MySQL
MySQL is one of the supported databases that underpins a Moodle installation.
Installing MySQL
- If you are running Linux your preference should be to install using your distribution's package manager. This ensures you will get any available updates. However, you can also use apt-get or yum depending on the distribution that you are running.
- There are installers available for most popular operating systems at http://www.mysql.com/downloads/mysql/.
- It is possible and reasonably straightforward to build mysql from source but it is not recommended (the pre-built binaries are supposedly better optimised).
- Make sure you set a password for the 'root' user (see http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.0/en/default-privileges.html).
- Consider installing and configuring my.cnf (the MySQL settings file) to suit your needs. The default configuration is usually very conservative in respect of memory usage versus performance. Increase the 'max_allowed_packet' setting to at least 4 megabytes.
- If you are going to use Master/Slave replication, you must add binlog_format = 'ROW' into your my.cnf within [mysqld]. Otherwise, Moodle will not be able to write to the database.
Configure full UTF-8 support
It's recommended that full UTF-8 support is configured in MySQL. If this is not done some character sets – notably emojis – cannot be used. It is possible to do this after installing your site but is much easier and quicker before installation.
Check if this is already configured by running the following statement, e.g. at the mysql> prompt or in phpMyAdmin:
SHOW GLOBAL VARIABLES WHERE variable_name IN ('innodb_file_format', 'innodb_large_prefix', 'innodb_file_per_table');
If the settings you see match any list above then no changes are needed and you can skip to Creating Moodle database.
If your settings do not match any list you will have to edit the MySQL configuration file. On Linux this may be /etc/my.cnf, /etc/mysql/my.cnf, or /etc/my.cnf.d/mariadb-server.cnf; on Microsoft Windows it may be my.ini.
- Note: Back up the configuration file before changing it.
- Note: Back up all databases before making this change.
- Note: Other systems with databases on this server may be impacted by this change.
Add the following settings to the configuration file, do not add innodb_file_format = Barracuda and innodb_large_prefix = 1 if these were blank or missing when you ran SHOW GLOBAL VARIABLES above:
[client] default-character-set = utf8mb4 [mysqld] innodb_file_format = Barracuda # Remove line if not needed innodb_file_per_table = 1 innodb_large_prefix = 1 # Remove line if not needed character-set-server = utf8mb4 collation-server = utf8mb4_unicode_ci skip-character-set-client-handshake [mysql] default-character-set = utf8mb4
Restart the MySQL server process to apply these settings (for example with MariaDB on Linux: systemctl restart mariadb).
If you have any difficulty applying these settings, see MySQL_full_unicode_support for further information.
If for some reason you cannot change to the settings described here you can continue to install Moodle but you must select utf8 and utf8_unicode_ci for the default character set and collation respectively.
Creating Moodle database
These are the steps to create an empty Moodle database. Substitute your own database name, user name and password as appropriate.
The instructions assume that the web server and MySQL server are on the same machine. In this case the 'dbhost' is 'localhost'. If they are on different machines substitute the name of the web server for 'localhost' in the following instructions and the 'dbhost' setting will be the name of the database server. Databases have a "Character set" and a "Collation". For Moodle, we recommend the Character Set be set to utf8mb4 and the Collation utf8mb4_unicode_ci. You may get the option to set these values when you create the database. If you are not given a choice, the default options are probably good. An install on an old server may have the wrong settings.
Command line
- To create a database using the 'mysql' command line client, first log into MySQL
$ mysql -u root -p Enter password:
(Enter the password you previously set - or been given - for the MySQL 'root' user). After some pre-amble this should take you to the mysql> prompt.
- Create a new database (called 'moodle' - substitute your own name if required).
If you have successfully configured the recommended full UTF-8 support as described above run:
mysql> CREATE DATABASE moodle DEFAULT CHARACTER SET utf8mb4 COLLATE utf8mb4_unicode_ci;
If you do not have the recommended full UTF-8 support run:
mysql> CREATE DATABASE moodle DEFAULT CHARACTER SET utf8 COLLATE utf8_unicode_ci;
- Add a user/password with the minimum needed permissions:
mysql> CREATE USER moodleuser@localhost IDENTIFIED BY 'yourpassword'; mysql> GRANT SELECT,INSERT,UPDATE,DELETE,CREATE,CREATE TEMPORARY TABLES,DROP,INDEX,ALTER ON moodle.* TO moodleuser@localhost;
...which creates a user called 'moodleuser' with a password 'yourpassword'. Make sure you invent a strong password and resist the temptation to 'GRANT ALL'.
- Exit from mysql:
mysql> quit
phpMyAdmin
phpMyAdmin is a web based administration tool for MySQL. If this is available you can use it to create a new database. If you have successfully configured the recommended full UTF-8 support as described above select collation utf8mb4_unicode_ci. If you do not have the recommended full UTF-8 support select collation utf8_unicode_ci.
Which database belongs to which Moodle
If you have installed several Moodle installations on the same server, there will be several databases in your MySQL server. The names might be quite poor reflections of the content like _mdl1 _mdl2 _mdl3 . So how do I see which database goes with which Moodle installation? You can go in with phpMyAdmin and in the various databases check for the table "mdl_course". There you will easily see the name of that Moodle Installation. In table mdl_config you can see the Moodle version. The main URL for the site is not in the database except where there are absolute links.