Old Release

This documentation covers an old version of Fedora. Looking for another version? See all documentation.

You are viewing an old version of this page. View the current version.

Compare with Current View Page History

Version 1 Current »

By default, Fedora comes configured to write binary resources (i.e. files) to the file system and RDF resources (i.e. objects) to a LevelDB database. It is often desirable to replace the LevelDB database with a different object store. As of 2016-03-04, the configuration for MySQL or PostgreSQL databases are available within the deployable Fedora war file.  Below are the steps to use MySQL or PostgreSQL instead of LevelDB.

MySQL

  1. Install an instance of MySQL and create a database user account
  2. Run Fedora with the following JAVA_OPTS:

    JAVA_OPTS="${JAVA_OPTS} -Dfcrepo.modeshape.configuration=classpath:/config/jdbc-mysql/repository.json"
    JAVA_OPTS="${JAVA_OPTS} -Dfcrepo.mysql.username=<username>"
    JAVA_OPTS="${JAVA_OPTS} -Dfcrepo.mysql.password=<password>"
    JAVA_OPTS="${JAVA_OPTS} -Dfcrepo.mysql.host=<default=localhost>"
    JAVA_OPTS="${JAVA_OPTS} -Dfcrepo.mysql.port=<default=3306>"

Note, the database and table used by ISPN are auto-created.

PostgreSQL

  1. Install PostgreSQL and create a database called ispn and a user account that can access it
  2. Run Fedora with the following JAVA_OPTS:
JAVA_OPTS="${JAVA_OPTS} -Dfcrepo.modeshape.configuration=classpath:/config/jdbc-postgresql/repository.json"
JAVA_OPTS="${JAVA_OPTS} -Dfcrepo.postgresql.username=<username>"
JAVA_OPTS="${JAVA_OPTS} -Dfcrepo.postgresql.password=<password>"
JAVA_OPTS="${JAVA_OPTS} -Dfcrepo.postgresql.host=<default=localhost>"
JAVA_OPTS="${JAVA_OPTS} -Dfcrepo.postgresql.port=<default=5432>"

Note, the ispn database must be manually created, but the tables will be automatically created.

  • No labels