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#MySQL

####Table of Contents

  1. Overview
  2. Module Description - What the module does and why it is useful
  3. Setup - The basics of getting started with mysql
  4. Usage - Configuration options and additional functionality
  5. Reference - An under-the-hood peek at what the module is doing and how
  6. Limitations - OS compatibility, etc.
  7. Development - Guide for contributing to the module

##Overview

The MySQL module installs, configures, and manages the MySQL service.

##Module Description

The MySQL module manages both the installation and configuration of MySQL as well as extends Pupppet to allow management of MySQL resources, such as databases, users, and grants.

##Backwards Compatibility

This module has just undergone a very large rewrite. As a result it will no longer work with the previous classes and configuration as before. We've attempted to handle backwards compatibility automatically by adding a attempt_compatibility_mode parameter to the main mysql class. If you set this to true it will attempt to map your previous parameters into the new mysql::server class.

###WARNING

This may fail. It may eat your MySQL server. PLEASE test it before running it live. Even if it's just a no-op and a manual comparision. Please be careful!

##Setup

###What MySQL affects

  • MySQL package.
  • MySQL configuration files.
  • MySQL service.

###Beginning with MySQL

If you just want a server installing with the default options you can run include '::mysql::server'. If you need to customize options, such as the root password or /etc/my.cnf settings then you can also include mysql::server and pass in an override hash as seen below:

class { '::mysql::server':
  override_options => { 'mysqld' => { 'max_connections' => '1024' } }
}

##Usage

All interaction for the server is done via mysql::server. To install the client you use mysql::client, and to install bindings you can use mysql::bindings.

###Overrides

The hash structure for overrides in mysql::server is as follows:

override_options = {
  'section' => {
    'item'             => 'thing',
  }
}

For items that you would traditionally represent as:

[section]
thing

You can just make an entry like thing => true in the hash. MySQL doesn't care if thing is alone or set to a value, it'll happily accept both.

###Custom configuration

To add custom mysql configuration you can drop additional files into /etc/mysql/conf.d/ in order to override settings or add additional ones (if you choose not to use override_options in mysql::server). This location is hardcoded into the my.cnf template file.

##Reference

###Classes

####Public classes

  • mysql::server: Installs and configures MySQL.
  • mysql::server::account_security: Deletes default MySQL accounts.
  • mysql::server::monitor: Sets up a monitoring user.
  • mysql::server::mysqltuner: Installs MySQL tuner script.
  • mysql::server::backup: Sets up MySQL backups via cron.
  • mysql::bindings: Installs various MySQL language bindings.
  • mysql::client: Installs MySQL client (for non-servers).

####Private classes

  • mysql::server::install: Installs packages.
  • mysql::server::config: Configures MYSQL.
  • mysql::server::service: Manages service.
  • mysql::server::root_password: Sets MySQL root password.
  • mysql::bindings::java: Installs Java bindings.
  • mysql::bindings::perl: Installs Perl bindings.
  • mysql::bindings::python: Installs Python bindings.
  • mysql::bindings::ruby: Installs Ruby bindings.
  • mysql::client::install: Installs MySQL client.

###Parameters

####mysql::server

#####root_password

What is the MySQL root password. Puppet will attempt to set it to this and update /root/.my.cnf.

#####old_root_password

What was the previous root password (REQUIRED if you wish to change the root password via Puppet.)

#####override_options

This is the hash of override options to pass into MySQL. It can be visualized like a hash of the my.cnf file, so that entries look like:

override_options = {
  'section' => {
    'item'             => 'thing',
  }
}

For items that you would traditionally represent as:

[section]
thing

You can just make an entry like thing => true in the hash. MySQL doesn't care if thing is alone or set to a value, it'll happily accept both.

#####config_file

The location of the MySQL configuration file.

#####manage_config_file

Should we manage the MySQL configuration file.

#####purge_conf_dir

Should we purge the conf.d directory?

#####restart

Should the service be restarted when things change?

#####root_group

What is the group used for root?

#####package_ensure

What to set the package to. Can be present, absent, or version.

#####package_name

What is the name of the mysql server package to install.

#####remove_default_accounts

Boolean to decide if we should automatically include mysql::server::account_security.

#####service_enabled

Boolean to decide if the service should be enabled.

#####service_manage

Boolean to decide if the service should be managed.

#####service_name

What is the name of the mysql server service.

#####service_provider

Which provider to use to manage the service.

####mysql::server::backup

#####backupuser

MySQL user to create for backing up.

#####backuppassword

MySQL user password for backups.

#####backupdir

Directory to backup into.

#####backupcompress

Boolean to determine if backups should be compressed.

#####backuprotate

How many days to keep backups for.

#####delete_before_dump

Boolean to determine if you should cleanup before backing up or after.

#####backupdatabases

Array of databases to specifically backup.

#####file_per_database

Should a seperate file be used per database.

#####ensure

Present or absent, allows you to remove the backup scripts.

#####time

An array of two elements to set the time to backup. Allows ['23', '5'] or ['3', '45'] for HH:MM times.

####mysql::server::monitor

#####mysql_monitor_username

The username to create for MySQL monitoring.

#####mysql_monitor_password

The password to create for MySQL monitoring.

#####mysql_monitor_hostname

The hostname to allow to access the MySQL monitoring user.

####mysql::bindings

#####java_enable

Boolean to decide if the Java bindings should be installed.

#####perl_enable

Boolean to decide if the Perl bindings should be installed.

#####php_enable

Boolean to decide if the PHP bindings should be installed.

#####python_enable

Boolean to decide if the Python bindings should be installed.

#####ruby_enable

Boolean to decide if the Ruby bindings should be installed.

#####java_package_ensure

What to set the package to. Can be present, absent, or version.

#####java_package_name

The name of the package to install.

#####java_package_provider

What provider should be used to install the package.

#####perl_package_ensure

What to set the package to. Can be present, absent, or version.

#####perl_package_name

The name of the package to install.

#####perl_package_provider

What provider should be used to install the package.

#####python_package_ensure

What to set the package to. Can be present, absent, or version.

#####python_package_name

The name of the package to install.

#####python_package_provider

What provider should be used to install the package.

#####ruby_package_ensure

What to set the package to. Can be present, absent, or version.

#####ruby_package_name

The name of the package to install.

#####ruby_package_provider

What provider should be used to install the package.

####mysql::client

#####bindings_enable

Boolean to automatically install all bindings.

#####package_ensure

What to set the package to. Can be present, absent, or version.

#####package_name

What is the name of the mysql client package to install.

###Defines

####mysql::db

Creates a database with a user and assign some privileges.

    mysql::db { 'mydb':
      user     => 'myuser',
      password => 'mypass',
      host     => 'localhost',
      grant    => ['SELECT', 'UPDATE'],
    }

###Providers

####mysql_database

mysql_database can be used to create and manage databases within MySQL:

mysql_database { 'information_schema':
  ensure  => 'present',
  charset => 'utf8',
  collate => 'utf8_swedish_ci',
}
mysql_database { 'mysql':
  ensure  => 'present',
  charset => 'latin1',
  collate => 'latin1_swedish_ci',
}

####mysql_user

mysql_user can be used to create and manage user grants within MySQL:

mysql_user { '[email protected]':
  ensure                   => 'present',
  max_connections_per_hour => '0',
  max_queries_per_hour     => '0',
  max_updates_per_hour     => '0',
  max_user_connections     => '0',
}

####mysql_grant

mysql_grant can be used to create grant permissions to access databases within MySQL. To use it you must create the title of the resource as shown below, following the pattern of username@hostname/database.table:

mysql_grant { 'root@localhost/*.*':
  ensure     => 'present',
  options    => ['GRANT'],
  privileges => ['ALL'],
  table      => '*.*',
  user       => 'root@localhost',
}

##Limitations

This module has been tested on:

  • RedHat Enterprise Linux 5/6
  • Debian 6/7
  • CentOS 5/6
  • Ubuntu 12.04

Testing on other platforms has been light and cannot be guaranteed.

#Development

Puppet Labs modules on the Puppet Forge are open projects, and community contributions are essential for keeping them great. We can’t access the huge number of platforms and myriad of hardware, software, and deployment configurations that Puppet is intended to serve.

We want to keep it as easy as possible to contribute changes so that our modules work in your environment. There are a few guidelines that we need contributors to follow so that we can have a chance of keeping on top of things.

You can read the complete module contribution guide on the Puppet Labs wiki.

Authors

This module is based on work by David Schmitt. The following contributor have contributed patches to this module (beyond Puppet Labs):

  • Larry Ludwig
  • Christian G. Warden
  • Daniel Black
  • Justin Ellison
  • Lowe Schmidt
  • Matthias Pigulla
  • William Van Hevelingen
  • Michael Arnold
  • Chris Weyl

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