Database Server Installation Shared » History » Version 51
Amber Herold, 05/17/2010 01:41 PM
1 | 1 | Amber Herold | h1. Database Server Installation |
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3 | h2. Install MySQL |
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5 | The following is for the computer that hosts the databases. This involves installing MySQL server and creation/configuration of the leginondb and projectdb databases. |
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7 | 38 | Amber Herold | |
8 | 1 | Amber Herold | |
9 | 42 | Amber Herold | h3. 1 Install MySQL-Server and MySQL-Client |
10 | 38 | Amber Herold | |
11 | *Note:* You may already have MySQL Server and Client installed. Check by typing mysql at the command line. |
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12 | If you see a MySQL prompt (mysql>), you may skip this step. |
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13 | 1 | Amber Herold | |
14 | 15 | Neil Voss | To install Mysql on Linux you have two options (the first option is better): |
15 | 1 | Amber Herold | |
16 | 15 | Neil Voss | # Use your package installer (yum, zypper, YaST, apt-get). For example: |
17 | <pre>sudo yum install mysql mysql-server</pre> |
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18 | # Download the latest MySQL-server package for Linux from http://www.mysql.com |
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19 | 1 | Amber Herold | |
20 | 42 | Amber Herold | h3. 2 Locate Example MySQL configuration files |
21 | 1 | Amber Herold | |
22 | 42 | Amber Herold | They are usually located in /usr/share/mysql. |
23 | |||
24 | 1 | Amber Herold | <pre> |
25 | ls /usr/share/mysql/my* |
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26 | 15 | Neil Voss | /usr/share/mysql/my-huge.cnf |
27 | /usr/share/mysql/my-innodb-heavy-4G.cnf |
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28 | /usr/share/mysql/my-large.cnf |
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29 | /usr/share/mysql/my-medium.cnf |
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30 | /usr/share/mysql/my-small.cnf |
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31 | 20 | Neil Voss | </pre> |
32 | If that does not work try the locate function |
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33 | <pre> |
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34 | 15 | Neil Voss | locate my | egrep "\.cnf$" |
35 | /etc/my.cnf |
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36 | 1 | Amber Herold | /usr/share/mysql/my-huge.cnf |
37 | /usr/share/mysql/my-innodb-heavy-4G.cnf |
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38 | /usr/share/mysql/my-large.cnf |
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39 | /usr/share/mysql/my-medium.cnf |
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40 | /usr/share/mysql/my-small.cnf |
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41 | 3 | Amber Herold | </pre> |
42 | 1 | Amber Herold | |
43 | 42 | Amber Herold | h3. 3 Configure my.cnf in /etc using my-huge.cnf as the template |
44 | 1 | Amber Herold | |
45 | 18 | Neil Voss | # Copy my-huge.cnf to my.cnf |
46 | 19 | Neil Voss | <pre>sudo cp -v /usr/share/mysql/my-huge.cnf /etc/my.cnf</pre> |
47 | 22 | Neil Voss | # Edit /etc/my.cnf to add or change query cache variables like these (be sure to place them under the @[mysqld]@ section): |
48 | 1 | Amber Herold | <pre> |
49 | 39 | Amber Herold | query_cache_type = 1 |
50 | 1 | Amber Herold | query_cache_size = 100M |
51 | 21 | Neil Voss | query_cache_limit= 100M |
52 | 1 | Amber Herold | </pre> |
53 | 11 | Neil Voss | # Search for the text default-storage-engine in /etc/my.cnf. If it exists and is set to other than MyISAM, you should change it to: |
54 | 1 | Amber Herold | <pre>default-storage-engine=MyISAM</pre> |
55 | 10 | Neil Voss | |
56 | 42 | Amber Herold | h3. 4 Start the MySQL Server |
57 | 1 | Amber Herold | |
58 | 10 | Neil Voss | For CentOS/Fedora/RHEL system use the service command: |
59 | |||
60 | 1 | Amber Herold | <pre> |
61 | 10 | Neil Voss | sudo /sbin/service mysqld start |
62 | 1 | Amber Herold | </pre> |
63 | |||
64 | 10 | Neil Voss | For other Unix systems: |
65 | |||
66 | <pre> |
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67 | sudo /etc/init.d/mysqld start |
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68 | </pre> |
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69 | |||
70 | 12 | Neil Voss | or on some installations, |
71 | 1 | Amber Herold | |
72 | <pre> |
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73 | 10 | Neil Voss | sudo /etc/init.d/mysql start |
74 | 1 | Amber Herold | </pre> |
75 | |||
76 | For future reference: start | stop | restart MySQL Server with similar commands: |
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77 | |||
78 | <pre> |
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79 | 10 | Neil Voss | sudo /etc/init.d/mysqld start |
80 | sudo /etc/init.d/mysqld stop |
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81 | sudo /etc/init.d/mysqld restart |
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82 | 1 | Amber Herold | sudo /sbin/service mysqld start |
83 | 10 | Neil Voss | sudo /sbin/service mysqld stop |
84 | sudo /sbin/service mysqld restart |
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85 | 1 | Amber Herold | </pre> |
86 | |||
87 | 42 | Amber Herold | h3. 5 Configure MySQL to start automatically at boot |
88 | 1 | Amber Herold | |
89 | <pre> |
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90 | sudo /sbin/chkconfig mysqld on |
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91 | </pre> |
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92 | 23 | Neil Voss | or for SuSe: |
93 | <pre> |
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94 | sudo /sbin/chkconfig mysql on |
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95 | </pre> |
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96 | 1 | Amber Herold | |
97 | 42 | Amber Herold | h3. 6 For future reference, the database location will be: |
98 | 1 | Amber Herold | |
99 | 10 | Neil Voss | <pre> |
100 | ls /var/lib/mysql |
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101 | 1 | Amber Herold | ibdata1 ib_logfile0 ib_logfile1 mysql mysql.sock test |
102 | </pre> |
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103 | |||
104 | 42 | Amber Herold | h3. 7 Create the Leginon database, call it leginondb |
105 | 3 | Amber Herold | |
106 | 10 | Neil Voss | <pre> |
107 | 1 | Amber Herold | sudo mysqladmin create leginondb |
108 | </pre> |
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109 | |||
110 | 42 | Amber Herold | h3. 8 Create the Project database, call it projectdb |
111 | 1 | Amber Herold | |
112 | <pre> |
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113 | sudo mysqladmin create projectdb |
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114 | </pre> |
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115 | |||
116 | 42 | Amber Herold | h3. 9 Connect to mysql db |
117 | 11 | Neil Voss | |
118 | 40 | Amber Herold | If starting from scratch, the mysql root user will have no password. This is assumed to be the case and we will set it later. |
119 | 1 | Amber Herold | |
120 | 23 | Neil Voss | <pre> |
121 | 28 | Neil Voss | mysql -u root mysql |
122 | 23 | Neil Voss | </pre> |
123 | 1 | Amber Herold | |
124 | 40 | Amber Herold | You should see a mysql prompt: mysql> |
125 | |||
126 | You can view the current mysql users with the following command. |
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127 | 11 | Neil Voss | <pre> |
128 | 40 | Amber Herold | select user, password, host from user; |
129 | 1 | Amber Herold | +------+----------+-----------+ |
130 | | user | password | host | |
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131 | +------+----------+-----------+ |
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132 | | root | | localhost | |
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133 | | root | | host1 | |
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134 | | | | host1 | |
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135 | | | | localhost | |
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136 | +------+----------+-----------+ |
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137 | 4 rows in set (0.00 sec) |
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138 | </pre> |
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139 | |||
140 | 42 | Amber Herold | h3. 10 Create user |
141 | 1 | Amber Herold | |
142 | 41 | Amber Herold | Create and grant privileges to a user called usr_object for the databases on both the localhost and other hosts involved. For example, use wild card '%' for all hosts. You can set specific (@ALTER, CREATE, DROP, DELETE, INSERT, RENAME, SELECT, UPDATE@) privileges or @ALL@ privileges to the user. See MySQL Reference Manual for details. The following examples demonstrate some of the options available. |
143 | 3 | Amber Herold | |
144 | 36 | Amber Herold | At the mysql prompt execute the following commands: |
145 | 1 | Amber Herold | <pre> |
146 | 36 | Amber Herold | CREATE USER usr_object@'localhost' IDENTIFIED BY 'YOUR PASSWORD'; |
147 | GRANT ALTER, CREATE, INSERT, SELECT, UPDATE ON leginondb.* TO usr_object@'localhost'; |
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148 | GRANT ALTER, CREATE, INSERT, SELECT, UPDATE ON projectdb.* TO usr_object@'localhost'; |
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149 | 1 | Amber Herold | </pre> |
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151 | 41 | Amber Herold | You may choose to use the following less secure version (no password and all privileges) of the commands above, however, we recommend not allowing the DROP and DELETE privileges. |
152 | 1 | Amber Herold | |
153 | 36 | Amber Herold | At the mysql prompt execute the following commands: |
154 | 24 | Neil Voss | <pre> |
155 | 36 | Amber Herold | CREATE USER usr_object@'localhost'; |
156 | GRANT ALL PRIVILEGES ON leginondb.* TO usr_object@'localhost'; |
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157 | 1 | Amber Herold | GRANT ALL PRIVILEGES ON projectdb.* TO usr_object@'localhost'; |
158 | </pre> |
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159 | 24 | Neil Voss | |
160 | 41 | Amber Herold | You may also choose to assign a domain to your commands and use a wildcard to allow access from all computers in the domain. |
161 | 26 | Neil Voss | |
162 | 1 | Amber Herold | <pre> |
163 | 36 | Amber Herold | CREATE USER usr_object@'%.mydomain.edu' IDENTIFIED BY 'YOUR PASSWORD'; |
164 | GRANT ALTER, CREATE, INSERT, SELECT, UPDATE ON leginondb.* to usr_object@'%.mydomain.edu'; |
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165 | 1 | Amber Herold | GRANT ALTER, CREATE, INSERT, SELECT, UPDATE ON projectdb.* to usr_object@'%.mydomain.edu'; |
166 | 24 | Neil Voss | </pre> |
167 | 3 | Amber Herold | |
168 | 42 | Amber Herold | h3. 11 Give create and access privileges for the processing databases which begin with "ap". |
169 | 10 | Neil Voss | |
170 | 24 | Neil Voss | <pre> |
171 | 27 | Neil Voss | # if your web host is local |
172 | 36 | Amber Herold | GRANT ALTER, CREATE, INSERT, SELECT, UPDATE ON `ap%`.* to usr_object@localhost; |
173 | 27 | Neil Voss | # for all other hosts if you are accessing the databases from another computer |
174 | 36 | Amber Herold | GRANT ALTER, CREATE, INSERT, SELECT, UPDATE ON `ap%`.* to usr_object@'%.mydomain.edu'; |
175 | 1 | Amber Herold | </pre> |
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177 | 42 | Amber Herold | h3. 12 Change Root password |
178 | 1 | Amber Herold | |
179 | 28 | Neil Voss | To set the root password use the command: |
180 | 1 | Amber Herold | |
181 | 28 | Neil Voss | <pre> |
182 | sudo mysqladmin -u root password NEWPASSWORD |
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183 | </pre> |
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184 | 1 | Amber Herold | |
185 | 28 | Neil Voss | Or you can do it from within mysql |
186 | 10 | Neil Voss | <pre> |
187 | 36 | Amber Herold | update user set password=password('your_own_root_password') where user="root"; |
188 | 1 | Amber Herold | Query OK, 2 rows affected (0.01 sec) |
189 | Rows matched: 2 Changed: 2 Warnings: 0 |
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190 | |||
191 | 43 | Amber Herold | # run the flush privileges command to avoid problems |
192 | 36 | Amber Herold | flush privileges; |
193 | ^D or exit; |
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194 | 3 | Amber Herold | </pre> |
195 | 1 | Amber Herold | |
196 | 3 | Amber Herold | |
197 | 1 | Amber Herold | From now on, you will need to specify the password to connect to the database as root user like this: |
198 | |||
199 | 30 | Neil Voss | <pre> |
200 | 36 | Amber Herold | mysql -u root -p mysql |
201 | 1 | Amber Herold | </pre> |
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203 | 42 | Amber Herold | h3. 13 Check MySQL variables |
204 | 1 | Amber Herold | |
205 | 31 | Neil Voss | <pre> |
206 | 44 | Amber Herold | # at the command prompt, log into the leginon database |
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208 | 36 | Amber Herold | mysql -u usr_object -p leginondb |
209 | 1 | Amber Herold | |
210 | 44 | Amber Herold | # At the mysql prompt show variables that begin with 'query'. |
211 | # Check that the changes you made to my.cfg are in place. |
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212 | |||
213 | 36 | Amber Herold | SHOW VARIABLES LIKE 'query%'; |
214 | 1 | Amber Herold | +------------------------------+-----------+ |
215 | | Variable_name | Value | |
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216 | +------------------------------+-----------+ |
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217 | | ft_query_expansion_limit | 20 | |
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218 | | have_query_cache | YES | |
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219 | | long_query_time | 10 | |
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220 | | query_alloc_block_size | 8192 | |
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221 | 44 | Amber Herold | | query_cache_limit | 104857600 | ---This should correspond to your change |
222 | 1 | Amber Herold | | query_cache_min_res_unit | 4096 | |
223 | 44 | Amber Herold | | query_cache_size | 104857600 | ---This should correspond to your change |
224 | | query_cache_type | ON | ---This should correspond to your change |
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225 | 1 | Amber Herold | | query_cache_wlock_invalidate | OFF | |
226 | | query_prealloc_size | 8192 | |
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227 | +------------------------------+-----------+ |
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228 | 10 rows in set (0.00 sec) |
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229 | 36 | Amber Herold | |
230 | 1 | Amber Herold | exit; |
231 | </pre> |
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232 | 42 | Amber Herold | |
233 | 1 | Amber Herold | h3. 14 Make sure MySQL is running |
234 | 3 | Amber Herold | |
235 | 36 | Amber Herold | <pre> |
236 | 45 | Amber Herold | mysqlshow -u root |
237 | 1 | Amber Herold | +--------------+ |
238 | 30 | Neil Voss | | Databases | |
239 | +--------------+ |
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240 | | mysql | |
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241 | | leginondb | |
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242 | 1 | Amber Herold | | projectdb | |
243 | +--------------+ |
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244 | 30 | Neil Voss | </pre> |
245 | 36 | Amber Herold | |
246 | 1 | Amber Herold | h3. Run the following command from the command line: |
247 | 30 | Neil Voss | |
248 | 46 | Amber Herold | |
249 | 1 | Amber Herold | <pre> |
250 | php -r "mysql_connect('localhost', 'usr_object', 'PASSWORD', 'leginondb'); echo mysql_stat();"; echo "" |
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251 | 30 | Neil Voss | </pre> |
252 | 1 | Amber Herold | |
253 | Expected output: |
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254 | |||
255 | <pre> |
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256 | Uptime: 1452562 Threads: 1 Questions: 618 Slow queries: 0 Opens: 117 Flush tables: 1 Open tables: 106 Queries per second avg: 0.000 |
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257 | 47 | Amber Herold | </pre> |
258 | |||
259 | 48 | Amber Herold | If there are any error messages, mysql may be configured incorrectly. |
260 | |||
261 | 47 | Amber Herold | *Note:* If you do not have php and php-mysql packages installed you need to install them to run the above command. The yum installation is: |
262 | <pre> |
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263 | sudo yum -y install php php-mysql |
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264 | 36 | Amber Herold | </pre> |
265 | 30 | Neil Voss | |
266 | 1 | Amber Herold | |
267 | 30 | Neil Voss | h2. Configure phpMyAdmin |
268 | 1 | Amber Herold | |
269 | 50 | Amber Herold | You are not required to install phpMyAdmin for Appion or Leginon, however, it is a useful tool for interfacing with the mysql databases. |
270 | 49 | Amber Herold | |
271 | 51 | Amber Herold | If you have not already installed phpMyAdmin, do so. The yum installation is: |
272 | <pre> |
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273 | sudo yum -y install phpMyAdmin |
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274 | </pre> |
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275 | |||
276 | |||
277 | 12 | Neil Voss | Edit the phpMyAdmin config file @/etc/phpMyAdmin/config.inc.php@ and change the following lines: |
278 | 30 | Neil Voss | |
279 | 1 | Amber Herold | <pre> |
280 | $cfg['Servers'][$i]['AllowRoot'] = FALSE; |
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281 | 30 | Neil Voss | </pre> |
282 | 1 | Amber Herold | |
283 | Edit the phpMyAdmin apache config file @/etc/httpd/conf.d/phpMyAdmin.conf@ and change the following lines: |
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284 | |||
285 | <pre> |
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286 | <Directory /usr/share/phpMyAdmin/> |
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287 | order deny,allow |
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288 | deny from all |
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289 | allow from 127.0.0.1 |
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290 | allow from YOUR_IP_ADDRESS |
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291 | 31 | Neil Voss | </Directory> |
292 | </pre> |
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293 | 1 | Amber Herold | |
294 | 33 | Neil Voss | *Note:* If you want to access phpMyAdmin from another computer, you can also add it to this config file with an @allow from@ tag |
295 | |||
296 | Next restart the web server to take on the new setting |
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297 | <pre> |
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298 | sudo /sbin/service httpd restart |
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299 | 1 | Amber Herold | </pre> |
300 | 35 | Neil Voss | |
301 | To test the phpMyAdmin configuration, point your browser to http://YOUR_IP_ADDRESS/phpMyAdmin or http://localhost/phpMyAdmin and login with the usr_object user. |
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302 | 33 | Neil Voss | |
303 | !phpMyAdmin.png! |
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304 | |||
305 | A common problem is that the firewall may be blocking access to the web server and mysql server. On CentOS/Fedora you can configure this with the system config: |
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306 | |||
307 | <pre> |
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308 | system-config-securitylevel |
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309 | </pre> |
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310 | 1 | Amber Herold | |
311 | Firewall configuration is specific to different Unix distributions, so consult a guide on how to do this on non-RedHat machines. |