On Tue, 09 Mar 2004 12:36:30 +0200
Victoria Reznichenko <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> 5 is a number of version. MySQL-Max is a name of MySQL server, where
> Max means that this MySQL server supports InnoDB and BDB storage
> engines.
So this make MaxDB another product
> > Could anyone post a corre
Ivan Sergio Borgonovo <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Tue, 9 Mar 2004 10:52:38 +0100
> "Martijn Tonies" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>> > I'm running:
>> > mysql Ver 12.21 Distrib 4.0.15, for suse-linux (i686)
>> > ps says I'm running mysql-max
>> > mysql21397 0.0 1.7 71216 16064 pts/8 S
On Tue, 9 Mar 2004 10:52:38 +0100
"Martijn Tonies" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > I'm running:
> > mysql Ver 12.21 Distrib 4.0.15, for suse-linux (i686)
> > ps says I'm running mysql-max
> > mysql21397 0.0 1.7 71216 16064 pts/8 S10:32 0:00
> > /usr/sbin/mysqld-max
> >
> > that
Hi,
> I'm running:
> mysql Ver 12.21 Distrib 4.0.15, for suse-linux (i686)
> ps says I'm running mysql-max
> mysql21397 0.0 1.7 71216 16064 pts/8 S10:32 0:00
> /usr/sbin/mysqld-max
>
> that *should* support stored procedures, shouldn't it?
As far as I know, MySQL 5 support st
I'm running:
mysql Ver 12.21 Distrib 4.0.15, for suse-linux (i686)
ps says I'm running mysql-max
mysql21397 0.0 1.7 71216 16064 pts/8 S10:32 0:00
/usr/sbin/mysqld-max
that *should* support stored procedures, shouldn't it?
but this fail
create procedure pippo
begin
select 1