Tagged: percona xtradb

MariaDB 5.3.5 MySQL server stable release

MariaDB 5.3.5 stable MySQL server has been announced. Compared to previous releases in the MariaDB 5.3 series, MariaDB 5.3.5 is primarily a bug-fix release with a focus on stability, performance, and usability. It is first stable or GA release of the 5.3 series and the fifth overall release in the series. Apart from fixing...

Percona Server 5.5.19-24.0 Released

Percona MySQL Server 5.5.19-24.0 has been released. Based on MySQL 5.5.19, it includes all the bug fixes in it. New Features Variable innodb_flush_neighbor_pages can be now set to a new value cont. The previously-available option values 0 and 1 now have more descriptive names none and area. The value of none disables the neighbor page flush and area matches the...

MariaDB 5.1.60 and MariaDB 5.2.10 MySQL Server released

MariaDB MySQL server versions 5.1.60 and 5.2.10 have been released with update for Percona XtraDB InnoDB plugin to version 1.0.17-13.0. MariaDB 5.1.60 Release Notes & Change log & MariaDB 5.1.60 Download MariaDB 5.2.10 Release Notes & Change log & MariaDB 5.2.10 Download   mysqladmin Ver 9.0 Distrib 5.2.10-MariaDB, for unknown-linux-gnu on x86_64...

MariaDB 5.2.9 MySQL Server Released

MariaDB 5.2.9 has been released. MariaDB 5.2.9 download here. This is a Stable release. A "stable" MariaDB release is equivalent to a MySQL "GA" release. Compared to MariaDB 5.2.8, MariaDB 5.2.9 is a bug-fix release. For a list of every change made in MariaDB 5.2.9, with links to detailed information...

MySQL Benchmarks: MySQL 5.5.11 vs Percona 5.5.10-20.1 vs MariaDB 5.2.5 – InnoDB and MyISAM

Updated MySQL benchmark results for MySQL 5.5.11 vs Percona 5.5.10-20.1 vs MariaDB 5.2.5 were made possible as I managed to gain further access to the Quad Intel Xeon Nehalem-EX L7555 Octo-Core 1.86Ghz, 64GB memory server.  Apparently, it sat untouched for nearly 3 weeks after I last used the server as...

WHM/Cpanel – MariaDB MySQL 5.2.4 drop in replacement

MariaDB MySQL and Percona MySQL servers are two performance fork alternatives to MySQL.com’s own MySQL versions.  While some folks refer to them as forks, they are in fact drop in replacements.  So if you’re upgrading from MySQL 5.0.x, the same MySQL 5.1 upgrade notes apply. I’ve been playing around alot...