When you start the mysqld server, you can specify program options using any of the methods described in Section 4.2.3, “Specifying Program Options”. The most common methods are to provide options in an option file or on the command line. However, in most cases it is desirable to make sure that the server uses the same options each time it runs. The best way to ensure this is to list them in an option file. See Section 4.2.3.3, “Using Option Files”.
MySQL Enterprise. For expert advice on setting command options, subscribe to the MySQL Enterprise Monitor. For more information, see http://www.mysql.com/products/enterprise/advisors.html.
mysqld reads options from the
[mysqld]
and [server]
groups. mysqld_safe reads options from the
[mysqld]
, [server]
,
[mysqld_safe]
, and
[safe_mysqld]
groups.
mysql.server reads options from the
[mysqld]
and [mysql.server]
groups.
An embedded MySQL server usually reads options from the
[server]
, [embedded]
, and
[
groups, where xxxxx
_SERVER]xxxxx
is the name of the
application into which the server is embedded.
mysqld accepts many command options. For a
list, execute mysqld --help. Before MySQL
4.1.1, --help
prints the full help
message. As of 4.1.1, it prints a brief message; to see the full
list, use mysqld --verbose --help.
The following list shows some of the most common server options. Additional options are described in other sections:
Options that affect security: See Section 5.4.4, “Security-Related mysqld Options”.
SSL-related options: See Section 5.6.6.3, “SSL Command Options”.
Binary log control options: See Section 14.8.4, “Binary Log Options and Variables”.
Replication-related options: See Section 14.8, “Replication and Binary Logging Options and Variables”.
Options specific to particular storage engines: See
Section 13.1.1, “MyISAM
Startup Options”, Section 13.5.3, “BDB
Startup Options”,
Section 13.2.4, “InnoDB
Startup Options and System Variables”, and
Section 15.3.4.2, “mysqld Command Options for MySQL Cluster”.
You can also set the values of server system variables by using variable names as options, as described at the end of this section.
Some options control the size of buffers or caches. For a given buffer, the server might need to allocate internal data structures. These structures typically are allocated from the total memory allocated to the buffer, and the amount of space required might be platform dependent. This means that when you assign a value to an option that controls a buffer size, the amount of space actually available might differ from the value assigned. In some cases, the amount might be less than the value assigned. It is also possible that the server will adjust a value upward. For example, if you assign a value of 0 to an option for which the minimal value is 1024, the server will set the value to 1024.
Values for buffer sizes, lengths, and stack sizes are given in bytes unless otherwise specified.
Some options take file name values. Unless otherwise specified,
the default file location is the data directory if the value is a
relative path name. To specify the location explicitly, use an
absolute path name. Suppose that the data directory is
/var/mysql/data
. If a file-valued option is
given as a relative path name, it will be located under
/var/mysql/data
. If the value is an absolute
path name, its location is as given by the path name.
--help
, -?
Display a short help message and exit. Before MySQL 4.1.1,
--help
displays the full help
message. As of 4.1.1, it displays an abbreviated message only.
Use both the --verbose
and
--help
options to see the full
message.
This option controls whether user-defined functions that have
only an xxx
symbol for the main function
can be loaded. By default, the option is off and only UDFs
that have at least one auxiliary symbol can be loaded; this
prevents attempts at loading functions from shared object
files other than those containing legitimate UDFs. This option
was added in MySQL 4.0.24, and 4.1.10a. See
Section 18.2.2.6, “User-Defined Function Security Precautions”.
Use standard (ANSI) SQL syntax instead of MySQL syntax. For
more precise control over the server SQL mode, use the
--sql-mode
option instead. See
Section 1.9.3, “Running MySQL in ANSI Mode”, and
Section 5.1.7, “Server SQL Modes”.
The path to the MySQL installation directory. All paths are usually resolved relative to this directory.
Allow large result sets by saving all temporary sets in files. This option prevents most “table full” errors, but also slows down queries for which in-memory tables would suffice. Since MySQL 3.23.2, the server is able to handle large result sets automatically by using memory for small temporary tables and switching to disk tables where necessary.
The IP address to bind to. Only one address can be selected. If this option is specified multiple times, the last address given is used.
If no address or 0.0.0.0
is specified, the
server listens on all interfaces.
This option is used by the mysql_install_db script to create the MySQL privilege tables without having to start a full MySQL server.
The directory where character sets are installed. See Section 9.6, “Character Set Configuration”.
--character-set-client-handshake
Don't ignore character set information sent by the client. To
ignore client information and use the default server character
set, use
--skip-character-set-client-handshake
;
this makes MySQL 4.1 and higher behave like MySQL 4.0. This
option was added in MySQL 4.1.15.
--character-set-server=
,
charset_name
-C
charset_name
Use charset_name
as the default
server character set. See
Section 9.6, “Character Set Configuration”. If you use this
option to specify a nondefault character set, you should also
use --collation-server
to
specify the collation. This option is available as of MySQL
4.1.3.
--chroot=
,
path
-r
path
Put the mysqld server in a closed
environment during startup by using the
chroot()
system call. This is a recommended
security measure as of MySQL 4.0. (MySQL 3.23 is not able to
provide a chroot()
jail that is 100%
closed.) Note that use of this option somewhat limits
LOAD DATA
INFILE
and
SELECT ... INTO
OUTFILE
.
--collation-server=
collation_name
Use collation_name
as the default
server collation. This option is available as of MySQL 4.1.3.
See Section 9.6, “Character Set Configuration”.
(Windows only.) Write error log messages to
stderr
and stdout
even
if --log-error
is specified.
mysqld does not close the console window if
this option is used.
Write a core file if mysqld dies. The name
and location of the core file is system dependent. On Linux, a
core file named
core.
is
written to the current working directory of the process, which
for mysqld is the data directory.
pid
pid
represents the process ID of
the server process. On Mac OS X, a core file named
core.
is
written to the pid
/cores
directory. On
Solaris, use the coreadm command to specify
where to write the core file and how to name it.
For some systems, to get a core file you must also specify the
--core-file-size
option to
mysqld_safe. See
Section 4.3.2, “mysqld_safe — MySQL Server Startup Script”. On some systems, such as
Solaris, you do not get a core file if you are also using the
--user
option. There might be
additional restrictions or limitations. For example, it might
be necessary to execute ulimit -c unlimited
before starting the server. Consult your system documentation.
--datadir=
,
path
-h
path
The path to the data directory.
--debug[=
,
debug_options
]-# [
debug_options
]
If MySQL is configured with
--with-debug
, you can use
this option to get a trace file of what
mysqld is doing. A typical
debug_options
string is
'd:t:o,
.
The default is file_name
''d:t:i:o,mysqld.trace'
. See
MySQL
Internals: Porting.
--default-character-set=
,
charset_name
-C
charset_name
Use charset_name
as the default
character set. This option is deprecated in favor of
--character-set-server
as of
MySQL 4.1.3. See Section 9.6, “Character Set Configuration”.
--default-collation=
collation_name
Use collation_name
as the default
collation. This option is deprecated in favor of
--collation-server
as of MySQL
4.1.3. See Section 9.6, “Character Set Configuration”.
This option is a synonym for
--default-table-type
. It is
available as of MySQL 4.1.2.
Set the default table type (storage engine) for tables. See Chapter 13, Storage Engines.
Set the default server time zone. This option sets the global
time_zone
system variable. If
this option is not given, the default time zone is the same as
the system time zone (given by the value of the
system_time_zone
system
variable. This option is available as of MySQL 4.1.3.
--delay-key-write[={OFF|ON|ALL}]
Specify how to use delayed key writes. Delayed key writing
causes key buffers not to be flushed between writes for
MyISAM
tables. OFF
disables delayed key writes. ON
enables
delayed key writes for those tables that were created with the
DELAY_KEY_WRITE
option.
ALL
delays key writes for all
MyISAM
tables. Available as of MySQL 4.0.3.
See Section 7.5.3, “Tuning Server Parameters”, and
Section 13.1.1, “MyISAM
Startup Options”.
If you set this variable to ALL
, you
should not use MyISAM
tables from within
another program (such as another MySQL server or
myisamchk) when the tables are in use.
Doing so leads to index corruption.
--delay-key-write-for-all-tables
Old form of
--delay-key-write=ALL
for use
prior to MySQL 4.0.3. As of 4.0.3, use
--delay-key-write=ALL
instead.
--delay-key-write-for-all-tables
is removed in MySQL 5.5.
Read the default DES keys from this file. These keys are used
by the DES_ENCRYPT()
and
DES_DECRYPT()
functions.
Enable support for named pipes. This option applies only on Windows NT, 2000, XP, and 2003 systems, and can be used only with the mysqld-nt and mysqld-max-nt servers that support named-pipe connections.
Print a symbolic stack trace on failure. This capability is
available only on Intel Linux systems, and only if MySQL was
configured with the --with-pstack
option.
--exit-info[=
,
flags
]-T [
flags
]
This is a bit mask of different flags that you can use for debugging the mysqld server. Do not use this option unless you know exactly what it does!
Enable external locking (system locking), which is disabled by
default as of MySQL 4.0. Note that if you use this option on a
system on which lockd
does not fully work
(such as Linux), it is easy for mysqld to
deadlock. This option was named
--enable-locking
before MySQL 4.0.3.
For more information about external locking, including conditions under which it can and cannot be used, see Section 7.3.4, “External Locking”.
Flush (synchronize) all changes to disk after each SQL statement. Normally, MySQL does a write of all changes to disk only after each SQL statement and lets the operating system handle the synchronizing to disk. See Section A.5.4.2, “What to Do If MySQL Keeps Crashing”.
Install an interrupt handler for SIGINT
(needed to stop mysqld with
^C
to set breakpoints) and disable stack
tracing and core file handling. See
MySQL
Internals: Porting. This option was added in MySQL
4.0.14.
Read SQL statements from this file at startup. Each statement must be on a single line and should not include comments.
If this option is given, then after a crash recovery by
InnoDB
, mysqld truncates
the binary log after the last not-rolled-back transaction in
the log. The option also causes InnoDB
to
print an error if the binary log is smaller or shorter than it
should be. See Section 5.3.4, “The Binary Log”.
--innodb-
xxx
The InnoDB
options are listed in
Section 13.2.4, “InnoDB
Startup Options and System Variables”.
--language=
lang_name
,
-L lang_name
The language to use for error messages.
lang_name
can be given as the
language name or as the full path name to the directory where
the language files are installed. See
Section 9.3, “Setting the Error Message Language”.
--log[=
,
file_name
]-l [
file_name
]
Log connections and SQL statements received from clients to
this file. See Section 5.3.2, “The General Query Log”. If you omit the
file name, MySQL uses
as the file name.
host_name
.log
Log errors and startup messages to this file. See
Section 5.3.1, “The Error Log”. If you omit the file name, MySQL
uses
.
If the file name has no extension, the server adds an
extension of host_name
.err.err
.
Log all ISAM
/MyISAM
changes to this file (used only when debugging
ISAM
/MyISAM
).
Log extra information to the update log, binary update log,
and slow query log, if they have been activated. For example,
the user name and timestamp are logged for queries. Before
MySQL 4.1, if you are using
--log-slow-queries
and
--log-long-format
, queries that
are not using indexes also are logged to the slow query log.
--log-long-format
is deprecated
as of MySQL version 4.1, when
--log-short-format
was
introduced. (Long log format is the default setting since
version 4.1.) Also note that starting with MySQL 4.1, the
--log-queries-not-using-indexes
option is available for the purpose of logging queries that do
not use indexes to the slow query log.
--log-queries-not-using-indexes
If you are using this option with the slow query log enabled, queries that are expected to retrieve all rows are logged. See Section 5.3.5, “The Slow Query Log”. This option does not necessarily mean that no index is used. For example, a query that uses a full index scan uses an index but would be logged because the index would not limit the number of rows. This option is available as of MySQL 4.1.
Originally intended to log less information to the update log, binary log and slow query log, if they have been activated. This option was introduced in MySQL 4.1, but is not operational.
Log slow administrative statements such as
OPTIMIZE TABLE
,
ANALYZE TABLE
, and
ALTER TABLE
to the slow query
log.
This option was added in MySQL 4.1.13. (It is unnecessary in MySQL 4.0 because slow administrative statements are logged by default.)
--log-slow-queries[=
file_name
]
Log all queries that have taken more than
long_query_time
seconds to
execute to this file. See Section 5.3.5, “The Slow Query Log”.
Note that the default for the amount of information logged has
changed in MySQL 4.1. See the
--log-long-format
and
--log-short-format
options for
details.
Log updates to fileN
where
N
is a unique number if not given.
See Section 5.3.3, “The Update Log”. The update log is now
deprecated; you should use the binary log instead
(--log-bin
). See
Section 5.3.4, “The Binary Log”.
--log-warnings[=
,
level
]-W [
level
]
Print out warnings such as Aborted
connection...
to the error log. Enabling this option
is recommended, for example, if you use replication (you get
more information about what is happening, such as messages
about network failures and reconnections). This option is
enabled by default as of MySQL 4.0.19 and 4.1.2; to disable
it, use --log-warnings=0
. As of
MySQL 4.0.21 and 4.1.3, a level
argument can be given. If omitted, the default
level
is 1. If the value is greater
than 1, aborted connections are written to the error log. See
Section A.5.2.11, “Communication Errors and Aborted Connections”.
If a slave server was started with
--log-warnings
enabled, the
slave prints messages to the error log to provide information
about its status, such as the binary log and relay log
coordinates where it starts its job, when it is switching to
another relay log, when it reconnects after a disconnect, and
so forth.
Before MySQL 4.0.21 and 4.1.3, this is a boolean option, not
an integer-valued option. Before 4.0, this option was named
--warnings
.
Give table-modifying operations
(INSERT
,
REPLACE
,
DELETE
,
UPDATE
) lower priority than
selects. This can also be done via {INSERT | REPLACE
| DELETE | UPDATE} LOW_PRIORITY ...
to lower the
priority of only one query, or by SET
LOW_PRIORITY_UPDATES=1
to change the priority in one
thread. This affects only storage engines that use only
table-level locking (MyISAM
,
MEMORY
, MERGE
). See
Section 7.3.2, “Table Locking Issues”.
Lock the mysqld process in memory. This option might help if you have a problem where the operating system is causing mysqld to swap to disk.
--memlock
works on systems that
support the mlockall()
system call; this
includes Solaris as well as most Linux distributions that use
a 2.4 or newer kernel. On Linux systems, you can tell whether
or not mlockall()
(and thus this option) is
supported by checking to see whether or not it is defined in
the system mman.h
file, like this:
shell> grep mlockall /usr/include/sys/mman.h
If mlockall()
is supported, you should see
in the output of the previous command something like the
following:
extern int mlockall (int __flags) __THROW;
Using this option requires that you run the server as
root
, which, for reasons of security, is
normally not a good idea. See
Section 5.4.6, “How to Run MySQL as a Normal User”.
You must not try to use this option on a system that does
not support the mlockall()
system call;
if you do so, mysqld will very likely
crash as soon as you try to start it.
The block size to be used for MyISAM
index
pages.
--myisam-recover[=
option
[,option
]...]]
Set the MyISAM
storage engine recovery
mode. The option value is any combination of the values of
DEFAULT
, BACKUP
,
FORCE
, or QUICK
. If you
specify multiple values, separate them by commas. You can also
use a value of ""
to disable this option.
If this option is used, each time mysqld
opens a MyISAM
table, it checks whether the
table is marked as crashed or wasn't closed properly. (The
last option works only if you are running with external
locking disabled.) If this is the case,
mysqld runs a check on the table. If the
table was corrupted, mysqld attempts to
repair it.
The following options affect how the repair works.
Option | Description |
DEFAULT |
Recovery without backup, forcing, or quick checking. |
BACKUP |
If the data file was changed during recovery, save a backup of the
file as
. |
FORCE |
Run recovery even if we would lose more than one row from the
.MYD file. |
QUICK |
do not check the rows in the table if there are not any delete blocks. |
Before the server automatically repairs a table, it writes a
note about the repair to the error log. If you want to be able
to recover from most problems without user intervention, you
should use the options BACKUP,FORCE
. This
forces a repair of a table even if some rows would be deleted,
but it keeps the old data file as a backup so that you can
later examine what happened.
See Section 13.1.1, “MyISAM
Startup Options”.
This option is available as of MySQL 3.23.25.
The --new
option can be used to make the
server behave as 4.1 in certain respects, easing a 4.0 to 4.1
upgrade:
Hexadecimal strings such as 0xFF
are
treated as strings by default rather than as numbers.
(Works in 4.0.12 and up.)
TIMESTAMP
is returned as a
string with the format 'YYYY-MM-DD
HH:MM:SS'
. (Works in 4.0.13 and up.) See
Chapter 10, Data Types.
This option can be used to help you see how your applications behave in MySQL 4.1, without actually upgrading to 4.1.
Force the server to generate short (pre-4.1) password hashes for new passwords. This is useful for compatibility when the server must support older client programs. See Section 5.4.2.3, “Password Hashing in MySQL”.
--old-protocol
,
-o
Use the 3.20 protocol for compatibility with some very old clients. This option was removed in MySQL 4.1.1.
Only use one thread (for debugging under Linux). This option is available only if the server is built with debugging enabled. See MySQL Internals: Porting.
Changes the number of file descriptors available to
mysqld. You should try increasing the value
of this option if mysqld gives you the
error Too many open files
.
mysqld uses the option value to reserve
descriptors with setrlimit()
. If the
requested number of file descriptors cannot be allocated,
mysqld writes a warning to the error log.
mysqld may attempt to allocate more than
the requested number of descriptors (if they are available),
using the values of
max_connections
and
table_cache
to estimate
whether more descriptors will be needed.
The path name of the process ID file. The server creates the file in the data directory unless an absolute path name is given to specify a different directory. This file is used by other programs such as mysqld_safe to determine the server's process ID.
--port=
,
port_num
-P
port_num
The port number to use when listening for TCP/IP connections.
The port number must be 1024 or higher unless the server is
started by the root
system user.
Skip some optimization stages.
With this option, the SHOW
DATABASES
statement displays only the names of those
databases for which the user has some kind of privilege. As of
MySQL 4.0.2, this option is deprecated and does not do
anything (it is enabled by default), because there is a
SHOW DATABASES
privilege that
can be used to control access to database names on a
per-account basis. See Section 5.5.1, “Privileges Provided by MySQL”.
If this option is enabled, a user cannot create new MySQL
users by using the GRANT
statement, if the user doesn't have the
INSERT
privilege for the
mysql.user
table or any column in the
table.
Disallow authentication by clients that attempt to use accounts that have old (pre-4.1) passwords. This option is available as of MySQL 4.1.1.
Enable shared-memory connections by local clients. This option is available only on Windows. It was added in MySQL 4.1.0.
--shared-memory-base-name=
name
The name of shared memory to use for shared-memory
connections. This option is available only on Windows. The
default name is MYSQL
. The name is case
sensitive. This option was added in MySQL 4.1.0.
Disable the BDB
storage engine. This saves
memory and might speed up some operations. Do not use this
option if you require BDB
tables.
Turn off the ability to select and insert at the same time on
MyISAM
tables. (This is to be used only if
you think you have found a bug in this feature.) See
Section 7.3.3, “Concurrent Inserts”.
Ignore the DELAY_KEY_WRITE
option for all
tables. As of MySQL 4.0.3, you should use
--delay-key-write=OFF
instead.
See Section 7.5.3, “Tuning Server Parameters”.
Do not use external locking (system locking). For more information about external locking, including conditions under which it can and cannot be used, see Section 7.3.4, “External Locking”.
External locking has been disabled by default since MySQL 4.0.
This option causes the server to start without using the
privilege system at all, which gives anyone with access to the
server unrestricted access to all
databases. You can cause a running server to start
using the grant tables again by executing mysqladmin
flush-privileges or mysqladmin
reload command from a system shell, or by issuing a
MySQL FLUSH
PRIVILEGES
statement after connecting to the server.
This option also suppresses loading of user-defined functions
(UDFs).
Do not use the internal host name cache for faster name-to-IP resolution. Instead, query the DNS server every time a client connects. See Section 7.5.9, “How MySQL Uses DNS”.
Disable the InnoDB
storage engine. This
saves memory and disk space and might speed up some
operations. Do not use this option if you require
InnoDB
tables.
Disable the ISAM
storage engine. As of
MySQL 4.1, ISAM
is disabled by default, so
this option applies only if the server was configured with
support for ISAM
. This option was added in
MySQL 4.1.1.
Disable the MERGE
storage engine. This
option was added in MySQL 4.1.21. It can be used if the
following behavior is undesirable: If a user has access to
MyISAM
table t
,
that user can create a MERGE
table
m
that accesses
t
. However, if the user's
privileges on t
are subsequently
revoked, the user can continue to access
t
by doing so through
m
.
Do not resolve host names when checking client connections.
Use only IP numbers. If you use this option, all
Host
column values in the grant tables must
be IP numbers or localhost
. See
Section 7.5.9, “How MySQL Uses DNS”.
Do not listen for TCP/IP connections at all. All interaction with mysqld must be made via named pipes or shared memory (on Windows) or Unix socket files (on Unix). This option is highly recommended for systems where only local clients are allowed. See Section 7.5.9, “How MySQL Uses DNS”.
Do not use new, possibly wrong routines.
This is the old form of
--skip-symbolic-links
,
for use before MySQL 4.0.13.
--skip-symlink
is deprecated as
of 4.0.13 and is removed in MySQL 5.5.
Options that begin with --ssl
specify whether to allow clients to connect via SSL and
indicate where to find SSL keys and certificates. See
Section 5.6.6.3, “SSL Command Options”.
Available on Windows NT-based systems only; instructs the MySQL server not to run as a service.
--symbolic-links
,
--skip-symbolic-links
Enable or disable symbolic link support. This option has different effects on Windows and Unix:
On Windows, enabling symbolic links allows you to
establish a symbolic link to a database directory by
creating a
file that contains the path to the real directory. See
Section 7.6.1.3, “Using Symbolic Links for Databases on Windows”.
db_name
.sym
On Unix, enabling symbolic links means that you can link a
MyISAM
index file or data file to
another directory with the INDEX
DIRECTORY
or DATA DIRECTORY
options of the CREATE TABLE
statement. If you delete or rename the table, the files
that its symbolic links point to also are deleted or
renamed. See Section 7.6.1.2, “Using Symbolic Links for Tables on Unix”.
This option was added in MySQL 4.0.13.
If MySQL is configured with
--with-debug=full
, all MySQL
programs check for memory overruns during each memory
allocation and memory freeing operation. This checking is very
slow, so for the server you can avoid it when you do not need
it by using the
--skip-safemalloc
option.
With this option, the SHOW
DATABASES
statement is allowed only to users who
have the SHOW DATABASES
privilege, and the statement displays all database names.
Without this option, SHOW
DATABASES
is allowed to all users, but displays each
database name only if the user has the
SHOW DATABASES
privilege or
some privilege for the database. Note that
any global privilege is considered a
privilege for the database.
do not write stack traces. This option is useful when you are running mysqld under a debugger. On some systems, you also must use this option to get a core file. See MySQL Internals: Porting.
Disable using thread priorities for faster response time.
mysqld makes a large number of invalid
calls to thread scheduling routines on Linux. These calls do
not affect performance noticeably but may be a source of
“noise” for debugging tools. For example, they
can overwhelm other information of more interest in kernel
logs. To avoid these calls, start the server with the
--skip-thread-priority
option.
On Unix, this option specifies the Unix socket file to use
when listening for local connections. The default value is
/tmp/mysql.sock
. If this option is given,
the server creates the file in the data directory unless an
absolute path name is given to specify a different directory.
On Windows, the option specifies the pipe name to use when
listening for local connections that use a named pipe. The
default value is MySQL
(not case
sensitive).
--sql-mode=
value
[,value
[,value
...]]
Set the SQL mode. See Section 5.1.7, “Server SQL Modes”. This option was added in 3.23.41.
This option causes most temporary files created by the server to use a small set of names, rather than a unique name for each new file. This works around a problem in the Linux kernel dealing with creating many new files with different names. With the old behavior, Linux seems to “leak” memory, because it is being allocated to the directory entry cache rather than to the disk cache.
Sets the default transaction isolation level. The
level
value can be
READ-UNCOMMITTED
,
READ-COMMITTED
,
REPEATABLE-READ
, or
SERIALIZABLE
. See
Section 12.3.6, “SET TRANSACTION
Syntax”.
--tmpdir=
,
path
-t
path
The path of the directory to use for creating temporary files.
It might be useful if your default /tmp
directory resides on a partition that is too small to hold
temporary tables. Starting from MySQL 4.1.0, this option
accepts several paths that are used in round-robin fashion.
Paths should be separated by colon characters
(“:
”) on Unix and semicolon
characters (“;
”) on Windows,
NetWare, and OS/2. If the MySQL server is acting as a
replication slave, you should not set
--tmpdir
to point to a
directory on a memory-based file system or to a directory that
is cleared when the server host restarts. For more information
about the storage location of temporary files, see
Section A.5.4.4, “Where MySQL Stores Temporary Files”. A replication slave needs
some of its temporary files to survive a machine restart so
that it can replicate temporary tables or
LOAD DATA
INFILE
operations. If files in the temporary file
directory are lost when the server restarts, replication
fails.
--user={
,
user_name
|user_id
}-u
{
user_name
|user_id
}
Run the mysqld server as the user having
the name user_name
or the numeric
user ID user_id
.
(“User” in this context refers to a system login
account, not a MySQL user listed in the grant tables.)
This option is mandatory when starting
mysqld as root
. The
server changes its user ID during its startup sequence,
causing it to run as that particular user rather than as
root
. See
Section 5.4.1, “General Security Guidelines”.
Starting from MySQL 3.23.56 and 4.0.12: To avoid a possible
security hole where a user adds a
--user=root
option to a
my.cnf
file (thus causing the server to
run as root
), mysqld
uses only the first --user
option specified and produces a warning if there are multiple
--user
options. Options in
/etc/my.cnf
and
$MYSQL_HOME/my.cnf
are processed before
command-line options, so it is recommended that you put a
--user
option in
/etc/my.cnf
and specify a value other
than root
. The option in
/etc/my.cnf
is found before any other
--user
options, which ensures
that the server runs as a user other than
root
, and that a warning results if any
other --user
option is found.
As of MySQL 4.1.1, use this option with the
--help
option for detailed
help.
--version
, -V
Display version information and exit.
As of MySQL 4.0, you can assign a value to a server system
variable by using an option of the form
--
.
For example, var_name
=value
--key_buffer_size=32M
sets the key_buffer_size
variable
to a value of 32MB.
Note that when you assign a value to a variable, MySQL might automatically correct the value to stay within a given range, or adjust the value to the closest allowable value if only certain values are allowed.
If you want to restrict the maximum value to which a variable can
be set at runtime with
SET
, you can
define this by using the
--maximum-
command-line option.
var_name
=value
It is also possible to set variables by using
--set-variable=
or
var_name
=value
--
syntax. This syntax is deprecated as of MySQL
4.0.
var_name
=value
You can change the values of most system variables for a running
server with the
SET
statement. See Section 12.4.4, “SET
Syntax”.
Section 5.1.3, “Server System Variables”, provides a full description for all variables, and additional information for setting them at server startup and runtime. Section 7.5.3, “Tuning Server Parameters”, includes information on optimizing the server by tuning system variables.
User Comments
open_files_limit: If your mysql server process runs as mysql then the setrlimit will not raise higher then the calling safe_mysqld process. Thus relying on max_connections*5 does not work for a Linux ulimit. Use open_files_limit to go beyond 1024.
To get the server listening on all interfaces, use 0.0.0.0 as the bind address. i.e.:
--bind-address=0.0.0.0
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