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FreshStackDBnotes.md

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RDS-Hosted Database Peculiarities

RedMine's MySQL database connection-gems need a MySQL database during their compilation. Because the stacks are meant to allow safe-replaceability of the EC2 host, the connection-gems are initially compiled against a local, dummy MySQL database. Once compiled, RedMine is then reconfigured to connect to the RDS-hosted database.

The RDS-hosted database is empty on any initial/fresh stack-deployment. This empty state will cause the RedMine web-service to display an error page once it initially reaches a ready-state. Populate the database to make this error go away.

Populating the RDS-hosted database is a fairly straight-forward task (see this DigitalOcean article to get a better idea of the specifics):

  1. Use the mysqldump tool to create a backup of an existing MySQL database for RedMine.
    • If you have an existing RedMine installation, dump out its contents and transfer them to the new RedMine-hosting EC2 instance.
    • If you do not have an existing RedMine installation, create a dump from the "dummy" database that was created during the EC2 instance's initial deployment.
  2. Use the mysql utility to restore data from the file created with the mysqldump tool. The RDS credentials are stored in the /etc/cfn/RedMine.envs file.
  3. Restart the httpd processes.

Note: It is recommended that, after populating the RDS-hosted database, that an EC2-replacing stack-update be performed. The update ensures that all RedMine plugins are appropriately set up to reference the RDS-hosted database elements. Changing the EC2's AMI, availability zone, (provisioning) key name, private IP address and/or subnet attribute-values will force a redeployment.