Quad Xeon 64-bit Intel XServes are shipping November 2006, so there are deals to be found on PowerPC XServes on eBay. We needed another XServe to add to our few G4 XServes, so we decided to get the fastest machine we could on eBay and use it as our dedicated MySQL server instead of the G4. We got a good deal on a cluster Dual 2.0 GHz G5 on eBay recently. It came with 10.3 Panther Server, but we want to use Tiger and I don't want to pay $499 for OS X Server Tiger right now (I'll wait a year when they are going to be $149 long after Leopard Server has shipped). So we are going to use Tiger 10.4 client on this headless G5 XServe. This article documents some of the details in getting this set up......

MySQL: Stanford GSB case study (Part II)

Christof Wittig, CEO of db4o, and former student at Stanford's Graduate School of Business, has written an excellent follow-up to his original MySQL case study.

Christof does a great job of tracing the challenges facing MySQL, as well as the way the company has successfully responded to many of them. He also identifies an interesting, parallel trend to how Linux spread:

The first enterprise-wide users of MySQL were Internet-enabled start-up companies which turned to free open source software stacks such as LAMP to get their business off the ground. These companies not only saw the lower cost advantages of open source, but also valued the ability to modify parts of the underlying software to differentiate themselves in …

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Database partitioning

We’ve been experimenting lately with database partitioning (in version 2.3.2-dev, make sure to update your kettle.jar to the latest snapshot). In our context, database partitioning means that we divide our data over a cluster of several databases.

A typical way of doing that is that you divide the customer_id by the number of hosts in the cluster and get the remainder. If the remainder is 0, you store the data on the first host in the cluster, 1 for the second, 2 for the third, etc.

This sort of thing is something that we’ve been implementing in Kettle for the last couple of weeks. The reasoning is simple: if one database is not up to the task, split the load over 2 or 5 or 10 databases on any amount of hosts.  ( Now imagine all the PCs at work all running an in-memory database )
Besides small changes to the Kettle transformation …

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Using Sphinx as MySQL data retrieval accelerator

I've run into the following thread couple of days ago:

Basically someone is using sphinx to perform search simply on attributes (date, group etc) and get sorted result set and claiming it is way faster than getting it with MySQL. Honestly I can well believe it for cases when you want to know number of matching rows as well as if you can't build efficient indexes so selectivity is done by index and index used to resolve order by.

Funny enough to filter by attributes or sort sphinx does not use indexes - indexes are only used for full text search matching, but it is still extremely fast doing data crunching.

I just tested right now performing search of "the" which matched 100.000.000 of documents out of 200.000.000 collection (200GB) completed in 0.7 second. This is system we're building for one of our clients which uses cluster of 3 nodes to …

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Using CHAR/VARCHAR data types in NDBAPI

Many people have problem how to use the string data types (char/varchar) from the NDBAPI. Here I explain how you can use them.

First of all, let's create a table we can use as an example:

CREATE TABLE `t1` (
`a` int(11) NOT NULL,
`b` char(64) DEFAULT NULL,
`c` varchar(255) DEFAULT NULL,
`d` varchar(256) DEFAULT NULL,
PRIMARY KEY (`a`)
) ENGINE=ndbcluster DEFAULT CHARSET=latin1;


CHAR

In the MySQL server CHARs are space padded to the length of the CHAR.

Example:
insert into t1(a,b) values (1, 'mysql'); -- 'mysql' is 5 bytes long.

The MySQL server will now space-pad the string up to the length (in this case 64 bytes, given the character set used).

However, the NDBAPI does not respect this and does not care if it is space-padded, null-padded, or even 5-padded. But, if you want to be able …

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MySQL AB Licenses Hyperic IT Management Technology

SAN FRANCISCO ? Hyperic Inc., the leader in multi-platform, open-source IT management, today announced a technology license agreement with MySQL AB, the developer of the world?s most popular open source database. Under terms of the agreement, Hyperic?s SIGAR (System Information Gathering and Reporter) API is being incorporated into the new monitoring and advisory component of the recently-announced MySQL Enterprise subscription offering.

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