LAMP DB-agnostic way to create a DB stack
Is there a LAMP-MySQL (or equivalent) agnostic way to create a DB stack that includes:
- DB-user and a relative password
- DB with the same name as of the user
- Setting a host for the DB (say,
localhost) - Give the user all privileges
The reason I need such a way or approach is to have easier life when working with different LAMP-MySQL (or equivalent) DB programs as part of LAMP.
For example, not all LAMP stacks has particularly MySQL or MariaDB and the SQL syntax or DB-CLUI (Bash) extension syntax might be a tiny bit different for each DB SQL variant, hence I seek standardization in a LAMP-RDBMS agnostic fashion.
apache-httpd configuration mysql ansible database
add a comment |
Is there a LAMP-MySQL (or equivalent) agnostic way to create a DB stack that includes:
- DB-user and a relative password
- DB with the same name as of the user
- Setting a host for the DB (say,
localhost) - Give the user all privileges
The reason I need such a way or approach is to have easier life when working with different LAMP-MySQL (or equivalent) DB programs as part of LAMP.
For example, not all LAMP stacks has particularly MySQL or MariaDB and the SQL syntax or DB-CLUI (Bash) extension syntax might be a tiny bit different for each DB SQL variant, hence I seek standardization in a LAMP-RDBMS agnostic fashion.
apache-httpd configuration mysql ansible database
The term "LAMP" normally means a stack with "Linux, Apache, MySQL (or MariaDB), and PHP (or Perl or Python)." When using a different relational database it is no longer a standard "LAMP" stack, so your question becomes "Agnostic way to create any DB stack to back $SCRIPTING_LANG using Apache on Linux" which seems a bit more open ended and possibly too vague. My suggestion would be to use one of the web frameworks for your scripting language that supports all of the different databases you would like to use.
– GracefulRestart
2 days ago
I've edited the question. I admit it's hard being accurate here and the terminology of this topic can be "heavy".
– JohnDoea
2 days ago
add a comment |
Is there a LAMP-MySQL (or equivalent) agnostic way to create a DB stack that includes:
- DB-user and a relative password
- DB with the same name as of the user
- Setting a host for the DB (say,
localhost) - Give the user all privileges
The reason I need such a way or approach is to have easier life when working with different LAMP-MySQL (or equivalent) DB programs as part of LAMP.
For example, not all LAMP stacks has particularly MySQL or MariaDB and the SQL syntax or DB-CLUI (Bash) extension syntax might be a tiny bit different for each DB SQL variant, hence I seek standardization in a LAMP-RDBMS agnostic fashion.
apache-httpd configuration mysql ansible database
Is there a LAMP-MySQL (or equivalent) agnostic way to create a DB stack that includes:
- DB-user and a relative password
- DB with the same name as of the user
- Setting a host for the DB (say,
localhost) - Give the user all privileges
The reason I need such a way or approach is to have easier life when working with different LAMP-MySQL (or equivalent) DB programs as part of LAMP.
For example, not all LAMP stacks has particularly MySQL or MariaDB and the SQL syntax or DB-CLUI (Bash) extension syntax might be a tiny bit different for each DB SQL variant, hence I seek standardization in a LAMP-RDBMS agnostic fashion.
apache-httpd configuration mysql ansible database
apache-httpd configuration mysql ansible database
edited 7 hours ago
JohnDoea
asked 2 days ago
JohnDoeaJohnDoea
931132
931132
The term "LAMP" normally means a stack with "Linux, Apache, MySQL (or MariaDB), and PHP (or Perl or Python)." When using a different relational database it is no longer a standard "LAMP" stack, so your question becomes "Agnostic way to create any DB stack to back $SCRIPTING_LANG using Apache on Linux" which seems a bit more open ended and possibly too vague. My suggestion would be to use one of the web frameworks for your scripting language that supports all of the different databases you would like to use.
– GracefulRestart
2 days ago
I've edited the question. I admit it's hard being accurate here and the terminology of this topic can be "heavy".
– JohnDoea
2 days ago
add a comment |
The term "LAMP" normally means a stack with "Linux, Apache, MySQL (or MariaDB), and PHP (or Perl or Python)." When using a different relational database it is no longer a standard "LAMP" stack, so your question becomes "Agnostic way to create any DB stack to back $SCRIPTING_LANG using Apache on Linux" which seems a bit more open ended and possibly too vague. My suggestion would be to use one of the web frameworks for your scripting language that supports all of the different databases you would like to use.
– GracefulRestart
2 days ago
I've edited the question. I admit it's hard being accurate here and the terminology of this topic can be "heavy".
– JohnDoea
2 days ago
The term "LAMP" normally means a stack with "Linux, Apache, MySQL (or MariaDB), and PHP (or Perl or Python)." When using a different relational database it is no longer a standard "LAMP" stack, so your question becomes "Agnostic way to create any DB stack to back $SCRIPTING_LANG using Apache on Linux" which seems a bit more open ended and possibly too vague. My suggestion would be to use one of the web frameworks for your scripting language that supports all of the different databases you would like to use.
– GracefulRestart
2 days ago
The term "LAMP" normally means a stack with "Linux, Apache, MySQL (or MariaDB), and PHP (or Perl or Python)." When using a different relational database it is no longer a standard "LAMP" stack, so your question becomes "Agnostic way to create any DB stack to back $SCRIPTING_LANG using Apache on Linux" which seems a bit more open ended and possibly too vague. My suggestion would be to use one of the web frameworks for your scripting language that supports all of the different databases you would like to use.
– GracefulRestart
2 days ago
I've edited the question. I admit it's hard being accurate here and the terminology of this topic can be "heavy".
– JohnDoea
2 days ago
I've edited the question. I admit it's hard being accurate here and the terminology of this topic can be "heavy".
– JohnDoea
2 days ago
add a comment |
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The term "LAMP" normally means a stack with "Linux, Apache, MySQL (or MariaDB), and PHP (or Perl or Python)." When using a different relational database it is no longer a standard "LAMP" stack, so your question becomes "Agnostic way to create any DB stack to back $SCRIPTING_LANG using Apache on Linux" which seems a bit more open ended and possibly too vague. My suggestion would be to use one of the web frameworks for your scripting language that supports all of the different databases you would like to use.
– GracefulRestart
2 days ago
I've edited the question. I admit it's hard being accurate here and the terminology of this topic can be "heavy".
– JohnDoea
2 days ago