HI again, This multiple mysql proccesses are nothing to worry about - these are the threads that mysql opens to accept incoming connections. You can configure the maximum number of connections and the mysql memory usage in the /etc/my.cnf file.
On Wednesday 01 September 2004 02:14, Yannick Warnier wrote: > Le mar 31/08/2004 à 16:21, Dobromir Velev a écrit : > > Hi, > > Make sure that the mysql user have permissions to write into the folder > > /var/lib/mysql (or whatever your data folder is) . > > Thanks Eric and Dobromir. This was a problem of permissions on > /var/lib/mysql indeed. Although it did not work immediatly after a > change, I saw (how awful) that the mysql version was a 3.23 or something > and replaced by the recommended version 4. > > Now it all works perfectly (although mysqld is now divided in ten > different processes, but I don't know why and I don't mind as long as it > works). > > Thanks, > Yannick -- Dobromir Velev [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://www.websitepulse.com/ -- MySQL General Mailing List For list archives: http://lists.mysql.com/mysql To unsubscribe: http://lists.mysql.com/[EMAIL PROTECTED]