There is no my. Cnf by default. As such, MySQL starts with all of the default settings.
If you want to create your own my. Cnf to override any defaults, place it at /etc/my.cnf.
There is no my. Cnf by default. As such, MySQL starts with all of the default settings.
If you want to create your own my. Cnf to override any defaults, place it at /etc/my.cnf. Also, you can run mysql --help and look through it for the conf locations listed.
One way to find out: sudo /usr/libexec/locate. Updatedb # wait a few minutes for it to finish locate my.cnf.
I believe the answer is no. Installing one in ~/.my. Cnf or /usr/local/etc seems to be the preferred solution.
On my MBP only /etc/my. Cnf allows me affect the Homebrew installation of mysql. – ewalshe Dec 22 '11 at 1:11.
The homebrew mysql contains sample configuration files in the installations's support-files folder. Ls $(brew --prefix mysql)/support-files/my-* If you need to change the default settings you can use one of these as a starting point. Sudo cp $(brew --prefix mysql)/support-files/my-small.
Cnf /etc/my.cnf.
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