MySQL 5.5 for Mac OS X — for MacOS 10.4-10.6, Intel only MAMP / XAMPP on Mac OS X MAMP and XAMPP are complete web development packages. They are designed to give developers an easy way to serve up PHP pages using Apache and MySQL right on their Mac. The preference pane is 32bit, the actual MySQL software is 64bit. Mac os x emulator for windows 10 download. It's annoying because the build is not specifically for 10.6 but is intended for 10.4 and 10.5. I could only get MySQL started by installing mysql-5.4.1-beta-osx10.5-x8664 instead of the 5.1 non-beta.
Posted by: Jean-Yves Rouffiac
Date: July 13, 2010 07:28AM
Date: July 13, 2010 07:28AM
Hi Jim,
By default, the OS X installation does not use a my.cnf, and MySQL just uses the default values.
To set up your own my.cnf, you could just create a file straight in /etc, or do the following (excuse me if I say anything which is obvious to you, but this may help complete OS X beginners who are not familiar with the Unix command line):
Log in to OS X using an administrator-level account (to keep things simple lower down)
Open Terminal (in Utilities folder under Applications folder)
and enter your admin password when prompted. You could do this from a non-admin account by using the su command, but that's probably a bit scary for some people ;)
You will now have a copy of my.cnf in /etc (just in case you don't know, that means the etc folder directly under the root folder, not under MySQL's install folder)
You can edit it with a text-editor such as TextWrangler by using File->Open Hidden, or if you are happy to use the command line, use:
To exit without saving, press CTRL+X, to Save then exit it's: CTRL+O then CTRL+X
(O meaning write Out, X meaning eXit)
Hope this helps.
PS: but as I said at the start, MySQL under OS X does not actually need a my.cnf file if you are happy with the defaults (which should be fine for most non-intensive uses)
------------------
Jean-Yves Rouffiac
www.shimeril.com
Edited 4 time(s). Last edit at 07/13/2010 07:33AM by Jean-Yves Rouffiac.
By default, the OS X installation does not use a my.cnf, and MySQL just uses the default values.
To set up your own my.cnf, you could just create a file straight in /etc, or do the following (excuse me if I say anything which is obvious to you, but this may help complete OS X beginners who are not familiar with the Unix command line):
Log in to OS X using an administrator-level account (to keep things simple lower down)
Open Terminal (in Utilities folder under Applications folder)
and enter your admin password when prompted. You could do this from a non-admin account by using the su command, but that's probably a bit scary for some people ;)
You will now have a copy of my.cnf in /etc (just in case you don't know, that means the etc folder directly under the root folder, not under MySQL's install folder)
You can edit it with a text-editor such as TextWrangler by using File->Open Hidden, or if you are happy to use the command line, use:
To exit without saving, press CTRL+X, to Save then exit it's: CTRL+O then CTRL+X
(O meaning write Out, X meaning eXit)
Hope this helps.
PS: but as I said at the start, MySQL under OS X does not actually need a my.cnf file if you are happy with the defaults (which should be fine for most non-intensive uses)
------------------
Jean-Yves Rouffiac
www.shimeril.com
Edited 4 time(s). Last edit at 07/13/2010 07:33AM by Jean-Yves Rouffiac.
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