It's been a busy year for MySQL. Perhaps you've heard. Here are some recent improvements to the speed, scalability, and user-friendliness of the MySQL database and the InnoDB storage engine that we think deserve their own headlines. Now is a great time to beta test the 5.5 release and give feedback to the MySQL engineering team.
Hi everyone. I am not really a new member i was once a member using the handle despiragado.
I now wish to be identified with my new handle.
It's been a while i have last visited the forum to see whats happening. I guess a lot has happened. I will try to read up and keep up to date.
I am a... (3 Replies)
Hello,
I couldn't find an actual introduction thread, so I decided to just put this here.
I go by d0wngrade online. I have been programming in multiple languages for about 15+ years. I started with standard web design languages like HTML and CSS, but I then advanced from design to development... (2 Replies)
After doing a yum install mysql mysql-server on Fedora 14 I wasn't able to fully install the packages correctly. It installed MySQL 5.1. I was getting the following error when running the:
mysql
ERROR 2002 (HY000): Can't connect to local MySQL server through socket '/var/lib/mysql/mysql.sock' (2)... (3 Replies)
Session::Lock::MySQL(3) User Contributed Perl Documentation Session::Lock::MySQL(3)NAME
Apache::Session::Lock::MySQL - Provides mutual exclusion using MySQL
SYNOPSIS
use Apache::Session::Lock::MySQL;
my $locker = Apache::Session::Lock::MySQL->new();
$locker->acquire_read_lock($ref);
$locker->acquire_write_lock($ref);
$locker->release_read_lock($ref);
$locker->release_write_lock($ref);
$locker->release_all_locks($ref);
DESCRIPTION
Apache::Session::Lock::MySQL fulfills the locking interface of Apache::Session. Mutual exclusion is achieved through the use of MySQL's
GET_LOCK and RELEASE_LOCK functions. MySQL does not support the notion of read and write locks, so this module only supports exclusive
locks. When you request a shared read lock, it is instead promoted to an exclusive write lock.
CONFIGURATION
The module must know how to connect to your MySQL database to acquire locks. You must provide a datasource name, a user name, and a
password. These options are passed in the usual Apache::Session style, and are very similar to the options for
Apache::Session::Store::MySQL. Example:
tie %hash, 'Apache::Session::MySQL', $id, {
LockDataSource => 'dbi:mysql:database',
LockUserName => 'database_user',
LockPassword => 'K00l'
};
Instead, you may pass in an already opened DBI handle to your database.
tie %hash, 'Apache::Session::MySQL', $id, {
LockHandle => $dbh
};
AUTHOR
This module was written by Jeffrey William Baker <jwbaker@acm.org>.
SEE ALSO
Apache::Session
perl v5.12.1 2008-01-08 Session::Lock::MySQL(3)