Using freely available ZRM for MySQL , you can set up a solution to backup and restore your MySQL database, within minutes. This article has all the details.
If you're following MySQL or PHP landscape you should have seen announcement by MySQL to develop pure PHP driver. If not - Here is FAQ .
I'm to meet the team (Georg, Andrey etc) which will be developing this driver during my visit to Open Source Database Conference in November so I thought it would be good idea to gather some wish list for things nice to have in this new driver. Below is my list and I would appreciate to hear your ideas.
Build In Profiling I would like to see how many connections and queries page generated and how long they took - I will place this information in the log. For debugging I'd like to be able to get a table below page output listing all the queries, their exec times and number of rows they are returned. So far it has to be done in inherited class.
Auto Explain Would be very helpful for …
[Read more]I have decided to withdraw definitively from the political debate on the European Patent Litigation Agreement (EPLA). The process itself may very well take several more years, but I will not do any more lobbying nor make any more public statements in this regard.
This year I made a lot of effort to inform politicians, the media and the public of the shortcomings of the present EPLA proposal, and I had the chance to make my contribution in the build-up to the European Parliament’s October 13 resolution, but I kept rather silent in recent weeks and will not speak out on this particular issue again. Until there is a new patent policy process in which I might participate, I will not comment on any patent-related issues. Last year I returned to the fray after three months of absence ? this time there definitely won’t be …
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Ah well, since my first article on this, MySQL has had multiple
version changes and I have gained more experience in using MySQL.
(Off topic...... I really like the fact that I am stuck in
everything from MySQL server config/support thru Apache thru
WebObjects/Java development, deployment and administration ......
never a dull day in the job!). Here is my "new improved" process
for setting up a replication master-slave configuration using
MySQL 4.1.21. These instructions will definitely not work for
version 4.0.XX and earlier and may not work for some earlier
versions of 4.1. Earlier version incompatabilities are mostly
related to the parameters used in mysqldump.
This article assumes a basic knowledge of unix (cd, ssh, scp,
mkdir, chown) and a basic knowledge of mysql (mysqld, mysql,
mysqldump, mysqladmin)
Ah well, since my first article on this, MySQL has had multiple
version changes and I have gained more experience in using MySQL.
(Off topic...... I really like the fact that I am stuck in
everything from MySQL server config/support thru Apache thru
WebObjects/Java development, deployment and administration ......
never a dull day in the job!). Here is my "new improved" process
for setting up a replication master-slave configuration using
MySQL 4.1.21. These instructions will definitely not work for
version 4.0.XX and earlier and may not work for some earlier
versions of 4.1. Earlier version incompatabilities are mostly
related to the parameters used in mysqldump.
This article assumes a basic knowledge of unix (cd, ssh, scp,
mkdir, chown) and a basic knowledge of mysql (mysqld, mysql,
mysqldump, mysqladmin)
There are essentially two main choices for scaling MySQL - cluster (NDB) or replication.
For many people replication works fine because their application is mostly read based. Just throw a few MySQL slave servers into the mix and you can scale out pretty well.
My guess is that this only works well for about 80-90% of users.
You update your database on the master but perform queries on the slaves. If you need more queries you can just add more slaves.
The problem with replication is that you can't scale your writes. If you buy an expensive RAID array you can probably get 1500 transactions per second (maybe more) out of your IO array but that's the best you can do for the whole cluster.
As soon as you hit 100% of your transactions as writes you're done. You've hit a scaling wall with replication and you can't go any farther.
You can of course go with vertical replication partitioning which works …
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Many of you might know HowToForge, but for those who don't - there's a
bunch of excellent and interesting tutorials relating to Linux
and OpenSource.
There are also many about MySQL or using MySQL - here are some
examples:
-
How To Set Up Database Replication In
MySQL
-
MySQL Master Master Replication
-
How To Set Up A Load-Balanced MySQL
Cluster
-
Running A MySQL-Based DNS Server: MyDNS
- …
Dear Diary, today I ventured into one of the
darkest realms of the sysadmin profession: I started playing with
SNMP. My goal was very simple and quite clearly stated: Make the
output of "SHOW GLOBAL STATUS" available to a SNMP client. One
would think that this is a reasonable and easily fulfilled
wish.
Little did I know of the madness and despair that linger in the
depths which are guarded by the dread named ASN.1 and where the
noxious fumes of the organisation no longer called CCITT can
still strongly be smelled.
But let us begin this story at the beginning - with a clean
install of Suse Linux 10.0 and my trusty apt4rpm and me. It was
my thought that the perl support of net-snmp might me handy to
get me where I wanted to me: perl is easily the more convenient
language for prototyping that C or C++ and getting to the data …
I got a lot of feedback on my question a few weeks back when pondering what I might choose for an OS to run MySQL. I also got a few "so what did you go with" questions.
A week ago I decided to give Ubuntu server a shot at winning my favor. I haven't used Ubuntu much, but all the fuss over it warrants giving it a shot.
I'm quite pleased so far. It meets at least two of the items on my list from that original post (minimal processes and minimal footprint). I'm not familiar with the philosophy behind building the Ubuntu kernel, but I'll accept the fact that there's nothing specifically tailored for MySQL.
Four clues that the server is installed minimal:
-
- 17 minutes from start to finish (including times when it sits …
The sixteenth edition of Log Buffer, the weekly review of database blogs, has been published by Guy Bowerman on his blog, Informix Application Development. Log Buffer has a distributed editorship. If you’d like to share your POV on the database blogosphere, read the Log Buffer homepage and get involved. Take it away, Guy.