Hi. I made MySQL start at boot adding it do Xinetd. Then I changed password using /usr/bin/mysqladmin -u command Then I installed phpMyAdmin. All is working good but, at reboot, I get this message from kernel: entering runlevel 3 ... mysql service failed .. skipped services: mysql but phpMyAdmin is working and I can work on mysql databases... So what's wrong? TIA, Ferdinando -- --> Powered by: <------ --> SUSE Linux 10.0 <--
On Thursday 17 Nov 2005 08:00, Ferdinando Bassi wrote:
Hi. I made MySQL start at boot adding it do Xinetd. Then I changed password using /usr/bin/mysqladmin -u command Then I installed phpMyAdmin. All is working good but, at reboot, I get this message from kernel:
entering runlevel 3 ... mysql service failed .. skipped services: mysql
but phpMyAdmin is working and I can work on mysql databases... So what's wrong?
Nothing - Xinetd is starting MySql on demand, exactly as it is supposed to do. Dylan
TIA, Ferdinando
--
--> Powered by: <------ --> SUSE Linux 10.0 <--
-- "The man who strikes first admits that his ideas have given out." (Chinese Proverb)
That's because MySQL has a control script in /etc/init.d. Presumably you have it enabled for runlevel 3. I'd back out the xinetd configuration change you made.
Right. Done it. Now MySQL is started via Runlevel 3 only, but at reboot i get this: entering runlevel 3 .... Startting mysq service failed .. failed services in runlevel 3: mysql skipped services in runlevel 3: nfs, smbfs (that's correct, they're called by xinetd) Any hints? TIA, Ferdinando
On Thu, 2005-11-17 at 08:18 +0000, Dylan wrote:
On Thursday 17 Nov 2005 08:00, Ferdinando Bassi wrote:
Hi. I made MySQL start at boot adding it do Xinetd. Then I changed password using /usr/bin/mysqladmin -u command Then I installed phpMyAdmin. All is working good but, at reboot, I get this message from kernel:
entering runlevel 3 ... mysql service failed .. skipped services: mysql
but phpMyAdmin is working and I can work on mysql databases... So what's wrong?
Nothing - Xinetd is starting MySql on demand, exactly as it is supposed to do.
Which is -not- how you should run a database. Use insserv mysql to have it start at boot time. -- Ken Schneider UNIX since 1989, linux since 1994, SuSE since 1998
participants (3)
-
Dylan
-
Ferdinando Bassi
-
Ken Schneider