MariaDB (Debian)

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Diese Anleitungen gelten für:

  • MySQL 5.5
  • MariaDB 10.0


Connect to Server

$ mysql -u user1 -p                     # Mit Passwortabfrage
$ mysql -u user1 -ppassword1
exit                                    # Close connection

Database Management

show databases;                         # Datenbanken anzeigen
show status;                            # Status of MySQL Server
create database [database];             # Create new database
use [database];                         # Select Database
drop database [database];               # Drop database

Table Management

show tables;
show table status;                      # Stats of all tables
describe [table];

User Management

show grants;                            # Show grants of current user
show grants for user1                   # Show grants for user1

List users:

select user,host from mysql.user;

Create user:

create user username@localhost identified by 'password';

Remarks

  • localhost: User can connect only from (?) localhost
  • %: User can connect on multiple hosts
  • Using apostrophes helps to make sure all characters will be interpreted as expected

Grant all access to user1@localhost for * tables in database1:

grant all on database1.* to user1@localhost;

Change Password

Important Note for Debian >= 9.x: When logged in as root no password is needed.

If password is known and you can log in:

set password [for 'user'] = password('newpassword');

Alternative approach by updating user table for compatibility across versions:

# mysql -u root -p
MariaDB [(none)]> USE mysql;
MariaDB [(mysql)]> UPDATE user SET password=PASSWORD('YourPasswordHere') WHERE User='root' AND Host = 'localhost';
MariaDB [(mysql)]> FLUSH PRIVILEGES;

To validate, exit your current MariaDB session by typing.

MariaDB [(mysql)]> exit;

and then press Enter. You should now be able to connect to the server using the new password.

Note: Replace YourPasswordHere with the new password.

Backup Database

$ mysqldump -u root -p[root_password] [database_name] > dumpfilename.sql

Restore Database

$ mysql -u root -p[root_password] [database_name] < dumpfilename.sql

Date and Time conversion

select userid,from_unixtime(datefield) from table1;

+-----------------------+----------------------------+ | userid | from_unixtime(datefield) | +-----------------------+----------------------------+ | user1 | 2016-05-01 19:30:00 | | user2 | 2016-05-02 12:55:00 | | user3 | 2016-05-03 21:03:00 | | user4 | 2016-05-04 23:27:00 | +-----------------------+----------------------------+

Upgrade Database

# mysql_upgrade -u root -p

Durch Parameter -p ohne Angabe eines Passworts wird ein Passwort abgefragt.

Transaction Isolation Level und Binary Logging für Nextcloud konfigurieren

Für Nextcloud sollte folgende Koniguration vorliegen.

Diese kann z.B. in folgender Datei abgelegt werden:

/etc/mysql/conf.d/99-nextcloud.cnf

[mysqld]
transaction_isolation = READ-COMMITTED
binlog_format = ROW

Aktuellen Konfiguration:

SELECT @@GLOBAL.tx_isolation, @@tx_isolation, @@GLOBAL.binlog_format, @@binlog_format;

Alternative:

SELECT VARIABLES;

Quellen:

https://docs.nextcloud.com/server/19/admin_manual/configuration_database/linux_database_configuration.html#db-transaction-label

https://mariadb.com/kb/en/set-transaction/