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Introduction/Notes
==================

This module manages your mysql resources. 

Requirements
------------

The puppetlabs-stdlib module is required for some functions used in this module.

If you are wanting munin integration, you will need the munin module installed.

If you are wanting shorewall integration, you will need the shorewall module
installed.

If you are wanting nagios integration, you will need the nagios module
installed, specifically it must have nagios::plugin::deploy functionality. 

You will need to have activated storedconfigs on the puppetmaster.

Special Notes
=============

By using this module, the following users will be automatically removed, if they
exist: "root@${fqdn}", "[email protected]", "@${fqdn}", "@localhost", "@%"

If you require any of these, you can subclass class
mysql::server::account_security to override this.

Mysql Server
============

On a node where you wish to have a mysql server installed, you should include
mysql::server, for example:

node foo {
  class{'mysql::server':
    root_password => 'foo',
  }
}

This will manage the necessary directories and configuration files, it will
install the mysql client program and set the root password to 'foo',
along with setting a /root/.my.cnf for various module operations. It will also
make sure the mysql service is running, and setup all the databases, users and
grant tables.

The my.cnf file will installed from one of many possible places, see
manifests/server/base.pp for possible locations for managing this.

Backups
-------

If you wish to automatically setup a cronjob to backup your databases, you can
set the "$mysql_backup_cron = true" variable. This will setup a cronjob to do a
mysqldump at 1am of all the databases on the system and put them in
/var/backups/mysql by default. You can override this location by specifying
$mysql_backup_dir.

Optimizing tables
-----------------

If you wish mysql to periodically optimize tables, set the
"$mysql_optimize_cron = true" variable before you include mysql::server.

Munin
-----

If you wish to use munin you need to set the variables use_munin to "true" in
hiera, before you include mysql::server. This will be used to
setup a mysql user for munin, with reduced privileges to allow for the various
munin graphs to be setup and queried. The munin graphs are: mysql_bytes,
mysql_queries, mysql_slowqueries and mysql_threads. NOTE: The
munin_mysql_password will be taken from what you passed to the mysql::server
class, but it is not necessary on Debian systems as it will handled with
Debian's /etc/mysql/debian.cnf.

Nagios
------

If you wish nagios to check mysql, you should set the variable "use_nagios" to 
"true" in hiera along with the "nagios_check_mysql" variable to "true". A 
password for the nagios mysql user will be created for you with reduced privileges
used only for nagios checks. This will be what you passed as nagios_password_hash
to mysql::server and should be a mysql md5 hash. These should be set before you
include mysql::server.

Unless you specify otherwise, the default nagios check which will be performed
is the basic 'check_mysql' nagios plugin which simply tests connectivity to a
MySQL server. You can specify more advanced mysql health checks as follows:

mysql::server::nagios::check_health { [ 'connection-time', 'uptime', 'threads-connected', 
				        'slave-lag', 'slave-io-running', 'slave-sql-running' ]:  }

See the files/nagios/check_mysql_health script for the various mysql health
checks that you can perform. Additionally, see the define "check_health" in
manifests/server/nagios.pp for various options that you can pass to check_health. 

Firewall
--------

If you wish to have firewall rules setup automatically for you, using shorewall,
you will need to set the hiera variable "use_shorewall" to "true". See the
shorewall module for more information about how this works.


Client
======

On a node where you wish to have the mysql client managed, you can 'include
mysql::client' in the node definition. This will install the appropriate
package.

You can also 'include mysql::client::ruby' if you want the 'libmysql-ruby'
libraries installed.