gt; wrote:
>
>
>
>> Am 13.09.2016 um 12:13 schrieb Johan De Meersman:
>> - Original Message -
>>> From: "Ryan Coleman" <ryan.cole...@cwis.biz>
>>> Subject: Re: MySQL Platform Migration
>>>
>>> Because they want to
Dear sir,
You do not realize that there aren’t always sys admins on these lists. Your
proven track record of asshole first, kid gloves later drives people away.
Your fight to change mailing lists is one which only you seem to share.
Goodnight.
> On Sep 12, 2016, at 7:27 AM, Reindl Harald
Because they want to be belittled by european jackasses online.
On Sep 10, 2016, at 11:56 PM, Reindl Harald wrote:
>
>
> Am 11.09.2016 um 06:36 schrieb Suresh Rajagopal:
>> Is the mysql datafile compatible with different operation system ? I have
>> not done this in
reply-all?
>
> Am 18.10.2015 um 22:52 schrieb bluethu...@gmail.com:
>> e
>>
>> Sent from my iPhone
>>
>>> On Oct 18, 2015, at 4:12 PM, Daevid Vincent <dae...@daevid.com> wrote:
>>>
>>> d
>>>
>>>> -Original
b
> On Oct 15, 2015, at 10:07 PM, Dennis Ruiz wrote:
>
> a
>
> --
> MySQL General Mailing List
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c
On Fri, Oct 16, 2015 at 3:01 PM, Ryan Coleman <ryan.cole...@cwis.biz> wrote:
> b
>
> > On Oct 15, 2015, at 10:07 PM, Dennis Ruiz <darv...@gmail.com> wrote:
> >
> > a
> >
> > --
> > MySQL General Mailing List
> > For list archiv
No but there should be. If there's not my task is useless.
Secondly yes. Unique name on it too.
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Publisher, d3photography.com
ryan.cole...@cwis.biz
m. 651.373.5015
o. 612.568.2749
On Aug 4, 2015, at 17:33, Wm Mussatto mussa...@csz.com wrote:
On Tue, August 4, 2015 11:19
records from /images/ and thusly could be 3000+ from /files/.
How on earth do I do this?
—
Ryan
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shouldn't be taken to make MySQL more
secure, instead additional steps should be taken to make it insecure
if that is what is needed in certain environments.
Thank you for the reply.
Ryan
On Tue, Dec 27, 2011 at 4:08 PM, Shawn Green (MySQL)
shawn.l.gr...@oracle.com wrote:
Hello Ryan,
On 12
Hi,
Does anyone know why what's done in 'mysql_secure_installation' [0]
isnot part of the default mysql installation?
[0] http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.0/en/mysql-secure-installation.html
Thank you,Ryan Dewhurst
P.S. I also asked this question on the
forums:http://forums.mysql.com/read.php
Architecture question I'm having trouble finding an answer to:
I run four WordPress websites. I have mysql setup in a write master/read
replica slave configuration on Amazon. There is one master that all the
WordPress instances write to. I'm trying to figure out how to setup the read
replicas.
not like
to share an app server) and added memcache. So I think we're ripe for another
try.
Thanks again,
Ryan
On Oct 18, 2011, at 5:39 PM, Lydia Rowe wrote:
You have answered your own question, good sir. Or so I have come to believe.
Is your primary concern $? Is your organization focused
` = d ?
Thanks,
Ryan
Hello,
I am setting MySQL (5.0) replication over WAN for backup purpose (with
SSL enabled).
I have read the document:
http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.0/en/replication.html, and wonder if
any special tunning needed for using replication over WAN.
Are there any configuration parameter(s) need
According to this document:
http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.0/en/charset-unicode.html
It said MySQL support UTF-8 using one to three bytes per character.
But I have created a test table:
-- create table test ( c char(5) ) default charset =utf8;
From the table status, the data length is alway
Assume MySQL int range (unsigned) is from 0 to 4294967295
There are total 10 digits.
Why a lot of tutorial in the web tell you to declare,
e.g.
CREATE TABLE t1 (f INT(11) UNSIGNED);
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Hi,
On Tue, Jun 8, 2010 at 12:44 AM, Warren Young war...@etr-usa.com wrote:
The Unicode consortium has stated that Unicode will
never require more than 21 bits per character[*], and 24 bits is the next
even multiple of 8 up from that.
Maybe off topic, but just curious...If 3 bytes is enough
http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.0/en/charset-unicode.html
Since MySQL only support BMP, so in fact 16 bit is needed actually?
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Hey.
Back to few years ago, InnoDB require table level locking when
inserting auto-increment PK to the table, and Heikki said there will
be a fix.
Is this problem still exist now?
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On Sun, Dec 13, 2009 at 11:48 AM, Michael Dykman mdyk...@gmail.com wrote:
I hope the only reason this thread is so quiet is because we are all
busy notifying our friends. There are a hell of a lot more users
invested in MySQL than those who read this list. Spread the word!
Let's stand up
Hello,
Is it common heard from people that if you have large table (assume
MyISAM in my case), you need large memory in order to have the
key/index in memory for performance, otherwise, table scan on disk is
slow.
But how to estimate how much memory I need?
Consider a simple case, a MyISAM
in the where clause.
Thanks,
-Ryan
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the non-ascii characters removed, for example.
-Ryan
Darryle Steplight wrote:
Hi Ryan,
MySql does have regular expressions. See Link
http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.0/en/regexp.html
On Thu, Sep 11, 2008 at 9:52 AM, Ryan Stille [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
From looking at the MySQL 5 docs
: sort_buffer_size
Value: 67108856
12 rows in set (0.00 sec)
I'll bump innodb_buffer_pool_size to 2G and see how that goes. Thanks
for the tips, if there's additional innodb tuning parameters folks
tend to hit first I'd be glad to try them as well.
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On Sep 4, 2008, at 8:16
On Sep 4, 2008, at 1:48 PM, Ranjeet Walunj wrote:
Hi ryan.
As pointed by Johnny, it is difficult to give optimization advise
without exactly knowing the performance of your machine.
I'm assuming you are using the machine as Database Server and not
running application (Web/other
indexes where the slow query log is pointing them,
but any suggestions on how better to tune things up would be much
appreciated. I'm not sure what else to tune here but we're getting
bursts of 1200+ queries per second regularly and seeing things slow
down significantly.
Best,
--
Ryan
I'm trying to delete some orphaned records from a table that has about
150K records. Here is my delete:
|CREATE TEMPORARY TABLE deleteids AS (
SELECT subTable.ID from subTable
LEFT OUTER JOIN parentTable ON subTable.ID = parentTable.ID
WHERE parentTable.ID IS NULL
);
DELETE FROM subTable
.
Thinking about it now... its probably the IN clause, isn't it? I've
heard those are slow. Hopefully someone will have a better idea.
Thanks,
-Ryan
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Thanks for the help, I rewrote it as a subselect and it deleted all 10K
records in two seconds.
DELETE subTable FROM subTable LEFT OUTER JOIN parentTable ON
subTable.parentID = parentTable.ID WHERE parentTable.ID IS NULL
-Ryan
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Ryan Stille wrote:
Thanks for the help, I rewrote it as a subselect and it deleted all
10K records in two seconds.
DELETE subTable FROM subTable LEFT OUTER JOIN parentTable ON
subTable.parentID = parentTable.ID WHERE parentTable.ID IS NULL
-Ryan
Whoops, I meant that I rewrote it as a JOIN
to their own servers instead, and not
have to remember a port number. Like:
mysql -h mysql.username.domain.com -u username -p
and then they'd be pointed at their appropriate instance.
Anybody know how I can do that?
Thanks.
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, or ...
I would settle for a single shared database in which users could create
databases and drop their own databases but not other users'. They'll have
to live with namespace collisions.
Is that possible to do with mysql's permissions?
Thanks.
--Ryan
On Thu, 20 Dec 2007 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi
)?Eod
#master-connect-retry = 60
#replicate-do-db= mydns
#
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CHARSET=latin1;
CREATE TABLE `projects_tags` (
`project_id` int(11) default NULL,
`tag_id` int(11) default NULL,
KEY `tag_id` (`tag_id`)
) ENGINE=InnoDB DEFAULT CHARSET=latin1;
I'm using MySQL 5.0.37. Thanks in advance.
Ryan
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) VALUES\n;
print ($i, 888, 'title $i', 'clean title $i', 'description $i', .
'clean description $i', 999);\n
}
so:
perl newfile.pl test_records.sql
mysql -p mydatabase test_records.sql
-Ryan
http://www.stillnetstudios.com
SRM SRM wrote:
Group,
I'm an oracle dba and new to mysql. I've just
-Saturday.zip
etc.
Modify to suit your needs.
-Ryan
Brian Dunning wrote:
I have a huge MySQL table, 2.1 million records, 200MB. Once a week I
need to dump it in CSV format and zip the file.
This is not on my server, and it's in production, so I don't want to
risk testing different methods
Perl would be my language of choice to do something like this.
-Ryan
Thufir wrote:
what would be the quickest, easiest way to import, for example, the rss feed
http://rss.gmane.org/gmane.comp.db.mysql.general into mysql?
what would be some different approaches, pls? I'm more interested
I am on 4.1.20-1.
Maybe your OS isn't patched?
Try this: SELECT @@global.time_zone;
If you get back SYSTEM, then MySQL is looking to the OS for timezone
data. And its only loaded when MySQL starts, so if you haven't
restarted MySQL since you patched your OS, you need to do that.
-Ryan
Is MySQL on each one set to the same time zone?
SELECT@@global.time_zone;
-Ryan
Néstor wrote:
That was interesting. I have 2 rhel 3 servers and they both have been
update to handle the DST. They both yield different results when I
ran the
command:
SERVER=RALPH
Whats wrong with using the --single-transaction switch for backing up
InnoDB tables? What does the Hot Backup product do that this doesn't?
Thanks,
-Ryan
Juan Eduardo Moreno wrote:
Ananda,
For Innodb the best is Innodb Hot Backup ( www.innodb.com (US$) )
For MyISAM you can use a simple
Ryan Stille wrote:
Paul DuBois wrote:
At 4:40 PM -0600 2/20/07, Ryan Stille wrote:
Is there an easy way to test to see if MySQL already has the proper
tables loaded?
-Ryan
Yes, reload them. :-) After that, they're current! ...
After digging around on the net for a while I found
.
-Ryan
Mike Blezien wrote:
Out of curiousity, what should be done if they results are different.
We checked on one of boxes and got two different results:
SELECT UNIX_TIMESTAMP('2007-03-11 02:00:00'),
- UNIX_TIMESTAMP('2007-03-11 03:00:00
Paul DuBois wrote:
At 4:40 PM -0600 2/20/07, Ryan Stille wrote:
Is there an easy way to test to see if MySQL already has the proper
tables loaded?
-Ryan
Yes, reload them. :-) After that, they're current! ...
My timezone tables appear to be empty. At least the time_zone_name
Ryan Stille wrote:
Paul DuBois wrote:
At 4:40 PM -0600 2/20/07, Ryan Stille wrote:
Is there an easy way to test to see if MySQL already has the proper
tables loaded?
-Ryan
Yes, reload them. :-) After that, they're current! ...
My timezone tables appear to be empty. At least
Is there an easy way to test to see if MySQL already has the proper
tables loaded?
-Ryan
Paul DuBois wrote:
At 4:17 PM -0600 2/20/07, Paul DuBois wrote:
At 4:36 PM -0500 2/20/07, Sun, Jennifer wrote:
Any answers for the question below ?
Is there a DST patch for MySql 4.0.20? Thanks
in
your example).
You can programmatically get a list of columns in a table, then when you
are using Perl or PHP or whatever to build your query string, you can
loop through the columns to list them.
-Ryan
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.
-Ryan
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the docs about this the other day.
It said temp tables are always created in memory, but can be moved to
disk if they get too large, or will be created on disk initially if the
table contains a certain type of field (maybe text or binary, can't
remember).
-Ryan
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auto increment id. Hope this helps.
-Ryan
Daevid Vincent wrote:
http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.0/en/innodb-auto-increment-column.html
We have recently switched several database tables from MYISM to INNODB, only
to find out this colossal design flaw in InnoDB tables.
We ship out mySQL on our
running on MSSQL, and we are wondering if we could find any
speed improvements by moving to MySQL, possibly running on a ram disk.
Any input appreciated.
Thanks,
-Ryan
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Maybe I should just be looking at using a HEAP table?
-Ryan
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(s) is/are
doing. The master only writes stuff to the binary log and leaves it at
that.
Anyway, that's my understanding.
Cheers,
Ryan
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the listings. So I don't think it would be a problem to build up all
the data in a session and then write it all at once at the end.
-Ryan
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Hi Rithish,
Thank you all for your suggestion, I would definitely give it a shot.
Regards,
Ryan.
On 3/13/06, Rithish Saralaya [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hello Ryan. I am more of a developer than a MySQL administrator. Hence, I
would always favour applications logging query errors rather than
Hi Dan,
Noted with thanks.
As such, is there a workaround to log problematic sql queries ran against
the mysqld server ? Do I need to write separate script to do this ?
Regards,
Ryan.
On 3/10/06, Dan Nelson [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
In the last episode (Mar 08), ryan lwf said:
I
Are my emails not coming through? Or is this question way too 'newbie'
and no one wants to touch it?
-Ryan
Ryan Stille wrote:
I'm still hoping someone can else can share their input on this.
What do other people usually do as far as the collation setting?
Thanks,
-Ryan
Ryan Stille
with mysqld-4.0.25 binary version.
Any inputs are appreciated.
Thanks,
Ryan.
I'm still hoping someone can else can share their input on this.
What do other people usually do as far as the collation setting?
Thanks,
-Ryan
Ryan Stille wrote:
When we migrated to MySQL from MS SQL, I left everything set
to the default as far as collations - latin1_swedish_ci
What else can I do to observe myslqd?
mytop may be of some use: http://jeremy.zawodny.com/mysql/mytop/
-Ryan
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Yes, look at the PURGE LOGS command.
Rithish Saralaya wrote:
Hello.
Can I delete off the binary log files manually? I do not want
to 'RESET MASTER', as it will clear all the binary logs, and
that's not what I want to do. The database is backed up every
midnight, and I wouldn't want to keep
from the local machine,
depending on what address you use to connect to. (local IP, local host,
actual hostname, etc).
-Ryan
Scott Haneda wrote:
ERROR 2002: Can't connect to local MySQL server through
socket '/tmp/mysql.sock'
I accidentally deleted the above file, I can not connect any
on some ColdFusion functions. I am wondering if my
database charset has anything to do with it.
What do other people usually do as far as the collation setting?
We are in the US, but do have a few sites that make use of German and
Spanish characters.
Thanks,
-Ryan
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they show up as ads.id, track.id, etc?
-Ryan
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Put SET SQL_LOG_BIN=0 at the top of your dump file. That will turn
off logging just for your session.
-Ryan
-Original Message-
From: sheeri kritzer [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Thursday, March 02, 2006 11:56 AM
To: Rithish Saralaya
Cc: MySQL general mailing list
Subject: Re
(ads.id as adid).
Thanks,
-Ryan
Rhino wrote:
I don't understand what you want. If you have the original
query, it should be apparent from it where each 'id' column
originated. If you're not sure how to read the query, post it
and we can help you figure out which table provided each 'id
did u start mysql with --skip-name-resolve ???
Kishore Jalleda
Kim Christensen wrote:
On 2/16/06, Ryan Stille [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Nope.
Well, have you tried it? Did it solve your problem?
Sorry, I misunderstood. I thought Kishore was saying that if I had
started the server
trying to connect from is named
dbdev.willcomminc.com. I did a reverse lookup from the database server
and the IP 192.168.2.56 does indeed lookup to dbdev.willcomminc.com.
Why is MySQL ignoring the hostname and using the IP?
I did google for this first but didn't come up with anything.
-Ryan
Nope.
_
From: Kishore Jalleda [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Thursday, February 16, 2006 4:32 PM
To: Ryan Stille
Cc: mysql@lists.mysql.com
Subject: Re: User is rejected because of IP, but hostname is
allowed
did u start
You can also install MyODBC and then hook an Excel spreadsheet into your
database. Editing the spreadsheet will update data in your database.
This isn't a good solution if you are going to be creating new tables
often. But for manipulating data in a known set of tables it's great.
-Ryan
Furthermore, would it make more sense to have the data dump locally,
and then use a script to move the contents of the dump to a machine
on the network, perhaps even to a machine located on an alternate
network accessed via a second ethernet card?
This would be the simplest approach. That is
that to the field value.
-Ryan
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':
: multiple definition of `compress2'
/usr/lib/mysql/libz.a(compress.o)(.text+0x0): first defined here
...
Did something change in the 4.1.16-1 RPM's in regards to zlib? As I
mentioned above, 4.1.16-0 worked fine.
Thanks,
Ryan
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I am using MySQL 5.0.15 on windows and cannot run this query:
SELECT a.*,b.name, c.fullname,d.fullname
FROM access_authorization a, building b
LEFT JOIN users c ON a.createdby=c.id
LEFT JOIN users d ON a.modifiedby=d.id
WHERE a.sortcode=b.sortcode AND
a.sortcode like '1,2,1,6%' LIMIT 0, 25
I
\
--exec-prefix=/usr/local/mysql \
--with-named-curses-libs=/usr/lib/libncurses.so.4 \
--enable-thread-safe-client \
--with-extra-character-sets=complex
Any ideas on what's wrong? I am installing verion 4.1.14, and the
server is running RedHat 6.2.
Thanks,
-Ryan
and my pasted error
messages. I hate Outlook with a passion but am forced to use it.
-Ryan
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I fixed the whole problem by typing this one line:
`ln -s libz.so.1.1.3 /usr/lib/libz.so`
Linux is such a pain sometimes.
-Ryan
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is possible to get UNIX timestamp with microseconds
when i try the following it just give 10 digits
mysqlSELECT unix_timestamp('20051114095641'+ INTERVAL 0 HOUR) as ts;
output :
1131933401 --- 10 digits
any tips?
tia!
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is it possible to get the the given (unix)timestamp in milliseconds
since the epoch?
tia!
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you further.
hth
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CEBB F1E4 1E39 EC48 F05D 6B72 9C11 DD88 5E39 E471
$ gpg --keyserver pgp.mit.edu --recv-keys 0x5E39E471
main(k){float i,j,r,x,y=-16;while(puts(),y++15)
for(x=0;x++84;putchar( .:-;!/)|IH%*#[k15]))
for(i=k=r=0;j=r*r-i*i-2+x/25,i=2*r*i+y/10,j*j+i*i11k++111;r=j
. I don't know
how it got there. By looking inside the file it appears to be related
to MyODBC 3.5.11.
Just for kicks I copied this file to the second system, but got the same
error when trying to run ./configure.
Any ideas?
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SELECT notifyto FROM cfgbiz
ELSE
SELECT '' as notifyto
Is there something similar in MySQL? I am running version 4.1.x.
Thanks,
-Ryan
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was hoping for a more elegant way to do it, within the single query.
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,'') FROM cfgbiz;
But it looks like the SHOW TABLES statement just doesn't return like a
regular SELECT statement does, because the above works if I use it like
this:
select IF(1,notifyto,'') FROM cfgbiz;
-Ryan
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Josh Chamas wrote:
Ryan Stille wrote:
Has anyone ever used this MSSQL-to-MySQL converter? It's pretty
reasonable at $40, and the demo output I got looked pretty good. But
I wanted to see if there is anything I should be weary about.
http://www.convert-in.com/mss2sql.htm
I have done
data than VARCHAR(16) ?
I'm not sure how the (16) is used on a TEXT field. MS SQL has TEXT
fields and VARCHAR fields. A VARCHAR(16) in MSSQL would be the same as
a VARCHAR(16) in MySQL. But in my MSSQL database I have data with
thousands of characters in a TEXT(16) field.
-Ryan
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SQL syntax; check the manual that corresponds
to your MySQL server version for the right syntax to use near 'INSERT
INTO rps_names (nameid, name) VALUES (NULL, Ryan Smithland) SELECT LA'
at line 2
With MSSQL the trick was the NO COUNT. That told the database server
not to return a count
autocommit = 0 at the beginning also.
I will ask on a CF list, because they may have run into this issue. But
really I think it's a MySQL question.
Thanks,
-Ryan
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(Specified driver could not be loaded)
Thanks for any help.
-Ryan
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Has anyone ever used this MSSQL-to-MySQL converter? It's pretty
reasonable at $40, and the demo output I got looked pretty good. But I
wanted to see if there is anything I should be weary about.
http://www.convert-in.com/mss2sql.htm
Thanks,
-Ryan
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For list
.
-Ryan
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it!
Thanks for any input,
-Ryan
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. The
mysqldump is still running. How is this record getting inserted into
the database? I thought it was locked while the dump was happening? I
thought it would get queued up and inserted when the mysqldump is
finished. The record was NOT in the dump, this part made sense.
Thanks for any help.
-Ryan
server.
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for from_cno should be r.jpg but its
somehow cacheing the above.
Please advise.
Thanks,
Ryan A
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Is 'find' what you're looking for?
find ${path} -type f -iname '*.doc' -print
find ${path} -type f -iname '*.doc' -exec /some/import/script {} \;
Thanks,
Ryan Yagatich
,__,
/ Ryan Yagatich Pantek Incorporated |
\ http
Best regards,
Ryan
Can I post a query to this list and ask for help optimizing it?
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Ryan McCullough
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with no archiving/compression/purges.
What if we use COMPRESS() for the text in old rows?
Jacob
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MySQL
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Ryan McCullough
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LIKE CONCAT((SELECT
parent_path FROM category WHERE id=2), ,2);
Empty set (0.00 sec)
mysql SELECT VERSION();
+-+
| VERSION() |
+-+
| 4.1.5-gamma |
+-+
1 row in set (0.00 sec)
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Ryan Sommers
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