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Le serveur SME, jusqu'à la version 9.2 incluse, exécute MySQL en tant que gestionnairre de base de données.

Le serveur Koozali SME 10 utilise MariaDB pour réaliser cette fonction. De nombreuses applications nécessitent une base de données MySQL, parmi lesquelles l'interface webmail Horde qui est fournie par défaut par le serveur SME.

Généralités

Warning.png Attention :
serveur Koozali SME version 10 : MySQL est fourni par MariaDB. Vous pouvez vérifier la version de la manière habituelle, par ex. au moment de la rédaction de ce wiki, il s'agissait de la version 5.5.


Le serveur SME est fondé sur CentOS, l'équipe de développement prendra leurs paquets en stock à partir des versions de CentOS. La version actuelle de MariaDB installée sur le serveur SME est la version 5.5.68. L'interface de messagerie Web Horde s'appuie sur MariaDB. La mise à niveau vers la version 10.x peut potentiellement casser des choses comme le webmail. Si vous insistez pour mettre à niveau MariaDB, vous pourrez peut-être trouver des instructions sur le forum, mais sachez qu'aucun support ne peut être attendu des développeurs et que tous les bogues signalés dans Bugzilla ne seront pas pris en compte.

Vous pouvez également vous fier aux contributions et à la collection logicielle Red-Hat pour ajouter MySQL 5.7 et MariaDB 10.1 10.2 10.3 ou 10.5 comme service SQL secondaire pour répondre à vos besoins.

MariaDB s'exécute sur le serveur SME sur un socket (une interface de connexion) au lieu d'un port - auquel vous êtes peut-être habitué. Ceci est fait pour améliorer la sécurité car, de l'avis de l'équipe de développement, seul le serveur lui-même (localhost) doit avoir accès au serveur MySQL. Cependant, vous pouvez configurer MySQL pour qu'il soit accessible depuis le réseau local (voir ci-dessous).


Important.png Note :
tous les services MariaDB fournis par le noyau ou des contributions partagent le même fichier /etc/my.cnf comme fichier de configuration. Veuillez respecter les sections à l'intérieur du fichier lors de l'ajout d'un nouveau modèle personnalisé selon que vous souhaitez que cela soit vu par toutes les versions en cours d'exécution ou par une version spécifique. Vous pouvez vous référer au manuel de MariaDB pour plus d'informations.

Alors que MySQL prend en charge ce type de configuration, pour la rétrocompatibilité de la contribution MySQL57, nous avons conservé un fichier de configuration séparé.


[mysqld]
[mysqld_safe]
[mysql-5.7]
[mariadb-10.1]
[mariadb-10.2]
[mariadb-10.3]
[mariadb-10.5]

Accès à MariaDB/MySQL depuis mon application

Comme indiqué ci-dessus, sur SME Server, vous devez utiliser un socket (une interface de connexion), c'est plus sûr que d'utiliser un port. Par défaut, le service n'écoute que sur le serveur à l'aide d'un socket, donc essayer de se connecter avec n'importe quel port entraînera un échec.

La plupart des applications devront définir une chaîne pour accéder au socket, comme ci-dessous pointant vers localhost (pas 127.0.0.1, ni l'ip LAN) et le chemin complet vers le socket. Dans certaines situations, vous devrez définir le chemin du socket et l'hôte (localhost à nouveau et non 127.0.0.1) dans des variables.

define( 'DB_HOST', 'localhost:/var/lib/mysql/mysql.sock' );

Mot de passe root MariaDB/MySQL

Il semble qu'il n'y ait pas de mot de passe défini comme mot de passe root MySQL, mais ce n'est pas vrai. Si vous êtes connecté au shell du serveur SME, un mécanisme spécial est en place pour vous connecter avec les privilèges root de MySQL sans vous demander le mot de passe.

Le mot de passe root MySQL pour le serveur SME est une chaîne aléatoire de 72 caractères générée lors de l'installation du serveur SME. Vous ne devez jamais modifier le mot de passe root MySQL car cela casserait la configuration de votre serveur SME. Comment se connecter en tant qu'utilisateur root MySQL ? décrit comment accéder à MySQL avec les privilèges root sur le serveur SME.

Login as MySQL root user

To login as MySQL root user, simply type 'mysql' at the SME Server shell, this will log you in with root privileges.

Resetting the MySQL root password

To reset the password for the MySQL root account. The MySQL root user on SME Server has a random generated password which is generated during installation. You do not need to know this password to login to MySQL with root privileges on SME Server. If you might have changed the MySQL root password you can reset it like this after getting command line access as root user.

For SME 10 (note for SCLO version see respective contrib page):

systemctl stop mariadb
expand-template /root/.my.cnf
expand-template /var/lib/mysql/set.password
/usr/libexec/mysqld --socket=/var/lib/mysql/mysql.sock --bootstrap --user=mysql --skip-grant-tables < /var/lib/mysql/set.password
exit
systemctl start mariadb 

For SME Server 7.3 and up to SME 9.2:

cd /var/service/mysqld
sv d .
expand-template /root/.my.cnf
expand-template /var/service/mysqld/set.password
/usr/libexec/mysqld --bootstrap --user=mysql --skip-grant-tables < ./set.password
sv u .

For SME Server 7.2 and earlier releases do the following (they use the runsvctrl command instead of the sv command):

cd /var/service/mysqld
runsvctrl d .
expand-template /root/.my.cnf
expand-template /var/service/mysqld/set.password
/usr/libexec/mysqld --bootstrap --user=mysql --skip-grant-tables < ./set.password
runsvctrl u .

Restoring accidentally deleted MySQL root user

Note: The following is only applicable on SME 7.3 and MySQL 4.1

cd /var/service/mysqld
sv d .
echo 'use mysql;'>set.rootuser
echo -n 'INSERT INTO user VALUES("localhost","root","",'>>set.rootuser
echo '"Y","Y","Y","Y","Y","Y","Y","Y","Y","Y","Y","Y","Y","Y","Y","Y","Y","Y","Y","Y","Y","","","","",0,0,0);'>>set.rootuser
expand-template /root/.my.cnf
expand-template /var/service/mysqld/set.password
/usr/libexec/mysqld --bootstrap --user=mysql --skip-grant-tables < set.rootuser
/usr/libexec/mysqld --bootstrap --user=mysql --skip-grant-tables < set.password
sv u .

Access MariaDB/MySQL using port from the localhost and local network

MariaDB/MySQL on SME Server runs on a socket instead of on a port. MariaDB/MySQL on SME Server is by default configured to allow only localhost connections to improve security, this means that it is only accessible from the server itself and not from the local network nor from the internet. If you wish to enable local network access, execute the following commands on a SME Server shell as root (note access private is not needed as this is the default, and TCPPort 3306 neither as all ports are open to the LAN by default):


Warning.png Warning:
Keep in mind that by default MariaDB/MySQL is not using any kind of encryption unless you did work on that yourself, so any access to the port from the LAN will be as clear text and anyone on the LAN will be able to access to the password and all the data transferred between your server and the client. Refers to the manual of your database version.


For SME 10:

config setprop mariadb LocalNetworkingOnly no
expand-template /etc/my.cnf
sv t /service/mysqld

For SME 9 and below:

config setprop mysqld LocalNetworkingOnly no
expand-template /etc/my.cnf
sv t /service/mysqld

Access MySQL from a remote network

If you wish to enable access to MariaDB/MySQL databases from remote networks, then in addition to the LocalNetworkingOnly db setting mentioned above, you will need to execute the following commands:

For SME 10

config set mariadb service access public status enabled TCPPort 3306 
signal-event remoteaccess-update 
signal-event reboot

For SME9 and below

config set mysqld service access public status enabled TCPPort 3306 
signal-event remoteaccess-update 
signal-event reboot

Keep in mind this enables access to your MariaDB/MySQL database for ANYONE, so make sure you have strong passwords on ALL your MariaDB/MySQL databases. Alternatively it would be a more secure approach to require external (remote) users to establish a VPN connection and effectively become part of the local network. In that case do not change the mysql access to public status using the above command.


Warning.png Warning:
Keep in mind that by default MariaDB/MySQL is not using any kind of encryption unless you did work on that yourself, so any access to the port from the WAN will be as clear text and anyone on the Internet will be able to access to the password and all the data transferred between your server and the client. Refers to the manual of your database version.


Create MariaDB/MySQL user(s) with access from other computers

SME Server's default MariaDB/MySQL database users, and most of the database examples in the wiki, allow login only from localhost.

If you want to access a MariaDB/MySQL database on your SME server from other computers, you must not only make the configuration changes described above, you must also create a user who is allowed to login from those systems (see 5.5.4. Access Control, Stage 1: Connection Verification for more detail).

Allow mysql login from any LAN workstation

Assuming your local network is 192.168.1.0, you can create a user with MariaDB/MySQL access from any LAN workstation (or VPN client) using the command shown below (courtesy of DarkMirage).

Information.png Tip:
The suggestion here is to assign privileges based on IP number (using a wild card if desired), the same can also be done for hostnames. In some cases, like dynamicaly assgned IP addresses, this might be a more suitable and robust solution.


You probably want to change:

  • the database name (MyDB)
  • the user name (MyUser)
  • the password (MyPW) and
  • the allowed computers (192.168.1.%)
## In the command below, \ escapes a linebreak.
   ## Either include them, or place the entire command on one line
   mysql -e "\
   create database MyDB; \
   GRANT SELECT,INSERT,UPDATE,DELETE,CREATE,ALTER \
   ON *.* \
   TO 'MyUser'@'192.168.1.%' \
   IDENTIFIED BY 'MyPW'; \
   FLUSH PRIVILEGES;"

Security Implications of allowing remote MariaDB/MySQL login

It is technically possible to combine the above techniques to allow remote MariaDB/MySQL login from any host on the Internet (allow network login, open the firewall, then set the network address to '%'). This would be a bad idea.

If you have remote users who need access to your MariaDB/MySQL database(s), encourage them to use a VPN connection, or an SSH tunnel, or (at a minimum), restrict the allowed login hosts to their internet IP address. On top of that, you are encouraged to enforce encrypted connection at the level of you MariaDB/MySQL service to avoid any clear text exchange on the LAN or worse on the Internet.

Enable InnoDB engine

Warning.png Warning:
Version 10 MySQL is provided by MariaDB which already has InnoDB as its default database engine


To enable the InnoDB engine, run the following commands:

db configuration setprop mysqld InnoDB enabled
expand-template /etc/my.cnf
sv t /service/mysqld

To disable the InnoDB engine, run the following commands:

db configuration setprop mysqld InnoDB disabled
expand-template /etc/my.cnf
sv t /service/mysqld

Administration

Information about user managament can be found in the MySQL User Account Management section of the MySQL manual, which holds a lot of useful information, a small section is listed here for convenience.

Create a new database

  • See the developers guide if you wish to automate the creation of a database within an rpm

or

  • Get access to the SME Server shell and issue the following commands:
mysqladmin create 'dbname' --default-character-set=utf8

This will create an empty database called dbname.


Warning.png Warning:
The 'root' user should not be permitted to access the database except from localhost. Each application should have its own database and its own user to access that database.


Creating MySQL user(s)

Decide which permissions you will have to give to the user on what database. Details about this can be found in the MariaDB/MySQL Manual found at the MariaDB/MySQL site. Get access to the SME Server shell and issue the following commands to login to the MySQL server:

mysql

Suppose we want to create a user which has read-only access on all tables in the database called 'test':

GRANT SELECT ON test.* TO 'user'@'host' IDENTIFIED BY 'password';

In the above line you will have to fill in the user and the host and/or domain from which you will allow the user access to the SME Server MariaDB/MySQL server (don't forget the single quotes). More information can be found in the MariaDB/MySQL Server Manual at the MariaDB/MySQL website linked here.

Listing available databases

To view a list of available databases on the system you can issue the following command while logged in in MariaDB/MySQL:

show databases;

Remove a database

Get access to the SME Server shell and MariaDB/MySQL and issue the following command:

drop database databasename;

Replace databasename with the name of the database.

Remove a user

Get access to the SME Server shell and MariaDB/MySQL and issue the following command:

USE mysql;
DELETE FROM user WHERE user = 'username';
FLUSH PRIVILEGES;

Replace username with the username you wish to delete.


Information.png Tip:
mysql_setpermission is a command line menu driven utility that can assist in MySQL administration.


Optimizing MariaDB/MySQL default settings for SME 10

Here are the available settings from the configuration database to tweak you MariaDB service. If no default value indicated, please refers the the manual of your database version for its own default value:

key default Role
innodb_file_format barracuda
innodb_file_per_table 1
LocalNetworkingOnly no
OpenFilesLimit 0
MaxConnections
WaitTimeout
QueryCacheLimit
QueryCacheSize 1M
QueryCacheType 1
SortBufferSize
ReadRndBufferSize
TableOpenCache
TableOpenCacheInstances
TmpTableSize
MaxHeapTableSize
ThreadCacheSize 256
KeyBufferSize key_buffer_size
MyisamSortBufferSize myisam_sort_buffer_size
JoinBufferSize 262144
ReadBufferSize
MaxConnectErrors
ConnectTimeout 100
MaxAllowedPacket 16M
SlowQueries


to alter a value, just do

config set mariadb  KeyBufferSize 18M MyisamSortBufferSize 8M
expand-template /etc/my.cnf 
systemctl restart mariadb

if your needed option is not available then create a dedicated template custom. Be careful to use a name starting with a number between 016 and 039.

mkdir -p /etc/e-smith/templates-custom/etc/my.cnf/
vim /etc/e-smith/templates-custom/etc/my.cnf/017myvalues
expand-template /etc/my.cnf 
systemctl restart mariadb

Optimizing MariaDB/MySQL default settings for up to SME9

SME Server uses MariaDB/MySQL for the webmail package, and the default configuration is optimized for that.

If you are using the SME server to provide MariaDB/MySQL databases for functions running on workstations, you may need to adjust some of the default MariaDB/MySQL parameters. Keep in mind it is difficult to optimize MYSQL for a number of different applications, as default values that are suitable for one application may not be suitable for another. In determining appropriate settings for MariaDB/MySQL, you will also need to consider the system resources & general specification of the server that MariaDB/MySQL is running on.

Pointers for tuning and optimizing the databases can be found at http://www.mysqlperformanceblog.com/2006/09/29/what-to-tune-in-mysql-server-after-installation/ and http://lists.mysql.com/mysql/214398 and specifically re key_buffer_size at http://lists.mysql.com/mysql/214398

The following example comes from this forum thread http://forums.contribs.org/index.php/topic,46694.0.html and refers to this bug report http://bugs.contribs.org/show_bug.cgi?id=6287

To change the following parameters

key_buffer_size=18M
myisam_sort_buffer_size=8M

Create a custom template fragment & edit it to include your required parameters

mkdir -p /etc/e-smith/templates-custom/etc/my.cnf/
vim  /etc/e-smith/templates-custom/etc/my.cnf/016mysetup

Save & Exit

Ctrl o
Ctrl x

Expand the changes & restart mysql

expand-template /etc/my.cnf
sv t /service/mysqld

Check /etc/my.cnf to see that the changes are reflected.