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MariaDB server is a community developed fork of MySQL server. Started by core members of the original MySQL team, MariaDB actively works with outside developers to deliver the most featureful, stable, and sanely licensed open SQL server in the industry.
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MYSQLD_SAFE DESCRIPTION =========== Starting a mysql server by running init script: /etc/init.d/mysqld start is failing. This is happening after the changes done in script 'mysqld_safe' as a patch to Bug#24464380. ANALYSIS ======== Say customer's /etc/my.cnf has following content: [mysqld_safe] . . ledir = /mysqld_ledir mysqld = mysqld_wrapper Patch to Bug#24464380 prohibits using "mysqld" (and few other variables) in config file due to privilege reasons. Since mysqld init scripts internally calls 'mysqld_safe' script, the existing configuration has started failing. FIX === In the init script, we now pass MYSQLD_OPTS as the first argument (expected to be read from /etc/sysconfig/mysqld) to mysqld_safe command. This new variable can have all the mysqld_safe's special options as a string containing command line arguments. For example: MYSQLD_OPTS=" --ledir=/mysqld_ledir --mysqld=my_wrapper " NOTE TO THE DOCUMENTATION TEAM ============================== As mentioned above, the prohibited variables have to be moved from /etc/my.cnf to /etc/sysconfig/mysqld as a string containing command-line arguments in the form of variable MYSQLD_OPTS. We can pass mysqld options as well in this new variable which would be further passed to mysqld process. |
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client | ||
cmake | ||
cmd-line-utils | ||
dbug | ||
Docs | ||
extra | ||
include | ||
libmysql | ||
libmysqld | ||
libservices | ||
man | ||
mysql-test | ||
mysys | ||
packaging | ||
plugin | ||
regex | ||
scripts | ||
sql | ||
sql-bench | ||
sql-common | ||
storage | ||
strings | ||
support-files | ||
tests | ||
unittest | ||
vio | ||
win | ||
zlib | ||
.gitattributes | ||
.gitignore | ||
BUILD-CMAKE | ||
CMakeLists.txt | ||
config.h.cmake | ||
configure.cmake | ||
COPYING | ||
INSTALL-SOURCE | ||
INSTALL-WIN-SOURCE | ||
README | ||
VERSION |
MySQL Server 5.5 This is a release of MySQL, a dual-license SQL database server. For the avoidance of doubt, this particular copy of the software is released under the version 2 of the GNU General Public License. MySQL is brought to you by Oracle. Copyright (c) 2000, 2017, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. License information can be found in the COPYING file. MySQL FOSS License Exception We want free and open source software applications under certain licenses to be able to use specified GPL-licensed MySQL client libraries despite the fact that not all such FOSS licenses are compatible with version 2 of the GNU General Public License. Therefore there are special exceptions to the terms and conditions of the GPLv2 as applied to these client libraries, which are identified and described in more detail in the FOSS License Exception at <http://www.mysql.com/about/legal/licensing/foss-exception.html>. This distribution may include materials developed by third parties. For license and attribution notices for these materials, please refer to the documentation that accompanies this distribution (see the "Licenses for Third-Party Components" appendix) or view the online documentation at <http://dev.mysql.com/doc/>. GPLv2 Disclaimer For the avoidance of doubt, except that if any license choice other than GPL or LGPL is available it will apply instead, Oracle elects to use only the General Public License version 2 (GPLv2) at this time for any software where a choice of GPL license versions is made available with the language indicating that GPLv2 or any later version may be used, or where a choice of which version of the GPL is applied is otherwise unspecified. For further information about MySQL or additional documentation, see: - The latest information about MySQL: http://www.mysql.com - The current MySQL documentation: http://dev.mysql.com/doc Some Reference Manual sections of special interest: - If you are migrating from an older version of MySQL, please read the "Upgrading from..." section. - To see what MySQL can do, take a look at the features section. - For installation instructions, see the Installing and Upgrading chapter. - For the new features/bugfix history, see the MySQL Change History appendix. You can browse the MySQL Reference Manual online or download it in any of several formats at the URL given earlier in this file. Source distributions include a local copy of the manual in the Docs directory.