Setting up MariaDB
The following sections describe how to replace the default H2 databases with MariaDB, which is a drop-in replacement for MySQL:
Follow the steps below to set up MariaDB. See Tested DBMSs for information on the MariaDB versions that we have tested the WSO2 products with. Download, install and start MariaDB on your computer. See https://downloads.mariadb.org/. You can install MariaDB standalone or as a galera cluster for high availability. Database clustering is independent of WSO2 product clustering. For more information on setting up a galera cluster, see the MariaDB Galera Cluster documentation. For instructions on installing MariaDB on MAC OS, go to Homebrew. Enter the password when prompted. In most systems, there is no default root password. Press the Enter key without typing anything if you have not changed the default root password. Download the MySQL Java connector JAR file, and copy it to the < Note that you must use the MySQL connector that is compatible with your MariaDB version. For example, A datasource is used to establish the connection to a database. By default, Follow the steps below to change the type of the default Edit the default datasource configuration in the < Do not change the datasource name The elements in the above configuration are described below: testOnBorrow This property is not applicable to the Carbon database in WSO2 products because auto committing is usually handled at the code level, i.e., the default auto commit configuration specified for the RDBMS driver will be effective instead of this property element. Typically, auto committing is enabled for an RDBMS drivers by default. When auto committing is enabled, each SQL statement will be committed to the database as an individual transaction, as opposed to committing multiple statements as a single transaction. For more information on other parameters that can be defined in the Follow the steps below to configure new datasources to point to the new databases you create to manage registry and/or user management data separately. If you are setting up a separate database to store registry-related data, update the following configurations in the < If you are setting up a separate database to store user management data, update the following configurations in the < To create the database tables, connect to the database that you created earlier and run the following scripts. To create tables in the registry and user manager database ( You may have to enter the password for each command when prompted. Restart the server. You can create database tables automatically when starting the product for the first time by using the For Windows: For Linux: Setting up the database and users
mysql -u root -p
create database regdb;
GRANT ALL ON regdb.* TO regadmin@localhost IDENTIFIED BY "regadmin";
FLUSH PRIVILEGES;
quit;
Setting up the drivers
PRODUCT_HOME>/repository/components/lib/
directory.mysql-connector-java-5.1.36-bin.jar
is compatible with MariaDB version 10.0.20. See Tested DBMSs for information on which version of a WSO2 product has been tested for compatibility with which version of MariaDB and MySQL connector. Setting up datasource configurations
WSO2_CARBON_DB
datasource is used to connect to the default H2 database, which stores registry and user management data. After setting up the MariaDB database to replace the default H2 database, either change the default configurations of the WSO2_CARBON_DB
datasource, or configure a new datasource to point it to the new database as explained below. Changing the default WSO2_CARBON_DB datasource
WSO2_CARBON_DB
datasource.PRODUCT_HOME>/repository/conf/datasources/m
aster-datasources.xml
file as shown below.WSO2_CARBON_DB
in the below configuration.<datasource>
<name>WSO2_CARBON_DB</name>
<description>The datasource used for registry and user manager</description>
<jndiConfig>
<name>jdbc/WSO2CarbonDB</name>
</jndiConfig>
<definition type="RDBMS">
<configuration>
<url>jdbc:mysql://localhost:3306/regdb</url>
<username>regadmin</username>
<password>regadmin</password>
<defaultAutoCommit>false</defaultAutoCommit>
<driverClassName>com.mysql.jdbc.Driver</driverClassName>
<maxActive>80</maxActive>
<maxWait>60000</maxWait>
<minIdle>5</minIdle>
<testOnBorrow>true</testOnBorrow>
<validationQuery>SELECT 1</validationQuery>
<validationInterval>30000</validationInterval>
<defaultAutoCommit>false</defaultAutoCommit>
</configuration>
</definition>
</datasource>
Element Description url The URL of the database. The default port for MariaDB is 3306 username and password The name and password of the database user driverClassName The class name of the database driver maxActive The maximum number of active connections that can be allocated at the same time from this pool. Enter any negative value to denote an unlimited number of active connections. maxWait The maximum number of milliseconds that the pool will wait (when there are no available connections) for a connection to be returned before throwing an exception. You can enter zero or a negative value to wait indefinitely. minIdle The minimum number of active connections that can remain idle in the pool without extra ones being created, or enter zero to create none. The indication of whether objects will be validated before being borrowed from the pool. If the object fails to validate, it will be dropped from the pool, and another attempt will be made to borrow another. validationQuery The SQL query that will be used to validate connections from this pool before returning them to the caller. validationInterval The indication to avoid excess validation, and only run validation at the most, at this frequency (time in milliseconds). If a connection is due for validation, but has been validated previously within this interval, it will not be validated again. defaultAutoCommit <PRODUCT_HOME>/repository/conf/
datasources/ master-datasources.xml
file, see Tomcat JDBC Connection Pool. Configuring new datasources to manage registry or user management data
WSO2_CARBON_DB
datasource above to the <PRODUCT_HOME>/repository/conf/datasources/
master-datasources.xml
file . Change its elements with your custom values. For instructions, see Setting up datasource configurations.PRODUCT_HOME>/repository/conf/
<dbConfig name="wso2registry">
<dataSource>jdbc/MY_DATASOURCE_NAME</dataSource>
</dbConfig>
PRODUCT_HOME>/repository/conf/
user-mgt.xml
file.<Configuration>
<Property name="dataSource">jdbc/MY_DATASOURCE_NAME</Property>
</Configuration>
Creating database tables
WSO2CARBON_DB
), use the below script:mysql -u regadmin -p -Dregdb < '<PRODUCT_HOME>/dbscripts/mysql.sql';
-Dsetup
parameter as follows:<PRODUCT_HOME>/bin/wso2server.bat -Dsetup
<PRODUCT_HOME>/bin/wso2server.sh -Dsetup
Changing the identity/storage databases
The topics above show how to change the WSO2_CARBON_DB
, which is used to store registry and user manager information. If you set up a separate database for identity/storage related data, the instructions are the same. In summary:
Add the datasource to the
master-datasources.xml
file.Create the database tables using the following scripts:
For the identity database Use
<DAS_HOME>/dbscripts/identity/mysql.sql
For the storage database Use
<DAS_HOME>/dbscripts/storage/mysql.sql