MySQL HeatWave is a fully managed database service for transactions, real- time analytics across data warehouses and data lakes, and machine learning services, without the complexity, latency, and cost of ETL duplication. It is available on OCI, AWS, and Azure. 

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Over 2000 ISVs, OEMs, and VARs rely on MySQL as their products' embedded database to make their applications, hardware and appliances more competitive, bring them to market faster, and lower their cost of goods sold. 

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A database is a structured collection of data. It may be anything from a simple shopping list to a picture gallery or the vast amounts of information in a corporate network. To add, access, and process data stored in a computer database, you need a database management system such as MySQL Server. Since computers are very good at handling large amounts of data, database management systems play a central role in computing, as standalone utilities, or as parts of other applications.

Open Source means that it is possible for anyone to use and modify the software. Anybody can download the MySQL software from the Internet and use it without paying anything. If you wish, you may study the source code and change it to suit your needs. The MySQL software uses the GPL (GNU General Public License), , to define what you may and may not do with the software in different situations. If you feel uncomfortable with the GPL or need to embed MySQL code into a commercial application, you can buy a commercially licensed version from us. See the MySQL Licensing Overview for more information ( ).

If that is what you are looking for, you should give it a try. MySQL Server can run comfortably on a desktop or laptop, alongside your other applications, web servers, and so on, requiring little or no attention. If you dedicate an entire machine to MySQL, you can adjust the settings to take advantage of all the memory, CPU power, and I/O capacity available. MySQL can also scale up to clusters of machines, networked together.

MySQL Server was originally developed to handle large databases much faster than existing solutions and has been successfully used in highly demanding production environments for several years. Although under constant development, MySQL Server today offers a rich and useful set of functions. Its connectivity, speed, and security make MySQL Server highly suited for accessing databases on the Internet.

The MySQL Database Software is a client/server system that consists of a multithreaded SQL server that supports different back ends, several different client programs and libraries, administrative tools, and a wide range of application programming interfaces (APIs).

MySQL HeatWave is a fully managed database service, powered by the HeatWave in-memory query accelerator. It is the only cloud service that combines transactions, real-time analytics across data warehouses and data lakes, and machine learning in one MySQL Database; without the complexity, latency, risks, and cost of ETL duplication. It is available on OCI, AWS, and Azure. Learn more at:

Yeah, I was just hoping there was some sort of workaround. Looks like we'll be moving to PostgreSQL. Not a big deal as there are really good migration tools out there but it would be nice if Esri supported MySQL as well. I feel like it's common enough to warrant compatibility.

I had completely misunderstood what the Microsoft OLE DB Provider for ODBC Drivers was for. If I choose that option and select the MySQL data source that I made through MySQL's OLE DB connection it all works.

I guess that option is like a wrapper or whatever to allow connections to other types of database. So if you're in my situation and need to connect to a MySQL server, try the "Microsoft OLE DB Provider for ODBC Drivers" option!

@KieranClark : I followed your advice as well as post from @KenGalliher1 and I've established a MySQL connection through ArcGIS Pro (2.7.1) but I get an error when I try to add a table to my ArcGIS Pro session:

Can somebody please provide detailed instructions on how to connect ArcGIS Desktop to a MySQL database? I've seen other threads where people say they've done it. I have tried it myself, downloaded the ODBC driver, but have not been able to get it to work.

Is this workflow still relevant in ArcCatalog 10.7.x? I had an OLE DB connection that still works in 10.5.x, but the MySQL tables do not show up in ArcCatalog 10.7.x when using the same drivers and connection parameters.

The error you shared looks like your existing database requires some specific credentials or password to connect to MySQL. Maybe these connection details are listed in cPanel (mentioned in another of your posts)?

Feel free to share more about your use cases (maybe they are valid). But my overall suspicion would be that you probably want something else than Coda if you need to connect it to SQL and anything that resembles a 2-way near-realtime data syncs.

Thank you very much @Paul_Danyliuk , it is a shame not to be able to do it from coda.io, in my case I wanted to connect to the FACTURAPLUS 2016 database (the db is acces) so that when the client creates a new invoice in FACTURAPLUS it is added to a coda table and from coda create a workflow with warehouse. I only want to be able to read the facturaplus data but I wanted to do it without using zapier to avoid intermediaries.

You can use Google script with trigger (hourly, daily, etc) to get the data from your table and save it to your SQL server. If you need to refresh the data more often then you can use AWS lambda. You can refresh the db every minute.

A simpler workflow could be to paste the data into Coda directly in order to avoid to store the data in a spreadsheet. In this way, you save the data in two places, DataBase + Coda, not DataBase + SpreadSheet + Coda. If you still need a spreadsheet, you can try to save the data in the spreadsheet, and in Coda directly without the need to get the data from the spreadsheet

I downloaded XAMPP about a month ago and it was working just fine. Today I installed a voice recognition software and then restarted my computer. Ever since, MySQL won't start in my manager-osx application. It doesn't throw me an in the application log. This is what it says:

check the err log on your /Applications/XAMPP/xamppfiles/var/mysql/ with filename like your_machine_name.local.err, if you find something like: "Attempted to open a previously opened tablespace. Previous tablespace ... uses space ID"

I monitored the running processes by running top in one terminal window. Then I killed mysqld via sudo killall mysqld (screw the PID ;-) ) in another and restarted via sudo /Applications/XAMPP/xamppfiles/bin/mysql.server start.

There's been a lot of answer, but I think I found what is causing it, at least for me. It looks like if you put your computer to sleep (or it falls asleep on its own), when it reopens, it tries to open the the mysql process again. At one point I looked at my activity monitor and I had 5 instances running - killing all of them and then starting mysql works.

It can cause because of the software you installed or may be any other software which is using the same port 3306. This 3306 port is used by the Mysql in XAMPP. Similar kind of problem I faced for Apache. I was running skype and trying to run the XAMPP but the skype uses the same port as Apache so it was not working. Then I sign out from skype then the port was free and the apache started. So you should look for the software in you laptop which is blocking or making busy this port. Free that port by closing the software and then run XAMPP and It will work. 152ee80cbc

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