MariaDB
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MariaDB is a community-developed, commercially supported fork of the MySQL relational database management system, intended to remain free and open-source software under the GNU GPL. Development is led by some of the original developers of MySQL, who forked it due to concerns over its acquisition by Oracle Corporation.[1]
MariaDB intends to maintain high compatibility with MySQL, ensuring a drop-in replacement capability with library binary parity and exact matching with MySQL APIs and commands.[2] It includes a new storage engine, Aria, an alternative to MyISAM that intends to be the default transactional and non-transactional engine.[3] It initially used XtraDB as the default storage engine,[4] and switched back to InnoDB since version 10.2.[5]
Its lead developer is Michael "Monty" Widenius, one of the founders of MySQL AB and the founder of Monty Program AB. On 16 January 2008, MySQL AB announced that it had agreed to be acquired by Sun Microsystems for approximately $1 billion. The acquisition completed on 26 February 2008. MariaDB is named after Monty's younger daughter Maria, similar to how MySQL is named after his other daughter My.[6]
Versioning
MariaDB version numbers follow the MySQL's numbering scheme up to version 5.5. Thus, MariaDB 5.5 offers all of the MySQL 5.5 features. There exists a gap in MySQL versions between 5.1 and 5.5, while MariaDB issued 5.2 and 5.3 point releases.
Since specific new features have been developed in MariaDB, the developers decided that a major version number change was necessary.[7][8]
Version | Original release date | Latest version | Release date | Status |
---|---|---|---|---|
Template:Version | Template:Release date and age[9] | 5.1.67 | 2013-01-30[10] | Stable (GA) |
Template:Version | Template:Release date and age[11] | 5.2.14 | 2013-01-30[12] | Stable (GA) |
Template:Version | Template:Release date and age[13] | 5.3.12 | 2013-01-30[14] | Stable (GA) |
Template:Version | Template:Release date and age[15] | 5.5.63 | 2019-01-30[16] | Stable (GA) |
Template:Version | Template:Release date and age[17] | 10.0.38 | 2019-01-31[18] | Stable (GA) |
Template:Version | Template:Release date and age[19] | 10.1.38 | 2019-02-06[20] | Stable (GA) |
Template:Version | Template:Release date and age[21] | 10.2.22 | 2019-02-11[22] | Stable (GA) |
Template:Version | Template:Release date and age[23] | 10.3.13 | 2019-02-21[24] | Stable (GA) |
Template:Version | Template:Release date and age[25] | 10.4.3 | 2019-02-25[26] | Beta |
Template:Version |
Cloud deployment
MariaDB has been supported in Amazon RDS service since October 2015.[27]
MariaDB is a supported database in Microsoft Azure.[28]
Third-party software
MariaDB's API and protocol are compatible with those used by MySQL, plus some features to support native non-blocking operations and progress reporting. This means that all connectors, libraries and applications which work with MySQL should also work on MariaDB—whether or not they support its native features. On this basis, Fedora developers replaced MySQL with MariaDB in Fedora 19, out of concerns that Oracle was making MySQL a more closed software project.[29] OpenBSD likewise in April 2013 dropped MySQL for MariaDB 5.5.[30]
MariaDB Foundation
In December 2012 Michael Widenius, David Axmark, and Allan Larsson announced the formation of a foundation that would oversee the development of MariaDB.[31][32]
In April 2013 the Foundation announced that it had appointed Simon Phipps as its Secretary and interim Chief Executive Officer,[33] Rasmus Johansson as Chairman of the Board, and Andrew Katz, Jeremy Zawodny, and Michael Widenius as Board members.[34] Noting that it wished to create a governance model similar to that used by the Eclipse Foundation, the Board appointed the Eclipse Foundation's Executive Director Mike Milinkovich as an advisor to lead the transition. SkySQL Corporation Ab, a company formed by ex-MySQL executives and investors after Oracle bought MySQL, announced in April 2013 that they were merging their company with Monty Program AB, and joining the MariaDB Foundation. The MariaDB Foundation appointed Widenius as its CTO.[35][34]
Simon Phipps quit in 2014 on the sale of the MariaDB trademark to SkySQL. He later said: "I quit as soon as it was obvious the company was not going to allow an independent foundation."[36] On 1 October 2014, SkySQL Corporation AB changed its name to MariaDB Corporation AB[37] to reflect its role as the main driving force behind the development of MariaDB server and the biggest support-provider for it.[38] MariaDB is a registered trademark of MariaDB Corporation AB,[39] used under license by the MariaDB Foundation.[40]
From January 2015 to September 2018, Otto Kekäläinen was the CEO of the MariaDB Foundation. He stepped down effectively on 1 October of that year.[41] Arjen Lentz was appointed CEO of the Foundation in October 2018,[42] but resigned in December 2018.[43] Kaj Arnö joined as the CEO on 1 February 2019.[44] Eric Herman is the current Chairman of the Board.
Prominent users
MariaDB is used at ServiceNow,[45] DBS Bank,[46] Google,[47] Mozilla,[48] and the Wikimedia Foundation since 2013.[49]
Several Linux and BSD distributions include MariaDB,[50] like Ubuntu (from 14.04 LTS).[51] Some default to MariaDB, such as Arch Linux,[52] Manjaro,[53] Debian (from Debian 9),[54] Fedora (from Fedora 19),[55][56] Red Hat Enterprise Linux (from RHEL 7 in June 2014),[57][58] CentOS (from CentOS 7),[59] Mageia (from Mageia 2),[60] openSUSE (from openSUSE 12.3 Dartmouth),[61] SUSE Linux Enterprise Server (from SLES 12),[62] OpenBSD (from 5.7),[63][64][65] and FreeBSD.[66]
Support
In 2013 Google tasked one of its engineers to work at the MariaDB Foundation.[67] A group of investment companies led by Intel has invested $20 million in SkySQL.[68] The European Investment Bank has funded MariaDB with €25 million in 2017.[69] Template:Clear
See also
References
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Further reading
External links
Template:Wikibooks Template:Wikiversity
- MariaDB Foundation website
- MariaDB Corporation website
- Template:YouTubeTemplate:Snd a lecture given by Monty Widenius at Google