Spec-Zone .ru
спецификации, руководства, описания, API
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To invoke a MySQL program from the command line (that is, from your shell or command prompt), enter the program
name followed by any options or other arguments needed to instruct the program what you want it to do. The
following commands show some sample program invocations. "shell>
" represents the prompt for your command interpreter; it
is not part of what you type. The particular prompt you see depends on your command interpreter. Typical prompts
are $
for sh, ksh, or bash,
%
for csh or tcsh, and C:\>
for the Windows
command.com or cmd.exe command interpreters.
shell>mysql --user=root test
shell>mysqladmin extended-status variables
shell>mysqlshow --help
shell>mysqldump -u root personnel
Arguments that begin with a single or double dash ("-
", "--
") specify program options. Options typically indicate the type of
connection a program should make to the server or affect its operational mode. Option syntax is described in Section
4.2.3, "Specifying Program Options".
Nonoption arguments (arguments with no leading dash) provide additional information to the program. For example,
the mysql program interprets the first nonoption argument as a
database name, so the command mysql --user=root test
indicates that you want to use
the test
database.
Later sections that describe individual programs indicate which options a program supports and describe the meaning of any additional nonoption arguments.
Some options are common to a number of programs. The most frequently used of these are the --host
(or -h
), --user
(or -u
), and --password
(or -p
) options that specify connection
parameters. They indicate the host where the MySQL server is running, and the user name and password of your
MySQL account. All MySQL client programs understand these options; they enable you to specify which server to
connect to and the account to use on that server. Other connection options are --port
(or -P
) to specify a TCP/IP port number and
--socket
(or -S
) to specify a Unix socket file on Unix (or named pipe name on Windows). For
more information on options that specify connection options, see Section
4.2.2, "Connecting to the MySQL Server".
You may find it necessary to invoke MySQL programs using the path name to the bin
directory in which they are installed. This is likely to be the case if you get a "program not found" error whenever you attempt to run a MySQL program from
any directory other than the bin
directory. To make it more convenient to use
MySQL, you can add the path name of the bin
directory to your PATH
environment variable setting. That enables you to run a program by typing
only its name, not its entire path name. For example, if mysql is installed in /usr/local/mysql/bin
,
you can run the program by invoking it as mysql, and it is not necessary to invoke it as /usr/local/mysql/bin/mysql.
Consult the documentation for your command interpreter for instructions on setting your PATH
variable. The syntax for setting environment variables is interpreter-specific. (Some information is given in Section 4.2.4, "Setting Environment Variables".) After
modifying your PATH
setting, open a new console window on Windows or log in again
on Unix so that the setting goes into effect.