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Minimum MySQL version required for Alfresco 3.4.c ?

svast
Champ on-the-rise
Champ on-the-rise
Hi there,
I read that Alfresco 3.4.c prerequesites that are listed at chapter "Supported Stacks":
   http://www.alfresco.com/help/34/community/all/

The MySQL version is 5.1.49 in that document , which is not the standard delivered on RedHat 5.5
RedHat EL 5.5 ships MySQL 5.0.77.

I wonder if I should upgrade MySQL, and by doing so breaking the support contract I have with RedHat.

The main question is : What is the minimum MySQL version needed to run Alfresco 3.4.c ?
Would it run with MySQL 5.0.77 ?

Thanks in advance
Stephane
4 REPLIES 4

ptx
Champ in-the-making
Champ in-the-making
anything to worry just install mysql what ever u have and create alfresco database. that it u can proceed with the installation. Never seen minimum mysql version up to this moment. any way am not alfresco specialist.

_sax
Champ in-the-making
Champ in-the-making
The release notes of every version include a hint: The versions mentioned there are the ones, Alfresco was developed with. They are therefore not necessarily prerequisites, but only an Alfresco engineer, having insight into which functionality a version uses, could verify this.

The last Alfresco version, that was developed with your very MySQL version was 3.2r2.
Interestingly, the supported stacks page you linked to says 5.1.49; while 3.4c was developed with 5.1.39 as the wiki states.

http://wiki.alfresco.com/wiki/Alfresco_Community_3.4.a_Release_Notes
http://wiki.alfresco.com/wiki/Alfresco_Community_Edition_3.2r2_Release_Notes

Having said that, I never updated MySQL on my servers and I successfully evaluated 3.4c with 5.0.51.

Since Alfresco 3.4.c comes with a separate MySQL installation inside its folder, you may just stop the MySQL service of your Redhat server and use the bundled, newer version? Would that comply with your contract?

mrogers
Star Contributor
Star Contributor
Acually its rare that the version of the database is important.   What seems far more important are the database drivers which do have
quirks ande problems.

What the release notes hint at is the versions which are tested and known to work.    That's not to say that old versions do not work, they probably will.

svast
Champ on-the-rise
Champ on-the-rise
Thanks to everyone for the responses.

The truth is that my client would expect to use the RedHat flavor of MySQL of course, which is not a big deal finally as far as I can read  :wink: