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Commit 25a4309e authored by Dries Buytaert's avatar Dries Buytaert
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- Patch ##1041474 by 1V: Fixed INSTALL.pgsql.txt and INSTALL.mysql.txt cleanup...

- Patch ##1041474 by 1V: Fixed INSTALL.pgsql.txt and INSTALL.mysql.txt cleanup of various grammatical errors.
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......@@ -3,10 +3,10 @@
CREATE THE MySQL DATABASE
--------------------------
This step is only necessary if you don't already have a database set-up (e.g. by
your host). In the following examples, 'username' is an example MySQL user which
has the CREATE and GRANT privileges. Use the appropriate user name for your
system.
This step is only necessary if you don't already have a database set up (e.g.,
by your host). In the following examples, 'username' is an example MySQL user
which has the CREATE and GRANT privileges. Use the appropriate user name for
your system.
First, you must create a new database for your Drupal site (here, 'databasename'
is the name of the new database):
......
......@@ -7,38 +7,39 @@ Note that the database must be created with UTF-8 (Unicode) encoding.
1. CREATE DATABASE USER
This step is only necessary if you don't already have a user set up (e.g.
by your host) or you want to create new user for use with Drupal only. The
following command creates a new user named "username" and asks for a
password for that user:
This step is only necessary if you don't already have a user set up (e.g., by
your host), or want to create a new user for use with Drupal only. The
following command creates a new user named 'username' and asks for a password
for that user:
createuser --pwprompt --encrypted --no-createrole --no-createdb username
If there are no errors then the command was successful
If there are no errors, then the command was successful.
2. CREATE THE DRUPAL DATABASE
2. CREATE DRUPAL DATABASE
This step is only necessary if you don't already have a database set up (e.g.
by your host) or you want to create new database for use with Drupal only.
The following command creates a new database named "databasename", which is
owned by previously created "username":
This step is only necessary if you don't already have a database set up
(e.g., by your host) or want to create a new database for use with Drupal
only. The following command creates a new database named 'databasename',
which is owned by the previously created 'username':
createdb --encoding=UTF8 --owner=username databasename
If there are no errors then the command was successful
If there are no errors, then the command was successful.
3. CREATE A SCHEMA OR SCHEMAS (Optional advanced)
3. CREATE SCHEMA OR SCHEMAS (Optional advanced step)
Drupal will run across different schemas within your database if you so wish.
By default, Drupal runs inside the 'public' schema but you can use $db_prefix
inside settings.php to define a schema for Drupal to inside of or specify tables
that are shared inside of a separate schema. Drupal will not create schemas for
you, infact the user that Drupal runs as should not be allowed to. You'll need
execute the SQL below as a superuser (such as a postgres user) and replace
'drupaluser' with the username that Drupal uses to connect to PostgreSQL with
and replace schema_name with a schema name you wish to use such as 'shared':
Drupal will run across different schemas within your database if you so wish.
By default, Drupal runs inside the 'public' schema but you can use $db_prefix
inside settings.php to define a schema for Drupal to run inside of, or
specify tables that are shared inside of a separate schema. Drupal will not
create schemas for you. In fact, the user that Drupal runs as should not be
allowed to do this. You'll need to execute the SQL below as a superuser,
replace 'username' with the username that Drupal uses to connect to
PostgreSQL, and replace 'schema_name' with a schema name you wish to use,
such as 'shared':
CREATE SCHEMA schema_name AUTHORIZATION drupaluser;
CREATE SCHEMA schema_name AUTHORIZATION username;
Do this for as many schemas as you need. See default.settings.php for how to
set which tables use which schemas.
Do this for as many schemas as you need. See default.settings.php for
instructions on how to set which tables use which schemas.
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