I have a LAMP server on an EC2 instance. I downloaded phpMyAdmin using Amazon's guide here: http://docs.aws.amazon.com/AWSEC2/latest/UserGuide/install-LAMP.html.
On the phpMyAdmin page it says that:
"A newer version of phpMyAdmin is available and you should consider upgrading. The newest version is 4.6.5.2, released on 2016-12-05."
and I need to update it and also MySQL to use new features they put on the updates.
I'm accessing the EC2 instance from the terminal in my Mac laptop. I've tried a lot of things but I couldn't manage it. I've tried
sudo yum install -y phpMyAdmin
sudo yum install
I tried to manually download the latest version from phpmyadmin.net and change the files in the folder but I couldn't access the phpmyadmin folder in the first place.
Any help would be appreciated,
Thanks
You're using the version of phpMyAdmin maintained by your distribution (presumably Fedora, CentOS, or Red Hat); this means that basically you're not responsible for (or able to) upgrade the software that's under control of the package manager (aside from running the updates occasionally). If you wish to use a different version, you're certainly able to remove the package manager version then install it manually. I don't use EPEL, but I believe the highest version currently distributed is 4.4.15.9 (reference, which I think is because of the older versions of PHP and/or MySQL which are currently shipped. So you might not be able to upgrade due to your MySQL or PHP versions, but YMMV.
Basically, if you're using the package managed version, the whole point is so you don't have to worry about manual updates.
You can disable the notification by adding the directive $cfg['VersionCheck'] = false; to your config.inc.php (which may be in /etc/ or /etc/phpmyadmin, but I'm just guessing about how your distribution may handle it.).
Related
I'm trying to delete msyql 5.1 and install mysql 5.7 on Centos 6.9 However when I enter
"yum remove mysql-libs-5.1.73-8.el6_8.x86_64"
it shows a whole slew of applications such as crontab, chrome, redhat-lsb-core, postfix and many others that will be deleted because they have a dependency on it.
From googling, I saw there is a "swap" option, but can I do this for each application? Do both the old and the new MySql libraries have to be installed?
Another option is to leave the old dependency there, and install the new one. But it seems like this could throw off the mysql install...it might somehow find the old dependency - or the existing apps might find the new dependency.
A third option is to re-install all the deleted applications, but figuring out how to install mysql was tricky enough. How do I know which ones are critical or not, for one thing? I definitely need crontab and chrome. The other "redhat-lsb" onese look important. Also postfix.
Any ideas on how to approach this?
To avoid issues such as this, CentOS/Redhat has provided another way to get latest packages of MySQL, PHP, Python etc.. through Software Collections(SCL).
Using SCL you can have multiple versions of MySQL running on the same server without any conflict or dealing with dependency.
https://wiki.centos.org/AdditionalResources/Repositories/SCL
https://www.softwarecollections.org/en/scls/rhscl/rh-mysql57/
I would like to install different MySQL versions on Windows. I have a MySQL 5.5 running, and I want to install a MySQL 5.7 to debug compatibility issues of a program I am working on. Both installations should stay side at a side, may have their own databases (it’s OK to start with an empty 5.7) and I am happy to run or stop the one or other from the Services control panel manually. The nowadays MySQL installer - community wants to upgrade my existing installation and, unlike explained in this article, does not offer another option to install the versions side to side. All I found was a rant confirming my problem, but no real solution. If it requires me to install it manually, I need detailed instructions. In my case, default setup (default port) is sufficient, because I don’t need to run both instances the same time.
This is not so obvious but using the "MySQL installer", you need to run it, then click on "Cancel" and a new window will appear, letting you install new elements. You can then select the version(s) of MySQL that you want to add to your system.
You don't need it but if people want to run several instances at the same time, they need to choose a different port for each installation.
Why not simply use a virtual machines to install your different MySQL version ?
Like that you will be sure to have no compatibilty issues between them and you can start/stop vms as you like.
Otherwise, I did find that : https://www.codementor.io/arpitbhayani/setup-multiple-mysql-servers-with-different-versions-docker-du107solq but can't confirm it's working.
Use Dockerized mysql and you can run as many mysql versions you want on different ports.
I have downloaded the MySQL from the following link:
http://dev.mysql.com/downloads/mysql/
Downloaded the version 8.0.0. I have OS X 10.10.5
Now, I suppose I need to configure a visual MySQL client on my laptop to write queries. For that, I have installed sequelpro (sequelpro.com).
I need help on following points:
- Since there are a number of sample databases which one can use to learn SQL, can you please guide me on few such databases. My objective is to learn advanced SQL.
- Also, how do I configure my client (sequelpro) to connect to that database so that I can run queries.
As of now, I am stuck with the following screenshot with no clue what to do next.
Thanks a lot. Screenshot here
Based on the fact you said in the comments you have OSX and you installed mysql manually without phpmyadmin I suggest you download and install mamp.
mamp
1: https://www.mamp.info/en/ is,
MAMP installs a local server environment in a matter of seconds on
your computer. It comes free of charge, and is easily installed. MAMP
will not compromise any existing Apache installation already running
on your system. You can install Apache, PHP and MySQL without starting
a script or having to change any configuration files! Furthermore, if
MAMP is no longer needed, just delete the MAMP folder and everything
returns to its original state (i.e. MAMP does not modify any of the
"normal" system).
Basically it is a fake server that runs on your computer. This will be yours for localhost development. You can use it to serve your localhost php applications, change versions of php and gives you a GUI for mysql which is phpmyadmin.
Once you install mamp
you might need to configure mamp to use the mamp mysql but most likley it will work out of the box. If you do run into any problems make sure you stop the instance of mysql you installed already before running mamp then trying to ran mamp again and it should be using the correct version.
I'm using CentOS 6, and trying to create a virtual mirror on a new server of an old one (which someone else setup). As much as possible, I want keep everything with the same version, but I've started from scratch and am documenting everything. By default, yum would install MySQL 5.1.73. I downloaded MySQL community v5.1.69 and installed it manually. This required installing a "shared compatibility" package of MySQL v5.1.69 first, and removing mysql-libs.x86_64. With that in place, I successfully mirrored MySQL.
Now, I'm trying to install Postfix. Yum wants to pull version 2.6.6-6. This fails because it requires a dependency that it attempts to install as well: mysql-libs.x86_64 v.5.1.73-5. It splits out a pile of errors messages which are all similar to this:
Transaction Check Error:
file /usr/share/mysql/charsets/Index.xml from install of mysql-libs-5.1.73-5.el6_6.x86_64 conflicts with file from package MySQL-server-community-5.1.69-1.rhel5.x86_64
My old server is using postfix v2.6.6-2, which is apparently compatible with MySQL v5.1.69. I found the rpm for that version of postfix. It doesn't install, because it requires mysql-libs. I can't install mysql-libs v.5.1.69, because it conflicts with the MySQL community edition (also 5.1.69) that I installed. I tried to install the MySQL 5.1.73 "shared compatibility" package, but that conflicts with MySQL community too.
I'm going in circles. Is the only way to break this chain to uninstall MySQL community? Must I just use the v5.1.73 default, and the Postfix 2.6.6-6? I don't expect any real problems, but I'm going to end up with slightly different versions of MySQL and Postfix then I am trying hard to mirror.
I gave up, uninstalled all the MySQL community packages, and just installed the out of the box yum MySQL and Postfix. That works, but I now have different versions of this software on these two servers as a result.
I have downloaded and stalled the MySQL server 5.5 version via .DMG on my Mac.
But I am confused as to what to do next. I have the preference settings bundle and it says that the MySQL server is running. But do I need to download a client separately? I'm trying to access MySQl in terminal to create an account or login but nothing is working.
You need to use the full path to mysql (/var/lib/mysql), or add the mysql directory to your $PATH var.
If you're trying to install LAMP environment on your mac, try a complete solution, such as MAMP (http://www.mamp.info/en/index.html) or XAMP.
These tools are bundled with phpmyadmin, which makes mysql administration easy