You’re running MySQL or MariaDB as backend database, how do you tune it to make best use of the hardware? How do you optimize the Operating System? How do you best configure MySQL or MariaDB for a specific database workload?
Do these questions sound familiar to you? Maybe you’re having to deal with that type of situation yourself?
A database server needs CPU, memory, disk and network in order to function. Understanding these resources is important for anybody managing a production database. Any resource that is weak or overloaded can become a limiting factor and cause the database server to perform poorly.
In this webinar, we’ll discuss some of the settings that are most often tweaked and which can bring you significant improvement in the performance of your MySQL or MariaDB database. We will also cover some of the variables which are frequently modified even though they should not.
Performance tuning is not easy, especially if you’re not an experienced DBA, but you can go a surprisingly long way with a few basic guidelines.
Date, Time & Registration
Europe/MEA/APAC
Tuesday, June 26th at 09:00 BST / 10:00 CEST (Germany, France, Sweden)
North America/LatAm
Tuesday, June 26th at 09:00 Pacific Time (US) / 12:00 Eastern Time (US)
Agenda
- What to tune and why?
- Tuning process
- Operating system tuning
- Memory
- I/O performance
- MySQL configuration tuning
- Memory
- I/O performance
- Useful tools
- Do’s and do not’s of MySQL tuning
- Changes in MySQL 8.0
Speaker
Krzysztof Książek, Senior Support Engineer at Severalnines, is a MySQL DBA with experience managing complex database environments for companies like Zendesk, Chegg, Pinterest and Flipboard.
This webinar builds upon blog posts by Krzysztof from the ‘Become a MySQL DBA’ series.
We look forward to “seeing” you there!