Date: Sat, 14 Jan 2012 17:18:48 -0800 From: Paul Beard <paulbeard@gmail.com> Cc: FreeBSD-questions <questions@Freebsd.org> Subject: database apps that ignore sockets? [was: Solution: mysqld fails to run, can't create/find mysql.sock] Message-ID: <1954AA20-BE6F-4F04-A770-49ECFA405B5D@gmail.com> In-Reply-To: <7325D262-C6EB-42DB-870D-D3E2FAC9D0C1@mac.com> References: <0F82362E-2694-4EBC-B019-DE2F2C160D45@gmail.com> <7325D262-C6EB-42DB-870D-D3E2FAC9D0C1@mac.com>
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--Apple-Mail=_33839377-F65C-42B1-87D3-236E5F34AB84 Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable Content-Type: text/plain; charset=windows-1252 On Jan 14, 2012, at 11:15 AM, Chuck Swiger wrote: > Anyway, doesn't the mysql port want to keep the socket under = /var/run/mysql/mysqld.sock or some such, to avoid issues with /tmp? Turns out some applications won't work if you move the socket if they = are configured to access localhost. Seems like a misunderstanding of = networking if you can specify a port number in a configuration file but = the application looks to the filesystem for the socket. There is no way = to specify a file location so it seems doomed to fail =97 as it did.=20 The apps in question are net-mgmt/cacti and net-mgmt/cacti-spine.=20 -- Paul Beard Are you trying to win an argument or solve a problem?=20 --Apple-Mail=_33839377-F65C-42B1-87D3-236E5F34AB84--
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