479 lines
		
	
	
		
			19 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Plaintext
		
	
	
	
		
		
			
		
	
	
			479 lines
		
	
	
		
			19 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Plaintext
		
	
	
	
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								#BEGIN CONFIG INFO
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								#DESCR: 4GB RAM, InnoDB only, ACID, few connections, heavy queries
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								#TYPE: SYSTEM
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								#END CONFIG INFO
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								#
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								# This is a MySQL example config file for systems with 4GB of memory
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								# running mostly MySQL using InnoDB only tables and performing complex
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								# queries with few connections.
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								# 
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								# MySQL programs look for option files in a set of
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								# locations which depend on the deployment platform.
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								# You can copy this option file to one of those
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								# locations. For information about these locations, see:
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								# http://dev.mysql.com/doc/mysql/en/option-files.html
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								#
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								# In this file, you can use all long options that a program supports.
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								# If you want to know which options a program supports, run the program
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								# with the "--help" option.
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								#
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								# More detailed information about the individual options can also be
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								# found in the manual.
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								#
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								#
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								# The following options will be read by MySQL client applications.
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								# Note that only client applications shipped by MySQL are guaranteed
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								# to read this section. If you want your own MySQL client program to
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								# honor these values, you need to specify it as an option during the
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								# MySQL client library initialization.
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								#
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								[client]
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								#password	= [your_password]
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								port		= 3306
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								socket		= /tmp/mysql.sock
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								# *** Application-specific options follow here ***
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								#
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								# The MySQL server
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								#
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								[mysqld]
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								# generic configuration options
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								port		= 3306
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								socket		= /tmp/mysql.sock
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								# back_log is the number of connections the operating system can keep in
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								# the listen queue, before the MySQL connection manager thread has
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								# processed them. If you have a very high connection rate and experience
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								# "connection refused" errors, you might need to increase this value.
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								# Check your OS documentation for the maximum value of this parameter.
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								# Attempting to set back_log higher than your operating system limit
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								# will have no effect.
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								back_log = 50
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								# Don't listen on a TCP/IP port at all. This can be a security
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								# enhancement, if all processes that need to connect to mysqld run
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								# on the same host.  All interaction with mysqld must be made via Unix
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								# sockets or named pipes.
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								# Note that using this option without enabling named pipes on Windows
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								# (via the "enable-named-pipe" option) will render mysqld useless!
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								#skip-networking
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								# The maximum amount of concurrent sessions the MySQL server will
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								# allow. One of these connections will be reserved for a user with
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								# SUPER privileges to allow the administrator to login even if the
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								# connection limit has been reached.
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								max_connections = 100
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								# Maximum amount of errors allowed per host. If this limit is reached,
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								# the host will be blocked from connecting to the MySQL server until
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								# "FLUSH HOSTS" has been run or the server was restarted. Invalid
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								# passwords and other errors during the connect phase result in
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								# increasing this value. See the "Aborted_connects" status variable for
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								# global counter.
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								max_connect_errors = 10
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								# The number of open tables for all threads. Increasing this value
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								# increases the number of file descriptors that mysqld requires.
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								# Therefore you have to make sure to set the amount of open files
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								# allowed to at least 4096 in the variable "open-files-limit" in
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								# section [mysqld_safe]
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								table_open_cache = 2048
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								# Enable external file level locking. Enabled file locking will have a
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								# negative impact on performance, so only use it in case you have
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								# multiple database instances running on the same files (note some
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								# restrictions still apply!) or if you use other software relying on
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								# locking MyISAM tables on file level.
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								#external-locking
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								# The maximum size of a query packet the server can handle as well as
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								# maximum query size server can process (Important when working with
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								# large BLOBs).  enlarged dynamically, for each connection.
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								max_allowed_packet = 16M
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								# The size of the cache to hold the SQL statements for the binary log
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								# during a transaction. If you often use big, multi-statement
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								# transactions you can increase this value to get more performance. All
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								# statements from transactions are buffered in the binary log cache and
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								# are being written to the binary log at once after the COMMIT.  If the
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								# transaction is larger than this value, temporary file on disk is used
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								# instead.  This buffer is allocated per connection on first update
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								# statement in transaction
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								binlog_cache_size = 1M
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								# Maximum allowed size for a single HEAP (in memory) table. This option
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								# is a protection against the accidential creation of a very large HEAP
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								# table which could otherwise use up all memory resources.
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								max_heap_table_size = 64M
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								# Size of the buffer used for doing full table scans.
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								# Allocated per thread, if a full scan is needed.
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								read_buffer_size = 2M
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								# When reading rows in sorted order after a sort, the rows are read
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								# through this buffer to avoid disk seeks. You can improve ORDER BY
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								# performance a lot, if set this to a high value.
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								# Allocated per thread, when needed.
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								read_rnd_buffer_size = 16M
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								# Sort buffer is used to perform sorts for some ORDER BY and GROUP BY
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								# queries. If sorted data does not fit into the sort buffer, a disk
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								# based merge sort is used instead - See the "Sort_merge_passes"
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								# status variable. Allocated per thread if sort is needed.
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								sort_buffer_size = 8M
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								# This buffer is used for the optimization of full JOINs (JOINs without
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								# indexes). Such JOINs are very bad for performance in most cases
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								# anyway, but setting this variable to a large value reduces the
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								# performance impact. See the "Select_full_join" status variable for a
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								# count of full JOINs. Allocated per thread if full join is found
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								join_buffer_size = 8M
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								# How many threads we should keep in a cache for reuse. When a client
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								# disconnects, the client's threads are put in the cache if there aren't
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								# more than thread_cache_size threads from before.  This greatly reduces
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								# the amount of thread creations needed if you have a lot of new
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								# connections. (Normally this doesn't give a notable performance
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								# improvement if you have a good thread implementation.)
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								thread_cache_size = 8
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								# This permits the application to give the threads system a hint for the
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								# desired number of threads that should be run at the same time.  This
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								# value only makes sense on systems that support the thread_concurrency()
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								# function call (Sun Solaris, for example).
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								# You should try [number of CPUs]*(2..4) for thread_concurrency
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								thread_concurrency = 8
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								# Query cache is used to cache SELECT results and later return them
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								# without actual executing the same query once again. Having the query
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								# cache enabled may result in significant speed improvements, if your
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								# have a lot of identical queries and rarely changing tables. See the
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								# "Qcache_lowmem_prunes" status variable to check if the current value
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								# is high enough for your load.
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								# Note: In case your tables change very often or if your queries are
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								# textually different every time, the query cache may result in a
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								# slowdown instead of a performance improvement.
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								query_cache_size = 64M
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								# Only cache result sets that are smaller than this limit. This is to
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								# protect the query cache of a very large result set overwriting all
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								# other query results.
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								query_cache_limit = 2M
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								# Minimum word length to be indexed by the full text search index.
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								# You might wish to decrease it if you need to search for shorter words.
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								# Note that you need to rebuild your FULLTEXT index, after you have
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								# modified this value.
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								ft_min_word_len = 4
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								# If your system supports the memlock() function call, you might want to
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								# enable this option while running MySQL to keep it locked in memory and
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								# to avoid potential swapping out in case of high memory pressure. Good
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								# for performance.
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								#memlock
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								# Table type which is used by default when creating new tables, if not
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								# specified differently during the CREATE TABLE statement.
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								default-storage-engine = MYISAM
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								# Thread stack size to use. This amount of memory is always reserved at
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								# connection time. MySQL itself usually needs no more than 64K of
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								# memory, while if you use your own stack hungry UDF functions or your
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								# OS requires more stack for some operations, you might need to set this
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								# to a higher value.
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								thread_stack = 192K
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								# Set the default transaction isolation level. Levels available are:
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								# READ-UNCOMMITTED, READ-COMMITTED, REPEATABLE-READ, SERIALIZABLE
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								transaction_isolation = REPEATABLE-READ
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								# Maximum size for internal (in-memory) temporary tables. If a table
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								# grows larger than this value, it is automatically converted to disk
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								# based table This limitation is for a single table. There can be many
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								# of them.
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								tmp_table_size = 64M
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								# Enable binary logging. This is required for acting as a MASTER in a
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								# replication configuration. You also need the binary log if you need
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								# the ability to do point in time recovery from your latest backup.
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								log-bin=mysql-bin
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								# binary logging format - mixed recommended
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								binlog_format=mixed
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								# If you're using replication with chained slaves (A->B->C), you need to
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								# enable this option on server B. It enables logging of updates done by
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								# the slave thread into the slave's binary log.
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								#log_slave_updates
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								# Enable the full query log. Every query (even ones with incorrect
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								# syntax) that the server receives will be logged. This is useful for
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								# debugging, it is usually disabled in production use.
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								#log
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								# Print warnings to the error log file.  If you have any problem with
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								# MySQL you should enable logging of warnings and examine the error log
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								# for possible explanations. 
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								#log_warnings
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								# Log slow queries. Slow queries are queries which take more than the
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								# amount of time defined in "long_query_time" or which do not use
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								# indexes well, if log_short_format is not enabled. It is normally good idea
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								# to have this turned on if you frequently add new queries to the
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								# system.
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								slow_query_log
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								# All queries taking more than this amount of time (in seconds) will be
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								# trated as slow. Do not use "1" as a value here, as this will result in
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								# even very fast queries being logged from time to time (as MySQL
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								# currently measures time with second accuracy only).
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								long_query_time = 2
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								# ***  Replication related settings 
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								# Unique server identification number between 1 and 2^32-1. This value
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								# is required for both master and slave hosts. It defaults to 1 if
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								# "master-host" is not set, but will MySQL will not function as a master
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								# if it is omitted.
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								server-id = 1
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								# Replication Slave (comment out master section to use this)
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								#
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								 | 
							
								# To configure this host as a replication slave, you can choose between
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# two methods :
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# 1) Use the CHANGE MASTER TO command (fully described in our manual) -
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#    the syntax is:
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#    CHANGE MASTER TO MASTER_HOST=<host>, MASTER_PORT=<port>,
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#    MASTER_USER=<user>, MASTER_PASSWORD=<password> ;
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#    where you replace <host>, <user>, <password> by quoted strings and
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#    <port> by the master's port number (3306 by default).
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#    Example:
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#    CHANGE MASTER TO MASTER_HOST='125.564.12.1', MASTER_PORT=3306,
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#    MASTER_USER='joe', MASTER_PASSWORD='secret';
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# OR
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# 2) Set the variables below. However, in case you choose this method, then
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#    start replication for the first time (even unsuccessfully, for example
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#    if you mistyped the password in master-password and the slave fails to
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#    connect), the slave will create a master.info file, and any later
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#    changes in this file to the variable values below will be ignored and
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#    overridden by the content of the master.info file, unless you shutdown
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#    the slave server, delete master.info and restart the slaver server.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#    For that reason, you may want to leave the lines below untouched
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#    (commented) and instead use CHANGE MASTER TO (see above)
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# required unique id between 2 and 2^32 - 1
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# (and different from the master)
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# defaults to 2 if master-host is set
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# but will not function as a slave if omitted
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#server-id = 2
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# The replication master for this slave - required
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#master-host = <hostname>
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# The username the slave will use for authentication when connecting
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# to the master - required
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#master-user = <username>
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# The password the slave will authenticate with when connecting to
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# the master - required
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#master-password = <password>
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# The port the master is listening on.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# optional - defaults to 3306
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#master-port = <port>
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# Make the slave read-only. Only users with the SUPER privilege and the
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# replication slave thread will be able to modify data on it. You can
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# use this to ensure that no applications will accidently modify data on
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# the slave instead of the master
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#read_only
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#*** MyISAM Specific options
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# Size of the Key Buffer, used to cache index blocks for MyISAM tables.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# Do not set it larger than 30% of your available memory, as some memory
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# is also required by the OS to cache rows. Even if you're not using
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# MyISAM tables, you should still set it to 8-64M as it will also be
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# used for internal temporary disk tables.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								key_buffer_size = 32M
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# MyISAM uses special tree-like cache to make bulk inserts (that is,
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# INSERT ... SELECT, INSERT ... VALUES (...), (...), ..., and LOAD DATA
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# INFILE) faster. This variable limits the size of the cache tree in
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# bytes per thread. Setting it to 0 will disable this optimisation.  Do
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# not set it larger than "key_buffer_size" for optimal performance.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# This buffer is allocated when a bulk insert is detected.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								bulk_insert_buffer_size = 64M
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# This buffer is allocated when MySQL needs to rebuild the index in
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# REPAIR, OPTIMIZE, ALTER table statements as well as in LOAD DATA INFILE
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# into an empty table. It is allocated per thread so be careful with
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# large settings.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								myisam_sort_buffer_size = 128M
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# The maximum size of the temporary file MySQL is allowed to use while
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# recreating the index (during REPAIR, ALTER TABLE or LOAD DATA INFILE.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# If the file-size would be bigger than this, the index will be created
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# through the key cache (which is slower).
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								myisam_max_sort_file_size = 10G
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# If a table has more than one index, MyISAM can use more than one
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# thread to repair them by sorting in parallel. This makes sense if you
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# have multiple CPUs and plenty of memory.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								myisam_repair_threads = 1
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# Automatically check and repair not properly closed MyISAM tables.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								myisam_recover
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# *** INNODB Specific options ***
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# Use this option if you have a MySQL server with InnoDB support enabled
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# but you do not plan to use it. This will save memory and disk space
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# and speed up some things.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#skip-innodb
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# Additional memory pool that is used by InnoDB to store metadata
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# information.  If InnoDB requires more memory for this purpose it will
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# start to allocate it from the OS.  As this is fast enough on most
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# recent operating systems, you normally do not need to change this
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# value. SHOW INNODB STATUS will display the current amount used.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								innodb_additional_mem_pool_size = 16M
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# InnoDB, unlike MyISAM, uses a buffer pool to cache both indexes and
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# row data. The bigger you set this the less disk I/O is needed to
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# access data in tables. On a dedicated database server you may set this
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# parameter up to 80% of the machine physical memory size. Do not set it
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# too large, though, because competition of the physical memory may
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# cause paging in the operating system.  Note that on 32bit systems you
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# might be limited to 2-3.5G of user level memory per process, so do not
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# set it too high.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								innodb_buffer_pool_size = 2G
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# InnoDB stores data in one or more data files forming the tablespace.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# If you have a single logical drive for your data, a single
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# autoextending file would be good enough. In other cases, a single file
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# per device is often a good choice. You can configure InnoDB to use raw
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# disk partitions as well - please refer to the manual for more info
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# about this.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								innodb_data_file_path = ibdata1:10M:autoextend
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# Set this option if you would like the InnoDB tablespace files to be
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# stored in another location. By default this is the MySQL datadir.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#innodb_data_home_dir = <directory>
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# Number of IO threads to use for async IO operations. This value is
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# hardcoded to 4 on Unix, but on Windows disk I/O may benefit from a
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# larger number.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								innodb_file_io_threads = 4
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# If you run into InnoDB tablespace corruption, setting this to a nonzero
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# value will likely help you to dump your tables. Start from value 1 and
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# increase it until you're able to dump the table successfully.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#innodb_force_recovery=1
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# Number of threads allowed inside the InnoDB kernel. The optimal value
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# depends highly on the application, hardware as well as the OS
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# scheduler properties. A too high value may lead to thread thrashing.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								innodb_thread_concurrency = 16
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# If set to 1, InnoDB will flush (fsync) the transaction logs to the
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# disk at each commit, which offers full ACID behavior. If you are
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# willing to compromise this safety, and you are running small
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# transactions, you may set this to 0 or 2 to reduce disk I/O to the
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# logs. Value 0 means that the log is only written to the log file and
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# the log file flushed to disk approximately once per second. Value 2
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# means the log is written to the log file at each commit, but the log
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# file is only flushed to disk approximately once per second.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								innodb_flush_log_at_trx_commit = 1
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# Speed up InnoDB shutdown. This will disable InnoDB to do a full purge
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# and insert buffer merge on shutdown. It may increase shutdown time a
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# lot, but InnoDB will have to do it on the next startup instead.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#innodb_fast_shutdown
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# The size of the buffer InnoDB uses for buffering log data. As soon as
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# it is full, InnoDB will have to flush it to disk. As it is flushed
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# once per second anyway, it does not make sense to have it very large
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# (even with long transactions). 
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								innodb_log_buffer_size = 8M
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# Size of each log file in a log group. You should set the combined size
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# of log files to about 25%-100% of your buffer pool size to avoid
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# unneeded buffer pool flush activity on log file overwrite. However,
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# note that a larger logfile size will increase the time needed for the
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# recovery process.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								innodb_log_file_size = 256M
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# Total number of files in the log group. A value of 2-3 is usually good
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# enough.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								innodb_log_files_in_group = 3
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# Location of the InnoDB log files. Default is the MySQL datadir. You
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# may wish to point it to a dedicated hard drive or a RAID1 volume for
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# improved performance
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#innodb_log_group_home_dir
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# Maximum allowed percentage of dirty pages in the InnoDB buffer pool.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# If it is reached, InnoDB will start flushing them out agressively to
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# not run out of clean pages at all. This is a soft limit, not
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# guaranteed to be held.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								innodb_max_dirty_pages_pct = 90
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# The flush method InnoDB will use for Log. The tablespace always uses
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# doublewrite flush logic. The default value is "fdatasync", another
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# option is "O_DSYNC".
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#innodb_flush_method=O_DSYNC
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# How long an InnoDB transaction should wait for a lock to be granted
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# before being rolled back. InnoDB automatically detects transaction
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# deadlocks in its own lock table and rolls back the transaction. If you
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# use the LOCK TABLES command, or other transaction-safe storage engines
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# than InnoDB in the same transaction, then a deadlock may arise which
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# InnoDB cannot notice. In cases like this the timeout is useful to
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# resolve the situation.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								innodb_lock_wait_timeout = 120
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								[mysqldump]
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# Do not buffer the whole result set in memory before writing it to
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# file. Required for dumping very large tables
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								quick
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								max_allowed_packet = 16M
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								[mysql]
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								no-auto-rehash
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# Only allow UPDATEs and DELETEs that use keys.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								#safe-updates
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								[myisamchk]
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								key_buffer_size = 512M
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								sort_buffer_size = 512M
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								read_buffer = 8M
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								write_buffer = 8M
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								[mysqlhotcopy]
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								interactive-timeout
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								[mysqld_safe]
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# Increase the amount of open files allowed per process. Warning: Make
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# sure you have set the global system limit high enough! The high value
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# is required for a large number of opened tables
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								open-files-limit = 8192
							 |