Appendix A. Troubleshooting and Support

This Appendix A proposes guidelines for solving some common problems, and provides hints on how to avoid them. It also explains how to interact with the development team for support, bug reports, and contributions.

Troubleshooting

Over the years, the development team has received numerous requests for support, and many of them could have been avoided with a few simple verifications.

System requirements

A section at the beginning of the Documentation.html file (which is included with phpMyAdmin's software), discusses system requirements for the particular phpMyAdmin version we are using. It's crucial that these requirements be met, and that the environment be properly configured so that problems are avoided.

Some problems, looking like phpMyAdmin bugs, are in fact caused by the server environment. Sometimes, the web server is not configured to interpret .php files correctly, or the PHP component inside the web server does not run with the mysql or mysqli extensions. MySQL accounts may be badly configured. This can happen on home servers as well as on hosted servers.

When we suspect that something is wrong, we can try a simple PHP script, test.php, which contains the following code block, to check if the PHP component answers correctly:

<?php
echo 'hello';
?>

We should see the hello message. If this works, we can try another script:

<?php
phpinfo();
?>

This script displays information about the PHP component, including the available extensions. We should at least see a section about MySQL (proving that the mysql extension is available), which gives information about the MySQL Client API version.

We can also try other PHP scripts that make a connection to MySQL, to see if the problem is more general than just phpMyAdmin not working. As a general rule, we should be running the latest stable versions of every component.

Verifying the base configuration

We should always double check the way in which we performed the installation, including correct permissions and ownerships. Typos may occur when modifying config.inc.php.

Solving common errors

To help solve a problem, we should first pinpoint the origin of the error message. The following are the various components that can generate an error message:

  • MySQL server: These messages are relayed by phpMyAdmin, which displays MySQL said followed by the message
  • PHP component of the web server: For example, Parser error
  • Web server: The error can be seen from the browser, or in the web server's log files
  • Web browser: For example, JavaScript errors
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