Spec-Zone .ru
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Most MySQL programs can read startup options from option files (also sometimes called configuration files). Option files provide a convenient way to specify commonly used options so that they need not be entered on the command line each time you run a program. For the MySQL server, MySQL provides a number of preconfigured option files.
To determine whether a program reads option files, invoke it with the --help
option.
(For mysqld,
use --verbose
and --help
.) If the program reads option files, the help message indicates which
files it looks for and which option groups it recognizes.
The .mylogin.cnf
file that contains login path options is created by the mysql_config_editor
utility. See Section 4.6.6, "mysql_config_editor — MySQL Configuration Utility". A "login path" is an option group that permits only
a limited set of options: host
, user
, and password
. Client programs specify which login path to read from .mylogin.cnf
using the --login-path
option.
To specify an alternate file name, set the MYSQL_TEST_LOGIN_FILE
environment
variable. This variable is used by the mysql-test-run.pl testing
utility, but also is recognized by mysql_config_editor
and by MySQL clients such as
mysql, mysqladmin, and so forth.
Option files used with MySQL Cluster programs are covered in Section 17.3, "Configuration of MySQL Cluster NDB 7.3".
On Windows, MySQL programs read startup options from the following files, in the specified order (top items are used first).
File Name | Purpose |
---|---|
,
|
Global options |
,
|
Global options |
C:\my.ini , C:\my.cnf |
Global options |
,
|
Global options |
defaults-extra-file |
The file specified with --defaults-extra-file= ,if
any
|
|
Login path options |
%PROGRAMDATA%
represents the file system directory that contains application data
for all users on the host. This path defaults to C:\ProgramData
on Microsoft
Windows Vista and greater, and C:\Documents and Settings\All Users\Application Data
on older versions of Microsoft Windows.
%WINDIR%
represents the location of your Windows directory. This is commonly C:\WINDOWS
. You can determine its exact location from the value of the WINDIR
environment variable using the following command:
C:\> echo %WINDIR%
INSTALLDIR
represents the MySQL installation directory. This is
typically C:\
where PROGRAMDIR
\MySQL\MySQL 5.6 ServerPROGRAMDIR
represents the programs directory (usually Program Files
on English-language versions of Windows), when MySQL 5.6 has been
installed using the installation and configuration wizards. See Section
2.3.3, "Installing MySQL on Microsoft Windows Using MySQL Installer".
%APPDATA%
represents the value of the Windows application data directory. You can
determine its exact location from the value of the APPDATA
environment variable
using the following command:
C:\> echo %APPDATA%
On Unix, Linux and Mac OS X, MySQL programs read startup options from the following files, in the specified order (top items are used first).
File Name | Purpose |
---|---|
/etc/my.cnf |
Global options |
/etc/mysql/my.cnf |
Global options |
|
Global options |
$MYSQL_HOME/my.cnf |
Server-specific options |
defaults-extra-file |
The file specified with --defaults-extra-file= ,if
any
|
~/.my.cnf |
User-specific options |
~/.mylogin.cnf |
Login path options |
~
represents the current user's home directory (the value of $HOME
).
SYSCONFDIR
represents the directory specified with the SYSCONFDIR
option to CMake when
MySQL was built. By default, this is the etc
directory located under the
compiled-in installation directory.
MYSQL_HOME
is an environment variable containing the path to the directory in which
the server-specific my.cnf
file resides. If MYSQL_HOME
is not set and you start the server using the mysqld_safe program, mysqld_safe attempts to set MYSQL_HOME
as follows:
Let BASEDIR
and DATADIR
represent the path names of the MySQL base directory
and data directory, respectively.
If there is a my.cnf
file in DATADIR
but not in BASEDIR
, mysqld_safe sets MYSQL_HOME
to DATADIR
.
Otherwise, if MYSQL_HOME
is not set and there is no
my.cnf
file in DATADIR
, mysqld_safe
sets MYSQL_HOME
to BASEDIR
.
In MySQL 5.6, use of DATADIR
as the location for my.cnf
is deprecated.
Typically, DATADIR
is /usr/local/mysql/data
for a binary installation or /usr/local/var
for a source installation. Note that this is the data directory location that was specified at configuration
time, not the one specified with the --datadir
option when mysqld starts. Use of --datadir
at runtime has no effect on where the server looks for option files,
because it looks for them before processing any options.
MySQL looks for option files in the order just described and reads any that exist. If an option file that you want to use does not exist, create it with a plain text editor.
If multiple instances of a given option are found, the last instance takes precedence. There is one exception:
For mysqld, the first
instance of the --user
option is used as a security precaution, to prevent a user specified in
an option file from being overridden on the command line.
On Unix platforms, MySQL ignores configuration files that are world-writable. This is intentional as a security measure.
Any long option that may be given on the command line when running a MySQL program can be given in an option
file as well. To get the list of available options for a program, run it with the --help
option.
The syntax for specifying options in an option file is similar to command-line syntax (see Section
4.2.3.1, "Using Options on the Command Line"). However, in an option file, you omit the leading two dashes
from the option name and you specify only one option per line. For example, --quick
and --host=localhost
on the command line should be specified as quick
and host=localhost
on separate lines in an
option file. To specify an option of the form --loose-
in an option file, write it as opt_name
loose-
. opt_name
Empty lines in option files are ignored. Nonempty lines can take any of the following forms:
#
,
comment
;
comment
Comment lines start with "#
" or ";
". A "#
" comment can start in the middle of a line as well.
[
group
]
group
is the name of the program or group for which you
want to set options. After a group line, any option-setting lines apply to the named group until the
end of the option file or another group line is given. Option group names are not case sensitive.
opt_name
This is equivalent to --
on the command line. opt_name
opt_name
=value
This is equivalent to --
on the command line. In an option file, you
can have spaces around the "opt_name
=value
=
" character, something that is not true on the command
line. You can optionally enclose the value within single quotation marks or double quotation marks,
which is useful if the value contains a "#
" comment character.
Leading and trailing spaces are automatically deleted from option names and values.
You can use the escape sequences "\b
",
"\t
", "\n
", "\r
", "\\
", and "\s
" in option values to represent the
backspace, tab, newline, carriage return, backslash, and space characters. The escaping rules in option files
are:
If a backslash is followed by a valid escape sequence character, the sequence is
converted to the character represented by the sequence. For example, "\s
" is converted to a space.
If a backslash is not followed by a valid escape sequence character, it remains
unchanged. For example, "\S
"
is retained as is.
The preceding rules mean that a literal backslash can be given as "\\
", or as "\
" if it is not followed by a valid escape sequence character.
The rules for escape sequences in option files differ slightly from the rules for escape sequences in string
literals in SQL statements. In the latter context, if "x
" is not a valid escape sequence character, "\
" becomes "x
x
" rather than "\
". See Section
9.1.1, "String Literals". x
The escaping rules for option file values are especially pertinent for Windows path names, which use "\
" as a path name separator. A
separator in a Windows path name must be written as "\\
" if it is followed by an escape sequence character. It can be
written as "\\
" or "\
" if it is not.
Alternatively, "/
" may be
used in Windows path names and will be treated as "\
". Suppose that you want to specify a base directory of C:\Program Files\MySQL\MySQL Server 5.6
in an option file. This can be done
several ways. Some examples:
basedir="C:\Program Files\MySQL\MySQL Server 5.6"basedir="C:\\Program Files\\MySQL\\MySQL Server 5.6"basedir="C:/Program Files/MySQL/MySQL Server 5.6"basedir=C:\\Program\sFiles\\MySQL\\MySQL\sServer\s5.6
If an option group name is the same as a program name, options in the group apply specifically to that program.
For example, the [mysqld]
and [mysql]
groups apply to
the mysqld server and the mysql client program, respectively.
The [client]
option group is read by all client programs (but not by mysqld). This enables you to specify options that apply to all
clients. For example, [client]
is the perfect group to use to specify the password
that you use to connect to the server. (But make sure that the option file is readable and writable only by
yourself, so that other people cannot find out your password.) Be sure not to put an option in the [client]
group unless it is recognized by all client programs that you use. Programs that do not understand the
option quit after displaying an error message if you try to run them.
Here is a typical global option file:
[client]port=3306socket=/tmp/mysql.sock[mysqld]port=3306socket=/tmp/mysql.sockkey_buffer_size=16Mmax_allowed_packet=8M[mysqldump]quick
The preceding option file uses
syntax for the lines that set the var_name
=value
key_buffer_size
and max_allowed_packet
variables.
Here is a typical user option file:
[client]# The following password will be sent to all standard MySQL clientspassword="my_password"[mysql]no-auto-rehashconnect_timeout=2[mysqlhotcopy]interactive-timeout
If you want to create option groups that should be read by mysqld servers from a specific MySQL release series only, you
can do this by using groups with names of [mysqld-5.5]
, [mysqld-5.6]
,
and so forth. The following group indicates that the --new
option should be used
only by MySQL servers with 5.6.x version numbers:
[mysqld-5.6]new
It is possible to use !include
directives in option files to include other option
files and !includedir
to search specific directories for option files. For example,
to include the /home/mydir/myopt.cnf
file, use the following directive:
!include /home/mydir/myopt.cnf
To search the /home/mydir
directory and read option files found there, use this
directive:
!includedir /home/mydir
There is no guarantee about the order in which the option files in the directory will be read.
Currently, any files to be found and included using the !includedir
directive on Unix operating systems must have file names ending in
.cnf
. On Windows, this directive checks for files with the .ini
or .cnf
extension.
Write the contents of an included option file like any other option file. That is, it should contain groups of
options, each preceded by a [
line
that indicates the program to which the options apply. group
]
While an included file is being processed, only those options in groups that the current program is looking for
are used. Other groups are ignored. Suppose that a my.cnf
file contains this line:
!include /home/mydir/myopt.cnf
And suppose that /home/mydir/myopt.cnf
looks like this:
[mysqladmin]force[mysqld]key_buffer_size=16M
If my.cnf
is processed by mysqld, only the [mysqld]
group in
/home/mydir/myopt.cnf
is used. If the file is processed by mysqladmin, only the [mysqladmin]
group is used. If the file is processed by any other program, no
options in /home/mydir/myopt.cnf
are used.
The !includedir
directive is processed similarly except that all option files in
the named directory are read.