MySQL
MySQL (/ˌmaɪˌɛsˌkjuːˈɛl/ "My S-Q-L") is an open source relational database management system (RDBMS). Its name is a combination of "My", the name of co-founder Michael Widenius's daughter, and "SQL", the abbreviation for Structured Query Language. The MySQL development project has made its source code available under the terms of the GNU General Public License, as well as under a variety of proprietary agreements. MySQL was owned and sponsored by a single for-profit firm, the Swedish company MySQL AB, now owned by Oracle Corporation. For proprietary use, several paid editions are available, and offer additional functionality.
MySQL is a central component of the LAMP open-source web application software stack (and other "AMP" stacks). LAMP is an acronym for "Linux, Apache, MySQL, Perl/PHP/Python". Applications that use the MySQL database include: TYPO3, MODx, Joomla, WordPress, Simple Machines Forum, phpBB, MyBB, and Drupal. MySQL is also used in many high-profile, large-scale websites, including Google (though not for searches), Facebook, Twitter, Flickr, and YouTube.
Contents
- 1 Service Control
- 2 Basic Commands
- 3 Importing/Exporting Databases
- 4 Exporting a database
- 5 Managing Databases and Tables
- 6 Admin Commands
- 7 User & Privilege Management
- 8 Key Directories, Files, and Scripts
- 9 Dumping and Restoring Databases
- 10 MySQL recovery mode
- 11 Mass MySQL database repair
- 12 MySQL optimizations
- 13 Troubleshooting
- 14 Slow queries
Service Control
mysql {start|stop|restart|reload|force-reload|status}
The mysqladmin utility is also used for MySQL management. You can find a list of mysqladmin options by invoking the utility without any arguments:
mysqladmin
Basic Commands
These command assume you are running them as root. If not, you need to specify a user with '-u user_name -p' Logging In
Log into MySQL prompt as the user:
mysql -u vnessa5_test -p
Log into MySQL prompt as root:
mysql
or:
mysql -u root -p
Importing/Exporting Databases
Importing Databases
phpMyAdmin is unable to import databases larger than 50M unless otherwise set within the settings. You can import large database from the command line so long as you have a sql dump and the username and password for the database on the server.
Import a database as the user (replace username with their username or the username from their database credentials - it will prompt you for the password):
mysql -p -u username db_name < file.sql
Importing the database as root:
mysql db_name < file.sql
You may have to check the first few lines of the file to make sure there are no 'CREATE DATABASE' and 'USE DATABASE' commands in the file and, if there are, remove of comment them out as another database will be created.
Importing multiple databases:
When running this command as root, check the 'CREATE DATABASE' and 'USE DATABASE' commands to ensure the correct database names are being used:
mysql -u root < file.sql
Warning: this is not recommended for security reasons. If you cannot review the entire content of the file, you will not know if you are running malicious commands! For example, a user could easily add 'drop database user' and remove all users from mysql. In short avoid doing this - import using individual databases.
Exporting a database
Dump a Database (on other servers):
mysqldump -Q --add-drop-table db_name > file.sql
Dump a Database, 4.0 compatible (works on 4.1 or higher servers):
mysqldump --compatible=mysql40 --add-drop-table --quote-name db_name > file.sql
Dump Multiple Databases:
mysqldump -Q --add-drop-table --databases db_name1 db_name2 > file.sql
Managing Databases and Tables
Show Databases: (will only show databases the user has access to. Root has all.)
show databases;
Drop a whole database:
drop database databasename;
Create a database: *only the root mysql user can use this command
create database databasename;
Select a database to work on:
use databasename;
Drop a specific table:
drop table wp_options;
Admin Commands
Process Management
Show all MySQL Processes:
show full processlist;
Kill a process (use 'show full processlist' to get PID)
kill 9843;
To view various mysql stats
mysqladmin version
To view current queries
mysqladmin processlist
User & Privilege Management
Grant superuser privileges. Be careful with this.
GRANT ALL PRIVILEGES ON *.* TO user_name@localhost;
Grant superuser privileges to a user for just this database.
GRANT USAGE ON *.* TO 'user'@'host' GRANT Select, Insert, Update, Delete, Create, Drop ON `database`.* TO 'user'@'host' FLUSH PRIVILEGES;
Have privileges take effect without having to restart.
FLUSH PRIVILEGES;
List of Privileges:
CREATE DROP GRANT OPTION REFERENCES EVENT ALTER DELETE INDEX INSERT SELECT UPDATE TRIGGER EXECUTE FILE PROCESS PROCESS SUPER CREATE VIEW SHOW VIEW ALTER ROUTINE CREATE ROUTINE CREATE TEMPORARY TABLES LOCK TABLES CREATE USER RELOAD : flush-hosts, flush-logs, flush-privileges, flush-status, flush-tables, flush-threads, refresh, reload REPLICATION CLIENT REPLICATION SLAVE SHOW DATABASES
Key Directories, Files, and Scripts
/var/lib/mysql MySQL root folder (contains all databases, named per folder)
/var/lib/mysql/<hostname>.pid
MySQL process ID file
/var/lib/mysql/<hostname>.err
MySQL error log
/var/log/slowqueries
Slow queries log, if enabled in my.cnf
/var/log/mysql*
Various MySQL logs as specified in my.cnf (varies)
/etc/my.cnf
MySQL main configuration file
perror
A Unix utility provided by MySQL to translate error codes
cPanel Scripts
/scripts/fixmysql
Fixes common MySQL problems (mysql.sock, /var/lib/mysql ownership/perms, stable PID)
/scripts/mysqlup [--force]
Upgrades/reinstalls MySQL (version specified in /var/cpanel/cpanel.conf)
/scripts/mysqladduserdb
Adds a MySQL user
/scripts/killmysqluserprivs
Removed a MySQL user's privileges
/scripts/dropmysqldb
Deletes a MySQL database
/scripts/grabmysqlprivs
Shows MySQL user privilege table (warning: not filtered = a lot of results)
/scripts/securemysql
contains options for securing MySQL
/scripts/suspendmysqlusers
Suspends a MySQL user
/scripts/unsuspendmysqlusers
Unsuspends a MySQL user
/scripts/mysqlconnectioncheck
Checks for MySQL connections, re-establishes mysql.sock
/scripts/updatemysqlquota
Updates quotas for all MySQL users
Dumping and Restoring Databases
To dump a database use:
mysqldump -u username -p database1 > dump-lbry.sql
To restore that database:
mysql -u username -p database1 < dump-lbry.sql
To destroy a database from CLI:
mysqladmin -u username -p drop database1
To create a database from CLI:
mysqladmin -u username -p create database1
Perform backup of all mysql databases
mkdir /root/dbbackups; touch /root/dbbackups/list; for db in $( mysql -e 'show databases' | grep -v "Database\|information_schema" | awk '{print $1}' ) ; do mysqldump --add-drop-table $db > /root/dbbackups $db.sql && echo $db >> list; done
MySQL recovery mode
Start with "1" and go to "3"; try not to go above "3" or you will start to see dropped tables and further corruption. Use above "3" only with a backup.
- echo "innodb_force_recovery = 1" >> /etc/my.cnf; /scripts/restartsrv_mysql ;
Mass MySQL database repair
Repair all MySQL databases:
mysqlcheck -reA
Repair all MyISAM databases:
for i in $(find /var/lib/mysql/ -name '*.MYI'); do myisamchk -r -f $i; done
MySQL optimizations
Query Cache
in /etc/my.cnf:
query_cache_size=16M query_cache_type=1
These settings will enable caching for queries except for those that are specifically marked as no caching enabled. See Mysqltuner.pl for adjusting values.
More information is available here: MySql:_my.cnf_settings#Enabling_the_Query_Cache
MySQLtuner.pl
Additionally, a tool exists that can provide further insight into tuning MySQLd: https://github.com/major/MySQLTuner-perl
You can obtain this tool by running:
wget http://mysqltuner.pl -O mysqltuner.pl
You start the tool by running:
perl mysqltuner.pl
Be aware that incorrectly changing to recommended setting may cause OoM kills or other undesirable behavior.
Troubleshooting
InnoDB Crashes
InnoDB crashes can be very complex to resolve.
First, try setting InnoDB to recovery mode. Edit /etc/my.cnf and add:
innodb_force_recovery = 1
Then restart MySQL. If it does not started up, keep increasing the recovery level up to 3 until it does start. If it doesn't start at this point, get a developer.
Once it does start, reverse the change you made and restart again normally. If InnoDB does not initialize after doing this, you may be dealing with a more complex issue that might require re-importing InnoDB data.
Root Login Failure
If this is a cPanel server, simply run:
/scripts/mysqlpass root 'password'
Otherwise:
Add this line to /etc/my.cnf and restart MySQL:
skip-grant-tables
Follow these steps to reset the MySQL root password:
mysql -u root mysql> FLUSH PRIVILEGES; mysql> GRANT ALL PRIVILEGES ON *.* TO root@localhost IDENTIFIED BY 'ourmysqlpassword' WITH GRANT OPTION; mysql> FLUSH PRIVILEGES; mysql> exit;
service mysql restart
Remove the line you added to my.cnf and restart again.
Disable innodb on MySQL 5.6
If you're using MySQL 5.6+ and want to disable InnoDB, don't forget "--default-tmp-storage" or it won't work.
To disable InnoDB, use --innodb=OFF or --skip-innodb. In this case, because the default storage engine is InnoDB, the server will not start unless you also use --default-storage-engine and --default-tmp-storage-engine to set the default to some other engine for both permanent and TEMPORARY tables.
http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.6/en/innodb-parameters.html#option_mysqld_ignore-builtin-innodb
You can add this to your my.cnf:
[mysqld] innodb=OFF ignore-builtin-innodb skip-innodb default-storage-engine=myisam default-tmp-storage-engine=myisam
Missing libmysqlclient.so.14
error while loading shared libraries: libmysqlclient.so.14: cannot open shared object file: No such file or directory
Run this command:
cp /usr/lib/mysql/libmysqlclient.so.14 /usr/lib
InnoDB Errors
If you see the following error while attempting to start (or restart) MySQL
InnoDB: corruption in the InnoDB tablespace. Please refer to InnoDB: http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.0/en/forcing-recovery.html InnoDB: about forcing recovery.
Add the following line to my.cnf:
innodb_force_recovery = 4
If you see a large number of databases with the following error:
Incorrect information in file: './database/table.frm'
It means the innodb engine has locked up and crashed. You need to comment out the innodb lines in /etc/my.cnf, restart mysql, uncomment the innodb lines again, restart mysql.
Slow queries
The slow query parser tool can be used to parse the slow query log. Running 'slowqueryparser.py' by itself will return a list sorted by number of queries and including total time, total lock time, total rows sent, and total rows received. It is recommended that you pipe only the last 50k lines to this script, since the slow query log is infrequently rotated:
tail -50000 /var/log/slowqueries | slowqueryparser.py
As with the general query parser, per-user output can be extracted with the '--user=' option:
tail -50000 /var/log/slowqueries | slowqueryparser.py --user=username --output=/home/username/slowqueries.log
Full help output:
usage: slowqueryparser.py [options] [filename]
[filename] is optional and defaults to stdin.
options: -h, --help show this help message and exit -v, --verbose Print info on stderr (default: True) -q, --quiet Suppress stderr output -o FILE, --output=FILE Write output to FILE (default: stdout) -u USER, --user=USER Output USER's queries instead of tallys -a, --average Print averages per query instead of totals
mysqldumpslow parses MySQL slow query log files and prints a summary of their contents. Normally, mysqldumpslow groups queries that are similar except for the particular values of number and string data values. It abstracts these values to N and S when displaying summary output. The -a and -n options can be used to modify value abstracting behaviour.
usage: mysqldumpslow <path to slowquerylog> options: -a Do not abstract all numbers to N and strings to ´S´. -g pattern Consider only queries that match the (grep-style) pattern. -l Do not subtract lock time from total time. -n N Abstract numbers with at least N digits within names. -s sort_type How to sort the output. The value of sort_type should be chosen from the following list: · t, at: Sort by query time or average query time · l, al: Sort by lock time or average lock time · r, ar: Sort by rows sent or average rows sent · c: Sort by count By default, mysqldumpslow sorts by average query time (equivalent to -s at).
To parse the default slow query log:
mysqldumpslow /var/log/slowqueries
You can also pass data to it via stdin by passing '-' as the log name. You may also find it beneficial to use this tool in tandem with the slowqueryparser to provide the customer with an easy to understand report of their slow query activity:
slowqueryparser.py -u username | mysqldumpslow - > ~username/slow-query-report.txt