Mysql optimizer team blog5/7/2023 ![]() ![]() High Scalability Blog - although not a blog concentrating on MySQL, it covers posts about a lot of companies using MySQL and how it fits into their architecture. They mostly have announcements about future releases along with their features along with how-to articles about different setups, for instance, MySQL with Docker, Nomad with Docker and MySQL and so on.ĩ. MySQL Release Team- for news from MySQL Release team. MySQL Step By Step - blog with most content around HA, backup and recovery and replication.Ĩ. This blog has detailed official posts about all things HA, Replication and MySQL Cluster.ħ. MySQL High Availability Team - for news from MySQL High Availability Team. Here you would find posts explaining stuff about MySQL’s architecture, upcoming features, upgrade and migration strategies and other announcements about releases and other wide ranging topics core to MySQL Server.Ħ. ![]() ![]() MySQL Server Team - for news from MySQL Server Team. His blog posts around grants, permissions, network-layer security, authentication are very insightful. Todd’s MySQL Blog - he spent 10 years as a Technical Product Manager at MySQL and was responsible for security in MySQL. Again, I have not used this product but have been following the blog for quite some time for insights.Ĥ. His writings can also be found here - but are not limited to technology. He has continued contributing this blog after Percona. ![]() Vivid Cortex - is a database performance monitoring and optimization platform company started by Baron Schwartz who left Percona in 2012 to start this company. They also have a product for automation and management of MySQL and several other databases. They have a similar series for PostgreSQL. Content on this blog is more about HA, scaling, monitoring and so on. Several Nines - While Percona’s Blog is more about internals, performance and optimization of databases, on the Several Nines Blog, you find more in-depth articles related to hardcore database administration more centred about distributed computing. Do go through the list of blogs by Percona’s team.Ģ. They have also written another tool that does hot backups and restores.Īuthors to follow - Vadim Tkachenko, Peter Zaitsev, Aurimas Mikalauskas and Baron Schwartz. Apart from the blog, Percona has developed probably the most widely used set of tools for MySQL power users. On their database performance blog, they write about performance, optimization, testing, benchmarking and internals of different flavours of MySQL including MySQL on Amazon Aurora, MySQL on Amazon RDS, MariaDB, XtraDB along with several storage engines like TokuDB, RocksDB, InnoDB, MyIASM, Memory, Blackhole and so on. These are the guys who have written the book I have mentioned earlier - High Performance MySQL earlier. Percona Database Performance Blog - Percona XtraDB is another flavour of MySQL written by people who have earlier contributed to MySQL source code to improve server performance.Understanding MySQL Internals by Alexander Pachev.High Performance MySQL, 3rd Edition by Baron Schwartz, Peter Zaitsev and Vadim Tkachenko.So, whether you are using MySQL on RDS or Aurora, or you’re using MariaDB or you’re using MyRocks - refer the official documentation on their respective websites first. Having said that, the first place to look for an answer always should be the Official documentation. I’m listing the ones which I have found to be extremely useful.Įvery book and blog mentioned here is written and maintained by people who have either worked at MySQL AB (or Oracle) in some capacity or have developed from a fork of MySQL which is widely used in the community or have extensively used MySQL in production at scale and hence are authorities on the subject. A compilation of reading material - books and blogs by MySQL Expertsįor the past couple of years, apart from the official documentation of MySQL, I have referred other sources too for getting more insights into MySQL. A list of resources by people who have either worked at MySQL AB (or Oracle), developed a widely used fork of MySQL, or developed MySQL at scale. ![]()
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