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You're reading from  MariaDB Cookbook

Product typeBook
Published inMar 2014
Reading LevelBeginner
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ISBN-139781783284399
Edition1st Edition
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Daniel Bartholomew
Daniel Bartholomew
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Daniel Bartholomew

Daniel Bartholomew has been using Linux since 1997 and databases since 1998. In addition to this book, he has also written MariaDB Cookbook, Packt Publishing, and dozens of articles for various magazines, including The Linux Journal, Linux Pro, Ubuntu User, and Tux. He became involved with the MariaDB project shortly after it began in early 2009 and continues to be involved to this day. He currently works for MariaDB, Inc. and splits his time between managing MariaDB releases, documentation, and maintaining various bits and pieces that keep the MariaDB project running smoothly.
Read more about Daniel Bartholomew

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Introduction


With any growing or evolving database, there comes a time when the limitations of MariaDB's built in, full text-searching functionality becomes more of a hindrance than its convenience is worth. At that point, another method is needed to efficiently index and search through our textual data. This is where Sphinx comes in.

There are actually two parts to Sphinx: an external daemon called Sphinx that does the work of building and maintaining the search index using that we use to search our data, and a storage engine component called SphinxSE that is part of MariaDB, which the Sphinx daemon uses to talk to MariaDB. The recipes in this chapter will cover setting up and using both these.

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MariaDB Cookbook
Published in: Mar 2014Publisher: ISBN-13: 9781783284399

Author (1)

author image
Daniel Bartholomew

Daniel Bartholomew has been using Linux since 1997 and databases since 1998. In addition to this book, he has also written MariaDB Cookbook, Packt Publishing, and dozens of articles for various magazines, including The Linux Journal, Linux Pro, Ubuntu User, and Tux. He became involved with the MariaDB project shortly after it began in early 2009 and continues to be involved to this day. He currently works for MariaDB, Inc. and splits his time between managing MariaDB releases, documentation, and maintaining various bits and pieces that keep the MariaDB project running smoothly.
Read more about Daniel Bartholomew