This chapter provides a brief overview of the command-line programs provided
by MySQL AB and discusses the general syntax for specifying options when you
run these programs. Most programs have options that are specific to their
own operation, but the option syntax is similar for all of them. Later
chapters provide more detailed descriptions of individual programs,
including which options they recognize.
MySQL AB also provides three GUI client programs for use with MySQL Server:
4.2. Invoking MySQL Programs
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 or
bash,
% for csh
or
tcsh, and
C:\> for the Windows command.com
or
cmd.exe command
interpreters.
shell> mysql -u root test
shell> mysqladmin extended-status variables
shell> mysqlshow --help
shell> mysqldump --user=root personnel
Arguments that begin with a single or double dash (‘-’,
‘--’) are option arguments. Options
typically specify the type of connection a program should make to the
server or affect its operational mode. Option syntax is described in
Section 4.3, “Specifying Program Options”.
Non-option arguments (arguments with no leading dash) provide additional
information to the program. For example, the
mysql program interprets the
first non-option argument as a database name, so the command
mysql -u root test indicates that you want to use the
test database.
Later sections that describe individual programs indicate which options a
program understands and describe the meaning of any additional
non-option arguments.
Some options are common to a number of programs. The most common 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 username and password of your MySQL
account. All MySQL client programs understand these options; they allow
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).
The default hostname is localhost. For client
programs on Unix, the hostname localhost is
special. It causes the client to connect to the MySQL server through a
Unix socket file. This occurs even if a
--port or -P
option is given to specify a port number. To ensure that the client
makes a TCP/IP connection to the local server, use
--host or
-h to specify a hostname value of
127.0.0.1, or the IP address or name of the
local server. You can also specify the connection protocol explicitly,
even for localhost, by using the
--protocol=tcp option.
You may find it necessary to invoke MySQL programs using the pathname 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 pathname 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 pathname. For example, if
mysql is installed in
/usr/local/mysql/bin, you'll be able to run
it by invoking it as mysql;
it will not be 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 4.3.3, “Using Environment Variables to Specify Options”.)
4.3. Specifying Program Options
There are several ways to specify options for MySQL programs:
List the options on the command line following the program name. This
is most common for options that apply to a specific invocation of
the program.
List the options in an option file that the program reads when it
starts. This is common for options that you want the program to use
each time it runs.
List the options in environment variables. This method is useful for
options that you want to apply each time the program runs. In
practice, option files are used more commonly for this purpose.
However,
Section 5.12.2, “Running Multiple Servers on Unix”, discusses
one situation in which environment variables can be very helpful. It
describes a handy technique that uses such variables to specify the
TCP/IP port number and Unix socket file for both the server and
client programs.
MySQL programs determine which options are given first by examining
environment variables, then by reading option files, and then by
checking the command line. This means that environment variables have
the lowest precedence and command-line options the highest.
Because options are processed in order, if an option is specified multiple
times, the last occurrence takes precedence. The following command
causes mysql to connect to
the server running on localhost:
shell> mysql -h example.com -h localhost
If conflicting or related options are given, later options take precedence
over earlier options. The following command runs
mysql in “no
column names” mode:
shell> mysql --column-names --skip-column-names
An option can be specified by writing it in full or as any unambiguous
prefix. For example, the --compress
option can be given to mysqldump
as
--compr, but not as
--comp
because that is ambiguous:
shell> mysqldump --comp
mysqldump: ambiguous option '--comp' (compatible, compress)
Be aware that the use of option prefixes can cause problems in the event
that new options are implemented for a program. A prefix that is
unambigious now might become ambiguous in the future.
You can take advantage of the way that MySQL programs process options by
specifying default values for a program's options in an option file.
That enables you to avoid typing them each time you run the program, but
also allows you to override the defaults if necessary by using
command-line options.
4.3.1. Using Options on the Command Line
Program options specified on the command line follow these rules:
Options are given after the command name.
An option argument begins with one dash or two dashes, depending on
whether it has a short name or a long name. Many options have both
forms. For example,
-? and --help
are the short and long forms of the option that instructs a MySQL
program to display its help message.
Option names are case sensitive. -v and
-V are both legal and have different
meanings. (They are the corresponding short forms of the
--verbose and
--version
options.)
Some options take a value following the option name. For example,
-h localhost or
--host=localhost indicate the MySQL
server host to a client program. The option value tells the program
the name of the host where the MySQL server is running.
For a long option that takes a value, separate the option name and
the value by an ‘=’ sign. For a short
option that takes a value, the option value can immediately follow
the option letter, or there can be a space between:
-hlocalhost and
-h localhost are equivalent. An
exception to this rule is the option for specifying your MySQL
password. This option can be given in long form as
--password=pass_val
or as --password. In the latter case
(with no password value given), the program prompts you for the
password. The password option also may be given in short form as
-ppass_val
or as
-p. However, for the short form, if the
password value is given, it must follow the option letter with
no intervening space. The reason for this is that if a
space follows the option letter, the program has no way to tell
whether a following argument is supposed to be the password value or
some other kind of argument. Consequently, the following two
commands have two completely different meanings:
shell> mysql -ptest
shell> mysql -p test
The first command instructs mysql
to use a password value of test, but
specifies no default database. The second instructs
mysql to prompt for
the password value and to use test as
the default database.
MySQL 4.0 introduced some additional flexibility in the way you specify
options. These changes were made in MySQL 4.0.2. Some of them relate to
the way you specify options that have “enabled”
and “disabled” states, and to the use of
options that might be present in one version of MySQL but not another.
Those capabilities are discussed in this section. Another change
pertains to the way you use options to set program variables.
Section 4.3.4, “Using Options to Set Program Variables”, discusses
that topic further.
Some options control behavior that can be turned on or off. For example,
the mysql client supports
a
--column-names option that determines
whether or not to display a row of column names at the beginning of
query results. By default, this option is enabled. However, you may want
to disable it in some instances, such as when sending the output of
mysql into another program that expects to see only data
and not an initial header line.
To disable column names, you can specify the option using any of these
forms:
--disable-column-names
--skip-column-names
--column-names=0
The --disable and
--skip
prefixes and the =0 suffix all have the
same effect: They turn the option off.
The “enabled” form of the option may be
specified in any of these ways:
--column-names
--enable-column-names
--column-names=1
Another change to option processing introduced in MySQL 4.0 is that you
can use the --loose prefix for command-line
options. If an option is prefixed by
--loose, a program does not exit with an
error if it does not recognize the option, but instead issues only a
warning:
shell> mysql --loose-no-such-option
mysql: WARNING: unknown option '--no-such-option'
The --loose prefix can be useful when you
run programs from multiple installations of MySQL on the same machine
and list options in an option file, An option that may not be recognized
by all versions of a program can be given using the
--loose prefix (or
loose in an option file). Versions of the
program that recognize the option process it normally, and versions that
do not recognize it issue a warning and ignore it. This strategy
requires that versions involved be 4.0.2 or later, because earlier
versions know nothing of the
--loose convention.
Another option that may occasionally be useful with
mysql is the
--execute or
-e option, which can be used to pass SQL
statements to the server. The statements must be enclosed by single or
double quotation marks. If you wish to use quoted values within a
statement, you should use double quotes for the statement, and single
quotes for any quoted values within the statement. When this option is
used, mysql
executes the statements and exits.
For example, you can use the following command to obtain a list of user
accounts:
shell> mysql -u root -p --execute="SELECT User, Host FROM user" mysql
Enter password: ******
+------+-----------+
| User | Host |
+------+-----------+
| | gigan |
| root | gigan |
| | localhost |
| jon | localhost |
| root | localhost |
+------+-----------+
shell>
Note that the long form (--execute) is
followed by an equals sign (=).
In the preceding example, the name of the
mysql database was passed as a separate
argument. However, the same statement could have been executed using
this command, which specifies no default database:
mysql> mysql -u root -p --execute="SELECT User, Host FROM mysql.user"
Multiple SQL statements may be passed on the command line, separated by
semicolons:
shell> mysql -u root -p -e "SELECT VERSION();SELECT NOW()"
Enter password: ******
+------------+
| VERSION() |
+------------+
| 4.1.17-log |
+------------+
+---------------------+
| NOW() |
+---------------------+
| 2006-01-05 21:19:04 |
+---------------------+
The --execute or -e
option may also be used to pass commands in an analogous fashion to the
ndb_mgm management client
for MySQL Cluster. See
Section 15.3.6, “Safe Shutdown and Restart”, for an example.
4.3.2. Using Option Files
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. Option file capability is
available from MySQL 3.22 on.
To determine whether a program reads option files, invoke it with the
--help option (--verbose and
--help for
mysqld as of MySQL 4.1.1).
If the program reads option files, the help message indicates which
files it looks for and which option groups it recognizes.
Note: Option files used with
MySQL Cluster programs are covered in
Section 15.4, “MySQL Cluster Configuration”.
On Windows, MySQL programs read startup options from the following
files:
WINDIR represents the location
of your Windows directory. This is commonly
C:\WINDOWS or
C:\WINNT. You can determine its exact
location from the value of the WINDIR
environment variable using the following command:
C:\> echo %WINDIR%
INSTALLDIR represents the
installation directory of MySQL. This is typically the case with MySQL
4.1.5 and higher, when installed using the installation and
configuration wizards. See
Section 2.3.4.14, “The Location of the my.ini File”.
On Unix, MySQL programs read startup options from the following files:
DATADIR represents 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
pathnames 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.
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.
Note: On Unix platforms,
MySQL ignores configuration files that are world-writable. This is
intentional, and acts 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, except that you omit the leading two dashes. For
example, --quick or
--host=localhost on the command line should
be specified as quick or
host=localhost in an option file. To
specify an option of the form
--loose-opt_name
in an option file, write it as
loose-opt_name.
Empty lines in option files are ignored. Non-empty lines can take any of
the following forms:
#comment,
;comment
Comment lines start with ‘#’ or ‘;’.
As of MySQL 4.0.14, 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.
opt_name
This is equivalent to
--opt_name
on the command line.
opt_name=value
This is equivalent to
--opt_name=value
on the command line. In an option file, you can have spaces around
the ‘=’ character, something that is
not true on the command line. As of MySQL 4.0.16, you can enclose
the value within double quotes or single quotes. This is useful if
the value contains a ‘#’ comment
character or whitespace.
set-variable =
var_name=value
Set the program variable var_name
to the given value. This is equivalent to
--set-variable=var_name=value
on the command line. Spaces are allowed around the first ‘=’
character but not around the second. This syntax is deprecated as of
MySQL 4.0. See
Section 4.3.4, “Using Options to Set Program Variables”, for
more information on setting program variables.
For options that take a numeric value, the value can be given with a
suffix of K, M,
or
G (either uppercase or lowercase) to
indicate a multiplier of 1024, 10242 or 10243. For
example, the following command tells
mysqladmin to ping the server 1024 times, sleeping 10
seconds between each ping:
mysql> mysqladmin --count=1K --sleep=10 ping
Leading and trailing blanks are automatically deleted from option names
and values. You may 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.
Because the ‘\\’ escape sequence represents
a single backslash, you must write each ‘\’
as ‘\\’. Alternatively, you can specify the
value using ‘/’ rather than ‘\’
as the pathname separator.
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 allows 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=3306
socket=/tmp/mysql.sock
[mysqld]
port=3306
socket=/tmp/mysql.sock
key_buffer_size=16M
max_allowed_packet=8M
[mysqldump]
quick
The preceding option file uses
var_name=value
syntax for the lines that set the
key_buffer_size and
max_allowed_packet variables. Prior to
MySQL 4.0.2, you would need to use set-variable
syntax instead (described earlier in this section).
Here is a typical user option file:
[client]
# The following password will be sent to all standard MySQL clients
password="my_password"
[mysql]
no-auto-rehash
set-variable = connect_timeout=2
[mysqlhotcopy]
interactive-timeout
This option file uses set-variable syntax
to set the connect_timeout variable. For
MySQL 4.0.2 and up, you can also set the variable using just
connect_timeout=2.
As of MySQL 4.0.14, if you want to create option groups that should be
read only by mysqld
servers from a specific MySQL release series only, you can do this by
using groups with names of [mysqld-4.0],
[mysqld-4.1], and so forth. The following
group indicates that the --new option should
be used only by MySQL servers with 4.0.x version numbers:
[mysqld-4.0]
new
Beginning with MySQL 4.1.11 in the 4.1 series and MySQL 5.0.4 in the 5.0
series, 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, you can
use the following directive:
!include /home/me/myopt.cnf
To search the /home/mydir directory and
read option files found there, you would use this directive:
!includedir /home/mydir
Note: Currently, any files to
be found and included using the !includedir
directive on Unix operating systems must
have filenames ending in .cnf. On Windows,
this directive checks for files with the
.ini or .cnf
extension.
Note that options read from included files are applied in the context of
the current option group. Suppose that you were to write the following
lines in my.cnf:
[mysqld]
!include /home/mydir/myopt.cnf
In this case, the myopt.cnf file is
processed only for the server, and the
!include directive is ignored by any client
applications. However, if you were to use the following lines, the
directory /home/mydir/my-dump-options
is checked for option files by mysqldump
only, and not by the server or by any other client applications:
[mysqldump]
!includedir /home/mydir/my-dump-options
If you have a source distribution, you can find sample option files
named
my-xxxx.cnf
in the support-files directory. If you
have a binary distribution, look in the
support-files directory under your MySQL
installation directory. On Windows, the sample option files may be
located in the MySQL installation directory (see earlier in this section
or
Chapter 2, Installing and Upgrading MySQL, if you do not know
where this is). Currently, there are sample option files for small,
medium, large, and very large systems. To experiment with one of these
files, copy it to C:\my.cnf on Windows or
to .my.cnf in your home directory on Unix.
Note: On Windows, the
.cnf option file extension might not be
displayed.
All MySQL programs that support option files handle the following
options. They affect option-file handling, so they must be given on the
command line and not in an option file. To work properly, each of these
options must immediately follow the command name, with the exception
that
--print-defaults may be used immediately
after
--defaults-file or
--defaults-extra-file.
--no-defaults
Don't read any option files.
--print-defaults
Print the program name and all options that it gets from option
files.
--defaults-file=file_name
Use only the given option file.
file_name is the full
pathname to the file.
--defaults-extra-file=file_name
Read this option file after the global option file but (on Unix)
before the user option file.
file_name is the full
pathname to the file.
In shell scripts, you can use the
my_print_defaults program
to parse option files and see what options would be used by a given
program. The following example shows the output that
my_print_defaults might
produce when asked to show the options found in the
[client] and
[mysql] groups:
shell> my_print_defaults client mysql
--port=3306
--socket=/tmp/mysql.sock
--no-auto-rehash
Note for developers: Option
file handling is implemented in the C client library simply by
processing all options in the appropriate group or groups before any
command-line arguments. This works well for programs that use the last
instance of an option that is specified multiple times. If you have a C
or C++ program that handles multiply specified options this way but that
doesn't read option files, you need add only two lines to give it that
capability. Check the source code of any of the standard MySQL clients
to see how to do this.
Several other language interfaces to MySQL are based on the C client
library, and some of them provide a way to access option file contents.
These include Perl and Python. For details, see the documentation for
your preferred interface.
4.3.3. Using Environment Variables to Specify Options
To specify an option using an environment variable, set the variable
using the syntax appropriate for your command processor. For example, on
Windows or NetWare, you can set the
USER variable to specify your MySQL account
name. To do so, use this syntax:
SET USER=your_name
The syntax on Unix depends on your shell. Suppose that you want to
specify the TCP/IP port number using the
MYSQL_TCP_PORT variable. Typical syntax
(such as for sh,
bash,
zsh, and so on) is as
follows:
MYSQL_TCP_PORT=3306
export MYSQL_TCP_PORT
The first command sets the variable, and the
export command exports the variable to the
shell environment so that its value becomes accessible to MySQL and
other processes.
For csh and
tcsh, use
setenv to make the shell
variable available to the environment:
setenv MYSQL_TCP_PORT 3306
The commands to set environment variables can be executed at your
command prompt to take effect immediately, but the settings persist only
until you log out. To have the settings take effect each time you log
in, place the appropriate command or commands in a startup file that
your command interpreter reads each time it starts. Typical startup
files are
AUTOEXEC.BAT for Windows,
.bash_profile for
bash, or .tcshrc for
tcsh. Consult the documentation for your command
interpreter for specific details.
Appendix F, Environment Variables, lists all environment
variables that affect MySQL program operation.
4.3.4. Using Options to Set Program Variables
Many MySQL programs have internal variables that can be set at runtime.
As of MySQL 4.0.2, program variables are set the same way as any other
long option that takes a value. For example,
mysql has a
max_allowed_packet variable that controls
the maximum size of its communication buffer. To set the
max_allowed_packet variable for
mysql to a value of 16MB,
use either of the following commands:
shell> mysql --max_allowed_packet=16777216
shell> mysql --max_allowed_packet=16M
The first command specifies the value in bytes. The second specifies the
value in megabytes. For variables that take a numeric value, the value
can be given with a suffix of
K, M, or
G (either uppercase or lowercase) to
indicate a multiplier of 1024, 10242 or 10243.
(For example, when used to set
max_allowed_packet, the suffixes indicate
units of kilobytes, megabytes, or gigabygtes.)
In an option file, variable settings are given without the leading
dashes:
[mysql]
max_allowed_packet=16777216
Or:
[mysql]
max_allowed_packet=16M
If you like, underscores in a variable name can be specified as dashes.
The following option groups are equivalent. Both set the size of the
server's key buffer to 512MB:
[mysqld]
key_buffer_size=512M
[mysqld]
key-buffer-size=512M
Prior to MySQL 4.0.2, program variable names are not recognized as
option names. Instead, use the
--set-variable option to assign a value to a
variable:
shell> mysql --set-variable=max_allowed_packet=16777216
shell> mysql --set-variable=max_allowed_packet=16M
In an option file, omit the leading dashes:
[mysql]
set-variable = max_allowed_packet=16777216
Or:
[mysql]
set-variable = max_allowed_packet=16M
With --set-variable, underscores in variable
names cannot be given as dashes for versions of MySQL older than 4.0.2.
The --set-variable option is still
recognized in MySQL 4.0.2 and up, but is deprecated.
Many server system variables can also be set at runtime. For details,
see
Section 5.2.3.2, “Dynamic System Variables”.