I and Kostja will be in San Francisco next week. We have plans
most of Tuesday but no plans for dinner on Tuesday night.
Anyone up for an impromptu dinner with a couple of
MySQL'ers?
Either drop me some email or leave a message in comments. If I
get a good response I will announce where we will go for dinner.
Any good bars to recommend?
Following on my "the winning mentality" post, here's a nice little image that Paul Kedrosky clued me into. It shows where the Forbes 400 richest Americans live - the billionaires, that is....
Soon enough, I'm expecting to see one dot in Alabama (Digium....), another few in California (SugarCRM, MySQL, etc.), and heck, let's give North Carolina a few more dollars, too.
Open source will crack the billion-dollar barrier, and a lot of people and companies will see the benefit of it. Fortunately, the difference between wealth in open source and wealth in …
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Today we have the great pleasure to announce the availability of
the simplified Chinese version of our website. Many thanks to
ZDYX for all his
efforts to make this translation possible.
To the simplified Chinese translation
MySQL has two upcoming European Customer Conferences which will feature customer presentations by the likes of BBC News, Neckermann, Siemens and Tiger Communications. The events are sponsored by Unisys, which is helping many large clients successfully integrate open source technology into their IT strategy. The agenda includes a range of business and technical presentations covering case studies, best practices, product roadmap, high availability and performance tuning.
More information is available on the MySQL web site. Space is limited and last year's events sold out. So please register early if you want to attend.
- MySQL: MySQL Hosts European Conferences in October
- London - …
My Regular Exrepssion UDFs for MySQL have been available on MySQL Forge for a while already, now i've taken the time to create a Trac project page for them.
I've implemented the following four functions
* REGEXP_LIKE(text, pattern [, mode])
* REGEXP_SUBSTR(text, pattern)
* REGEXP_INSTR(text, pattern [,position [,occurence [,return_end
[,mode]]]])
* REGEXP_REPLACE(text, pattern, replace)
that behave very similar to their Oracle counterparts, using the same regular expression syntax as the MySQL REGEXP operator.
Back in April, I wrote On IPs, hostnames, and MySQL, which described the (sometimes surprising) ways in which MySQL deals with IP addresses, hostnames, and privileges, as well as some basics about the host cache itself. In a footnote to that post, I mentioned a patch I had written against MySQL 4.1 to give some more visibility into the host cache.
Over the past two days, I have worked on porting that patch to MySQL 5.01, 2, and making some fairly large improvements to it. The patch implements a few things:
- Configurable Size — Without the patch, the size of the cache is fixed at 128 entries, and can only be changed by changing a #define and recompiling. You may now tune the size of the host cache using SET GLOBAL …
The domain registrars are making more money again, this time with
.mobi. Naturally, people with a trademark or other (like .com)
domain will be wanting to grab their .mobi so noone else can nick
off with it. But what's the practical purpose of all these
additional toplevel domains?
As far as I can tell, it's just a money making scheme just like
.biz was. You may use one or the other to provide advance clarity
to your users/customers, but you'll want/need to grab all the
domains anyway to keep them safe.
Guh.
In MySQL 5, at the moment you can't write a recursive stored
functions. It is forbidden.
Instead you can write a recursive stored procedure. That is not
permitted by default but modifying a variable you can achieve
such a recursion.
The variable is max_sp_recursion_depth.
SET GLOBAL max_sp_recursion_depth = 0.
A value of zero means: "no recursion" (the default value)
SET GLOBAL max_sp_recursion_depth=255
A value greater then zero means: the maximun number of nested
recursion in a procedure. Max value is 255.
Pay attention to the variable named thread_stack, it
is the amount of memory allocated for the stack of a thread.
Writing a recursive routine the tipical error is to create an
infinite recursion An infinite recursion leads very soon to fill
up the stack. (the default value of the thread stack is less than
200K)
So, if you have …
Peter Zaitsev's blog entry on Duplicate indexes and redundant indexes
certainly made a bit of a stir! It has already led to a new
(mini) project by Baron Schwartz, the Duplicate index/foreign key finder which is
publicly available on MySQLForge as a perl script. Daniel
Schneller has entered the arena as well, devoting an
entire blog to his own java implementation to tackle this and
other index trouble.
I figured it would be fun …
I wonder how many people will attend a session at a tech conference where the start of the description reads as follows:
Hey You! Yes, You! Manager, marketeer, sales professional: are you tired of 98lb weaklings kicking silicon in your face?
I am thinking this way because my friends at MySQL AB are putting on another MySQL User Conference - this time from April 23 - 26 in Santa Clara, California.
The Call for Participation went live a few days ago and, as always, I am proposing a session. I don’t really need to go, but I definitely have a soft spot for the event, as I chaired the first two MySQL UCs. Also, I had a good deal of fun working on the …
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