Difference between revisions of "Configuring the MySQL Server"
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::The character set defines how records can be alphanumerically ordered (or grouped, sorted, filtered, indexed). The list of supported languages is determined by the character set available at the server level. Hence, the <tt>UTF-8</tt> Unicode character set configuration is required as part of MySQL configuration. | ::The character set defines how records can be alphanumerically ordered (or grouped, sorted, filtered, indexed). The list of supported languages is determined by the character set available at the server level. Hence, the <tt>UTF-8</tt> Unicode character set configuration is required as part of MySQL configuration. | ||
{{Note| If user does not specific in '''my.cnf''' or '''my.ini''' file then default MySQL 8 character set and collation are '''utf8mb4''' and '''utf8mb4_0900_ai_ci''' taken by server}} | {{Note| If user does not specific in '''my.cnf''' or '''my.ini''' file then default MySQL 8 character set and collation are '''utf8mb4''' and '''utf8mb4_0900_ai_ci''' taken by server}} | ||
::<tt>regexp_time_limit=32</tt> | |||
'''''Tip''''': By default, the regexp_time_limit configuration is set to '''32'''. To increase the limit, add this line "<tt>'''regexp_time_limit=1024'''</tt>" in the '''/etc/my.cnf''' file. Ensure that you restart the MySQL after this change. The limit increment will allow you to perform the desired actions. | |||
:::: To specify character settings at MySQL configuration time:<br>For MySQL Version 8.0, see http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman//8.0/en/charset-applications.html | :::: To specify character settings at MySQL configuration time:<br>For MySQL Version 8.0, see http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman//8.0/en/charset-applications.html | ||
;max_allowed_packet Configuration: | ;max_allowed_packet Configuration: |
Revision as of 09:44, 29 September 2023
These instructions apply to the version of MySQL specified in the Software Requirements.
Terminology:
- MySQL Server
- The database server which has MySQL Server software installed, configured, and running.
- MySQL Client
- Any other computer which connects to the database server and has the MySQL Client software installed, configured, and running.
- The client connects to the database server to access data, for example, webserver.
- Configuration file
- my.cnf, a MySQL configuration file that may be edited and used in the MySQL client or MySQL Server installation.
MySQL Settings
- Storage Engine
- default-storage-engine = innodb
- Server System Variables Configuration
- It is observed that READ_UNCOMMITTED does not work well with Row-Based Replication. Use one of the following configurations:
- a) Either STATEMENT-BASED or MIXED replication with the Transaction Isolation level dictated by business needs.
- b) ROW-BASED replication with transaction_isolation = READ-COMMITTED
- User Configuration
-
- Create a user account with password in MySQL
The Application Server will use the user details.
- The user account should have all MySQL privileges enabled on all databases
- Use the default root account that is created during the installation of MySQL. You can also create a non-root MySQL user to run Agile Apps. For more information, see Creating a non-root MySQL User to Run Agile Apps.
- Create a user account with password in MySQL
- sql-mode Configuration
-
- For a First-Time installation:
- Add the following code to the my.cnf file located in the MySQL Client:
- sql-mode="PIPES_AS_CONCAT,ANSI_QUOTES"
- Add the following code to the my.cnf file located in the MySQL Server:
- sql-mode="PIPES_AS_CONCAT,ANSI_QUOTES"
- MySQL Configuration for UTF-8 Unicode character set for 5.7 Version
-
- Add the following code to the my.cnf file, located in the MySQL Client:
- default-character-set=utf8
- Add the following code to the my.cnf file, located in MySQL Server:
- character-set-server=utf8
- collation-server=utf8_general_ci
- The character set defines how records can be alphanumerically ordered (or grouped, sorted, filtered, indexed). The list of supported languages is determined by the character set available at the server level. Hence, the UTF-8 Unicode character set configuration is required as part of MySQL configuration.
- To specify character settings at MySQL configuration time:
For MySQL Version 5.7, see https://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.7/en/charset-applications.html
- To specify character settings at MySQL configuration time:
- MySQL Configuration for UTF-8mb4 Unicode character set for MySQL 8.0 Version
-
- Add the following code to the my.cnf file, located in the MySQL Client:
- default-character-set=utf8mb4
- Add the following code to the my.cnf file, located in MySQL Server:
- character-set-server=utf8mb4
- collation-server=utf8mb4_0900_ai_ci
- The character set defines how records can be alphanumerically ordered (or grouped, sorted, filtered, indexed). The list of supported languages is determined by the character set available at the server level. Hence, the UTF-8 Unicode character set configuration is required as part of MySQL configuration.
- regexp_time_limit=32
Tip: By default, the regexp_time_limit configuration is set to 32. To increase the limit, add this line "regexp_time_limit=1024" in the /etc/my.cnf file. Ensure that you restart the MySQL after this change. The limit increment will allow you to perform the desired actions.
- To specify character settings at MySQL configuration time:
For MySQL Version 8.0, see http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman//8.0/en/charset-applications.html
- To specify character settings at MySQL configuration time:
- max_allowed_packet Configuration
-
- Add max_allowed_packet = 64M to my.cnf or my.ini
- For MySQL Version 5.7, see https://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.7/en/charset-applications.html
- For MySQL Version 8.0, see https://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/8.0/en/charset-applications.html
- Restart the MySQL server to implement the changes
Populate the Timezone Tables
- The platform uses MySQL's timezone tables for timezone conversions. These tables are not automatically populated when MySQL is installed, so it necessary to do so after installation.
- Run the following program to initialize the MySQL timezone tables:
- mysql_tzinfo_to_sql /usr/share/zoneinfo | mysql -u root mysql
- where /usr/share/zoneinfo is the standard Linux location for the time zone files. (Your system may differ.)
- For MySQL Version 5.7, see https://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.7/en/mysql-tzinfo-to-sql.html
- For MySQL Version 8.0, see https://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/8.0/en/mysql-tzinfo-to-sql.html
- mysql_tzinfo_to_sql /usr/share/zoneinfo | mysql -u root mysql
Configuring MySQL Version 5.7 root password
- Start the mysql service using the command: service mysqld start
- Execute mysql_secure_installation script
A prompt appears to input the root password.
Info: To get temporary root password for MySQL Version 5.7 Community edition, see /root/.mysql_secret file.
For Commercial installation temporary password will be generated at at /var/log/mysqld.log.
Note: MySQL user password should contain at least one special character.