MariaDB 11.2.3, 11.1.4, 11.0.5, 10.11.7, 10.6.17, 10.5.24, 10.4.33 now available

The MariaDB Foundation is pleased to announce the availability of MariaDB 10.11.7, MariaDB 10.6.17, MariaDB 10.5.24 and MariaDB 10.4.33, the latest stable releases in their respective long-term series (maintained for five years from their first stable release dates), as well as MariaDB 11.2.3, MariaDB 11.1.4 and MariaDB 11.0.5, the latest stable releases in their respective short-term series (maintained for one year).

See the release notes and changelogs for details.


Download MariaDB 11.2.3

Release Notes Changelog What is MariaDB 11.2?

Looking for more migration guinea pigs

Remember our open letter, Looking for MySQL 5.7 or 8.0 guinea pigs?

We caught a nice German guinea pig!

We caught a nice guinea pig, a German one, from Hannover. They are currently using MySQL 5.7 (as was our prime wish), and they will be doing a live migration to MariaDB 10.11. They have 1.000.000.000 queries a day, their database size is 412 GB, and our goal is to the migration of the production data in less than five minutes – during our MariaDB Migration Workshop at our pre-FOSDEM event on Friday 2 Feb 2024.

MariaDB 11.1.3, 11.0.4, 10.11.6, 10.10.7, 10.6.16, 10.5.23, 10.4.32 now available

The MariaDB Foundation is pleased to announce the availability of MariaDB 10.11.6, MariaDB 10.6.16, MariaDB 10.5.23 and MariaDB 10.4.32, the latest stable releases in their respective long-term series (maintained for five years from their first stable release dates), as well as MariaDB 11.1.3, MariaDB 11.0.4 and MariaDB 10.10.7, the latest stable releases in their respective short-term series (maintained for one year).

See the release notes and changelogs for details.


Download MariaDB 11.1.3

Release Notes Changelog What is MariaDB 11.1?

MariaDB 11.0.3, 10.11.5, 10.10.6, 10.9.8, 10.6.15, 10.5.22, 10.4.31 now available

The MariaDB Foundation is pleased to announce the availability of MariaDB 10.11.5, MariaDB 10.6.15, MariaDB 10.5.22 and MariaDB 10.4.31, the latest stable releases in their respective long-term series (maintained for five years from their first stable release dates), as well as MariaDB 11.0.3, MariaDB 10.10.6 and MariaDB 10.9.8, the latest stable releases in their respective short-term series (maintained for one year).

See the release notes and changelogs for details.


Download MariaDB 11.0.3

Release Notes Changelog What is MariaDB 11.0?

MariaDB 10.11.4, 10.10.5, 10.9.7, 10.6.14, 10.5.21, 10.4.30 now available

The MariaDB Foundation is pleased to announce the availability of MariaDB 10.11.4, MariaDB 10.6.14, MariaDB 10.5.21 and MariaDB 10.4.30, the latest stable releases in their respective long-term series (maintained for five years from their first GA release dates), as well as MariaDB 10.10.5 and MariaDB 10.9.7, the latest Generally Available releases in their respective short-term series (maintained for one year).

See the release notes and changelogs for details.


Download MariaDB 10.11.4

Release Notes Changelog What is MariaDB 10.11?

MariaDB 10.11.3, 10.10.4, 10.9.6, 10.8.8, 10.6.13, 10.5.20, 10.4.29 and 10.3.39 now available

The MariaDB Foundation is pleased to announce the availability of MariaDB 10.11.3, MariaDB 10.6.13, MariaDB 10.5.20, MariaDB 10.4.29 and MariaDB 10.3.39, the latest stable releases in their respective long-term series (maintained for five years from their first GA release dates), as well as MariaDB 10.10.4, MariaDB 10.9.6 and MariaDB 10.8.8, the latest Generally Available releases in their respective short-term series (maintained for one year).

See the release notes and changelogs for details.


Download MariaDB 10.11.3

Release Notes Changelog What is MariaDB 10.11?

MariaDB 10.11.2 GA now available

The MariaDB Foundation is pleased to announce the availability of MariaDB Server 10.11.2, the first GA release of the MariaDB 10.11 series, a Long Term Support release.

See the release notes and changelogs for details.


Download MariaDB 10.11.2

Release Notes Changelog What is MariaDB 10.11?


MariaDB APT and YUM Repository Configuration Generator


Contributors to MariaDB 10.11.2

Aleksey Midenkov (MariaDB Corporation)
Alexander Barkov (MariaDB Corporation)
Alexander Freiherr von Buddenbrock
Alexander Kuleshov
Andrei Elkin (MariaDB Corporation)
Andrew Hutchings (MariaDB Foundation)
Anel Husakovic (MariaDB Foundation)
anson1014 (Amazon)
Angelique Sklavounos (MariaDB Corporation)
Brad Smith
Brandon Nesterenko (MariaDB Corporation)
Christian Gonzalez (Amazon)
Daniel Bartholomew (MariaDB Corporation)
Daniel Black (MariaDB Foundation)
Daniele Sciascia (Codership)
Denis Protivensky
Dmitry Shulga (MariaDB Corporation)
Dominik Hassler
Eric Herman
Haidong Ji (Amazon)
Heiko Becker
Ian Gilfillan (MariaDB Foundation)
Igor Babaev (MariaDB Corporation)
Jan Lindström (MariaDB Corporation)
Julius Goryavsky (MariaDB Corporation)
Lena Startseva (MariaDB Corporation)
lilinjie
lrf141
Marko Mäkelä (MariaDB Corporation)
Michael Roosz
Mikhail Chalov (Amazon)
Michael Widenius (MariaDB Corporation and MariaDB Foundation)
musvaage
Nayuta Yanagisawa (MariaDB Corporation)
Nikita Malyavin (MariaDB Corporation)
Oleg Smirnov (MariaDB Corporation)
Oleksandr Byelkin (MariaDB Corporation)
Otto Kekäläinen (Amazon)
Robin Newhouse (Amazon)
Rucha Deodhar (MariaDB Corporation)
Sachin Setia
Sergei Golubchik (MariaDB Corporation)
Sergei Petrunia (MariaDB Corporation)
Seppo Jaakola (Codership)
Teemu Ollakka (Codership)
Thirunarayanan Balathandayuthapani
Tuukka Pasanen (MariaDB Foundation)
Vicențiu Ciorbaru (MariaDB Foundation)
Vladislav Vaintroub (MariaDB Corporation)
Vlad Lesin (MariaDB Corporation)
Weijun Huang
Yuchen Pei (MariaDB Corporation)
51 Contributors

Thanks, and enjoy MariaDB! …

MariaDB 10.11 is LTS

Important news: MariaDB 10.11, which just was declared RC, is a long-term maintenance version. The industry standard term to refer to that concept is LTS (as in long-term support), and we too use this term for the releases that get a significantly longer lifetime of bug fixes.

We are announcing MariaDB 10.11 as LTS for a number of reasons:

Firstly, the purpose of an LTS is to reassure users – and, in particular, Linux distros – that a certain version will receive regular updates long-term, for the lifetime of their product.