Commit d8849293 authored by Sinisa@sinisa.nasamreza.org's avatar Sinisa@sinisa.nasamreza.org

Merge sinisa@work.mysql.com:/home/bk/mysql-4.0

into sinisa.nasamreza.org:/mnt/work/mysql-4.0
parents cded64f5 2ed3af4d
This diff is collapsed.
...@@ -8707,7 +8707,7 @@ cat /proc/sys/fs/super-max ...@@ -8707,7 +8707,7 @@ cat /proc/sys/fs/super-max
@end example @end example
If you have more than 16 MB of memory, you should add something like the If you have more than 16 MB of memory, you should add something like the
following in your boot script (@file{/etc/rc/boot.local} on SuSE): following to your init scripts (e.g. @file{/etc/init.d/boot.local} on SuSE Linux):
@example @example
echo 65536 > /proc/sys/fs/file-max echo 65536 > /proc/sys/fs/file-max
...@@ -8715,10 +8715,22 @@ echo 8192 > /proc/sys/fs/dquot-max ...@@ -8715,10 +8715,22 @@ echo 8192 > /proc/sys/fs/dquot-max
echo 1024 > /proc/sys/fs/super-max echo 1024 > /proc/sys/fs/super-max
@end example @end example
You can also run the preceding commands from the command-line as root, but in this case You can also run the preceding commands from the command-line as root, but
your old limits will be used the next time your computer reboots. these settings will be lost the next time your computer reboots.
You should also add /etc/my.cnf: Alternatively, you can set these parameters on bootup by using the
@code{sysctl} tool, which is used by many Linux distributions (SuSE has
added it as well, beginning with SuSE Linux 8.0). Just put the following
values into a file named @file{/etc/sysctl.conf}:
@example
# Increase some values for MySQL
fs.file-max = 65536
fs.dquot-max = 8192
fs.super-max = 1024
@end example
You should also add the following to @file{/etc/my.cnf}:
@example @example
[safe_mysqld] [safe_mysqld]
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