(mysql.info) windows-symbolic-links
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(mysql.info) symbolic-links
7.6.1.3 Using Symbolic Links for Databases on Windows
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Symbolic links are enabled by default for all Windows servers. This
enables you to put a database directory on a different disk by setting
up a symbolic link to it. This is similar to the way that database
symbolic links work on Unix, although the procedure for setting up the
link is different. If you do not need symbolic links, you can disable
them using the -skip-symbolic-links option.
On Windows, you create a symbolic link to a MySQL database by creating
a file in the data directory that contains the path to the destination
directory. The file should be named `DB_NAME.sym', where DB_NAME is the
database name.
Suppose that the MySQL data directory is `C:\mysql\data' and you want
to have database `foo' located at `D:\data\foo'. Set up a symlink using
this procedure
1. Make sure that the `D:\data\foo' directory exists by creating it
if necessary. If you already have a database directory named `foo'
in the data directory, you should move it to `D:\data'. Otherwise,
the symbolic link will be ineffective. To avoid problems, make
sure that the server is not running when you move the database
directory.
2. Create a text file `C:\mysql\data\foo.sym' that contains the
pathname `D:\data\foo\'.
After this, all tables created in the database `foo' are created in
`D:\data\foo'. _Note that the symbolic link is not used if a directory
with the same name as the database exists in the MySQL data directory_.
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(mysql.info) symbolic-links-to-tables
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