Nick:

What O/S are you running ... Windows?

To the best of my knowledge, MySQL doesn't impose file size limits ... that
is dictated by the O/S's file system. Switching to InnoDB wouldn't change
that.

Gerald Jensen

----- Original Message -----
From: "Nick Seidenman" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Friday, August 03, 2001 6:44 PM
Subject: Thinking of switching from MyISAM to InnoDB



Apparentlly there's a 4 GB limit to a MyISAM file when the table it contains
has VARCHAR, TEXT, or BLOB columns.  In order to get around this limitation
I
was looking to switching to InnoDB table types.  As this looks like a
relatively new subsystem I'm wondering if it is stable enough for production
systems, or is it still too new (and too "feature-prone".)  I'd appreciate
hearing feedback on this.  If I do wind up switching, it won't be for at
least a month.

TiA,

nick

----------------------------------------------------
 Nick Seidenman, CISSP
 Director of Software Development
 Hyperon, Inc.
 www.hyperon.com

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