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MARIADBD-SAFE(1)	    MariaDB Database System	      MARIADBD-SAFE(1)

NAME
       mariadbd-safe - MariaDB server startup script (mariadbd-safe is now a
       symlink to mariadbd-safe)

SYNOPSIS

       mariadbd-safe options

DESCRIPTION
       mariadbd-safe is	the recommended	way to start a mariadbd	server on
       Unix.  mariadbd-safe adds some safety features such as restarting the
       server when an error occurs and logging runtime information to an error
       log file. Descriptions of error logging is given	later in this section.

       mariadbd-safe tries to start an executable named	mariadbd. To override
       the default behavior and	specify	explicitly the name of the server you
       want to run, specify a --mariadbd or --mariadbd-version option to
       mariadbd-safe. You can also use --ledir to indicate the directory where
       mariadbd-safe should look for the server.

       Many of the options to mariadbd-safe are	the same as the	options	to
       mariadbd.

       Options unknown to mariadbd-safe	are passed to mariadbd if they are
       specified on the	command	line, but ignored if they are specified	in the
       [mariadbd-safe] or [mariadb_safe] groups	of an option file.

       mariadbd-safe reads all options from the	[mariadbd], [server],
       [mariadbd-safe],	and [mariadb_safe] sections in option files. For
       example,	if you specify a [mariadbd] section like this, mariadbd-safe
       will find and use the --log-error option:

	   [mariadbd]
	   log-error=error.log

       For backward compatibility, mariadbd-safe also reads [safe_mariadbd]
       sections, although you should rename such sections to [mariadbd-safe]
       in current installations.

       mariadbd-safe supports the options in the following list. It also reads
       option files and	supports the options for processing them.

          --help

	   Display a help message and exit.

          --basedir=path

	   The path to the MariaDB installation	directory.

          --core-file-size=size

	   The size of the core	file that mariadbd should be able to create.
	   The option value is passed to ulimit	-c.

          --crash-script=file

	   Script to call in the event of mariadbd crashing.

          --datadir=path

	   The path to the data	directory.

          --defaults-extra-file=path

	   The name of an option file to be read in addition to	the usual
	   option files. This must be the first	option on the command line if
	   it is used. If the file does	not exist or is	otherwise
	   inaccessible, the server will exit with an error.

          --defaults-file=file_name

	   The name of an option file to be read instead of the	usual option
	   files. This must be the first option	on the command line if it is
	   used.

          --flush-caches

	   Flush and purge buffers/caches before starting the server.

          --ledir=path

	   If mariadbd-safe cannot find	the server, use	this option to
	   indicate the	path name to the directory where the server is
	   located.

          --log-error=file_name

	   Write the error log to the given file.

          --malloc-lib=lib

	   Preload shared library lib if available.

          --mariadbd=prog_name

	   The name of the server program (in the ledir	directory) that	you
	   want	to start. This option is needed	if you use the MariaDB binary
	   distribution	but have the data directory outside of the binary
	   distribution. If mariadbd-safe cannot find the server, use the
	   --ledir option to indicate the path name to the directory where the
	   server is located.

          --mariadbd-version=suffix

	   This	option is similar to the --mariadbd option, but	you specify
	   only	the suffix for the server program name.	The basename is
	   assumed to be mariadbd. For example,	if you use
	   --mariadbd-version=debug, mariadbd-safe starts the mariadbd-debug
	   program in the ledir	directory. If the argument to
	   --mariadbd-version is empty,	mariadbd-safe uses mariadbd in the
	   ledir directory.

          --nice=priority

	   Use the nice	program	to set the server's scheduling priority	to the
	   given value.

          --no-auto-restart, --nowatch, --no-watch

	   Exit	after starting mariadbd.

          --no-defaults

	   Do not read any option files. This must be the first	option on the
	   command line	if it is used.

          --numa-interleave

	   Run mariadbd	with its memory	interleaved on all NUMA	nodes.

          --open-files-limit=count

	   The number of files that mariadbd should be able to open. The
	   option value	is passed to ulimit -n.	Note that you need to start
	   mariadbd-safe as root for this to work properly!

          --pid-file=file_name

	   The path name of the	process	ID file.

          --plugin-dir=dir_name

	   Directory for client-side plugins.

          --port=port_num

	   The port number that	the server should use when listening for
	   TCP/IP connections. The port	number must be 1024 or higher unless
	   the server is started by the	root system user.

          --skip-kill-mariadbd

	   Do not try to kill stray mariadbd processes at startup. This	option
	   works only on Linux.

          --socket=path

	   The Unix socket file	that the server	should use when	listening for
	   local connections.

          --syslog, --skip-syslog

	   --syslog causes error messages to be	sent to	syslog on systems that
	   support the logger program.	--skip-syslog suppresses the use of
	   syslog; messages are	written	to an error log	file.

          --syslog-tag=tag

	   For logging to syslog, messages from	mariadbd-safe and mariadbd are
	   written with	a tag of mariadbd-safe and mariadbd, respectively. To
	   specify a suffix for	the tag, use --syslog-tag=tag, which modifies
	   the tags to be mariadbd-safe-tag and	mariadbd-tag.

          --timezone=timezone

	   Set the TZ time zone	environment variable to	the given option
	   value. Consult your operating system	documentation for legal	time
	   zone	specification formats.

          --user={user_name|user_id}

	   Run the mariadbd server as the user having the name user_name or
	   the numeric user ID user_id.	("User"	in this	context	refers to a
	   system login	account, not a MariaDB user listed in the grant
	   tables.)

       If you execute mariadbd-safe with the --defaults-file or
       --defaults-extra-file option to name an option file, the	option must be
       the first one given on the command line or the option file will not be
       used. For example, this command will not	use the	named option file:

	   mariadb> mariadbd-safe --port=port_num --defaults-file=file_name

       Instead,	use the	following command:

	   mariadb> mariadbd-safe --defaults-file=file_name --port=port_num

       The mariadbd-safe script	is written so that it normally can start a
       server that was installed from either a source or a binary distribution
       of MariaDB, even	though these types of distributions typically install
       the server in slightly different	locations.  mariadbd-safe expects one
       of the following	conditions to be true:

          The server and databases can	be found relative to the working
	   directory (the directory from which mariadbd-safe is	invoked). For
	   binary distributions, mariadbd-safe looks under its working
	   directory for bin and data directories. For source distributions,
	   it looks for	libexec	and var	directories. This condition should be
	   met if you execute mariadbd-safe from your MariaDB installation
	   directory (for example, /usr/local/mysql for	a binary
	   distribution).

          If the server and databases cannot be found relative	to the working
	   directory, mariadbd-safe attempts to	locate them by absolute	path
	   names. Typical locations are	/usr/local/libexec and /usr/local/var.
	   The actual locations	are determined from the	values configured into
	   the distribution at the time	it was built. They should be correct
	   if MariaDB is installed in the location specified at	configuration
	   time.

       Because mariadbd-safe tries to find the server and databases relative
       to its own working directory, you can install a binary distribution of
       MariaDB anywhere, as long as you	run mariadbd-safe from the MariaDB
       installation directory:

	   shell> cd mysql_installation_directory
	   shell> bin/mariadbd-safe &

       If mariadbd-safe	fails, even when invoked from the MariaDB installation
       directory, you can specify the --ledir and --datadir options to
       indicate	the directories	in which the server and	databases are located
       on your system.

       When you	use mariadbd-safe to start mariadbd, mariadbd-safe arranges
       for error (and notice) messages from itself and from mariadbd to	go to
       the same	destination.

       There are several mariadbd-safe options for controlling the destination
       of these	messages:

          --syslog: Write error messages to syslog on systems that support
	   the logger program.

          --skip-syslog: Do not write error messages to syslog. Messages are
	   written to the default error	log file (host_name.err	in the data
	   directory), or to a named file if the --log-error option is given.

          --log-error=file_name: Write	error messages to the named error
	   file.

       If none of these	options	is given, the default is --skip-syslog.

	   Note

       If --syslog and --log-error are both given, a warning is	issued and
       --log-error takes precedence.

       When mariadbd-safe writes a message, notices go to the logging
       destination (syslog or the error	log file) and stdout. Errors go	to the
       logging destination and stderr.

       Normally, you should not	edit the mariadbd-safe script. Instead,
       configure mariadbd-safe by using	command-line options or	options	in the
       [mariadbd-safe] section of a my.cnf option file.	In rare	cases, it
       might be	necessary to edit mariadbd-safe	to get it to start the server
       properly. However, if you do this, your modified	version	of mariadbd-
       safe might be overwritten if you	upgrade	MariaDB	in the future, so you
       should make a copy of your edited version that you can reinstall.

       On NetWare, mariadbd-safe is a NetWare Loadable Module (NLM) that is
       ported from the original	Unix shell script. It starts the server	as
       follows:

	1. Runs	a number of system and option checks.

	2. Runs	a check	on MyISAM tables.

	3. Provides a screen presence for the MariaDB server.

	4. Starts mariadbd, monitors it, and restarts it if it terminates in
	   error.

	5. Sends error messages	from mariadbd to the host_name.err file	in the
	   data	directory.

	6. Sends mariadbd-safe screen output to	the host_name.safe file	in the
	   data	directory.

COPYRIGHT
       Copyright 2007-2008 MySQL AB, 2008-2010 Sun Microsystems, Inc.,
       2010-2024 MariaDB Foundation

       This documentation is free software; you	can redistribute it and/or
       modify it only under the	terms of the GNU General Public	License	as
       published by the	Free Software Foundation; version 2 of the License.

       This documentation is distributed in the	hope that it will be useful,
       but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
       MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A	PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See	the GNU
       General Public License for more details.

       You should have received	a copy of the GNU General Public License along
       with the	program; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation,	Inc.,
       51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor,	Boston,	MA 02110-1335 USA or see
       http://www.gnu.org/licenses/.

SEE ALSO
       For more	information, please refer to the MariaDB Knowledge Base,
       available online	at https://mariadb.com/kb/

AUTHOR
       MariaDB Foundation (http://www.mariadb.org/).

MariaDB	11.4		       3 September 2024		      MARIADBD-SAFE(1)

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