- About MogDB
- MogDB Introduction
- Comparison Between MogDB and openGauss
- MogDB Release Note
- High Availability and Performance
- Open Source Components
- Usage Limitations
- Terms of Use
- Quick Start
- Installation Guide
- Container Installation
- Standard Installation
- Installation Overview
- Preparing for Installation
- Installing the MogDB
- Verifying the Installation
- Uninstalling the MogDB
- Administrator Guide
- Routine Maintenance
- Primary and Standby Management
- MogHA Management
- MOT Engine
- Introducing MOT
- Using MOT
- Concepts of MOT
- Appendix
- Column-store Tables Management
- Backup and Restoration
- Importing and Exporting Data
- Importing Data
- Exporting Data
- Upgrade Guide
- Common Fault Locating Cases
- Core Fault Locating
- When the TPC-C is running and a disk to be injected is full, the TPC-C stops responding
- Standby Node in the Need Repair (WAL) State
- Insufficient Memory
- Service Startup Failure
- "Error:No space left on device" Is Displayed
- After You Run the du Command to Query Data File Size In the XFS File System, the Query Result Is Greater than the Actual File Size
- File Is Damaged in the XFS File System
- Primary Node Is Hung in Demoting During a Switchover
- Disk Space Usage Reaches the Threshold and the Database Becomes Read-only
- Slow Response to a Query Statement
- Analyzing the Status of a Query Statement
- Forcibly Terminating a Session
- Analyzing Whether a Query Statement Is Blocked
- Low Query Efficiency
- "Lock wait timeout" Is Displayed When a User Executes an SQL Statement
- Table Size Does not Change After VACUUM FULL Is Executed on the Table
- An Error Is Reported When the Table Partition Is Modified
- Different Data Is Displayed for the Same Table Queried By Multiple Users
- When a User Specifies Only an Index Name to Modify the Index, A Message Indicating That the Index Does Not Exist Is Displayed
- Reindexing Fails
- An Error Occurs During Integer Conversion
- "too many clients already" Is Reported or Threads Failed To Be Created in High Concurrency Scenarios
- B-tree Index Faults
- Security Guide
- Database Security Management
- Performance Tuning
- System Optimization
- SQL Optimization
- WDR Snapshot Schema
- Developer Guide
- Application Development Guide
- Development Specifications
- Development Based on JDBC
- Overview
- JDBC Package, Driver Class, and Environment Class
- Development Process
- Loading the Driver
- Connecting to a Database
- Connecting to the Database (Using SSL)
- Running SQL Statements
- Processing Data in a Result Set
- Closing a Connection
- Example: Common Operations
- Example: Retrying SQL Queries for Applications
- Example: Importing and Exporting Data Through Local Files
- Example 2: Migrating Data from a MY Database to MogDB
- Example: Logic Replication Code
- JDBC Interface Reference
- Development Based on ODBC
- Development Based on libpq
- Commissioning
- Appendices
- Stored Procedure
- User Defined Functions
- Application Development Guide
- Tool Reference
- System Catalogs and System Views
- Overview of System Catalogs and System Views
- System Catalogs
- GS_CLIENT_GLOBAL_KEYS
- GS_CLIENT_GLOBAL_KEYS_ARGS
- GS_COLUMN_KEYS
- GS_COLUMN_KEYS_ARGS
- GS_ENCRYPTED_COLUMNS
- GS_OPT_MODEL
- GS_WLM_INSTANCE_HISTORY
- GS_WLM_OPERATOR_INFO
- GS_WLM_PLAN_ENCODING_TABLE
- GS_WLM_PLAN_OPERATOR_INFO
- GS_WLM_USER_RESOURCE_HISTORY
- PG_AGGREGATE
- PG_AM
- PG_AMOP
- PG_AMPROC
- PG_APP_WORKLOADGROUP_MAPPING
- PG_ATTRDEF
- PG_ATTRIBUTE
- PG_AUTHID
- PG_AUTH_HISTORY
- PG_AUTH_MEMBERS
- PG_CAST
- PG_CLASS
- PG_COLLATION
- PG_CONSTRAINT
- PG_CONVERSION
- PG_DATABASE
- PG_DB_ROLE_SETTING
- PG_DEFAULT_ACL
- PG_DEPEND
- PG_DESCRIPTION
- PG_DIRECTORY
- PG_ENUM
- PG_EXTENSION
- PG_EXTENSION_DATA_SOURCE
- PG_FOREIGN_DATA_WRAPPER
- PG_FOREIGN_SERVER
- PG_FOREIGN_TABLE
- PG_INDEX
- PG_INHERITS
- PG_JOB
- PG_JOB_PROC
- PG_LANGUAGE
- PG_LARGEOBJECT
- PG_LARGEOBJECT_METADATA
- PG_NAMESPACE
- PG_OBJECT
- PG_OPCLASS
- PG_OPERATOR
- PG_OPFAMILY
- PG_PARTITION
- PG_PLTEMPLATE
- PG_PROC
- PG_RANGE
- PG_RESOURCE_POOL
- PG_REWRITE
- PG_RLSPOLICY
- PG_SECLABEL
- PG_SHDEPEND
- PG_SHDESCRIPTION
- PG_SHSECLABEL
- PG_STATISTIC
- PG_STATISTIC_EXT
- PG_TABLESPACE
- PG_TRIGGER
- PG_TS_CONFIG
- PG_TS_CONFIG_MAP
- PG_TS_DICT
- PG_TS_PARSER
- PG_TS_TEMPLATE
- PG_TYPE
- PG_USER_MAPPING
- PG_USER_STATUS
- PG_WORKLOAD_GROUP
- PLAN_TABLE_DATA
- STATEMENT_HISTORY
- System Views
- GS_SESSION_CPU_STATISTICS
- GS_SESSION_MEMORY_STATISTICS
- GS_SQL_COUNT
- GS_WLM_OPERATOR_HISTORY
- GS_WLM_OPERATOR_STATISTICS
- GS_WLM_PLAN_OPERATOR_HISTORY
- GS_WLM_REBUILD_USER_RESOURCE_POOL
- GS_WLM_RESOURCE_POOL
- GS_WLM_SESSION_HISTORY
- GS_WLM_SESSION_INFO_ALL
- GS_WLM_USER_INFO
- GS_WLM_SESSION_STATISTICS
- GS_STAT_SESSION_CU
- MPP_TABLES
- PG_AVAILABLE_EXTENSION_VERSIONS
- PG_AVAILABLE_EXTENSIONS
- PG_CURSORS
- PG_EXT_STATS
- PG_GET_INVALID_BACKENDS
- PG_GET_SENDERS_CATCHUP_TIME
- PG_GROUP
- PG_GTT_RELSTATS
- PG_GTT_STATS
- PG_GTT_ATTACHED_PIDS
- PG_INDEXES
- PG_LOCKS
- PG_MATVIEWS
- PG_NODE_ENV
- PG_OS_THREADS
- PG_PREPARED_STATEMENTS
- PG_PREPARED_XACTS
- PG_REPLICATION_SLOTS
- PG_RLSPOLICIES
- PG_ROLES
- PG_RULES
- PG_SECLABELS
- PG_SESSION_WLMSTAT
- PG_SESSION_IOSTAT
- PG_SETTINGS
- PG_SHADOW
- PG_STATS
- PG_STAT_ACTIVITY
- PG_STAT_ALL_INDEXES
- PG_STAT_ALL_TABLES
- PG_STAT_BAD_BLOCK
- PG_STAT_BGWRITER
- PG_STAT_DATABASE
- PG_STAT_DATABASE_CONFLICTS
- PG_STAT_USER_FUNCTIONS
- PG_STAT_USER_INDEXES
- PG_STAT_USER_TABLES
- PG_STAT_REPLICATION
- PG_STAT_SYS_INDEXES
- PG_STAT_SYS_TABLES
- PG_STAT_XACT_ALL_TABLES
- PG_STAT_XACT_SYS_TABLES
- PG_STAT_XACT_USER_FUNCTIONS
- PG_STAT_XACT_USER_TABLES
- PG_STATIO_ALL_INDEXES
- PG_STATIO_ALL_SEQUENCES
- PG_STATIO_ALL_TABLES
- PG_STATIO_SYS_INDEXES
- PG_STATIO_SYS_SEQUENCES
- PG_STATIO_SYS_TABLES
- PG_STATIO_USER_INDEXES
- PG_STATIO_USER_SEQUENCES
- PG_STATIO_USER_TABLES
- PG_THREAD_WAIT_STATUS
- PG_TABLES
- PG_TDE_INFO
- PG_TIMEZONE_NAMES
- PG_TOTAL_USER_RESOURCE_INFO
- PG_USER
- PG_USER_MAPPINGS
- PG_VIEWS
- PG_WLM_STATISTICS
- PLAN_TABLE
- GS_FILE_STAT
- GS_OS_RUN_INFO
- GS_REDO_STAT
- GS_SESSION_MEMORY
- GS_SESSION_MEMORY_DETAIL
- GS_SESSION_STAT
- GS_SESSION_TIME
- GS_THREAD_MEMORY_DETAIL
- GS_TOTAL_MEMORY_DETAIL
- PG_TIMEZONE_ABBREVS
- PG_TOTAL_USER_RESOURCE_INFO_OID
- PG_VARIABLE_INFO
- GS_INSTANCE_TIME
- Functions and Operators
- Logical Operators
- Comparison Operators
- Character Processing Functions and Operators
- Binary String Functions and Operators
- Bit String Functions and Operators
- Mode Matching Operators
- Mathematical Functions and Operators
- Date and Time Processing Functions and Operators
- Type Conversion Functions
- Geometric Functions and Operators
- Network Address Functions and Operators
- Text Search Functions and Operators
- JSON Functions
- SEQUENCE Functions
- Array Functions and Operators
- Range Functions and Operators
- Aggregate Functions
- Window Functions
- Security Functions
- Encrypted Equality Functions
- Set Returning Functions
- Conditional Expression Functions
- System Information Functions
- System Administration Functions
- Statistics Information Functions
- Trigger Functions
- Global Temporary Table Functions
- AI Feature Functions
- Other System Functions
- Supported Data Types
- SQL Syntax
- ABORT
- ALTER DATABASE
- ALTER DATA SOURCE
- ALTER DEFAULT PRIVILEGES
- ALTER DIRECTORY
- ALTER FOREIGN TABLE
- ALTER FUNCTION
- ALTER GROUP
- ALTER INDEX
- ALTER LARGE OBJECT
- ALTER MATERIALIZED VIEW
- ALTER ROLE
- ALTER ROW LEVEL SECURITY POLICY
- ALTER RULE
- ALTER SCHEMA
- ALTER SEQUENCE
- ALTER SERVER
- ALTER SESSION
- ALTER SYNONYM
- ALTER SYSTEM KILL SESSION
- ALTER SYSTEM SET
- ALTER TABLE
- ALTER TABLE PARTITION
- ALTER TABLESPACE
- ALTER TEXT SEARCH CONFIGURATION
- ALTER TEXT SEARCH DICTIONARY
- ALTER TRIGGER
- ALTER TYPE
- ALTER USER
- ALTER USER MAPPING
- ALTER VIEW
- ANALYZE | ANALYSE
- BEGIN
- CALL
- CHECKPOINT
- CLOSE
- CLUSTER
- COMMENT
- COMMIT | END
- COMMIT PREPARED
- COPY
- CREATE CLIENT MASTER KEY
- CREATE COLUMN ENCRYPTION KEY
- CREATE DATABASE
- CREATE DATA SOURCE
- CREATE DIRECTORY
- CREATE FOREIGN TABLE
- CREATE FUNCTION
- CREATE GROUP
- CREATE INDEX
- CREATE MATERIALIZED VIEW
- CREATE ROW LEVEL SECURITY POLICY
- CREATE PROCEDURE
- CREATE ROLE
- CREATE RULE
- CREATE SCHEMA
- CREATE SEQUENCE
- CREATE SERVER
- CREATE SYNONYM
- CREATE TABLE
- CREATE TABLE AS
- CREATE TABLE PARTITION
- CREATE TABLESPACE
- CREATE TEXT SEARCH CONFIGURATION
- CREATE TEXT SEARCH DICTIONARY
- CREATE TRIGGER
- CREATE TYPE
- CREATE USER
- CREATE USER MAPPING
- CREATE VIEW
- CURSOR
- DEALLOCATE
- DECLARE
- DELETE
- DO
- DROP CLIENT MASTER KEY
- DROP COLUMN ENCRYPTION KEY
- DROP DATABASE
- DROP DATA SOURCE
- DROP DIRECTORY
- DROP FOREIGN TABLE
- DROP FUNCTION
- DROP GROUP
- DROP INDEX
- DROP MATERIALIZED VIEW
- DROP OWNED
- DROP ROW LEVEL SECURITY POLICY
- DROP PROCEDURE
- DROP ROLE
- DROP RULE
- DROP SCHEMA
- DROP SEQUENCE
- DROP SERVER
- DROP SYNONYM
- DROP TABLE
- DROP TABLESPACE
- DROP TEXT SEARCH CONFIGURATION
- DROP TEXT SEARCH DICTIONARY
- DROP TRIGGER
- DROP TYPE
- DROP USER
- DROP USER MAPPING
- DROP VIEW
- EXECUTE
- EXPLAIN
- EXPLAIN PLAN
- FETCH
- GRANT
- INSERT
- LOCK
- MOVE
- MERGE INTO
- PREPARE
- PREPARE TRANSACTION
- REASSIGN OWNED
- REFRESH MATERIALIZED VIEW
- REINDEX
- RELEASE SAVEPOINT
- RESET
- REVOKE
- ROLLBACK
- ROLLBACK PREPARED
- ROLLBACK TO SAVEPOINT
- SAVEPOINT
- SELECT
- SELECT INTO
- SET
- SET CONSTRAINTS
- SET ROLE
- SET SESSION AUTHORIZATION
- SET TRANSACTION
- SHOW
- SHUTDOW
- START TRANSACTION
- TRUNCATE
- UPDATE
- VACUUM
- VALUES
- GUC Parameters
- GUC Parameter Usage
- File Location
- Connection and Authentication
- Resource Consumption
- Parallel Import
- Write Ahead Log
- HA Replication
- Memory Table
- Query Planning
- Error Reporting and Logging
- Alarm Detection
- Statistics During the Database Running
- Load Management
- Automatic Vacuuming
- Default Settings of Client Connection
- Lock Management
- Version and Platform Compatibility
- Faut Tolerance
- Connection Pool Parameters
- MogDB Transaction
- Developer Options
- Auditing
- Upgrade Parameters
- Miscellaneous Parameters
- Wait Events
- Query
- System Performance Snapshot
- Equality Query in a Fully-encrypted Database
- Global Temporary Table
- Appendix
- DBE_PERF
- DBE_PERF Overview
- OS
- Instance
- Memory
- File
- Object
- STAT_USER_TABLES
- SUMMARY_STAT_USER_TABLES
- GLOBAL_STAT_USER_TABLES
- STAT_USER_INDEXES
- SUMMARY_STAT_USER_INDEXES
- GLOBAL_STAT_USER_INDEXES
- STAT_SYS_TABLES
- SUMMARY_STAT_SYS_TABLES
- GLOBAL_STAT_SYS_TABLES
- STAT_SYS_INDEXES
- SUMMARY_STAT_SYS_INDEXES
- GLOBAL_STAT_SYS_INDEXES
- STAT_ALL_TABLES
- SUMMARY_STAT_ALL_TABLES
- GLOBAL_STAT_ALL_TABLES
- STAT_ALL_INDEXES
- SUMMARY_STAT_ALL_INDEXES
- GLOBAL_STAT_ALL_INDEXES
- STAT_DATABASE
- SUMMARY_STAT_DATABASE
- GLOBAL_STAT_DATABASE
- STAT_DATABASE_CONFLICTS
- SUMMARY_STAT_DATABASE_CONFLICTS
- GLOBAL_STAT_DATABASE_CONFLICTS
- STAT_XACT_ALL_TABLES
- SUMMARY_STAT_XACT_ALL_TABLES
- GLOBAL_STAT_XACT_ALL_TABLES
- STAT_XACT_SYS_TABLES
- SUMMARY_STAT_XACT_SYS_TABLES
- GLOBAL_STAT_XACT_SYS_TABLES
- STAT_XACT_USER_TABLES
- SUMMARY_STAT_XACT_USER_TABLES
- GLOBAL_STAT_XACT_USER_TABLES
- STAT_XACT_USER_FUNCTIONS
- SUMMARY_STAT_XACT_USER_FUNCTIONS
- GLOBAL_STAT_XACT_USER_FUNCTIONS
- STAT_BAD_BLOCK
- SUMMARY_STAT_BAD_BLOCK
- GLOBAL_STAT_BAD_BLOCK
- STAT_USER_FUNCTIONS
- SUMMARY_STAT_USER_FUNCTIONS
- GLOBAL_STAT_USER_FUNCTIONS
- Workload
- Session/Thread
- SESSION_STAT
- GLOBAL_SESSION_STAT
- SESSION_TIME
- GLOBAL_SESSION_TIME
- SESSION_MEMORY
- GLOBAL_SESSION_MEMORY
- SESSION_MEMORY_DETAIL
- GLOBAL_SESSION_MEMORY_DETAIL
- SESSION_STAT_ACTIVITY
- GLOBAL_SESSION_STAT_ACTIVITY
- THREAD_WAIT_STATUS
- GLOBAL_THREAD_WAIT_STATUS
- LOCAL_THREADPOOL_STATUS
- GLOBAL_THREADPOOL_STATUS
- SESSION_CPU_RUNTIME
- SESSION_MEMORY_RUNTIME
- STATEMENT_IOSTAT_COMPLEX_RUNTIME
- Transaction
- Query
- STATEMENT
- SUMMARY_STATEMENT
- STATEMENT_COUNT
- GLOBAL_STATEMENT_COUNT
- SUMMARY_STATEMENT_COUNT
- GLOBAL_STATEMENT_COMPLEX_HISTORY
- GLOBAL_STATEMENT_COMPLEX_HISTORY_TABLE
- GLOBAL_STATEMENT_COMPLEX_RUNTIME
- STATEMENT_RESPONSETIME_PERCENTILE
- STATEMENT_USER_COMPLEX_HISTORY
- STATEMENT_COMPLEX_RUNTIME
- STATEMENT_COMPLEX_HISTORY_TABLE
- STATEMENT_COMPLEX_HISTORY
- STATEMENT_WLMSTAT_COMPLEX_RUNTIME
- STATEMENT_HISTORY
- Cache/IO
- STATIO_USER_TABLES
- SUMMARY_STATIO_USER_TABLES
- GLOBAL_STATIO_USER_TABLES
- STATIO_USER_INDEXES
- SUMMARY_STATIO_USER_INDEXES
- GLOBAL_STATIO_USER_INDEXES
- STATIO_USER_SEQUENCES
- SUMMARY_STATIO_USER_SEQUENCES
- GLOBAL_STATIO_USER_SEQUENCES
- STATIO_SYS_TABLES
- SUMMARY_STATIO_SYS_TABLES
- GLOBAL_STATIO_SYS_TABLES
- STATIO_SYS_INDEXES
- SUMMARY_STATIO_SYS_INDEXES
- GLOBAL_STATIO_SYS_INDEXES
- STATIO_SYS_SEQUENCES
- SUMMARY_STATIO_SYS_SEQUENCES
- GLOBAL_STATIO_SYS_SEQUENCES
- STATIO_ALL_TABLES
- SUMMARY_STATIO_ALL_TABLES
- GLOBAL_STATIO_ALL_TABLES
- STATIO_ALL_INDEXES
- SUMMARY_STATIO_ALL_INDEXES
- GLOBAL_STATIO_ALL_INDEXES
- STATIO_ALL_SEQUENCES
- SUMMARY_STATIO_ALL_SEQUENCES
- GLOBAL_STATIO_ALL_SEQUENCES
- GLOBAL_STAT_DB_CU
- GLOBAL_STAT_SESSION_CU
- Utility
- REPLICATION_STAT
- GLOBAL_REPLICATION_STAT
- REPLICATION_SLOTS
- GLOBAL_REPLICATION_SLOTS
- BGWRITER_STAT
- GLOBAL_BGWRITER_STAT
- GLOBAL_CKPT_STATUS
- GLOBAL_DOUBLE_WRITE_STATUS
- GLOBAL_PAGEWRITER_STATUS
- GLOBAL_RECORD_RESET_TIME
- GLOBAL_REDO_STATUS
- GLOBAL_RECOVERY_STATUS
- CLASS_VITAL_INFO
- USER_LOGIN
- SUMMARY_USER_LOGIN
- GLOBAL_GET_BGWRITER_STATUS
- Lock
- Wait Events
- Configuration
- Operator
- Workload Manager
- Global Plancache
- Appendix
- Error Code Reference
- Description of SQL Error Codes
- Third-Party Library Error Codes
- GAUSS-00001 - GAUSS-00100
- GAUSS-00101 - GAUSS-00200
- GAUSS 00201 - GAUSS 00300
- GAUSS 00301 - GAUSS 00400
- GAUSS 00401 - GAUSS 00500
- GAUSS 00501 - GAUSS 00600
- GAUSS 00601 - GAUSS 00700
- GAUSS 00701 - GAUSS 00800
- GAUSS 00801 - GAUSS 00900
- GAUSS 00901 - GAUSS 01000
- GAUSS 01001 - GAUSS 01100
- GAUSS 01101 - GAUSS 01200
- GAUSS 01201 - GAUSS 01300
- GAUSS 01301 - GAUSS 01400
- GAUSS 01401 - GAUSS 01500
- GAUSS 01501 - GAUSS 01600
- GAUSS 01601 - GAUSS 01700
- GAUSS 01701 - GAUSS 01800
- GAUSS 01801 - GAUSS 01900
- GAUSS 01901 - GAUSS 02000
- GAUSS 02001 - GAUSS 02100
- GAUSS 02101 - GAUSS 02200
- GAUSS 02201 - GAUSS 02300
- GAUSS 02301 - GAUSS 02400
- GAUSS 02401 - GAUSS 02500
- GAUSS 02501 - GAUSS 02600
- GAUSS 02601 - GAUSS 02700
- GAUSS 02701 - GAUSS 02800
- GAUSS 02801 - GAUSS 02900
- GAUSS 02901 - GAUSS 03000
- GAUSS 03001 - GAUSS 03100
- GAUSS 03101 - GAUSS 03200
- GAUSS 03201 - GAUSS 03300
- GAUSS 03301 - GAUSS 03400
- GAUSS 03401 - GAUSS 03500
- GAUSS 03501 - GAUSS 03600
- GAUSS 03601 - GAUSS 03700
- GAUSS 03701 - GAUSS 03800
- GAUSS 03801 - GAUSS 03900
- GAUSS 03901 - GAUSS 04000
- GAUSS 04001 - GAUSS 04100
- GAUSS 04101 - GAUSS 04200
- GAUSS 04201 - GAUSS 04300
- GAUSS 04301 - GAUSS 04400
- GAUSS 04401 - GAUSS 04500
- GAUSS 04501 - GAUSS 04600
- GAUSS 04601 - GAUSS 04700
- GAUSS 04701 - GAUSS 04800
- GAUSS 04801 - GAUSS 04900
- GAUSS 04901 - GAUSS 05000
- GAUSS 05001 - GAUSS 05100
- GAUSS 05101 - GAUSS 05200
- GAUSS 05201 - GAUSS 05300
- GAUSS 05301 - GAUSS 05400
- GAUSS 05401 - GAUSS 05500
- GAUSS 05501 - GAUSS 05600
- GAUSS 05601 - GAUSS 05700
- GAUSS 05701 - GAUSS 05800
- GAUSS 05801 - GAUSS 05900
- GAUSS 05901 - GAUSS 06000
- GAUSS 06001 - GAUSS 06100
- GAUSS 06101 - GAUSS 06200
- GAUSS 06201 - GAUSS 06300
- GAUSS 06301 - GAUSS 06400
- GAUSS 06401 - GAUSS 06500
- GAUSS 06501 - GAUSS 06600
- GAUSS 06601 - GAUSS 06700
- GAUSS 06701 - GAUSS 06800
- GAUSS 06801 - GAUSS 06900
- GAUSS 06901 - GAUSS 07000
- GAUSS 07001 - GAUSS 07100
- GAUSS 07101 - GAUSS 07200
- GAUSS 07201 - GAUSS 07300
- GAUSS 07301 - GAUSS 07400
- GAUSS 07401 - GAUSS 07480
- GAUSS 50000 - GAUSS 50999
- GAUSS 51000 - GAUSS 51999
- GAUSS 52000 - GAUSS 52999
- GAUSS 53000 - GAUSS 53699
- System Catalogs and System Views
- Glossary
Configuring a Data Source in the Linux OS
The ODBC driver (psqlodbcw.so) provided by MogDB can be used after it has been configured in a data source. To configure a data source, you must configure the odbc.ini and odbcinst.ini files on the server. The two files are generated during the unixODBC compilation and installation, and are saved in the /usr/local/etc directory by default.
Procedure
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Obtain the source code package of unixODBC. Try the following link:
http://sourceforge.net/projects/unixodbc/files/unixODBC/2.3.0/unixODBC-2.3.0.tar.gz/download
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Install unixODBC. It does not matter if unixODBC of another version has been installed.
Currently, unixODBC-2.2.1 is not supported. For example, to install unixODBC-2.3.0, run the commands below. unixODBC is installed in the /usr/local directory by default. The data source file is generated in the /usr/local/etc directory, and the library file is generated in the /usr/local/lib directory.
tar zxvf unixODBC-2.3.0.tar.gz cd unixODBC-2.3.0 #Open the configure file. If it does not exist, open the configure.ac file. Find LIB_VERSION. #Change the value of LIB_VERSION to 1:0:0 to compile a *.so.1 dynamic library with the same dependency on psqlodbcw.so. vim configure ./configure --enable-gui=no #To perform compilation on a Kunpeng server, add the configure parameter --build=aarch64-unknown-linux-gnu. make #The installation may require root permissions. make install
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Replace the MogDB driver on the client.
- Decompress MogDB- x.x.x-ODBC.tar.gz to the /usr/local/lib directory. psqlodbcw.la and psqlodbcw.so files are obtained.
- Copy the library in the lib directory obtained after decompressing MogDB-x.x.x-ODBC.tar.gz to the /usr/local/lib directory.
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Configure a data source.
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Configure the ODBC driver file.
Add the following content to the end of the /usr/local/etc/odbcinst.ini file:
[GaussMPP] Driver64=/usr/local/lib/psqlodbcw.so setup=/usr/local/lib/psqlodbcw.so
For descriptions of the parameters in the odbcinst.ini file, see Table 1.
Table 1 odbcinst.ini configuration parameters
Parameter Description Example [DriverName] Driver name, corresponding to the driver in DSN. [DRIVER_N] Driver64 Path of the dynamic driver library. Driver64=/xxx/odbc/lib/psqlodbcw.so setup Driver installation path, which is the same as the dynamic library path in Driver64. setup=/xxx/odbc/lib/psqlodbcw.so -
Configure the data source file.
Add the following content to the end of the /usr/local/etc/odbc.ini file:
[MPPODBC] Driver=GaussMPP Servername=10.10.0.13 (database server IP address) Database=postgres (database name) Username=omm (database username) Password= (database user password) Port=8000 (database listening port) Sslmode=allow
For descriptions of the parameters in the odbc.ini file, see Table 2.
Table 2 odbc.ini configuration parameters
Parameter Description Example [DSN] Data source name [MPPODBC] Driver Driver name, corresponding to DriverName in odbcinst.ini Driver=DRIVER_N Servername Server IP address Servername=10.145.130.26 Database Name of the database to connect Database=postgres Username Database username Username=omm Password Database user password Password=
NOTE:
After a user established a connection, the ODBC driver automatically clears their password stored in memory.
However, if this parameter is configured, UnixODBC will cache data source files, which may cause the password to be stored in the memory for a long time.
When you connect to an application, you are advised to send your password through an API instead of writing it in a data source configuration file. After the connection has been established, immediately clear the memory segment where your password is stored.Port Port number of the server Port=8000 Sslmode Whether to enable SSL Sslmode=allow UseServerSidePrepare Whether to enable the extended query protocol for the database.
The value can be 0 or 1. The default value is 1, indicating that the extended query protocol is enabled.UseServerSidePrepare=1 UseBatchProtocol Whether to enable the batch query protocol. If it is enabled, DML performance can be improved. The value can be 0 or 1. The default value is 1.
If this parameter is set to 0, the batch query protocol is disabled (mainly for communication with earlier database versions).
If this parameter is set to 1 and support_batch_bind is set to on, the batch query protocol is enabled.UseBatchProtocol=1 ConnectionExtraInfo Whether to display the driver deployment path and process owner in the connection_info parameter mentioned in connection_info. ConnectionExtraInfo=1NOTE:The default value is 0. If this parameter is set to 1, the ODBC driver reports the driver deployment path and process owner to the database and displays the information in the connection_info parameter (see connection_info). In this case, you can query the information from PG_STAT_ACTIVITY. The valid values of sslmode are as follows:
Table 3 sslmode options and description
sslmode Whether SSL Encryption Is Enabled Description disable No SSL connection is not enabled. allow Possible If the database server requires SSL connection, SSL connection can be enabled. However, authenticity of the database server will not be verified. prefer Possible If the database supports SSL connection, SSL connection is recommended. However, authenticity of the database server will not be verified. require Yes SSL connection is required and data is encrypted. However, authenticity of the database server will not be verified. verify-ca Yes SSL connection is required and whether the database has a trusted certificate will be verified. verify-full Yes SSL connection is required. In addition to the check scope specified by verify-ca, the system checks whether the name of the host where the database resides is the same as that in the certificate. MogDB does not support this mode.
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-
(Optional) Generate an SSL certificate. For details, see Generating Certificates.This step and step 6 need to be performed when the server and the client are connected via ssl. It can be skipped in case of non-ssl connection.
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(Optional) Replace an SSL certificate. For details, see Replacing Certificates.
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Configure the database server.
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Log in as the OS user omm to the primary node of the database.
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Run the following command to add NIC IP addresses or host names, with values separated by commas (,). The NICs and hosts are used to provide external services. In the following command, NodeName specifies the name of the current node.
gs_guc reload -N NodeName -I all -c "listen_addresses='localhost,192.168.0.100,10.11.12.13'"
If direct routing of LVS is used, add the virtual IP address (10.11.12.13) of LVS to the server listening list.
You can also set listen_addresses to * or 0.0.0.0 to listen to all NICs, but this incurs security risks and is not recommended.
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Run the following command to add an authentication rule to the configuration file of the primary database node. In this example, the IP address (10.11.12.13) of the client is the remote host IP address.
gs_guc reload -N all -I all -h "host all jack 10.11.12.13/32 sha256"
NOTE:
- -N all indicates all hosts in MogDB.
- -I all indicates all instances of the host.
- -h specifies statements that need to be added in the pg_hba.conf file.
- all indicates that a client can connect to any database.
- jack indicates the user that accesses the database.
- 10.11.12.13/32 indicates hosts whose IP address is 10.11.12.13 can be connected. Configure the parameter based on your network conditions. 32 indicates that there are 32 bits whose value is 1 in the subnet mask. That is, the subnet mask is 255.255.255.255.
- sha256 indicates that the password of user jack is encrypted using the SHA-256 algorithm.
If the ODBC client and the primary database node to connect are deployed on the same machine, you can use the local trust authentication mode. Run the following command:
local all all trust
If the ODBC client and the primary database node to connect are deployed on different machines, use the SHA-256 authentication mode. Run the following command:
host all all xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx/32 sha256
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Restart MogDB.
gs_om -t stop gs_om -t start
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Configure environment variables on the client.
vim ~/.bashrc
Add the following information to the configuration file:
export LD_LIBRARY_PATH=/usr/local/lib/:$LD_LIBRARY_PATH export ODBCSYSINI=/usr/local/etc export ODBCINI=/usr/local/etc/odbc.ini
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Run the following command to validate the addition:
source ~/.bashrc
Verifying the Data Source Configuration
Run the isql-v MPPODBC command (*MPPODBC* is the data source name).
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If the following information is displayed, the configuration is correct and the connection succeeds.
+---------------------------------------+ | Connected! | | | | sql-statement | | help [tablename] | | quit | | | +---------------------------------------+ SQL>
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If error information is displayed, the configuration is incorrect. Check the configuration.
FAQs
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[UnixODBC]Can't open lib 'xxx/xxx/psqlodbcw.so' : file not found.
Possible causes:
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The path configured in the odbcinst.ini file is incorrect.
Run ls to check the path in the error information, and ensure that the psqlodbcw.so file exists and you have execute permissions on it.
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The dependent library of psqlodbcw.so does not exist or is not in system environment variables.
Run ldd to check the path in the error information. If libodbc.so.1 or other UnixODBC libraries do not exist, configure UnixODBC again following the procedure provided in this section, and add the lib directory under its installation directory to LD_LIBRARY_PATH. If other libraries do not exist, add the lib directory under the ODBC driver package to LD_LIBRARY_PATH.
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[UnixODBC]connect to server failed: no such file or directory
Possible causes:
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An incorrect or unreachable database IP address or port number was configured.
Check the Servername and Port configuration items in data sources.
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Server monitoring is improper.
If Servername and Port are correctly configured, ensure the proper network adapter and port are monitored by following the database server configurations in the procedure in this section.
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Firewall and network gatekeeper settings are improper.
Check firewall settings, and ensure that the database communication port is trusted.
Check to ensure network gatekeeper settings are proper (if any).
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[unixODBC]The password-stored method is not supported.
Possible causes:
The sslmode configuration item is not configured in the data sources.
Solution:
Set the configuration item to allow or a higher level. For details, see Table 3.
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Server common name "xxxx" does not match host name "xxxxx"
Possible causes:
When verify-full is used for SSL encryption, the driver checks whether the host name in certificates is the same as the actual one.
Solution:
To solve this problem, use verify-ca to stop checking host names, or generate a set of CA certificates containing the actual host names.
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Driver's SQLAllocHandle on SQL_HANDLE_DBC failed
Possible causes:
The executable file (such as the isql tool of unixODBC) and the database driver (psqlodbcw.so) depend on different library versions of ODBC, such as libodbc.so.1 and libodbc.so.2. You can verify this problem by using the following method:
ldd `which isql` | grep odbc ldd psqlodbcw.so | grep odbc
If the suffix digits of the outputs libodbc.so are different or indicate different physical disk files, this problem exists. Both isql and psqlodbcw.so load libodbc.so. If different physical files are loaded, different ODBC libraries with the same function list conflict with each other in a visible domain. As a result, the database driver cannot be loaded.
Solution:
Uninstall the unnecessary unixODBC, such as libodbc.so.2, and create a soft link with the same name and the .so.2 suffix for the remaining libodbc.so.1 library.
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FATAL: Forbid remote connection with trust method!
For security purposes, the primary database node forbids access from other nodes in MogDB without authentication.
To access the primary database node from inside MogDB, deploy the ODBC program on the host where the primary database node is located and set the server address to 127.0.0.1. It is recommended that the service system be deployed outside MogDB. If it is deployed inside, database performance may be affected.
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[unixODBC]Invalid attribute value
This problem occurs when you use SQL on other MogDB. The possible cause is that the unixODBC version is not the recommended one. You are advised to run the odbcinst -version command to check the unixODBC version.
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authentication method 10 not supported.
If this error occurs on an open-source client, the cause may be:
The database stores only the SHA-256 hash of the password, but the open-source client supports only MD5 hashes.
NOTE:
- The database stores the hashes of user passwords instead of actual passwords.
- If a password is updated or a user is created, both types of hashes will be stored, compatible with open-source authentication protocols.
- An MD5 hash can only be generated using the original password, but the password cannot be obtained by reversing its SHA-256 hash. Passwords in the old version will only have SHA-256 hashes and not support MD5 authentication.
To solve this problem, you can update the user password (see ALTER USER) or create a user (see CREATE USER) having the same permissions as the faulty user.
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unsupported frontend protocol 3.51: server supports 1.0 to 3.0
The database version is too early or the database is an open-source database. Use the driver of the required version to connect to the database.
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FATAL: GSS authentication method is not allowed because XXXX user password is not disabled.
In pg_hba.conf of the target primary database node, the authentication mode is set to gss for authenticating the IP address of the current client. However, this authentication algorithm cannot authenticate clients. Change the authentication algorithm to sha256 and try again. For details, see 7.