Tag Archives: MariaDB
This is both hilarious and sad. The new MySQL 5.7 milestone release presents a new feature — replication filters are now dynamic. This is a great and long awaited feature, no doubt about it.
In short, for years MySQL slaves could filter the incoming stream of replication events based on the database or table name these events were applicable to. These filters were configured using the my.cnf file (or command-line), in particular with the following variables:
replicate_do_db
replicate_ignore_db
replicate_do_table
replicate_ignore_table
replicate_wild_do_table
replicate_wild_ignore_table
Naturally, users wanted to be able to change the values of these options without having to restart the server. …
Continue reading “Dynamic replication filters — our wheel will be square!”
The MariaDB project is pleased to announce the immediate availability of MariaDB 5.5.34. This is a Stable (GA) release. See the Release Notes and Changelog for detailed information on this release and the What is MariaDB 5.5? page in the MariaDB Knowledge Base for general information about the MariaDB 5.5 series.
Release Notes Changelog What is MariaDB 5.5?
…
The MariaDB project is pleased to announce the immediate availability of MariaDB 10.0.6. This is a Beta release. See the Release Notes and Changelog for detailed information on this release and the What is MariaDB 10.0? page in the AskMonty Knowledgebase for general information about the MariaDB 10.0 series.
Release Notes Changelog What is MariaDB 10.0?
Also see MariaDB 10.0 Beta launched – an important milestone.
Upcoming MariaDB Webinar
SkySQL will be hosting a webinar with Colin Charles, the chief evangelist of MariaDB. …
Reposted from Monty Says.
I recently read some comments that we at the MariaDB Foundation have not been very open about what we are doing.
We are very sorry about this. The problem is not that we are secret about what we are doing, the problem is that not many of us working at the MariaDB Foundation are very active bloggers.
I will try to address this concern by starting a monthly blog about the MariaDB development that MariaDB Foundation employees are doing. This together with Simon Phipps’ state of the sea lion blog, which is published here, should hopefully give everyone a better idea of what we are doing.
…
Continue reading “MariaDB Foundation achivements 2012-12 – 2013-09”
The MariaDB project is pleased to announce the immediate availability of MariaDB 5.5.33. This is a Stable (GA) release. See the Release Notes and Changelog for detailed information on this release and the What is MariaDB 5.5? page in the AskMonty Knowledgebase for general information about the MariaDB 5.5 series.
Release Notes Changelog What is MariaDB 5.5?
Includes TokuDB Storage Engine
With this release of MariaDB we are pleased to announce the addition of the TokuDB storage engine from Tokutek. …
The MariaDB project is pleased to announce the immediate availability of MariaDB 5.5.32. This is a Stable (GA) release. See the Release Notes and Changelog for detailed information on this release and the What is MariaDB 5.5? page in the AskMonty Knowledgebase for general information about the MariaDB 5.5 series.
Release Notes Changelog What is MariaDB 5.5?
This release is primarily a bug-fix release.
Includes MariaDB 5.3.12 and MySQL 5.5.32
This release includes MariaDB 5.3.12 and MySQL 5.5.32. …
The MariaDB project is pleased to announce the immediate availability of the MariaDB Java Client 1.1.3. This is a Stable (GA) release. See the Release Notes and Changelog for detailed information on this release and the About the MariaDB Java Client page in the AskMonty Knowledgebase for general information about the client.
Download MariaDB Java Client 1.1.3
Release Notes Changelog About the MariaDB Java Client
New functionality
- On Windows, it is now possible to use named pipes if server enables them.
…
My fellow testers and others who run RQG tests on MySQL flavors might be interested in some additions that are being used for MariaDB testing. While none of them is a major breakthrough, maybe they will make somebody’s life a little easier.
RQG Introduction
A quick introduction for those who have never heard of RQG, but are still curious what this blog post is about.
RQG stands for Random Query Generator, also known as randgen — an open-source product, available under the GPL v2 license. Quoting its home page on Launchpad, it is a “pseudo-random data and query generator that can be used to test any Perl DBI, JDBC or ODBC-compatible SQL server, in particular MySQL, but also JavaDB and PostgreSQL”. …
Continue reading “MariaDB patches for Random Query Generator”