I am working with some testing tools today, and it is always the same tools. The big ones are LoadRunner and NeoLoad, and for APM I use Dynatrace. I also work with Grafana, but LoadRunner is my primary testing tool. JMeter is an open source tool, and LoadRunner is from OpenText. I have not been using LoadRunner in the cloud. I work with Micro Focus solutions apart from LoadRunner. I use functional testing solutions such as HP ALM. In terms of APM and performance monitoring, I work with LogicMonitor. I may also work with tools like New Relic and Dynatrace for performance monitoring, and Apache SkyWalking for performance. I work with backup solutions, storage, and database tools. I have experience with CentOS, Debian, Ubuntu, and similar products. I have been working with MariaDB on CentOS for 10 years. I use Galera Cluster as a feature of MariaDB on CentOS. I cannot answer about the largest volume because I have never used MariaDB on CentOS with the largest volume. My experience with the largest volumes is only with Postgres and Oracle. Postgres is easier for me because of the modification of requests. I do not know the difference about the license, as licensing is not my area. I use and maintain MariaDB because I am not really aware of the price of MariaDB license or Postgres licensing. If asked to rate MariaDB on CentOS from zero to ten, with ten being the best, I would give it a rating of seven. The compatibility with MariaDB on CentOS and SQL is good. I do not have experience with MySQL currently because the most database that I work with now is Postgres. I do not know about the advanced security features of MariaDB on CentOS because I do not work on security and am not skilled to answer that. I use AWS as my cloud provider. I do not have experience with AWS Marketplace as it is not my area. My overall experience with MariaDB on CentOS is seven. My review rating for MariaDB on CentOS is seven.
I am working with many technologies, including a quite old and stable technology named LDAP, Lightweight Directory Access Protocol, and some relatively new technologies for us, such as a Linux database called MariaDB on CentOS. Every day I encounter new technologies. I have not tested MariaDB on CentOS with a very high volume, but I test technologies and if I find a good technology, I offer that to the customer, and the customer can ask me to test this with X millions of objects. Basically, I stick with the feature that I need most, which is reliability and cluster capability. Overall, for MariaDB on CentOS, I am certain I can vote 10. CentOS is very good, even a 10, but I must inform you that CentOS is moving away and transitioning to followers of CentOS called Rocky Linux or other names. At the moment, I was forced to migrate from CentOS to Rocky Linux. A very interesting question for everybody would be a comparison between the open source Linux distributions, such as Fedora, SUSE, Rocky Linux, and Ubuntu, which is in high demand. I would rate my overall experience with MariaDB on CentOS as a 10.
I believe I have covered every important aspect to discuss, and I do not have anything else to add. I was offered a gift card. My overall review rating for MariaDB on CentOS is 10.
D V A 3 at a university with 1,001-5,000 employees
Real User
Top 10
Dec 30, 2025
I can share that after switching to MariaDB on CentOS, we saw great advantages in terms of high availability performance, particularly compared to other operating systems such as Linux and Unix platforms. On a scale of one to ten, I would rate MariaDB on CentOS an eight. I chose an eight out of ten for MariaDB on CentOS because, as I mentioned earlier, the performance level, advantages, and features implemented in MariaDB on CentOS are well supported on the CentOS platform. For my deployment, the cloud provider I use is AWS. I gave the overall product a rating of eight out of ten.
I work with MariaDB on CentOS, Oracle, and Postgres. CentOS is an operating system. I am working for a company that purchased MariaDB on CentOS more than four years ago. My company is not a partner, but my client is a partner.
MariaDB on CentOS is a reliable database system that offers robust performance and flexibility for modern application development. It stands as an open-source option for those seeking a stable and scalable database on the CentOS platform.With MariaDB on CentOS, users benefit from advanced database management features. It's popular among enterprises that require efficient handling of large datasets without compromising on performance and stability. CentOS offers a dependable operating...
I am working with some testing tools today, and it is always the same tools. The big ones are LoadRunner and NeoLoad, and for APM I use Dynatrace. I also work with Grafana, but LoadRunner is my primary testing tool. JMeter is an open source tool, and LoadRunner is from OpenText. I have not been using LoadRunner in the cloud. I work with Micro Focus solutions apart from LoadRunner. I use functional testing solutions such as HP ALM. In terms of APM and performance monitoring, I work with LogicMonitor. I may also work with tools like New Relic and Dynatrace for performance monitoring, and Apache SkyWalking for performance. I work with backup solutions, storage, and database tools. I have experience with CentOS, Debian, Ubuntu, and similar products. I have been working with MariaDB on CentOS for 10 years. I use Galera Cluster as a feature of MariaDB on CentOS. I cannot answer about the largest volume because I have never used MariaDB on CentOS with the largest volume. My experience with the largest volumes is only with Postgres and Oracle. Postgres is easier for me because of the modification of requests. I do not know the difference about the license, as licensing is not my area. I use and maintain MariaDB because I am not really aware of the price of MariaDB license or Postgres licensing. If asked to rate MariaDB on CentOS from zero to ten, with ten being the best, I would give it a rating of seven. The compatibility with MariaDB on CentOS and SQL is good. I do not have experience with MySQL currently because the most database that I work with now is Postgres. I do not know about the advanced security features of MariaDB on CentOS because I do not work on security and am not skilled to answer that. I use AWS as my cloud provider. I do not have experience with AWS Marketplace as it is not my area. My overall experience with MariaDB on CentOS is seven. My review rating for MariaDB on CentOS is seven.
I am working with many technologies, including a quite old and stable technology named LDAP, Lightweight Directory Access Protocol, and some relatively new technologies for us, such as a Linux database called MariaDB on CentOS. Every day I encounter new technologies. I have not tested MariaDB on CentOS with a very high volume, but I test technologies and if I find a good technology, I offer that to the customer, and the customer can ask me to test this with X millions of objects. Basically, I stick with the feature that I need most, which is reliability and cluster capability. Overall, for MariaDB on CentOS, I am certain I can vote 10. CentOS is very good, even a 10, but I must inform you that CentOS is moving away and transitioning to followers of CentOS called Rocky Linux or other names. At the moment, I was forced to migrate from CentOS to Rocky Linux. A very interesting question for everybody would be a comparison between the open source Linux distributions, such as Fedora, SUSE, Rocky Linux, and Ubuntu, which is in high demand. I would rate my overall experience with MariaDB on CentOS as a 10.
I believe I have covered every important aspect to discuss, and I do not have anything else to add. I was offered a gift card. My overall review rating for MariaDB on CentOS is 10.
I can share that after switching to MariaDB on CentOS, we saw great advantages in terms of high availability performance, particularly compared to other operating systems such as Linux and Unix platforms. On a scale of one to ten, I would rate MariaDB on CentOS an eight. I chose an eight out of ten for MariaDB on CentOS because, as I mentioned earlier, the performance level, advantages, and features implemented in MariaDB on CentOS are well supported on the CentOS platform. For my deployment, the cloud provider I use is AWS. I gave the overall product a rating of eight out of ten.
I work with MariaDB on CentOS, Oracle, and Postgres. CentOS is an operating system. I am working for a company that purchased MariaDB on CentOS more than four years ago. My company is not a partner, but my client is a partner.