It is already available in Custombuild. This is important update because it fixes some security vulnerabilities:
CVE-2017-3636
CVE-2017-3641
CVE-2017-3653
The same vulnerabilities are available for MySQL 5.5 and 5.6, so MySQL users should look for an update too.
FreeBSD users must upgrade again manually:
1. Go to /usr/local/directadmin/custombuild
2. ./build update
3. rm -rf mariadb-10.2.8
4. tar -zxvf mariadb-10.2.8.tar.gz
5. cd mariadb-10.2.28
5. cmake -DPLUGIN_TOKUDB=NO -DPLUGIN_OQGRAPH=NO -DPLUGIN_MROONGA=NO -DPLUGIN_ROCKSDB=NO -DWITHOUT_MROONGA_STORAGE_ENGINE=YES -DWITHOUT_TOKUDB_STORAGE_ENGINE=YES -DWITHOUT_ROCKSDB_STORAGE_ENGINE=YES
6. make install
7. restart:
/usr/local/etc/rc.d/mysqld restart
8. perform mysql-upgrade manually:
./client/mysql_upgrade -uda_admin -p
CVE-2017-3636
CVE-2017-3641
CVE-2017-3653
The same vulnerabilities are available for MySQL 5.5 and 5.6, so MySQL users should look for an update too.
FreeBSD users must upgrade again manually:
1. Go to /usr/local/directadmin/custombuild
2. ./build update
3. rm -rf mariadb-10.2.8
4. tar -zxvf mariadb-10.2.8.tar.gz
5. cd mariadb-10.2.28
5. cmake -DPLUGIN_TOKUDB=NO -DPLUGIN_OQGRAPH=NO -DPLUGIN_MROONGA=NO -DPLUGIN_ROCKSDB=NO -DWITHOUT_MROONGA_STORAGE_ENGINE=YES -DWITHOUT_TOKUDB_STORAGE_ENGINE=YES -DWITHOUT_ROCKSDB_STORAGE_ENGINE=YES
6. make install
7. restart:
/usr/local/etc/rc.d/mysqld restart
8. perform mysql-upgrade manually:
./client/mysql_upgrade -uda_admin -p
Last edited: