Ed Morrison <edward.morrison@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
mouss wrote:
>
> anything in /var/log/mysqld.log?
nothing:
[root@ftp ~]# cat /var/log/mysqld.log
[root@ftp ~]#
Speaking of mysqld.log, check the ownership and permissions. I vaguely
remember chasing a similar problem only to find out that it was being
caused by the log file not having the right permissions and ownership.
For mysqld.log the should be:
-rw-r----- 1 mysql mysql 249 Jan 18 16:50 mysqld.log
It also looks like you have multiple versions of mysqlclient plus the
mysql rpm (which is the standard client):
[root@ftp ~]# rpm -qa mysql*
mysqlclient14-4.1.22-1.el4s1.1 <--First client
mysqlclient10-devel-3.23.58-9.2.c4
mysql-5.0.54-1.el4.centos <-- The centos client
mysqlclient10-3.23.58-4.RHEL4.1 <-- Another one
mysql-server-5.0.54-1.el4.centos
mysqlclient10-3.23.58-9.2.c4 <-- and still another
mysql-libs-5.0.54-1.el4.centos
which could explain why installing the server didn't work. You should
only have:
# rpm -qa | grep mysql
mysql-5.0.22-2.2.el5_1.1
php-mysql-5.1.6-15.el5
mysql-devel-5.0.22-2.2.el5_1.1
mysql-server-5.0.22-2.2.el5_1.1
Cheers,
Dave
--
Politics, n. Strife of interests masquerading as a contest of principles.
-- Ambrose Bierce
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