Zitat von Carsten Pache pa...@vgr-gruppe.de:
An additional option is that after upgrading the database server it
returned to the default database config file which in a lot of cases
is optimized for machines with a few MB (yes MB) of memory.
I do not remember that I had to change the
Only applicable to InnoDB tables, but then you ARE using InnoDB, not
MyISAM right? *Right?*
Sorry that I have to ask this, but: How do I know if my MySQL installation is
using InnoDB tables?
Edit /etc/my.cnf to change innodb_log-file-size and
innodb_log_files_in_group.
Current values
An additional option is that after upgrading the database server it
returned to the default database config file which in a lot of cases
is optimized for machines with a few MB (yes MB) of memory.
I do not remember that I had to change the defaut database
configuration when I