On Windows, the recommended way to run MySQL is to install it as a Windows service, whereby MySQL starts and stops automatically when Windows starts and stops. A MySQL server installed as a service can also be controlled from the command line using NET commands, or with the graphical Services utility. Generally, to install MySQL as a Windows service you should be logged in using an account that has administrator rights.
The Services utility (the Windows Service Control Manager) can be found in the Windows Control Panel (under Administrative Tools on Windows 2000, XP, Vista and Server 2003). To avoid conflicts, it is advisable to close the Services utility while performing server installation or removal operations from the command line.
Before installing MySQL as a Windows service, you should first stop the current server if it is running by using the following command:
C:\>"C:\Program Files\MySQL\MySQL Server 5.1\bin\mysqladmin"-u root shutdown
          If the MySQL root user account has a
          password, you need to invoke mysqladmin
          with the -p option and supply the password
          when prompted.
        
        This command invokes the MySQL administrative utility
        mysqladmin to connect to the server and tell
        it to shut down. The command connects as the MySQL
        root user, which is the default
        administrative account in the MySQL grant system. Note that
        users in the MySQL grant system are wholly independent from any
        login users under Windows.
      
Install the server as a service using this command:
C:\> "C:\Program Files\MySQL\MySQL Server 5.1\bin\mysqld" --install
The service-installation command does not start the server. Instructions for that are given later in this section.
        To make it easier to invoke MySQL programs, you can add the path
        name of the MySQL bin directory to your
        Windows system PATH environment variable:
      
On the Windows desktop, right-click on the My Computer icon, and select Properties.
Next select the Advanced tab from the System Properties menu that appears, and click the Environment Variables button.
Under System Variables, select Path, and then click the Edit button. The Edit System Variable dialogue should appear.
            Place your cursor at the end of the text appearing in the
            space marked Variable Value. (Use the
            End key to ensure that your cursor is
            positioned at the very end of the text in this space.) Then
            enter the complete path name of your MySQL
            bin directory (for example,
            C:\Program Files\MySQL\MySQL Server
            5.1\bin), Note that there should be a
            semicolon separating this path from any values present in
            this field. Dismiss this dialogue, and each dialogue in
            turn, by clicking OK until all of the
            dialogues that were opened have been dismissed. You should
            now be able to invoke any MySQL executable program by typing
            its name at the DOS prompt from any directory on the system,
            without having to supply the path. This includes the
            servers, the mysql client, and all MySQL
            command-line utilities such as mysqladmin
            and mysqldump.
          
            You should not add the MySQL bin
            directory to your Windows PATH if you are
            running multiple MySQL servers on the same machine.
          
          You must exercise great care when editing your system
          PATH by hand; accidental deletion or
          modification of any portion of the existing
          PATH value can leave you with a
          malfunctioning or even unusable system.
        
The following additional arguments can be used in MySQL 5.1 when installing the service:
            You can specify a service name immediately following the
            --install option. The default service name
            is MySQL.
          
            If a service name is given, it can be followed by a single
            option. By convention, this should be
            --defaults-file=
            to specify the name of an option file from which the server
            should read options when it starts.
          file_name
            The use of a single option other than
            --defaults-file is possible
            but discouraged.
            --defaults-file is more
            flexible because it enables you to specify multiple startup
            options for the server by placing them in the named option
            file.
          
            You can also specify a --local-service
            option following the service name. This causes the server to
            run using the LocalService Windows
            account that has limited system privileges. This account is
            available only for Windows XP or newer. If both
            --defaults-file and
            --local-service are given following the
            service name, they can be in any order.
          
For a MySQL server that is installed as a Windows service, the following rules determine the service name and option files that the server uses:
            If the service-installation command specifies no service
            name or the default service name (MySQL)
            following the --install option, the server
            uses the a service name of MySQL and
            reads options from the [mysqld] group in
            the standard option files.
          
            If the service-installation command specifies a service name
            other than MySQL following the
            --install option, the server uses that
            service name. It reads options from the
            [mysqld] group and the group that has the
            same name as the service in the standard option files. This
            allows you to use the [mysqld] group for
            options that should be used by all MySQL services, and an
            option group with the service name for use by the server
            installed with that service name.
          
            If the service-installation command specifies a
            --defaults-file option after
            the service name, the server reads options only from the
            [mysqld] group of the named file and
            ignores the standard option files.
          
As a more complex example, consider the following command:
C:\>"C:\Program Files\MySQL\MySQL Server 5.1\bin\mysqld"--install MySQL --defaults-file=C:\my-opts.cnf
        Here, the default service name (MySQL) is
        given after the --install option. If no
        --defaults-file option had been
        given, this command would have the effect of causing the server
        to read the [mysqld] group from the standard
        option files. However, because the
        --defaults-file option is
        present, the server reads options from the
        [mysqld] option group, and only from the
        named file.
      
You can also specify options as Start parameters in the Windows Services utility before you start the MySQL service.
Once a MySQL server has been installed as a service, Windows starts the service automatically whenever Windows starts. The service also can be started immediately from the Services utility, or by using a NET START MySQL command. The NET command is not case sensitive.
        When run as a service, mysqld has no access
        to a console window, so no messages can be seen there. If
        mysqld does not start, check the error log to
        see whether the server wrote any messages there to indicate the
        cause of the problem. The error log is located in the MySQL data
        directory (for example, C:\Program Files\MySQL\MySQL
        Server 5.1\data). It is the file with a
        suffix of .err.
      
        When a MySQL server has been installed as a service, and the
        service is running, Windows stops the service automatically when
        Windows shuts down. The server also can be stopped manually by
        using the Services utility, the NET
        STOP MySQL command, or the mysqladmin
        shutdown command.
      
        You also have the choice of installing the server as a manual
        service if you do not wish for the service to be started
        automatically during the boot process. To do this, use the
        --install-manual option rather than the
        --install option:
      
C:\> "C:\Program Files\MySQL\MySQL Server 5.1\bin\mysqld" --install-manual
        To remove a server that is installed as a service, first stop it
        if it is running by executing NET STOP MySQL.
        Then use the --remove option to remove it:
      
C:\> "C:\Program Files\MySQL\MySQL Server 5.1\bin\mysqld" --remove
If mysqld is not running as a service, you can start it from the command line. For instructions, see Section 2.3.10, “Starting MySQL from the Windows Command Line”.
Please see Section 2.3.13, “Troubleshooting a MySQL Installation Under Windows”, if you encounter difficulties during installation.


User Comments
Be nice and do what it says. READ the error log.
The system error 1067 seems generic. If your problems says something like:
InnoDB: Error: log file .\ib_logfile{0,1} is of different size 0 0 bytes
InnoDB: than specified in the .cnf file 0 10485760 bytes!
050729 12:07:40 [ERROR] Can't init databases
050729 12:07:40 [ERROR] Aborting
Go ahead and delete both files. Yes, BOTH. They will be recreated with the right size, and the server will star cleanly.
I am happy to report that MySQL Server 5.0 installs and runs correctly on Windows Vista (December 05 CTP).
I installed using the msi download. Configuration failed initially because of a permissions issue but re-running the configuration tool from a cmd prompt with "run elevated" let me continue through the my.ini config and started the MySQL service.
Ok this is the way I installed mysql in my windows xp.
-downloaded the mysql-noinstall-5.0.20-win32.zip
-unziped it under c:\mysql. now my new path to mysql is: C:\mysql\mysql-5.0.20-win32
- I added the C:\mysql\mysql-5.0.20-win32\bin into my windowsxp path.
- started the server for the first time as I mentioned in section:
2.3.9. Starting the Server for the First Time
- Added the mysql as a service to windowsxp with using one of pre-configured ".ini" (option file, see 2.3.7. Creating an Option File) files in "C:\mysql\mysql-5.0.20-win32" path.
as the following:
C:\mysql\mysql-5.0.20-win32\bin>mysqld-nt --install mysql5
--defaults-file=C:\mysql\mysql-5.0.20-win32\my-small.ini
- then test the service by using:
C:\mysql\mysql-5.0.20-win32\bin>mysqlshow -u root mysql
>>> resutl <<<
Database: mysql
Watch out for windows defender blocking mysqld --install.
took me a minute, but as I was just tinkering after a webcast with --log="path" on my install and it worked fine before I tracked it down in event log.
(allow in control panel->system explorer/windows defender)
I ran into some headaches trying to install a 5.0 instance from the mysql-noinstall-5.0.37-win32.zip as a Windows Service.
I followed the instructions which said to run a test first with the --console, which worked fine, but then when I tried to start it as a service it would complain about not being able to find ibdata1. After some experimentation I discovered that the key is to change the group of the files in the data directory, mysql subdirectory, and files in mysql subdirectory to SYSTEM.
I have some more testing to do, but it seems OK now
In case you receive "The system cannot find the file specified", remember that you have to install the service with the absolute path, in my case "C:\mysql\bin\mysqld --install". I added the \bin to the windows path, and I was installing the service only with "mysqld --install".
As mentioned earlier by another user, I fell into the trap of adding MySQL to start as a service via a command like
C:\> mysqld --install
The service is reported as being installed successfully, however, under the Services panel it shows the executable path as 'C:\mysqld' when in fact it is located under 'C:\mysql\bin'. I was working under the assumption that the mysql\bin directory had been added to the system PATH variable, but really you need to use absolute file paths when installing services. In my case, I used;
C:\> C:\mysql\bin\mysqld --install MySQL --defaults-file=C:\mysql\my.ini
This starts the service automatically with Windows bootup, and will load the my.ini configuration file which you have to place within the mysql directory. For the first time however, you will need to start the mysql service manually, since the earlier command makes mysql start and end with windows shutdowns and restarts.
net start mysql
If you have problems installing the service on Windows Vista, just run the normal install and add the service manually with the following command:
use the sc create command in a dos window to add the service:
sc create MySQL start= auto DisplayName= MySQL binPath= c:\program files\mysql\mysql server 5.1\bin\mysqld.exe
then if you need to alter any parameters, use the administrative tools/services utility
If you have trouble starting the MySQL Administrator after you upgrade, it's because the upgrade changed the registry setting that identifies your configuration file. This has happened to me on every upgrade in the 5.x series over the past year.
See this excellent post by Michael Imhoff to fix it:
http://michael.omnicypher.com/2008/11/mysql-configuration-with-adobe.html
(You'll use your own INI file, of course.)
Another "got-ya"... Make sure your my.ini file is in your MySQL directory, and the variables are pointing to the correct directories.
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