Mysql
Ubuntu setup
Have a mysql
root password ready to go.
apt install mysql-server mysql-client libmysqlclient-dev apt install python3-mysqldb # if using python to access mysql mysql_secure_installation
ERROR in UBUNTU 22.04 solved here: https://www.nixcraft.com/t/mysql-failed-error-set-password-has-no-significance-for-user-root-localhost-as-the-authentication-method-used-doesnt-store-authentication-data-in-the-mysql-server-please-consider-using-alter-user/4233
ALTER USER 'root'@'localhost' IDENTIFIED WITH mysql_native_password BY 'SetRootPasswordHere';
Log in as root to mysql database
mysql -u root -p mysql select * from user; delete from user where host = 'myserver'; # not needed if secure installation completed above create user barney@localhost identified by 'xxxxxxxx'; create database bookstore; grant all privileges on bookstore.* to barney@localhost; # regular account grant select on bookstore.* to barney@localhost; # read-only account grant lock tables on bookstore.* to barney@localhost; # need lock tables to run mysqldump grant file on *.* to barney@localhost; # write output to files flush privileges;
Show Permissions
Logged in as root:
show grants for barney@localhost;
File I/O
You should have already granted "file" privileges to user:
grant file on *.* to barney@localhost; flush privileges;
To execute SQL commands in a text file (from the command line):
mysql -u barney -p bookstore < mycommands.sql
To execute SQL commands in a text file (from the mysql prompt):
mysql> use bookstore; mysql> source /home/barney/sql/mycommands.sql;
To read data out to a file (NOTE: The mysql
user can only write to the /var/lib/mysql-files/
directory):
select ... into outfile "/var/lib/mysql-files/goodbooks.txt";
To load a file into a table:
load data local infile "/home/barney/sql/goodbooks.txt" into table books;
Save into a CSV file:
select * from users into outfile '/tmp/users.csv' fields terminated by ',' optionally enclosed by '"' lines terminated by '\n';
Backing up and restoring a database
To back up the database "bookstore" to a file sq5.sql:
export MYSQL_PWD=XXXXX mysqldump --no-tablespaces --opt bookstore > bookstore.sql
To restore a database from backup (overwrites any existing):
mysql -u root -p bookstore < bookstore.sql
Searching on three-character words
- Edit
/etc/mysql/mysql.cnf
to add this line to the[mysqld]
section (create section if it doesn't exist):
[mysqld] ft_min_word_len=3
- Restart mysql.
- For each table you are doing a fulltext search on, run this command:
repair table <table_name> quick;
- Restart mysql and any dependent apps.
Create database/table example
drop database if exists edapt_quiz; create database edapt_quiz; use edapt_quiz; drop table if exists quizzes; create table quizzes ( id int unsigned not null auto_increment, name varchar(64) not null, primary key (id) ) engine=innodb; insert into quizzes (name) values ('Prodromal Questionnaire – Brief Version'); drop table if exists questions; create table questions ( id int unsigned not null auto_increment, quiz_id int unsigned not null, sort_order smallint, text text, primary key (id), foreign key (quiz_id) references quizzes(id) ) engine=innodb;
Troubleshooting
When attempting to load a database from a mysqldump backup, you get
ERROR 1227 (42000) at line 81: Access denied; you need (at least one of) the SUPER privilege(s) for this operation
You need to remove all DEFINER lines from the mysqldump file:
sed 's/DEFINER=[^*]*\*/\*/g' backup.sql > new_backup.sql