You can also follow these instructions to install MySQL 8 or phpMyAdmin on your Fedora system.
Step 1 – prerequisites
Login to your Fedora system and open a terminal. Now upgrade the current packages to the latest version by running the following command.
Step 2 – Configure Yum Repository
The MySQL team provides a Yum repository for the installation of the MySQL community server on Fedora systems. First, download the GnuPG key to your local system. After that create a repository file as: Save file and close.
Step 3 – Install MySQL Server
After that run the following command to install the mysql-community-server package on your systems. This will also install all other required dependencies.
After the installation of MySQL server on Fedora system. Enable the MySQL service to start on system boot. Also, start service using the below commands: Okay, now follow the post-installation instructions.
Step 4 – MySQL Post Installation Setup
The MySQL community server has been installed on your system. The installer will also generate a random password and set it for the root user. You can find the root user password in log files. Now run the following command to apply security on the MySQL server. Simply execute the below command and follow the security wizard. Follow the onscreen instructions. Change your root account password and Press Y for all other operations to apply improved security.
Change the password for root? – Press y and change root password Remove anonymous users? Press y Disallow root login remotely? Press y Remove test database and access to it? (Press y Reload privilege tables now? Press y
Step 5 – Connect MySQL Terminal
All done. You can now connect to the MySQL server using the command line. The following command will connect MySQL running on localhost as the root user. This will prompt for root account password. You can also install LAMP stack on Fedora and configure PHPMyAdmin on fedora to access databases graphically.
Conclusion
This tutorial helped you to install MySQL 5.7 on Fedora 31/30 and earlier version. To install MySQL on Fedora 34/33/32, the official repository provides MySQL 8.0 for installation. Visit another tutorial to install MySQL on Fedora 33/32 etc.