• Introducing WebPros Cloud - a fully managed infrastructure platform purpose-built to simplify the deployment of WebPros products !  WebPros Cloud enables you to easily deliver WebPros solutions — without the complexity of managing the infrastructure.
    Join the pilot program today!
  • The Horde component is removed from Plesk Installer. We recommend switching to another webmail software supported in Plesk.
  • The BIND DNS server has already been deprecated and removed from Plesk for Windows.
    If a Plesk for Windows server is still using BIND, the upgrade to Plesk Obsidian 18.0.70 will be unavailable until the administrator switches the DNS server to Microsoft DNS. We strongly recommend transitioning to Microsoft DNS within the next 6 weeks, before the Plesk 18.0.70 release.

MySQL ARCHIVE Storage Engine

0

00quick00

Guest
I was wondering if I'm able to install the MySQL ARCHIVE Storage Engine without manually recompiling MySQL in Plesk?
 
There is no such thing as 'MySQL in Plesk'. Plesk normally just installs the MySQL packages that come with your distribution. If your current MySQL installation doesn't support the Archive storage engine, then you'll have to find or create a compatible package that does support it. I don't know what OS you are running, but apparently the stock CentOS 5 MySQL packages don't support the Archive storage engine (according to the output of SHOW ENGINES).
 
Except Plesk also optimises the configuration file.

I mean I don't even know where the MySQL files are stored!
 
Except Plesk also optimises the configuration file.

I haven't seen Plesk do that on our servers.

I mean I don't even know where the MySQL files are stored!

If you need to know where they are stored (do you?) you can ask your package manager. On an RPM-based distribution you'd run 'rpm -ql mysql-server' for a list of files installed by the mysql-server package.
 
I haven't seen Plesk do that on our servers.

I was referring to the default configuration for your operating system. The Plesk MYSQL config is slightly different.


If you need to know where they are stored (do you?) you can ask your package manager. On an RPM-based distribution you'd run 'rpm -ql mysql-server' for a list of files installed by the mysql-server package.

Ok, I'm really scared to recomplie MySQL. Maybe Atomic Rocket Turtle will have a package for me. :)
 
I was referring to the default configuration for your operating system. The Plesk MYSQL config is slightly different.

I'm not sure to what files or statements you are referring exactly, but I believe there is no Plesk-specific configuration in our MySQL configuration files.

Ok, I'm really scared to recomplie MySQL. Maybe Atomic Rocket Turtle will have a package for me. :)

ART has MySQL packages, but they don't support the Archive storage engine either. But he might be willing to add it, I don't know.
 
Back
Top