MariaDB 10.4.13, 10.3.23, 10.2.32, 10.1.45 and 5.5.68 now available

The MariaDB Foundation is pleased to announce the availability of MariaDB 10.4.13, MariaDB 10.3.23, MariaDB 10.2.32, MariaDB 10.1.45 and MariaDB 5.5.68, the latest stable releases in their respective series.

This is the final release of MariaDB 5.5, and MariaDB 5.5 will no longer receive any updates or bugfixes.

See the release notes and changelogs for details.

Download MariaDB 10.4.13

Release Notes Changelog What is MariaDB 10.4?


Download MariaDB 10.3.23

Release Notes Changelog What is MariaDB 10.3?

MariaDB 10.4.12, 10.3.22 and 10.2.31, 10.1.44 and 5.5.67 now available

The MariaDB Foundation is pleased to announce the availability of MariaDB 10.4.12, MariaDB 10.3.22, MariaDB 10.2.31, MariaDB 10.1.44 and MariaDB 5.5.67, the latest stable releases in their respective series.

See the release notes and changelogs for details.

Download MariaDB 10.4.12

Release Notes Changelog What is MariaDB 10.4?


Download MariaDB 10.3.22

Release Notes Changelog What is MariaDB 10.3?


Download MariaDB 10.2.31

Release Notes Changelog What is MariaDB 10.2?

MariaDB 10.4.11, 10.3.21 and 10.2.30 now available

The MariaDB Foundation is pleased to announce the availability of MariaDB 10.4.11, MariaDB 10.3.21 and MariaDB 10.2.30, the latest stable releases in their respective series.

See the release notes and changelogs for details.

Download MariaDB 10.4.11

Release Notes Changelog What is MariaDB 10.4?


Download MariaDB 10.3.21

Release Notes Changelog What is MariaDB 10.3?


Download MariaDB 10.2.30

Release Notes Changelog What is MariaDB 10.2?

MariaDB 10.4.10, 10.3.20, 10.2.29 and 10.1.43 now available

The MariaDB Foundation is pleased to announce the availability of MariaDB 10.4.10, MariaDB 10.3.20, MariaDB 10.2.29 and MariaDB 10.1.43 the latest stable releases in their respective series.

See the release notes and changelogs for details.

Download MariaDB 10.4.10

Release Notes Changelog What is MariaDB 10.4?


Download MariaDB 10.3.20

Release Notes Changelog What is MariaDB 10.3?


Download MariaDB 10.2.29

Release Notes Changelog What is MariaDB 10.2?

MariaDB 10.4.9, 10.3.19 and 10.2.28, 10.1.42 and 5.5.66 now available

Note that 10.4.9, 10.3.19, 10.2.28 and 10.1.42 contain a critical bug, MDEV-20987, and should not be used. Releases fixing the issue will be available shortly.

The MariaDB Foundation is pleased to announce the availability of MariaDB 10.4.9, MariaDB 10.3.19, MariaDB 10.2.28, MariaDB 10.1.42 and MariaDB 5.5.66, the latest stable releases in their respective series.

See the release notes and changelogs for details.

Download MariaDB 10.4.9

Release Notes Changelog What is MariaDB 10.4?

MariaDB 10.4.8, 10.3.18 and 10.2.27 now available

The MariaDB Foundation is pleased to announce the availability of MariaDB 10.4.8, MariaDB 10.3.18 and MariaDB 10.2.27, the latest stable releases in their respective series.

See the release notes and changelogs for details.

Download MariaDB 10.4.8

Release Notes Changelog What is MariaDB 10.4?


Download MariaDB 10.3.18

Release Notes Changelog What is MariaDB 10.3?


Download MariaDB 10.2.27

Release Notes Changelog What is MariaDB 10.2?

MariaDB 10.4.7, 10.3.17, 10.2.26, 10.1.41 and 5.5.65 now available

The MariaDB Foundation is pleased to announce the availability of MariaDB 10.4.7, MariaDB 10.3.17, MariaDB 10.2.26, MariaDB 10.1.41 and MariaDB 5.5.65, the latest stable releases in their respective series.

See the release notes and changelogs for details.

Download MariaDB 10.4.7

Release Notes Changelog What is MariaDB 10.3?


Download MariaDB 10.3.16

Release Notes Changelog What is MariaDB 10.3?


Download MariaDB 10.2.26

Release Notes Changelog What is MariaDB 10.2?

Debian 10 released with MariaDB 10.3

The Debian project announced their 15th release, code name Buster, on July 6th 2019. Debian 10 ships with MariaDB 10.3 and Galera. There is no separate MariaDB Connector C package, but instead MariaDB 10.3 includes MariaDB Connector C 3.0. Like most other popular Linux distributions, Debian prefers MariaDB over the Oracle owned alternative and this is now the second major release of Debian that only ships with MariaDB, and no MySQL at all. Anybody attempting to run apt install mysql-server will end up with MariaDB server instead and any upgrades from older MySQL versions to new MariaDB versions happen seamlessly, just like users have learnt to expect from apt. …