Set up MySQL service
The mysql
service provides persistent data storage based on versions 10.2 to 10.4, supporting the storage engine and reimplemented features from MySQL 5.6 and 5.7.
Reindexing on MariaDB 10.4 takes more time compared to other MariaDB or MySQL versions. See Indexers in the Performance Best Practices guide.
Use the following instructions for service setup on Pro Integration environments and Starter environments, including the master
branch.
To enable MySQL:
-
Add the required name, type, and disk value (in MB) to the
.magento/services.yaml
file.code language-yaml mysql: type: mysql:<version> disk: 5120
note tip TIP MySQL errors, such as PDO Exception: MySQL server has gone away
, can occur as a result of insufficient disk space. Verify that you have allocated sufficient disk space to the service in the.magento/services.yaml
file. -
Configure the relationships in the
.magento.app.yaml
file.code language-yaml relationships: database: "mysql:mysql"
-
Add, commit, and push your code changes.
code language-bash git add .magento/services.yaml .magento.app.yaml && git commit -m "Enable mysql service" && git push origin <branch-name>
services.yaml
and .magento.app.yaml
configuration files. See Change service version for guidance on upgrading or downgrading a service.Configure MySQL database
You have the following options when configuring the MySQL database:
schemas
—A schema defines a database. The default schema is themain
database.endpoints
—Each endpoint represents a credential with specific privileges. The default endpoint ismysql
, which hasadmin
access to themain
database.properties
—Properties are used to define additional database configurations.
The following is a basic example configuration in the .magento/services.yaml
file:
mysql:
type: mysql:10.4
disk: 5120
configuration:
properties:
optimizer_switch: "rowid_filter=off"
optimizer_use_condition_selectivity: 1
The properties
in the above example modifies the default optimizer
settings as recommended in the Performance Best Practices guide.
MariaDB configuration options:
default_charset
default_collation
max_allowed_packet
1
to 100
.optimizer_switch
optimizer_use_condition_selectivity
1
to 5
. See .Set up multiple database users
Optionally, you can set up multiple users with different permissions for accessing the main
database.
By default, there is one endpoint named mysql
that has administrator access to the database. To set up multiple database users, you must define multiple endpoints in the services.yaml
file and declare the relationships in the .magento.app.yaml
file. For Pro Staging and Production environments, Submit an ÃÛ¶¹ÊÓƵ Commerce Support ticket to request the additional user.
Use a nested array to define the endpoints for specific user access. Each endpoint can designate access to one or more schemas (databases) and different levels of permission on each.
The valid permission levels are:
ro
: Only SELECT queries are allowed.rw
: SELECT queries and INSERT, UPDATE, and DELETE queries are allowed.admin
: All queries are allowed, including DDL queries (CREATE TABLE, DROP TABLE, and more).
For example:
mysql:
type: mysql:10.4
disk: 5120
configuration:
schemas:
- main
endpoints:
admin:
default_schema: main
privileges:
main: admin
reporter:
privileges:
main: ro
importer:
privileges:
main: rw
properties:
optimizer_switch: "rowid_filter=off"
optimizer_use_condition_selectivity: 1
In the preceding example, the admin
endpoint provides admin-level access to the main
database, the reporter
endpoint provides read-only access, and the importer
endpoint provides read-write access, which means:
- The
admin
user has full control of the database. - The
reporter
user has SELECT privileges only. - The
importer
user has SELECT, INSERT, UPDATE, and DELETE privileges.
Add the endpoints defined in the above example to the relationships
property of the .magento.app.yaml
file. For example:
relationships:
database: "mysql:admin"
databasereporter: "mysql:reporter"
databaseimporter: "mysql:importer"
Connect to the database
Accessing the MariaDB database directly requires you to use an SSH to log in to the remote Cloud environment, and connect to the database.
-
Use SSH to log in to the remote environment.
code language-bash magento-cloud ssh
-
Retrieve the MySQL login credentials from the
database
andtype
properties in the $MAGENTO_CLOUD_RELATIONSHIPS variable.code language-bash echo $MAGENTO_CLOUD_RELATIONSHIPS | base64 -d | json_pp
or
code language-bash php -r 'print_r(json_decode(base64_decode($_ENV["MAGENTO_CLOUD_RELATIONSHIPS"])));'
In the response, find the MySQL information. For example:
code language-json "database" : [ { "password" : "", "rel" : "mysql", "hostname" : "nnnnnnnn.mysql.service._.magentosite.cloud", "service" : "mysql", "host" : "database.internal", "ip" : "###.###.###.###", "port" : 3306, "path" : "main", "cluster" : "projectid-integration-id", "query" : { "is_master" : true }, "type" : "mysql:10.3", "username" : "user", "scheme" : "mysql" } ],
-
Connect to the database.
-
For Starter, use the following command:
code language-bash mysql -h database.internal -u <username>
-
For Pro, use the following command with hostname, port number, username, and password retrieved from the
$MAGENTO_CLOUD_RELATIONSHIPS
variable.code language-bash mysql -h <hostname> -P <number> -u <username> -p'<password>'
-
magento-cloud db:sql
command to connect to the remote database and run SQL commands.Connect to secondary database
Sometimes, you have to connect to the secondary database to improve database performance or resolve database locking issues. If this configuration is required, use "port" : 3304
to establish the connection. See the Best practice to configure the MySQL slave connection topic in the Implementation Best Practices guide.
Troubleshooting
See the following ÃÛ¶¹ÊÓƵ Commerce Support articles for help with troubleshooting MySQL problems: