Hello,

I faced this issues a few years ago and I'd like to give my contributions.
The easy and clean way I've found:

----------------------------------------------------------------------
<--> One installation for each mysql instance

<--> On each instance you can have as many databases as you want.

<--> One different mysql user and homedir (mysql41,mysql50) for each mysql 
installation.

<--> Put .my.cnf file in the home directory of each mysql user with the right 
parameters (different ports and socket files at least, this is the way I have 
found not to conflict between instances)
Ex:
:-----.my.cnf------------:
# The MySQL server
[mysqld]
port            = 3515
socket          = /tmp/mysql5015.sock
skip-locking
key_buffer = 256M
max_allowed_packet = 1M
:-------------------------:

<--> Start each mysql instance with his own user
----------------------------------------------------------------------


In this way I have several MySQL server instances (from 3.23 to 5.x) 
wonderfully working on the same 2.7 Solaris machine.

Aloha!

Claudio Nanni

-----Messaggio originale-----
Da: Eramo, Mark [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Inviato: martedì 29 aprile 2008 15.54
A: Arthur Fuller
Cc: mysql@lists.mysql.com
Oggetto: RE: Starting a 2nd MySQL instance on UNIX

Hi Arthur,
   Sure, no problem!

This actually proved to be rather tricky because the first instance was 
installed in /usr/local/mysql. It seems that by default, MySQL looks for things 
in this locations so if you deviate from it, you have to be explicit with mysql 
and tell it where to look for things.  My new MySQL 50 instance had to run 
alongside the 4.0.20 instance so I installed it into /usr/local/mysql-50

** Here is a summary of things I had to do to bring this up properly **

I created a my.cnf and put it in /usr/local/mysql-50

In the my.cnf, I defined the following (The first entry is for the mysql 
program and the 2nd entry is for the mysqld program).

[mysql]
socket=/tmp/mysql50/mysql.sock
port=3307

[mysqld]
user=mysql5
pid-file=/usr/local/mysql-50/mysql50.pid
log=/usr/local/mysql-50/mysql50d.log
port=3307
max_allowed_packet=32M   <== I had to set this so I could import the MySQL 
4.0.20 database properly. Some users may not need this set as high.
socket=/tmp/mysql50/mysql.sock

#Path to installation directory. All paths are usually resolved relative to 
this.
basedir="/usr/local/mysql-50"

#Path to the database root
datadir="/usr/local/mysql-50/data"

You have to be careful to not only pick a separate port, but also a separate 
pid file for the process ID and a separate socket file, especially if you are 
running both instance at the same time.

I modified the mysql.server in the /support-files folder. I had to set the 
basedir and the datadir. I then copied this to the /bin folder.

I edited the mysql_install_db file in the /scripts folder and set the basedir 
and datadir. I then ran that to create the mysql database.

As root, I started the server  ./bin/mysql.server start (The server starts up 
:) ). Since the user mysql50 is defined in this script, it then starts mysqld 
as the mysql50 user.

Now, the tricky part, to run mysql and access the mysql database, you cannot 
just say mysql -u root -p mysql, it will try to connect to the default instance 
in /usr/local/mysql.
What you have to do is:

Mysql --defaults-file=/usr/local/mysql-50/my.cnf -u root -p mysql

This now properly connects to the new mysql50 instance. Also, if you want to 
run mysqladmin, you need to specify the --defaults-file option.  Make sure 
wherever you use the --defaults-file option that it is the FIRST command line 
option used.

It took me quite some time to get this all working but now, I understand MySQL 
much better. I hope this proves to be some help to you and others out there who 
may be going through the same thing.

Regards,
Mark




From: Arthur Fuller [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesday, April 29, 2008 9:29 AM
To: Eramo, Mark
Cc: mysql@lists.mysql.com
Subject: Re: Starting a 2nd MySQL instance on UNIX

Would you kindly supply the changes you made, for our collective education? 
Thanks.

Arthur
On Mon, Apr 28, 2008 at 11:54 AM, Mark-E <[EMAIL PROTECTED]<mailto:[EMAIL 
PROTECTED]>> wrote:

Hi Ian,
  Thanks for the reply. I was specifying the new port of 3307. I actually
got it working over the weekend. Turns out I had to add a few entries in the
mysqld section of the my.cnf file and I was able to connect.

Regards,
 Mark



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