Setup Database
COmanage Registry is tested against PostgreSQL and MySQL, but should work against any database supported by CakePHP.
Use InnoDB Storage Engine With MySQL
If you are using MySQL, use the InnoDB storage engine, not MyISAM.
To set this as the default storage engine on a Unix-like system, add the following to /etc/my.cnf
and restart mysql before setting up the database tables:
# Set default engine to InnoDB default-storage-engine=InnoDB
(You can also set the storage engine on a per-session or per-table basis, see the MySQL documentation for details.)
Create a new database for COmanage Registry. You can name the new database whatever you like since you will configure the Registry below with the name of the database.
Configure COmanage Registry
Copy the file registry-current/app/Config/database.php.default
to registry-current/local/Config/database.php
. (For versions prior to v1.0.0, copy the file to registry-current/app/Config/database.php
instead.)
Edit this file with your database connection information, including the password needed to connect to the database.
Prefix Must Be cm_
Currently, the prefix
value must be set to "cm_
". (CO-174).
var $default = array( 'driver' => 'Database/Mysql', 'persistent' => false, 'host' => 'localhost', 'login' => 'registry_user', 'password' => 'a good password goes here', 'database' => 'registry', 'prefix' => 'cm_', );
var $default = array( 'driver' => 'Database/Postgres', 'persistent' => false, 'host' => 'localhost', 'login' => 'registry_user', 'password' => 'a good password goes here', 'database' => 'registry', 'prefix' => 'cm_', );
Install Database Schema
Set up the database schema.
In order to avoid problems with file ownership, you should run console commands as the web server user. Otherwise, make sure the cache directory (wherever app/tmp
points to) and all of its subdirectories and files are writeable by the web server. chown -R
and chgrp -R
may be in order after running console commands.
$ cd app $ su -c "./Console/cake database" ${APACHE_USER} [...] Database schema update successful
Error: Database connection "Mysql" is missing, or could not be created
This error indicates the command line php
utility can't find the appropriate PDO library. Go back and make sure your PHP was built correctly.