![]() If you ran a ls -la /Applications in Terminal, the software was displayed.On opening /Applications in Finder, the software was not displayed sorting the programs alphabetically, it definitely was not shown on the list where it should have been.pkg installer, which wrote the files to the /Applications folder. People have reported the same problem with Slack and JAMF, among others, so it seems to be some kind of caching thing with Finder itself, and not a bug with any of these particular examples.) (I’m not going to identify the software here because that’s not the important detail. Today, one of my coworkers installed a copy of our company’s software on his Mac. Socket =/Applications/XAMPP/xamppfiles/var/mysql/mysql.This is not an “answer” per se, so much as an affirmation that I do not think you are hallicinating. # The following options will be passed to all MySQL clients # If you want to know which options a program supports, run the program # In this file, you can use all long options that a program supports. # ~/.my.cnf to set user-specific options. # installation this directory is /Applications/XAMPP/xamppfiles/var/mysql) or # mysql-data-dir/my.cnf to set server-specific options (in this # an important part, or systems up to 128M where MySQL is used together with # This is for a system with little memory (32M - 64M) where MySQL plays The highlighted portion of the config file below is where you change the port number: my.cnf # Example MySQL config file for medium systems. Click Open Conf File and change the port number in the file.The Configure window for XAMPP’s MySQL service. When starting XAMPP’s MySQL, if it says that it cannot connect to the port number, then changing it to a new one will help. If you are unable to restart MySQL after, you can also try this command to directly start XAMPP’s MySQL server: $ sudo /Application/XAMPP/xamppfiles/bin/rver startĪrticle continues after the advertisement: c. Tip: If you have multiple mysql processes and don’t know which want to stop, you can also stop ALL MySQL processes with sudo killall mysqld. Restart MySQL in manager-osx and you will be good. ![]() Now, you need to kill this process, by using the following command: kill -9, so for me the final command will be: kill -9 362._mysql 362 0.0 0.0 35192992 3396 ? Ss Sun10PM 0:21.82 /usr/local/mysql/bin/mysqld -user=_mysql -basedir=/usr/local/mysql -datadir=/usr/local/mysql/data -plugin-dir=/usr/local/mysql/lib/plugin -log-error=/usr/local/mysql/data/ -pid-file=/usr/local/mysql/data/ -keyring-file-data=/usr/local/mysql/keyring/keyring -early-plugin-load=keyring_file=keyring_file.so In my case, the process is named _mysql, so I need its process ID, which is 362 (highlighted below). After getting processes, you need to get the process ID of the processes named mysql.This will show you the processes with mysql in its name. Then copy and insert this next command: ps aux | grep mysql.Open Terminal, paste this command: sudo su and type in your password. ![]() Here’s a guide (by Apple) on how to do this. Note: To run the following commands, you will need to be able to log in as a root user on your macOS. Instead of using the Activity Monitor, you can also find and close existing mysqld processes using macOS’s Terminal. Killing existing MySQL processes using Terminal ![]() Removing existing mysqld processes using the Activity Monitor.
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