Am 05.01.2012 20:22, schrieb Kevin Kofler:
> Akonadi ships its own default MySQL configuration, which is per user. It 
> does not use or require the systemwide instance (by default; it can be 
> configured to connect to a systemwide or even remote MySQL server, but the 
> default is a local per-user instance). There's no administration required at 
> all, Akonadi fires up everything automatically.

does it also run "mysql_upgrade" automatically or is it
supposed to be the road of dead two mysql-major-releases
later?

somehow strange that amarok was crippled down from optional
mysqld-usage to sqlite and now KDE introduces a new mysqld
instance

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