Installing MySQL: A Definitive Guide
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MySQL is one of the most popular SQL-based relational databases. The Community Edition is available at no charge and is widely used across the industry. This guide walks you through installing and updating MySQL Community on Windows, macOS, and Linux (either through the native repositories or MySQL’s own repositories).
- Windows
- macOS
- Linux through your distribution’s native repositories
- Linux through MySQL’s APT and YUM repositories (recommended)
When installing MySQL, you can either install MySQL Server or MySQL client utilities. Installing the entire MySQL Server software is the most common option. This allows you to run a full database server on your system. It also installs all of the client utilities that you might need when working with any MySQL instances (a locally installed one or one on a remote system). If you want to reduce disk usage or know you only need the client utilities, you can install the MySQL client package. Alternatively, consider installing and using the MySQL Shell.
Currently, there are two primary MySQL releases to consider: MySQL 5.7 and MySQL 8.0. Both are still receiving support and updates (until October 2023 and April 2026 respectively). You should likely install MySQL 8.0 unless your application does not yet support it.
Before You Begin
Consider other deployment options, such as fully managed solutions or automated installations.
- Linode MySQL Managed Databases: Fully managed database clusters, complete with automatic updates and backups, hosted on Linode’s reliable platform.
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If you have an existing database already deployed, you will continue to be able to deploy, provision, and manage the service exactly as you do today, and we’ll fully support your Managed Database workloads until our next-generation database solution is available. For future news and announcements related to Managed Databases, please sign up using the form on our product page.
- MySQL/MariaDB Marketplace App: Deploy a new Compute Instance with either MySQL or MariaDB preinstalled.
Check to see if MySQL is already installed on your system. To determine if MySQL is already installed, run the following command:
mysql --version
The above command should inform you which version you are using. If this command is not found, continue with the installation steps below. If the installed version differs from the release you want to use, consider first uninstalling it and then continuing with the instructions below.
sudo
. If you’re not familiar with the sudo
command, see the
Linux Users and Groups guide.Installing MySQL on Windows
Open a web browser and navigate to the MySQL Installer Downloads page. By default, the latest version of MySQL is displayed. You can also view the installer files for 8.0 or 5.7 directly. Alternatively, you can navigate to the Archives tab and select any MySQL release and version you wish.
Select your operating system version, click the Download link corresponding with the package you’d like to install, and then click the No thanks, just start my download link. The file should now start downloading.
Open the downloaded file and follow the prompts to install MySQL on your system.
Installing MySQL on macOS
Open a web browser and navigate to the MySQL Community Server Downloads page. By default, the latest version of MySQL is displayed. You can also view the installer files for 8.0 or 5.7 directly. Alternatively, you can navigate to the Archives tab and select any MySQL release and version you wish.
Select your operating system version, click the Download link corresponding with the package you’d like to install, and then click the No thanks, just start my download link. The file should now start downloading.
Open the downloaded file and follow the prompts to install MySQL on your system.
Installing MySQL on Linux: Native Repositories
One of the fastest ways to quickly install MySQL on most common Linux distributions is to use the distribution’s default/native repositories. For greater control over the release and version that’s installed, and to get the latest versions faster, you may want to consider using MySQL’s own YUM or APT repositories.
CentOS Stream 8 (and 9), CentOS/RHEL 8 (and 9)
sudo dnf upgrade && sudo dnf install mysql-server
MariaDB Server package:
mysql-server
MariaDB Client package:
mysql
CentOS/RHEL 7
MySQL is not available through CentOS 7’s native repositories (see CentOS 7 Packages list). Installing the mysql
package actually installs the mariadb
package. While MariaDB can be used as a drop-in replacement in some cases, it may be preferable to install MySQL through the MySQL YUM repository.
sudo yum update && sudo yum install mariadb-server
MariaDB Server package:
mariadb-server
MariaDB Client package:
mariadb
Debian
MySQL is not available through Debian’s native repositories. Instead, Debian includes MariaDB. While MariaDB can be used as a drop-in replacement in some cases, it may be preferable to install MySQL through the MySQL APT repository.
sudo apt update && sudo apt install mariadb-server
MariaDB Server package:
mariadb-server
MariaDB Client package:
mariadb-client
Fedora
sudo dnf update && sudo dnf install mysql-community-server
MySQL Server package:
mysql-community-server
MySQL Client package:
mysql-community
Ubuntu
sudo apt update && sudo apt install mysql-server
Replace mysql-server with one of the available packages below. If no version is specified in the package name, the default version is installed.
MySQL Server packages:
mysql-server
Target a specific version with
mysql-server-5.7
ormysql-server-8.0
. See Ubuntu Package Search for more.MySQL Client packages:
mysql-client
Target a specific version with
mysql-client-5.7
ormysql-client-8.0
. See Ubuntu Package Search for more.
Installing MySQL on Linux: MySQL’s Repositories
Using MySQL’s own repositories provides the latest MySQL versions faster than most native repositories. It also allows you more control over the version that is installed.
Ubuntu and Debian (APT Repository)
Download the release package for your distribution. Currently, all compatible distributions are combined into a single release package.
wget https://dev.mysql.com/get/mysql-apt-config_0.8.22-1_all.deb
If you’d like to download the latest version of this file or to select a different distribution, visit the MySQL APT Repository Downloads page. To obtain the URL for the file, click the Downloads button next to the package you wish to download, right click on the No thanks, just start my download link, and select Copy Link Address (or similar).
Install the downloaded release package. If you downloaded a different file than featured in the previous step, adjust the filename as needed.
sudo dpkg -i ./mysql-apt-config_0.8.22-1_all.deb
The repository configuration tool should automatically start. If not, you can run it using the following command:
sudo dpkg-reconfigure mysql-apt-config
Within the configuration tool, you can select from the options below to adjust how the repository is configured in your system:
MySQL Server & Cluster: Select mysql to add MySQL Server packages, mysql-cluster to add the MySQL NDB Cluster, or None to forgo adding either option.
MySQL Tools & Connectors: When enabled, this option adds all of the additional tools and utilities included with the MySQL software.
MySQL Preview Packages: Leave this option as disabled in production, though non-production environments can enable this to test unreleased features and products.
Run the update command to obtain updated package version and dependency information:
sudo apt update
Install MySQL Server or just the MySQL client tools:
MySQL Server:
sudo apt install mysql-server
MySQL Client Utilities:
sudo apt install mysql-client
Additional information about the packages available within MySQL’s APT repository can be found by exploring the repository for your distribution: Ubuntu or Debian.
CentOS/RHEL and Fedora (YUM Repository)
Download the release package for your distribution.
curl -OL [file-url]
- CentOS/RHEL 8:
https://dev.mysql.com/get/mysql80-community-release-el8-4.noarch.rpm
- CentOS/RHEL 7:
https://dev.mysql.com/get/mysql80-community-release-el7-6.noarch.rpm
- Fedora 38:
https://dev.mysql.com/get/mysql80-community-release-fc38-1.noarch.rpm
- Fedora 37:
https://dev.mysql.com/get/mysql80-community-release-fc37-1.noarch.rpm
If you’d like to download the latest file or to select a different distribution, visit the MySQL YUM Repository Downloads page. To obtain the URL for the desired file, click the Downloads button next to the package you wish to download, right click on the No thanks, just start my download link, and select Copy Link Address (or similar).
- CentOS/RHEL 8:
Install the downloaded release package, replacing [filename] with the file you just downloaded.
sudo yum install [filename]
Once installed, you can view all available packages and all enabled packages by running the commands below:
yum repolist all | grep mysql yum repolist enabled | grep mysql
By default, the MySQL 8.0 release will be installed. To switch this to MySQL 5.7 or any other available release, run the following commands:
CentOS Stream 8 (and 9), CentOS/RHEL 8 (and 9)
sudo dnf config-manager --disable mysql80-community sudo dnf config-manager --enable mysql57-community
CentOS/RHEL 7:
sudo yum-config-manager --disable mysql80-community sudo yum-config-manager --enable mysql57-community
Within CentOS/RHEL 8 distributions, disable the default MySQL module.
sudo dnf module disable mysql
Install MySQL Server or just the MySQL client tools:
MySQL Server:
sudo yum install mysql-community-server
MySQL Client Utilities:
sudo yum install mysql-community-client
Additional information about the packages available within MySQL’s YUM repository can be found by exploring the repository.
More Information
You may wish to consult the following resources for additional information on this topic. While these are provided in the hope that they will be useful, please note that we cannot vouch for the accuracy or timeliness of externally hosted materials.
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