MariaDB
To run MariaDB from Eclipse we will actually create and install the tar.gz package resulting from compilation(SeePart 2) in a separate directory, this will allow us to have MariaDB cleanly installed on a separate location and so it will be also easily possible to run it independently from Eclipse.
In these Blog posts series we assume:
<code><tt>yoda as developer user/home/yoda (or ~) as home directory of developer(yoda) usermariadb-10.0.11 as sources version (and general prefix)MariaDB10-test1 as Eclipse project name/home/yoda/playground as root working directory for sources, project, and installation/home/yoda/playground/mariadb-10.0.11 as sources directory/home/yoda/playground/mariadb-10.0.11-eclipse as project/working directory/home/yoda/playground/mariadb-10.0.11-linux-x86_64 as binary deployement directory</tt></code>
Replace accordingly the strings from this example to reflect your choices.
We have to ways to create the .tar.gz package
* In command line
* In Eclipse
Command line:<tt><br> $ cd ~/playground/mariadb-10.0.11-eclipse<br> $ make package<br> </tt>
At the end of the execution the package will be created and it should be namedmariadb-10.0.11-linux-x86_64.tar.gz
(i686 instead of x86_64 on 32 bit Linux)
Eclipse:
Right Click on the project name(MariaDB10-test1
) and choose:Make Target-->Create
,
in the popup windowAdd
a new target just inserting the name in the first field:package
, click onOk
.
Now Right Click again on the project name and choose:Make Target-->Build
, choosepackage
from the list and clickBuild
.
Check on Eclipse Log Console that the package is being created.
At this point, either method chosen, you should have the packagemariadb-10.0.11-linux-x86_64.tar.gz
in the project directory (mariadb-10.0.11-eclipse
).
We need at this point to run some commands from the shell:
<tt><br> $ cd ~/playground/<br> $ mv mariadb-10.0.11-eclipse/mariadb-10.0.11-linux-x86_64.tar.gz .<br> $ tar -zxvf mariadb-10.0.11-linux-x86_64.tar.gz<br> $ cd mariadb-10.0.11-linux-x86_64<br> $ scripts/mysql_install_db --basedir=`pwd` --datadir=`pwd`/data --user=yoda<br> </tt><code>
If all is good now you have a working MariaDB installation in~/playground/mariadb-10.0.11-linux-x86_64
Assuming the full path to binaries is:/home/yoda/playground/mariadb-10.0.11-linux-x86_64.
Right Click on the project (or open theRun
menu) and click onRun As-->Run configurations...
,
SelectC/C++ Application
, right click and chooseNew
.
Compile only two parameters in the respective tabs,Main
andArguments
<u>Main</u>
(tab):
ClickBrowse
and select/home/yoda/playground/mariadb-10.0.11-linux-x86_64/bin/mysqld
<u>Arguments</u>
(tab):<tt>--basedir=/home/yoda/playground/mariadb-10.0.11-linux-x86_64 --datadir=/home/yoda/playground/mariadb-10.0.11-linux-x86_64/data --plugin-dir=/home/eclipse/10011/lib/plugin --user=yoda --log-error=error.log --pid-file=mysql.pid --socket=10011.sock --port=10011</tt><code>
Click onApply
and then you can click onRun
, as usual check the progress in the Eclipse log Console,
A<font color="red">[Warning]</font>
about the user switch is totally fine, if you got only one warning about the user it means you probably managed to run succesfully MariaDB from Eclipse.
At this point we want to check if MariaDB is actually running:<tt><br> $ cd ~/playground<br> $ cd mariadb-10.0.11-linux-x86_64<br> $ bin/mysql -uroot -h127.0.0.1 -P10011 -e"SHOW GLOBAL VARIABLES LIKE 'version'"<br> </tt><code>
If you see the output:<tt><br> +---------------+-----------------------+<br> | Variable_name | Value |<br> +---------------+-----------------------+<br> | version | 10.0.11-MariaDB-debug |<br> +---------------+-----------------------+<br> 1 row in set (0.01 sec)<br> </tt><code>
Your MariaDB is happily running, Congratulations!
In the next Part 4(available soon) you will learn how to debug MariaDB under Eclipse.
You may also want to reviewPart 1andPart 2.
This is the end of Part 3.