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As most of you know, Sun acquired MySQL (and later Oracle acquired Sun), and during these acquisitions, there were a lot of FUD in MySQL community which resulted in creation of various forks.

Today we have MySQL from MySQL, Percona (XtraDB) MySQL, OurDelta MySQL, MariaDB, Drizzle to name a few. Which brings us to the source of the problem.

We are in the process of upgrading our databases (hardware/software) and I would like to know which one of the forks should I go with. Each has their own set of pros/cons. We are currently using MySQL 5.0.x from MySQL/Linux on an 8-core machine. Our new hardware is a monster with 32 cores and 32GB of memory connecting to a fast NetApp Storage via FC.

I would like to stick with MySQL from MySQL but I have heard horror stories on how badly MySQL 5.1 performs on many cores. I have also heard that MySQL 5.4 performs better on multi-core machines but that's still not production ready. In addition, I have also heard a lot of good things about Percona builds.

This is what I know so far:

MySQL 5.1 from MySQL: Reliable choice, but doesn't scale well on a big machine

Percona: Scales well, good backing company. I don't have much experience with it

MariaDB: Don't know much about it besides that it was founded by Original MySQL developers (including Monty)

OurDelta: Don't know much

Drizzle: Mostly optimized for cloud computing

I would like to know what's the general notion about this problem. Which build/version should I go with? How are you guys picking your builds/versions?

Thanks!

7 Answers 7

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All of the 'forks' you mentioned (except Drizzle) re-base off newer official releases of MySQL. I think that the word fork can lead you down the wrong path - since the intention is just to provide after market modifications. I wrote about this here:

http://mtocker.livejournal.com/50931.html

Since they re-base of MySQL, and MySQL 5.0 is in "extended maintenance", only major vulnerabilities are to be fixed. This means you want to be moving to 5.1. If we work with this assumption, then it cuts OurDelta out from your decisions - since they are just the 5.1 MariaDB build/packaging partners.

I think you can also rule out Drizzle, since it is currently pre-beta. They're planning a beta by the end of the summer - but it's still much earlier than what you'll want. I really don't think you use a database not ready for production, so this rules out MySQL 5.5 as well.

So this leaves Percona Server, Official MySQL 5.1 and MariaDB. It's true that 5.1 has some poor scalability with many cores, but if you enable the InnoDB plugin it is better.

The rest of my response from here on in is biased - I work for Percona:

Percona XtraDB has additional CPU scalability fixes than MySQL 5.1+InnoDB plugin. The ones that are going to matter are covered here:

http://www.percona.com/docs/wiki/percona-xtradb:features:start

One I can comment on in particular that will matter is this one: http://www.percona.com/docs/wiki/percona-xtradb:patch:innodb_split_buf_pool_mutex

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  • That's funny because that's exactly what we ended up deciding with help of Aurimas (from Percona). We're a happy client. Keep up the good job. Thanks, Drew
    – Drew
    Jun 11, 2010 at 5:13
  • Morgan I am looking at trying out Percona on Windows but don't see any Windows downloads. Do you only release Percona for Linux? Jul 1, 2011 at 17:14
  • I no longer work for Percona ;) Their official policy is "contact Sales to discuss." percona.com/mysql-support/policies/supported-platforms Jul 5, 2011 at 17:39
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    You missed MariaDB... which is essentially the upstream of MySQL now. Monty and crew are forging ahead making a better MySQL while being backward compatible so that MariaDB can drop in over the top of your MySQL install. Aug 20, 2012 at 1:16
  • I think calling MariaDB the upstream of MySQL is a bit optimistic. Oracle's done a lot of work on MySQL 5.6 - and they are not taking contributions from Monty. I didn't miss MariaDB - I said "this leaves official mysql, percona server and mariadb", then provided a specific reason for Percona Server. Jan 7, 2013 at 17:18
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Personally, I think that everyone who needs to set up a new MySQL installation today should be using MariaDB. MariaDB is based on the latest MySQL 5.1, actively maintained (including fixes for bugs reported against MySQL) and packages Percona XtraDB / InnoDB plugin.

I don't even know if "fork" accurately describes Maria, since they are committed to keeping up with current releases of MySQL.

In short: MariaDB 5.1 = MySQL 5.1 + Percona XtraDB + additional useful patches + active development and maintenance

Update late 2011- May 2012: I switched from MariaDB to Percona Server to get to MySQL 5.5 but I intend on switching back once the Maria team has a stable 5.5 based release. I think that everyone who needs to set up a new MySQL installation today should be running Percona Server. If you are using SSDs, you *must* run Percona Server.

2013-2018: Happily ran Percona server 5.6 this whole time.

2018: upgraded to Percona server 5.7 and then almost immediately to MySQL 8.0. [ At this point, I am not knowledgable enough to talk about the differences between MySQL 8, Percona Server 5.7 and MariaDB 10 and I can't say why you might want to choose one over the others ]

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    Doh. Thought I was on Serverfault. How'd this question get here anyway? ;)
    – outcassed
    Sep 14, 2010 at 5:05
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Use MariaDB. They've just released a version lately. Maria engine is also much better than MyISAM. With opensource project, you go where the founder go.

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    I think you're getting confused here. MariaDB is the fork of MySQL. Maria is a storage engine which is a better version of MyISAM, but not yet stable: askmonty.org/wiki/Rename_Maria Jun 9, 2010 at 19:47
  • 1
    Just because a product is not stable != the OP is 'confused'. Mar 10, 2016 at 7:11
  • The response was edited. It said, "MariaDB is a storage engine.." Jun 5, 2020 at 20:21
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Just an update on this. We chose to go with Percona and we can't be happier. Percona guys definitely know their stuff and keep up with the new technologies. Just checkout http://www.mysqlperformanceblog.com/ Top notch software plus top notch people and great support, you can't go wrong.

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I think it's still too early to write off MySQL entirely. I'm not enthusiastic about Sun/Oracle gaining the reins, but I don't have a clear idea what direction they'll take with it. Regardless, I'd wait another year before seriously thinking of switching to a fork. Time will tell which project has the resources and motivation to survive, or if a fork is even necessary.

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Google has a memory library patch out that supposedly improves performance on multi-thread / core mysql installations. Supposedly, the performance bottleneck was in the memory allocation routines, and would manifest itself starting at 4 cores. I'm currently running a dual proc box with 4 cores each, and am having no problems with 5.1.x without the memory library patch.

My biggest suggestion to you would be to install 5.4 and run a benchmark suite against it. If it does the job, go with it. The fragmentation of the various forks does suck, but maybe it will be for the best. At least the founders have money now to fund their own direction... I wouldn't take the advice to follow them blindly though... It took a lot of time and efffort to set up the mysql infrastructure initially, and while it wouldn't hurt to support the team that did it the first time, there is no guarantee they will succeed the second time. So... support them, but don't rely on them until you know you can rely on them.

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If you're upgrading your databases anyway, you should consider other FOSS DBMSes, or data management software systems as well, not just MySQL.

For example, if your DB workload is analytics more than transactions, and data is mostly added in batches, you should consider using MonetDB, a columnar DBMSes which is about 1.5-2 orders of magnitude faster than MySQL when doing analytics-only.

Another option is PostgreSQL. It's more transaction-oriented - like MySQL; in fact, they're similar enough to be proper competitors. There are arguments for preferring PostgreSQL and arguments for preferring a MySQL variant.

On DB-engines.com you can find other potentially-relevant DBMSes, FOSS and closed-source/commercial.

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