Understand the default MariaDB configuration
NOTE: We are in the process of modifying the configuration for many Bitnami stacks. On account of these changes, the file paths and commands stated in this guide may change depending on whether your Bitnami stack uses MySQL or MariaDB. To identify which database server is used in your stack, run the command below:
$ test -d /opt/bitnami/mariadb && echo "MariaDB" || echo "MySQL"
The output of the command indicates which database server (MySQL or MariaDB) is used by the installation, and will allow you to identify which guides to follow in our documentation for common database-related operations.
Default MariaDB user accounts and privileges
The grant tables define the initial MariaDB user accounts and their access privileges. The default configuration consists of:
- A privileged account with a username of root. The root user has remote access to the database.
- An anonymous user without remote access to the database server. This user can only connect from the local machine and it is only intended for testing.
- A test database only intended for testing.
Check our recommendations for a production server.
MariaDB version
In order to check the MariaDB version, execute the following command:
$ mysqld --version
MariaDB port
The default port for MariaDB is 3306.
MariaDB configuration file
The MariaDB configuration file is located at /opt/bitnami/mariadb/conf/my.cnf, on the MariaDB database server host:
The MariaDB official documentation has more details about how to configure the MariaDB database.
MariaDB log file
The log-error file contains information indicating when MariaDB was started and stopped and also any critical errors that occur while the server is running. If MariaDB notices a table that needs to be automatically checked or repaired, it writes a message to the error log.
Find it at /opt/bitnami/mariadb/logs/mysqld.log, on the MariaDB database server host.