Wow, Great work Otto and everyone else who attended. ----- Original Message -----
Hello!
I thought I'd brief the readers of this mailing list about the packaging sprint in London last week. It was organized by Canonical and in addition to Canonical staff and me there where also people from Oracle and Percona. We mostly worked on syncing the MySQL/MariaDB/Percona server packaging and a little bit also on creating a unified Galera package.
We made good progress and all results have been pushed to public repos. I also recently updated the pages https://wiki.debian.org/Teams/MySQL/MariaDB and https://wiki.debian.org/Teams/MySQL/Galera to reflect the current status.
One big technical change that was discussed and planned is the decoupling of the config and data directories. The plan is that in the future no MySQL variant in particular would anymore own the /etc/mysql/my.cnf file
Is this file still going to exist? Client programs like percona-toolkit and others will look for it. I imagine the client section of [mysqldump] [mysql] [myisamchk] would all be provided by the relevant client package too.
but instead each variant would register their own config file at installation time by using the Debian update-alternatives mechanism. So in future there would be /etc/mysql/mariadb.conf, mysql.conf, percona.conf etc and some more snippets in /etc/mysql/mariadb.conf.d/.. etc.
Good. Are you making use of product sections like [mariadb] [mariadb-5.5] [galera] ([percona]?) ? Good to see using the plugin auth_socket for debsysmaint or root user in lieu of a password on filesystem? Good to see UTF as a default (in https://wiki.debian.org/Teams/MySQL/MariaDB).
The plan is not complete nor tested, but there are preliminary changes in the mysql-common package to provide the config file registration hook and in a preliminary Percona Debian package to use the new config file registration facility.
As the config file defines the data directory, successful decoupling of config files would make it easy to also decouple the data directories so that if the user installs/removes/upgrades any of the MySQL variants they would not mess up their data accidentally and the installation scripts would help users to dump/migrate/copy/move their data in the common scenarios.
nice! -- Daniel Black, Engineer @ Open Query (http://openquery.com.au) Remote expertise & maintenance for MySQL/MariaDB server environments.