FOSDEM21 MariaDB devroom committee

We are pleased to announce the FOSDEM21 MariaDB devroom committee.

In February 2021, MariaDB will for the first time be hosting a dedicated devroom at FOSDEM, and the committee are tasked with narrowing down the submitted presentations to choose the most interesting final selection for the FOSDEM and MariaDB communities.

In past years, as part of the joint MySQL, MariaDB and Friends devroom, the number of submissions far exceeded the available slots, and we look forward to burdening the committee with a similar problem this year.

The committee

Aurélien Lequoy (68koncept)
Colin Charles
Daniel Bartholomew (MariaDB Corporation)
Manuel Arostegui (Wikimedia Foundation)
Sveta Smirnova (Percona)
Vicențiu Ciorbaru (MariaDB Foundation)

Welcome to everyone, and we can’t wait to see what you decide on!

Emergency Release of MariaDB 10.5.8, 10.4.17, 10.3.27, and 10.2.36 is now available

The MariaDB Foundation is pleased to announce the availability of MariaDB 10.5.8, MariaDB 10.4.17, MariaDB 10.3.27, and MariaDB 10.2.36, the latest stable releases in their respective series.

Why do we release MariaDB again only a week after the 10.5.7, 10.4.16, etc? What’s the emergency?

The previous, scheduled, set of releases (10.2 and up) included a security related change — MariaDB server became more strict about accepting network packets from the client. It never was particularly trusting, but still there was a loophole in the handling of prepared statements where the server just assumed that the client sends the correct data. …

MariaDB 10.5.7, 10.4.16, 10.3.26, 10.2.35 and 10.1.48 now available

The MariaDB Foundation is pleased to announce the availability of MariaDB 10.5.7, MariaDB 10.4.16, MariaDB 10.3.26, MariaDB 10.2.35 and MariaDB 10.1.48, the latest stable releases in their respective series.

See the release notes and changelogs for details.

Download MariaDB 10.5.7

Release Notes Changelog What is MariaDB 10.5?


Download MariaDB 10.4.16

Release Notes Changelog What is MariaDB 10.4?


Download MariaDB 10.3.26

Release Notes Changelog What is MariaDB 10.3?

MariaDB 10.5.6, 10.4.15, 10.3.25, 10.2.34 and 10.1.47 now available

The MariaDB Foundation is pleased to announce the availability of MariaDB 10.5.6, MariaDB 10.4.15, MariaDB 10.3.25, MariaDB 10.2.34 and MariaDB 10.1.47, the latest stable releases in their respective series.

The only change in all releases is a fix for a vulnerability, CVE-2020-15180.

See the release notes and changelogs for details.

Download MariaDB 10.5.6

Release Notes Changelog What is MariaDB 10.5?


Download MariaDB 10.4.15

Release Notes Changelog What is MariaDB 10.4?

MariaDB 10.5.5, 10.4.14, 10.3.24, 10.2.33 and 10.1.46 now available

The MariaDB Foundation is pleased to announce the availability of MariaDB 10.5.5, MariaDB 10.4.14, MariaDB 10.3.24, MariaDB 10.2.33 and MariaDB 10.1.46, the latest stable releases in their respective series.

See the release notes and changelogs for details.

Download MariaDB 10.5.5

Release Notes Changelog What is MariaDB 10.5?


Download MariaDB 10.4.14

Release Notes Changelog What is MariaDB 10.4?


Download MariaDB 10.3.24

Release Notes Changelog What is MariaDB 10.3?

Downloads – A fresh new look

It’s been close to four months since we announced our new project of renewing MariaDB Downloads. We are now ready to launch our first version. We have done a lot of work behind the scenes which will simplify further developments. A technical breakdown post is coming, but for now, let’s focus on the new features!

In with the new

User friendliness – one click to download

New downloads form

User friendliness is at the core of MariaDB (going all the way back to MySQL times). It should be really easy to download, install and run MariaDB.

MariaDB Server Fest CfP extended until Wed 15 July 2020

Thank you for the many submissions to our Call for Papers, and to your insightful replies to our Call for Attendees.

Based on the CfA replies and other feedback given to us, we could draw a few conclusions.

Attendees: Three-day event

First, we will spread out the event from a two-day event to a three-day event, for the attendees. We received several comments around preferences for shorter days, giving time for “normal” work. Rather three short days, than two long ones. That made perfect sense to us. We already changed a couple of convetions when moving from a physical event to a virtual;