Shift

The Shift project was started in May 2008 as a fork of the apparently defunct CocoaMySQL project. The goal of Shift is to enhance upon the CocoaMySQL project and provide Mac OS X users with a completely free and elegant way to handle their MySQL databases. Saved By: Chris Messina | View Details | Give Thanks
Tools | MySQL Performance Blog

Tools for optimizing mysql databases. Saved By: Miriam Schwab | View Details | Give Thanks
Installing MySQL on Mac OS X

Instructions for building and installing MySQL 5 on Mac OS X. These instructions should work perfectly on both Tiger and Leopard. Saved By: Ian Fieldhouse | View Details | Give Thanks
Installing MySQL on Mac OS X

Instructions for building and installing MySQL 5 on Mac OS X. These instructions should work perfectly on both Tiger and Leopard. Saved By: Ian Fieldhouse | View Details | Give Thanks
SQL Designer

Visual SQL designer Saved By: Chris Makarsky | View Details | Give Thanks
Saved By: Alexander Kolov | View Details | Give Thanks
Saved By: Ville Säävuori | View Details | Give Thanks
MySQL - Using The LIKE Operator Tutorials

Sponsors
More tags
Uncategorized Technology Linux Programming Security Software ajax javascript php tools python News Attack database tags rss server free css web web20 rails code search mac django webprogramming hacking japan mail blogs OSX home backup reference development hosting tips website howto tuning computers hacks tutorial performance unix opensource webdev wordpress IBM tutorials scripts script administration sysadmin comparison jaspersoft articles automatic SQL example postfix monitoring install tagging normalization optimization coding cheatsheet framework reader apache injection replication encoding charset mvc link en sql injection intranet howto injection security sql exploits momdev phpmysql php framework webedit php5 prog and html killerapp amp mac-os-x postgresql how.to wamp wildcard ngram mssql
MySQL-PostgreSQL Comparison

Tuning LAMP systems, Part 2: Optimizing Apache and PHP

Applications using the LAMP (Linux, Apache, MySQL, PHP/Perl) architecture are constantly being developed and deployed. But often the server administrator has little control over the application itself because it's written by someone else. This series of three articles discusses many of the server configuration items that can make or break an application's performance. This second article focuses on steps you can take to optimize Apache and PHP.








