Installing MariaDB MaxScale using a tarball
Installing MariaDB MaxScale using a tarball
MariaDB MaxScale is also made available as a tarball, which is named like
maxscale-x.y.z.OS.tar.gz
where x.y.z
is the same as the corresponding version and OS
identifies the operating system, e.g. maxscale-2.0.1.centos.7.tar.gz
.
In order to use the tarball, the following libraries are required:
- libcurl
- libaio
- OpenSSL
- gnutls
The tarball has been built with the assumption that it will be installed in /usr/local
.
However, it is possible to install it in any directory, but in that case MariaDB MaxScale
must be invoked with a flag.
Installing as root in /usr/local
If you have root access to the system you probably want to install MariaDB MaxScale under
the user and group maxscale
.
The required steps are as follows:
$ sudo groupadd maxscale
$ sudo useradd -g maxscale maxscale
$ cd /usr/local
$ sudo tar -xzvf maxscale-x.y.z.OS.tar.gz
$ sudo ln -s maxscale-x.y.z.OS maxscale
$ cd maxscale
$ sudo chown -R maxscale var
Creating the symbolic link is necessary, since MariaDB MaxScale has been built
with the assumption that the plugin directory is /usr/local/maxscale/lib/maxscale
.
The symbolic link also makes it easy to switch between different versions of
MariaDB MaxScale that have been installed side by side in /usr/local
;
just make the symbolic link point to another installation.
In addition, the first time you install MariaDB MaxScale from a tarball you need to create the following directories:
$ sudo mkdir /var/log/maxscale
$ sudo mkdir /var/lib/maxscale
$ sudo mkdir /var/run/maxscale
$ sudo mkdir /var/cache/maxscale
and make maxscale
the owner of them:
$ sudo chown maxscale /var/log/maxscale
$ sudo chown maxscale /var/lib/maxscale
$ sudo chown maxscale /var/run/maxscale
$ sudo chown maxscale /var/cache/maxscale
The following step is to create the MariaDB MaxScale configuration file /etc/maxscale.cnf
.
The file etc/maxscale.cnf.template
can be used as a base.
Please refer to Configuration Guide for details.
When the configuration file has been created, MariaDB MaxScale can be started.
$ sudo bin/maxscale --user=maxscale -d
The -d
flag causes maxscale not to turn itself into a daemon,
which is adviseable the first time MariaDB MaxScale is started, as it makes it easier to spot problems.
If you want to place the configuration file somewhere else but in /etc
you can invoke MariaDB MaxScale with the --config
flag,
for instance, --config=/usr/local/maxscale/etc/maxscale.cnf
.
Note also that if you want to keep everything under /usr/local/maxscale
you can invoke MariaDB MaxScale using the flag --basedir
.
$ sudo bin/maxscale --user=maxscale --basedir=/usr/local/maxscale -d
That will cause MariaDB MaxScale to look for its configuration file in
/usr/local/maxscale/etc
and to store all runtime files under /usr/local/maxscale/var
.
Installing in any Directory
Enter a directory where you have the right to create a subdirectory. Then do as follows.
$ tar -xzvf maxscale-x.y.z.OS.tar.gz
The next step is to create the MaxScale configuration file maxscale-x.y.z/etc/maxscale.cnf
.
The file maxscale-x.y.z/etc/maxscale.cnf.template
can be used as a base.
Please refer to Configuration Guide for details.
When the configuration file has been created, MariaDB MaxScale can be started.
$ cd maxscale-x.y.z.OS
$ bin/maxscale -d --basedir=.
With the flag --basedir
, MariaDB MaxScale is told where the lib
, etc
and var
directories are found. Unless it is specified, MariaDB MaxScale assumes
the lib
directory is found in /usr/local/maxscale
,
and the var
and etc
directories in /
.
It is also possible to specify the directories and the location of the configuration file individually. Invoke MaxScale like
$ bin/maxscale --help
to find out the appropriate flags.