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-README for mSQL version 1.0 14 December 1994
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-What's new in 1.0
------------------
-
-1.0 is actually what was going to be 0.3-release. I decided to give it
-a "real" number because it has enough features and appears stable enough
-to be used seriously now (we're even using it in production at Bond
-hanging of the back of our WWW server and campus user database). 2
-months of alpha and beta testing has produced what appears to be a
-pretty solid hunk of code.
-
-1.0 brings per-database access control, joins, ordering, mmap() support
-if you have it (and it'll do shared read/write regions - unlike Linux, HPUX
-etc), distinct, and many bug fixes to mSQL. The doco has also been updated
-for for this release to reflect the changes to both the SQL supported
-and also the API and programs.
-
-
-msqladmin now offers a "shutdown" command and also a "reload" command
-for reloading the access control info on the fly. You can only run
-msqladmin as root (or whoever you specified as the root user) from the
-local machine. There's further info about the access control mechanism
-in the manual.
-
-msqladmin also offers a version command. This will report the version
-of msqladmin, the version of the server it's talking to, and the
-protocol version used to talk to the server.
-
-msql will use the VISUAL environment variable for your editor rather
-than forcing you to use vi. If it isn't set it'll default to vi anyway.
-
-A new program called msqldump is included to generate an ASCII dump of a
-table or an entire database. The output is formatted as an msql script
-and includes the "create table" and "insert" commands required to
-recreate whatever was dumped. It'll work over the net too so you can
-grab an entire database off a remote box.
-
-The MSQL_HOST environment variable has gone. All msql programs now
-offer a -h option for talking to a remote host. In the API, if
-msqlConnect() is called with NULL, it forces it to use the UNIX socket
-on the local host.
-
-The lex/flex based scanner has been replaced by a hand written C
-scanner. This removes a heap of portability problems with various
-version of lex/flex and the good old "I'm flex but I'll call myself lex"
-problem on Linux and *BSD.
-
-A regression test suite is now available in tests/rtest. Run it after
-you've compiled and installed the code to ensure that it's working OK.
-
-
-General Info
-------------
-
-mSQL has been developed under Sun OS 4.1.1 but has been tested under
-Solaris 2.3, Ultrix 4.3, Linux, FreeBSD 2, and OSF/1 (cc not gcc). That
-said, it should "autoconf" and build on most BSD derived systems, SVR4
-based systems or POSIX O/S's (that should cover most of them). It has been
-reported that it works out-of-the-box on HP-UX, NeXT, SCO, Sequent,
-Cray, Tandem and a few others. I haven't tested these so buyer beware.
-
-
-Installation
-------------
-
-To build mSQL, type "make target" in the top directory. This will build
-a directory where the object files for your system will be made. This
-mechanism allows you to NFS mount the sources onto different machines
-and build mSQL on different platforms without having to make copies of
-the sources. The directory will be under the "targets" directory (e.g.
-$(TOP)/targets/Solaris-2.3-Sparc )
-
-Once the target directory has been created, change directory into it and
-run "setup". That will run autoconf and some other configuration
-scripts. Once that has completed, just type make. You should install
-the software with "make install" when you're happy with it.
-
-The default installation directory is /usr/local/Minerva. This area is
-shared by all the development of Minerva (including the ESL scripting
-language and Minerva itself). It's probably a good idea to leave it as
-that rather than /usr/local/msql or similar if you wish to use ESL
-(check out doc/Minerva for details on ESL or grab the ESL manual via ftp
-from Bond.edu.au in /pub/Minerva/esl )
-
-
-Testing the software
---------------------
-
-Once it is installed, you can try the sample mSQL script provided in
-the msql source directory. Fire up the server using
-
- /usr/local/Minerva/bin/msqld&
-
-Create a test database using
-
- /usr/local/Minerva/bin/msqladmin create test
-
-Run the script through the terminal monitor using
-
- /usr/local/Minerva/bin/msql test < sample.msql
-
-There are also some further test scripts in the tests directory. The
-"killer" test will produce performance figures about mSQL running on
-your machine. details such as the number of operations per second for
-inserts, fills and selects on both keyed and flat tables is generated.
-
-For a real test, run the regression test suite (rtest) in the tests
-directory.
-
-
-Notes :
-------
-
- o Because this stuff is pretty new, there's a script in the
- scripts directory that you may want to use to run the server. It
- restarts the server if it crashes and mails you a notification
- of the failure. It's called run_daemon and may save you some
- heart ache.
-
- o If you run this on a Cray (what? you don't have a Y-MP at
- home? :) you'll have to add -lsocket to EXTRA_LIB in site.mm
- after you run setup.
-
- o OSF/1 and gcc don't appear to like this stuff. If you're
- using OSF/1 use the standard DEC compiler and everything is
- fine.
-
- o The manual is formatted for an A4 page. I have run the
- postscript through a filter that should let it print on any
- paper size although the margins may get stuffed up a bit.
-
-
-If you decide to use mSQL for anything, could you drop me a line. I'd
-like to keep track of just how many people are using it and what it's
-being used for. You may also wish to join the mailing list by sending a
-message to msql-list-request@Bond.edu.au.
-
-
- __ David J. Hughes - Bambi@Bond.edu.au
- / \ / / / http://Bond.edu.au/People/bambi.html
- /___/ __ _ ____/ / / _
-/ \ / \ / \ / / / / / \ / Senior Network Programmer, Bond University
-\___/ \__// / \__/ \__/ / / / Qld. 4229 AUSTRALIA (+61 75 951450)