You need the following tools to install a MySQL binary distribution:
gunzip
to uncompress the distribution.
tar
to unpack the distribution. GNU tar
is
known to work. Sun tar
is known to have problems.
An alternative installation method under Linux is to use RPM (RedHat Package Manager) distributions. See section 2.1.1 Installing MySQL on Linux.
If you run into problems, PLEASE ALWAYS USE mysqlbug
when
posting questions to mysql@lists.mysql.com. Even if the problem
isn't a bug, mysqlbug
gathers system information that will help others
solve your problem. By not using mysqlbug
, you lessen the likelihood
of getting a solution to your problem! You will find mysqlbug
in the
`bin' directory after you unpack the distribution. See section 1.2.22.3 How to Report Bugs or Problems.
The basic commands you must execute to install and use a MySQL binary distribution are:
shell> groupadd mysql shell> useradd -g mysql mysql shell> cd /usr/local shell> gunzip < /path/to/mysql-VERSION-OS.tar.gz | tar xvf - shell> ln -s mysql-VERSION-OS mysql shell> cd mysql shell> scripts/mysql_install_db shell> chown -R root /usr/local/mysql shell> chown -R mysql /usr/local/mysql/data shell> chgrp -R mysql /usr/local/mysql shell> chown -R root /usr/local/mysql/bin shell> bin/safe_mysqld --user=mysql &
You can add new users using the bin/mysql_setpermission
script if
you install the DBI
and Msql-Mysql-modules
Perl modules.
A more detailed description follows.
To install a binary distribution, follow the steps below, then proceed to section 2.4 Post-installation Setup and Testing, for post-installation setup and testing:
root
.)
tar
archives and have names like `mysql-VERSION-OS.tar.gz', where
VERSION
is a number (for example, 3.21.15
), and OS
indicates the type of operating system for which the distribution is intended
(for example, pc-linux-gnu-i586
).
-max
prefix, this
means that the binary has support for transaction-safe tables and other
features. See section 4.7.5 mysqld-max, An extended mysqld server. Note that all binaries
are built from the same MySQL source distribution.
mysqld
to run as:
shell> groupadd mysql shell> useradd -g mysql mysqlThese commands add the
mysql
group and the mysql
user. The
syntax for useradd
and groupadd
may differ slightly on different
versions of Unix. They may also be called adduser
and addgroup
.
You may wish to call the user and group something else instead of mysql
.
shell> cd /usr/local
shell> gunzip < /path/to/mysql-VERSION-OS.tar.gz | tar xvf - shell> ln -s mysql-VERSION-OS mysqlThe first command creates a directory named `mysql-VERSION-OS'. The second command makes a symbolic link to that directory. This lets you refer more easily to the installation directory as `/usr/local/mysql'.
shell> cd mysqlYou will find several files and subdirectories in the
mysql
directory.
The most important for installation purposes are the `bin' and
`scripts' subdirectories.
PATH
environment variable so that your shell finds the MySQL
programs properly. See section H Environment Variables.
mysql_install_db
script used to initialize
the mysql
database containing the grant tables that store the server
access permissions.
mysqlaccess
and have the MySQL
distribution in some non-standard place, you must change the location where
mysqlaccess
expects to find the mysql
client. Edit the
`bin/mysqlaccess' script at approximately line 18. Search for a line
that looks like this:
$MYSQL = '/usr/local/bin/mysql'; # path to mysql executableChange the path to reflect the location where
mysql
actually is
stored on your system. If you do not do this, you will get a Broken
pipe
error when you run mysqlaccess
.
shell> scripts/mysql_install_dbNote that MySQL versions older than Version 3.22.10 started the MySQL server when you run
mysql_install_db
. This is no
longer true!
root
and ownership of the data
directory to the user that you will run mysqld
as:
shell> chown -R root /usr/local/mysql shell> chown -R mysql /usr/local/mysql/data shell> chgrp -R mysql /usr/local/mysqlThe first command changes the
owner
attribute of the files to the
root
user, the second one changes the owner
attribute of the
data directory to the mysql
user, and the third one changes the
group
attribute to the mysql
group.
DBI
/DBD
interface,
see section M.2 Perl Installation Comments.
support-files/mysql.server
to the location where
your system has its startup files. More information can be found in the
support-files/mysql.server
script itself and in
section 2.4.3 Starting and Stopping MySQL Automatically.
After everything has been unpacked and installed, you should initialize and test your distribution.
You can start the MySQL server with the following command:
shell> bin/safe_mysqld --user=mysql &
See section 4.7.2 safe_mysqld, the wrapper around mysqld.
See section 2.4 Post-installation Setup and Testing.
Perl support for MySQL is provided by means of the
DBI
/DBD
client interface. See section 8.2 MySQL Perl API. The Perl
DBD
/DBI
client code requires Perl Version 5.004 or later. The
interface will not work if you have an older version of Perl.
MySQL Perl support also requires that you've installed MySQL client programming support. If you installed MySQL from RPM files, client programs are in the client RPM, but client programming support is in the developer RPM. Make sure you've installed the latter RPM.
As of Version 3.22.8, Perl support is distributed separately from the main MySQL distribution. If you want to install Perl support, the files you will need can be obtained from http://www.mysql.com/Downloads/Contrib/.
The Perl distributions are provided as compressed tar
archives and
have names like `MODULE-VERSION.tar.gz', where MODULE
is the
module name and VERSION
is the version number. You should get the
Data-Dumper
, DBI
, and Msql-Mysql-modules
distributions
and install them in that order. The installation procedure is shown below.
The example shown is for the Data-Dumper
module, but the procedure is
the same for all three distributions:
shell> gunzip < Data-Dumper-VERSION.tar.gz | tar xvf -This command creates a directory named `Data-Dumper-VERSION'.
shell> cd Data-Dumper-VERSION
shell> perl Makefile.PL shell> make shell> make test shell> make install
The make test
command is important because it verifies that the
module is working. Note that when you run that command during the
Msql-Mysql-modules
installation to exercise the interface code, the
MySQL server must be running or the test will fail.
It is a good idea to rebuild and reinstall the Msql-Mysql-modules
distribution whenever you install a new release of MySQL,
particularly if you notice symptoms such as all your DBI
scripts
dumping core after you upgrade MySQL.
If you don't have the right to install Perl modules in the system directory or if you to install local Perl modules, the following reference may help you:
http://www.iserver.com/support/contrib/perl5/modules.html
Look under the heading
Installing New Modules that Require Locally Installed Modules
.
To install the MySQL DBD
module with ActiveState Perl on
Windows, you should do the following:
set HTTP_proxy=my.proxy.com:3128
C:\> c:\perl\bin\ppm.pl
DBI
:
ppm> install DBI
install ftp://ftp.de.uu.net/pub/CPAN/authors/id/JWIED/DBD-mysql-1.2212.x86.ppd
The above should work at least with ActiveState Perl Version 5.6.
If you can't get the above to work, you should instead install the MyODBC driver and connect to MySQL server through ODBC:
use DBI; $dbh= DBI->connect("DBI:ODBC:$dsn","$user","$password") || die "Got error $DBI::errstr when connecting to $dsn\n";
The MySQL Perl distribution contains DBI
,
DBD:MySQL
and DBD:ODBC
.
C:
so that you get a `C:\PERL' directory.
perl
works by executing perl -v
in a DOS shell.
DBI
/DBD
InterfaceIf Perl reports that it can't find the `../mysql/mysql.so' module, then the problem is probably that Perl can't locate the shared library `libmysqlclient.so'.
You can fix this by any of the following methods:
Msql-Mysql-modules
distribution with perl
Makefile.PL -static -config
rather than perl Makefile.PL
.
libmysqlclient.so
to the directory where your other shared
libraries are located (probably `/usr/lib' or `/lib').
LD_RUN_PATH
environment variable.
If you get the following errors from DBD-mysql
,
you are probably using gcc
(or using an old binary compiled with
gcc
):
/usr/bin/perl: can't resolve symbol '__moddi3' /usr/bin/perl: can't resolve symbol '__divdi3'
Add -L/usr/lib/gcc-lib/... -lgcc
to the link command when the
`mysql.so' library gets built (check the output from make
for
`mysql.so' when you compile the Perl client). The -L
option
should specify the pathname of the directory where `libgcc.a' is located
on your system.
Another cause of this problem may be that Perl and MySQL aren't both
compiled with gcc
. In this case, you can solve the mismatch by
compiling both with gcc
.
If you get the following error from Msql-Mysql-modules
when you run the tests:
t/00base............install_driver(mysql) failed: Can't load '../blib/arch/auto/DBD/mysql/mysql.so' for module DBD::mysql: ../blib/arch/auto/DBD/mysql/mysql.so: undefined symbol: uncompress at /usr/lib/perl5/5.00503/i586-linux/DynaLoader.pm line 169.
it means that you need to include the compression library, -lz, to the link line. This can be doing the following change in the file `lib/DBD/mysql/Install.pm':
$sysliblist .= " -lm"; to $sysliblist .= " -lm -lz";
After this, you MUST run 'make realclean' and then proceed with the installation from the beginning.
If you want to use the Perl module on a system that doesn't support dynamic
linking (like SCO) you can generate a static version of Perl that includes
DBI
and DBD-mysql
. The way this works is that you generate a
version of Perl with the DBI
code linked in and install it on top of
your current Perl. Then you use that to build a version of Perl that
additionally has the DBD
code linked in, and install that.
On SCO, you must have the following environment variables set:
shell> LD_LIBRARY_PATH=/lib:/usr/lib:/usr/local/lib:/usr/progressive/lib or shell> LD_LIBRARY_PATH=/usr/lib:/lib:/usr/local/lib:/usr/ccs/lib:/usr/progressive/lib:/usr/skunk/lib shell> LIBPATH=/usr/lib:/lib:/usr/local/lib:/usr/ccs/lib:/usr/progressive/lib:/usr/skunk/lib shell> MANPATH=scohelp:/usr/man:/usr/local1/man:/usr/local/man:/usr/skunk/man:
First, create a Perl that includes a statically linked DBI
by running
these commands in the directory where your DBI
distribution is
located:
shell> perl Makefile.PL -static -config shell> make shell> make install shell> make perl
Then you must install the new Perl. The output of make perl
will
indicate the exact make
command you will need to execute to perform
the installation. On SCO, this is make -f Makefile.aperl inst_perl
MAP_TARGET=perl
.
Next, use the just-created Perl to create another Perl that also includes a
statically-linked DBD::mysql
by running these commands in the
directory where your Msql-Mysql-modules
distribution is located:
shell> perl Makefile.PL -static -config shell> make shell> make install shell> make perl
Finally, you should install this new Perl. Again, the output of make
perl
indicates the command to use.
GROUP BY
Clauses
If you use a group function in a statement containing no GROUP BY
clause, it is equivalent to grouping on all rows.
COUNT(expr)
NULL
values in the rows
retrieved by a SELECT
statement:
mysql> select student.student_name,COUNT(*) from student,course where student.student_id=course.student_id GROUP BY student_name;
COUNT(*)
is somewhat different in that it returns a count of
the number of rows retrieved, whether or not they contain NULL
values.
COUNT(*)
is optimized to
return very quickly if the SELECT
retrieves from one table, no
other columns are retrieved, and there is no WHERE
clause.
For example:
mysql> select COUNT(*) from student;
COUNT(DISTINCT expr,[expr...])
NULL
values:
mysql> select COUNT(DISTINCT results) from student;In MySQL you can get the number of distinct expression combinations that don't contain NULL by giving a list of expressions. In ANSI SQL you would have to do a concatenation of all expressions inside
CODE(DISTINCT ..)
.
AVG(expr)
expr
:
mysql> select student_name, AVG(test_score) from student GROUP BY student_name;
MIN(expr)
MAX(expr)
expr
. MIN()
and
MAX()
may take a string argument; in such cases they return the
minimum or maximum string value. See section 5.4.3 How MySQL Uses Indexes.
mysql> select student_name, MIN(test_score), MAX(test_score) from student GROUP BY student_name;
SUM(expr)
expr
. Note that if the return set has no rows,
it returns NULL!
STD(expr)
STDDEV(expr)
expr
. This is an extension to
ANSI SQL. The STDDEV()
form of this function is provided for Oracle
compatibility.
BIT_OR(expr)
OR
of all bits in expr
. The calculation is
performed with 64-bit (BIGINT
) precision.
BIT_AND(expr)
AND
of all bits in expr
. The calculation is
performed with 64-bit (BIGINT
) precision.
MySQL has extended the use of GROUP BY
. You can use columns or
calculations in the SELECT
expressions that don't appear in
the GROUP BY
part. This stands for any possible value for this
group. You can use this to get better performance by avoiding sorting and
grouping on unnecessary items. For example, you don't need to group on
customer.name
in the following query:
mysql> select order.custid,customer.name,max(payments) from order,customer where order.custid = customer.custid GROUP BY order.custid;
In ANSI SQL, you would have to add customer.name
to the GROUP
BY
clause. In MySQL, the name is redundant if you don't run in
ANSI mode.
Don't use this feature if the columns you omit from the
GROUP BY
part aren't unique in the group! You will get
unpredictable results.
In some cases, you can use MIN()
and MAX()
to obtain a specific
column value even if it isn't unique. The following gives the value of
column
from the row containing the smallest value in the sort
column:
substr(MIN(concat(rpad(sort,6,' '),column)),7)
See section 3.5.4 The Rows Holding the Group-wise Maximum of a Certain Field.
Note that if you are using MySQL Version 3.22 (or earlier) or if
you are trying to follow ANSI SQL, you can't use expressions in GROUP
BY
or ORDER BY
clauses. You can work around this limitation by
using an alias for the expression:
mysql> SELECT id,FLOOR(value/100) AS val FROM tbl_name GROUP BY id,val ORDER BY val;
In MySQL Version 3.23 you can do:
mysql> SELECT id,FLOOR(value/100) FROM tbl_name ORDER BY RAND();
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