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MariaDB on CentOS Reviews

4.4 out of 5

What is MariaDB on CentOS?

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MariaDB on CentOS mindshare

As of March 2026, the mindshare of MariaDB on CentOS in the Operating Systems (OS) for Business category stands at 0.1%, according to calculations based on PeerSpot user engagement data.
Operating Systems (OS) for Business Mindshare Distribution
ProductMindshare (%)
MariaDB on CentOS0.1%
Rocky Linux10.2%
Ubuntu Linux8.8%
Other80.9%
Operating Systems (OS) for Business

PeerResearch reports based on MariaDB on CentOS reviews

TypeTitleDate
CategoryOperating Systems (OS) for BusinessMar 27, 2026Download
ProductReviews, tips, and advice from real usersMar 27, 2026Download
ComparisonMariaDB on CentOS vs Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL)Mar 27, 2026Download
ComparisonMariaDB on CentOS vs Rocky LinuxMar 27, 2026Download
ComparisonMariaDB on CentOS vs Ubuntu LinuxMar 27, 2026Download
 
 
Key learnings from peers
Last updated Mar 22, 2026

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MariaDB on CentOS Reviews Summary
Author infoRatingReview Summary
Owner at Syntlogo GmbH5.0I've used MariaDB on CentOS for five years and find it highly reliable, especially with Galera Cluster for high availability. While setup is complex, documentation is solid, and I prefer it over PostgreSQL and MS SQL for clustering.
Senior Software Developer at a tech services company with 501-1,000 employees4.0We've used MariaDB on CentOS for over four years on AWS; it's reliable, fast, scalable, and handles high transaction volumes well, though I'd prefer more up-to-date default versions and improved support for client integration tools.
D V A 3 at a university with 1,001-5,000 employees4.0I've used MariaDB on CentOS for nine years in telecom projects, valuing its high availability, strong security, and scalability, though memory issues exist; overall, it outperformed MySQL and earned an eight out of ten from me.
Senior Full Stack Software Engineer at BaliaTech5.0I run MariaDB on CentOS in hybrid/public clouds (AWS and DigitalOcean), self-installed. It’s very similar to MySQL but performs noticeably better in production, so I recommend switching. I have no real vendor relationship, rated support negatively, yet gave it 10.
Architect at LTIMindtree4.0I use MariaDB on CentOS for internal company applications after migrating from Oracle, which was challenging due to incompatible features and code differences, but MariaDB offers better speed and supports JSON, running on AWS in a public cloud.