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To subscribe to the main MySQL mailing list, send a message to the
electronic mail address mysql-subscribe@lists.mysql.com.
To unsubscribe from the main MySQL mailing list, send a message to
the electronic mail address mysql-unsubscribe@lists.mysql.com.
Only the address to which you send your messages is significant. The
subject line and the body of the message are ignored.
If your reply address is not valid, you can specify your address explicitly.
Adding a hyphen to the subscribe or unsubscribe command word, followed by
your address with the `@' character in your address replaced by a
`='. For example, to subscribe john@host.domain, send a message
to mysql-subscribe-john=host.domain@lists.mysql.com.
Mail to mysql-subscribe@lists.mysql.com or
ezmlm mailing list processor. Information about ezmlm is available at
the ezmlm Website.
To post a message to the list itself, send your message to
mysql@lists.mysql.com. However, please do not send mail about
subscribing or unsubscribing to mysql@lists.mysql.com, since any
mail sent to that address is distributed automatically to thousands of other
users.
Your local site may have many subscribers to mysql@lists.mysql.com.
If so, it may have a local mailing list, so that messages sent from
lists.mysql.com to your site are propagated to the local list. In such
cases, please contact your system administrator to be added to or dropped
from the local MySQL list.
The following MySQL mailing lists exist:
announce
-
This is for announcement of new versions of MySQL and related
programs. This is a low volume list that we think all MySQL
users should be on.
mysql
-
The main list for general MySQL discussion. Please note that some
topics are better discussed on the more-specialized lists. If you post to the
wrong list, you may not get an answer!
mysql-digest
-
The
mysql list in digest form. That means you get all individual
messages, sent as one large mail message once a day.
java
-
Discussion about MySQL and Java. Mostly about the JDBC drivers.
java-digest
-
A digest version of the
java list.
win32
-
All things concerning MySQL on Microsoft operating systems such as
Windows NT.
win32-digest
-
A digest version of the
win32 list.
myodbc
-
All things concerning connecting to MySQL with ODBC.
myodbc-digest
-
A digest version of the
myodbc list.
msql-mysql-modules
-
A list about the Perl support in MySQL.
msql-mysql-modules-digest
-
A digest version of the
msql-mysql-modules list.
developer
-
A list for people who work on the MySQL code.
developer-digest
-
A digest version of the
developer list.
You subscribe or unsubscribe to all lists in the same way as described
above. In your subscribe or unsubscribe message, just put the appropriate
mailing list name rather than mysql. For example, to subscribe to or
unsubscribe from the myodbc list, send a message to
Before posting a bug report or question, please do the following:
If you can't find an answer in the manual or the archives, check with your
local MySQL expert. If you still can't find an answer to your
question, go ahead and read the next section about how to send mail to
Writing a good bug report takes patience, but doing it right the first time
saves time for us and for you. This section will help you write your report
correctly so that you don't waste your time doing things that may not help us
much or at all.
We encourage everyone to use the mysqlbug script to generate a bug
report (or a report about any problem), if possible. mysqlbug can be
found in the `scripts' directory in the source distribution, or, for a
binary distribution, in the `bin' directory under your MySQL
installation directory. If you are unable to use mysqlbug, you should
still include all the necessary information listed in this section.
The mysqlbug script helps you generate a report by determining much
of the following information automatically, but if something important is
missing, please include it with your message! Please read this section
carefully and make sure that all the information described here is included
in your report.
Remember that it is possible to respond to a message containing too much
information, but not to one containing too little. Often people omit facts
because they think they know the cause of a problem and assume that some
details don't matter. A good principle is: if you are in doubt about stating
something, state it! It is a thousand times faster and less troublesome to
write a couple of lines more in your report than to be forced to ask again
and wait for the answer because you didn't include enough information the
first time.
The most common errors are that people don't indicate the version number of
the MySQL distribution they are using, or don't indicate what
platform they have MySQL installed on (including the platform
version number). This is highly relevant information and in 99 cases out of
100 the bug report is useless without it! Very often we get questions like
``Why doesn't this work for me?'' and then we find that the feature
requested wasn't implemented in that MySQL version, or that a bug
described in a report has been fixed already in newer MySQL
versions. Sometimes the error is platform dependent; in such cases, it is
next to impossible to fix anything without knowing the operating system and
the version number of the platform.
Remember also to provide information about your compiler, if it is related to
the problem. Often people find bugs in compilers and think the problem is
MySQL related. Most compilers are under development all the time and
become better version by version, too. To determine whether or not your
problem depends on your compiler, we need to know what compiler is used.
Note that every compiling problem should be regarded as a bug report and
reported accordingly.
It is most helpful when a good description of the problem is included in the
bug report. That is, a good example of all the things you did that led to
the problem and the problem itself exactly described. The best reports are
those that include a full example showing how to reproduce the bug or
problem.
If a program produces an error message, it is very important to include the
message in your report! If we try to search for something from the archives
using programs, it is better that the error message reported exactly matches
the one that the program produces. (Even the case sensitivity should be
observed!) You should never try to remember what the error message was;
instead, copy and paste the entire message into your report!
If you have a problem with MyODBC, you should try to genereate a MyODBC
trace file. See section 16.6 Reporting problems with MyODBC.
Please include the following information in your report:
If you are a support customer, please cross-post the bug report to
the appropriate mailing list to see if someone else has experienced (and
perhaps solved) the problem.
For information on reporting bugs in MyODBC, see section 16.2 How to report problems with MyODBC.
For solutions to some common problems, see See section 18 Problems and common errors.
When answers are sent to you individually and not to the mailing list,
it is considered good etiquette to summarize the answers and send the
summary to the mailing list so that others may have the benefit of
responses you received that helped you solve your problem!
If you consider your answer to have broad interest, you may want to post it
to the mailing list instead of replying directly to the individual who
asked. Try to make your answer general enough that people other than the
original poster may benefit from it. When you post to the list, please make
sure that your answer is not a duplication of a previous answer.
Try to summarize the essential part of the question in your reply; don't feel
obliged to quote the entire original message.
Please don't post mail messages from your browser with HTML mode turned on!
Many users doesn't read mail with a browser!
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