Bug 90110
Summary: | mysql packages don't include sql-bench | ||
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Product: | [Retired] Red Hat Linux | Reporter: | Jesse Keating <jkeating> |
Component: | mysql | Assignee: | Patrick Macdonald <patrickm> |
Status: | CLOSED RAWHIDE | QA Contact: | David Lawrence <dkl> |
Severity: | medium | Docs Contact: | |
Priority: | medium | ||
Version: | 9 | ||
Target Milestone: | --- | ||
Target Release: | --- | ||
Hardware: | All | ||
OS: | Linux | ||
Whiteboard: | |||
Fixed In Version: | Doc Type: | Bug Fix | |
Doc Text: | Story Points: | --- | |
Clone Of: | Environment: | ||
Last Closed: | 2003-05-09 19:24:21 UTC | Type: | --- |
Regression: | --- | Mount Type: | --- |
Documentation: | --- | CRM: | |
Verified Versions: | Category: | --- | |
oVirt Team: | --- | RHEL 7.3 requirements from Atomic Host: | |
Cloudforms Team: | --- | Target Upstream Version: | |
Embargoed: |
Description
Jesse Keating
2003-05-02 17:15:36 UTC
The bench package was removed way back on June 30, 2000 (according to the spec file changelog) but it seems as though the configure parameter --with-bench has miraculously survived. I'll fix this in the current spec file. Thanks for pointing it out. The bench package was removed as it was not required to run mysql (although it is a useful package). Can I RFE it to be included as a seperate package? My customers would really like some mysql benchmarking done, but I'd hate to have to do a source install to accomplish it. Understood and of course you can open an RFE. However, there have been very few requests for this functionality and we'd be penalizing all other users of MySQL in the Red Hat distros. It is very unlikely that this request for enhancement would be honored. Ok, would it help the acceptance process at all if I wrote a patch for the current spec, to build the sql-bench into it's own subpackage? I'll probably end up doing it for my own systems, but I'd like to see it included in the Distro. Honestly, probably not. The amount of work required on the spec file is relatively small. The problem is lack of demand from our customer/user base. If more customers/users wanted this functionality, we'd be happy to put it in. As it stands, you're the only one at the moment. Yo! I'd like this too, plz! I don't understand how including this would penalize other RedHat customers... Please include! nice to hear that you will include in the near future ;-) sql-bench mysqlcc a gui-tool for unix-odbc, myodbc a working openoffice-myodbc out of the box the most mysql-users do not use your rpms because you are absolutely not up to date. see www.mysql.com production 4.0.12 see http://updtates.redhat.com since yesterday 3.23.56 I would argue that the ability to benchmark mysql, especially given that it requires no added code from Red Hat, would be a useful thing for inclusion. From a customer perspective, it also looks bad, when Red Hat removes application functionality that other vendors keep. Especially when it comes with the program. Unless we have a good reason to be crippling mysql's application suite, lets put this back in. Its a minimal size increase. Mark me up as another 'me too'. I'd love to see this 'helpfully ALREADY PROVIDED BY THE MANUFACTURER' functionality _left in_ as it helps mightily for those of us who would like to see the relative performance of the system and do some tweaking to improve said performance. To me, this is akin to leaving out the 'examples/' from /usr/share/doc and other such helpful instructional material. Hard to tell users to RTFM when there IS no FM. It's part of the mysql package, and I can't for the life of me see how leaving it out benefits *anyone*. Particularly when you consider the contortions one must go through to *get it back*... out of idle curiousity, how many users asked for this functionality to be removed? :) See... you put out feelers and the people come out of the woodwork. If there is enough interest, we'll put it in. Like I said earlier, it's a small amount of code that has to be placed in the spec file and some additional sanity testing. Don't know how many users asked for the functionality to be removed, it was done many moons ago before my group was supporting this package. Anyway, it seems as though there are interested parties so I'll spend some time next week putting the functionality in. I'll update the bug with the results and we'll go from there. And, yes, we are looking at moving to MySQL 4.0 but migration issues with current installations are being investigated. At the moment, we are up-to-date with the 3.23.x version (3.23.56). Thank you very much for your support. I have to say that this was the fastest response time I have ever seen! Keep up the good work (; I'm impressed, thanks for your consideration. :) Ok... I was off sick for most of the week so I'm just getting to this now. In order not to penalize the users that don't care about benchmarking, I'll make this a new rpm (mysql-bench) instead of adding it to an existing one. It's currently building on my machine and once I've finished testing, I'll build it for rawhide. Successfully built and tested locally. It's currently building in our main system and will be in rawhide next week as mysql-bench-3.23.56-2.i386.rpm. Currently sitting in Rawhide... ftp> ls mysql* 227 Entering Passive Mode (172,16,52,204,44,41) 150 Here comes the directory listing. -rw-r--r-- 1 ftp 5378746 May 12 14:08 mysql-3.23.56-2.i386.rpm -rw-r--r-- 1 ftp 538749 May 12 14:08 mysql-bench-3.23.56-2.i386.rpm -rw-r--r-- 1 ftp 580333 May 12 14:08 mysql-devel-3.23.56-2.i386.rpm -rw-r--r-- 1 ftp 1120775 May 12 14:08 mysql-server-3.23.56-2.i386.rpm 226 Directory send OK. You rock! Thank you very much! |