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”. That section also describes option file format and syntax.
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 brief summary, execute mysqld --help. 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 6.1.4, “Security-Related mysqld Options and Variables”.
SSL-related options: See Section 6.3.9.4, “SSL Command Options”.
Binary log control options: See Section 5.2.4, “The Binary Log”.
Replication-related options: See Section 16.1.4, “Replication and Binary Logging Options and Variables”.
Options for loading plugins such as pluggable storage engines: See Section 5.1.8.1, “Installing and Uninstalling Plugins”.
Options specific to particular storage engines: See
Section 14.2.14, “InnoDB
Startup Options and System Variables” and
Section 14.3.1, “MyISAM
Startup Options”.
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
, -?
Command-Line Format | -? | ||
--help | |||
Option-File Format | help |
Display a short help message and exit. Use both the
--verbose
and
--help
options to see the full
message.
Command-Line Format | --allow-suspicious-udfs | ||
Option-File Format | allow-suspicious-udfs | ||
Permitted Values | |||
Type | boolean | ||
Default | FALSE |
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. See
Section 23.3.2.6, “User-Defined Function Security Precautions”.
Command-Line Format | --ansi | ||
-a | |||
Option-File Format | ansi |
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 1.8.3, “Running MySQL in ANSI Mode”, and
Section 5.1.7, “Server SQL Modes”.
Command-Line Format | --basedir=path | ||
-b | |||
Option-File Format | basedir | ||
System Variable Name | basedir | ||
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | No | ||
Permitted Values | |||
Type | file name |
The path to the MySQL installation directory. All paths are usually resolved relative to this directory.
Command-Line Format | --big-tables | ||
Option-File Format | big-tables | ||
System Variable Name | big_tables | ||
Variable Scope | Global, Session | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | |||
Type | boolean | ||
Default | OFF |
Enable 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.
Command-Line Format | --bind-address=addr | ||
Option-File Format | bind-address | ||
System Variable Name | bind_address | ||
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | No | ||
Permitted Values (<= 5.6.5) | |||
Type | string | ||
Default | 0.0.0.0 | ||
Permitted Values (>= 5.6.6) | |||
Type | string | ||
Default | * |
The MySQL server listens on a single network socket for TCP/IP
connections. This socket is bound to a single address, but it
is possible for an address to map onto multiple network
interfaces. To specify an address, use the
--bind-address=
option at server startup, where
addr
addr
is an IPv4 or IPv6 address or
a host name. If addr
is a host
name, the server resolves the name to an IP address and binds
to that address.
The server treats different types of addresses as follows:
If the address is *
, the server accepts
TCP/IP connections on all server host IPv6 and IPv4
interfaces if the server host supports IPv6, or accepts
TCP/IP connections on all IPv4 addresses otherwise. Use
this address to permit both IPv4 and IPv6 connections on
all server interfaces. This value is permitted (and is the
default) as of MySQL 5.6.6.
If the address is 0.0.0.0
, the server
accepts TCP/IP connections on all server host IPv4
interfaces. This is the default before MySQL 5.6.6.
If the address is ::
, the server
accepts TCP/IP connections on all server host IPv4 and
IPv6 interfaces.
If the address is an IPv4-mapped address, the server
accepts TCP/IP connections for that address, in either
IPv4 or IPv6 format. For example, if the server is bound
to ::ffff:127.0.0.1
, clients can
connect using --host=127.0.0.1
or
--host=::ffff:127.0.0.1
.
If the address is a “regular” IPv4 or IPv6
address (such as 127.0.0.1
or
::1
), the server accepts TCP/IP
connections only for that IPv4 or IPv6 address.
If you intend to bind the server to a specific address, be
sure that the mysql.user
grant table
contains an account with administrative privileges that you
can use to connect to that address. Otherwise, you will not be
able to shut down the server. For example, if you bind the
server to *
, you can connect to it using
all existing accounts. But if you bind the server to
::1
, it accepts connections only on that
address. In that case, first make sure that the
'root'@'::1'
account is present in the
mysql.user
table so you can still connect
to the server to shut it down.
--binlog-format={ROW|STATEMENT|MIXED}
Command-Line Format | --binlog-format=format | ||
Option-File Format | binlog-format | ||
System Variable Name | binlog_format | ||
Variable Scope | Global, Session | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | |||
Type | enumeration | ||
Default | STATEMENT | ||
Valid Values | ROW | ||
STATEMENT | |||
MIXED |
Specify whether to use row-based, statement-based, or mixed replication. Statement-based is the default in MySQL 5.6. See Section 16.1.2, “Replication Formats”.
Under some conditions, changing this variable at runtime is not possible, or causes replication to fail. See Section 5.2.4.2, “Setting The Binary Log Format”, for more information.
Setting the binary logging format without enabling binary
logging sets the
binlog_format
global system
variable and logs a warning.
Command-Line Format | --bootstrap | ||
Option-File Format | bootstrap |
This option is used by the mysql_install_db script to create the MySQL privilege tables without having to start a full MySQL server.
In MySQL 5.6.6 and later, replication and global transaction identifiers are automatically disabled whenever this option is used (Bug #1332602). See Section 16.1.3, “Replication with Global Transaction Identifiers”.
Command-Line Format | --character-sets-dir=path | ||
Option-File Format | character-sets-dir | ||
System Variable Name | character_sets_dir | ||
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | No | ||
Permitted Values | |||
Type | directory name |
The directory where character sets are installed. See Section 10.5, “Character Set Configuration”.
--character-set-client-handshake
Command-Line Format | --character-set-client-handshake | ||
Option-File Format | character-set-client-handshake | ||
Permitted Values | |||
Type | boolean | ||
Default | TRUE |
Do not 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 behave like MySQL 4.0.
--character-set-filesystem=
charset_name
Command-Line Format | --character-set-filesystem=name | ||
Option-File Format | character-set-filesystem | ||
System Variable Name | character_set_filesystem | ||
Variable Scope | Global, Session | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | |||
Type | string |
The file system character set. This option sets the
character_set_filesystem
system variable.
--character-set-server=
,
charset_name
-C
charset_name
Command-Line Format | --character-set-server | ||
Option-File Format | character-set-server | ||
System Variable Name | character_set_server | ||
Variable Scope | Global, Session | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | |||
Type | string |
Use charset_name
as the default
server character set. See
Section 10.5, “Character Set Configuration”. If you use this
option to specify a nondefault character set, you should also
use --collation-server
to
specify the collation.
--chroot=
,
path
-r
path
Command-Line Format | --chroot=name | ||
-r name | |||
Option-File Format | chroot | ||
Permitted Values | |||
Type | file name |
Put the mysqld server in a closed
environment during startup by using the
chroot()
system call. This is a recommended
security measure. Note that use of this option somewhat limits
LOAD DATA
INFILE
and
SELECT ... INTO
OUTFILE
.
--collation-server=
collation_name
Command-Line Format | --collation-server | ||
Option-File Format | collation-server | ||
System Variable Name | collation_server | ||
Variable Scope | Global, Session | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | |||
Type | string |
Use collation_name
as the default
server collation. See Section 10.5, “Character Set Configuration”.
Command-Line Format | --console | ||
Option-File Format | console | ||
Platform Specific | windows |
(Windows only.) Write error log messages to
stderr
and stdout
.
mysqld does not close the console window if
this option is used.
If both --log-error
and
--console
are specified,
--log-error
takes precedence.
The server writes to the log file, but not to the console.
Command-Line Format | --core-file | ||
Option-File Format | core-file | ||
Permitted Values | |||
Type | boolean | ||
Default | OFF |
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
Command-Line Format | --datadir=path | ||
-h | |||
Option-File Format | datadir | ||
System Variable Name | datadir | ||
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | No | ||
Permitted Values | |||
Type | file name |
The path to the data directory.
--debug[=
,
debug_options
]-# [
debug_options
]
Command-Line Format | --debug[=debug_options] | ||
Option-File Format | debug | ||
System Variable Name | debug | ||
Variable Scope | Global, Session | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | |||
Type | string | ||
Default | 'd:t:o,/tmp/mysqld.trace' |
If MySQL is configured with
-DWITH_DEBUG=1
, 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'
.
Using -DWITH_DEBUG=1
to
configure MySQL with debugging support enables you to use the
--debug="d,parser_debug"
option
when you start the server. This causes the Bison parser that
is used to process SQL statements to dump a parser trace to
the server's standard error output. Typically, this output is
written to the error log.
This option may be given multiple times. Values that begin
with +
or -
are added to
or subtracted from the previous value. For example,
--debug=T
--debug=+P
sets the value to
P:T
.
For more information, see Section 23.4.3, “The DBUG Package”.
Command-Line Format | --debug-sync-timeout[=#] | ||
Option-File Format | debug-sync-timeout | ||
Permitted Values | |||
Type | numeric |
Controls whether the Debug Sync facility for testing and
debugging is enabled. Use of Debug Sync requires that MySQL be
configured with the
-DENABLE_DEBUG_SYNC=1
option
(see Section 2.9.4, “MySQL Source-Configuration Options”). If Debug
Sync is not compiled in, this option is not available. The
option value is a timeout in seconds. The default value is 0,
which disables Debug Sync. To enable it, specify a value
greater than 0; this value also becomes the default timeout
for individual synchronization points. If the option is given
without a value, the timeout is set to 300 seconds.
For a description of the Debug Sync facility and how to use synchronization points, see MySQL Internals: Test Synchronization.
--default-authentication-plugin=
plugin_name
Introduced | 5.6.6 | ||
Command-Line Format | --default-authentication-plugin=plugin_name | ||
Option-File Format | default-authentication-plugin | ||
Permitted Values | |||
Type | enumeration | ||
Default | mysql_native_password | ||
Valid Values | mysql_native_password | ||
sha256_password |
This option sets the default authentication plugin. Permitted
values are mysql_native_password
(use MySQL
native passwords) and sha256_password
(use
SHA-256 passwords). For more information about these plugins,
see Section 6.3.7.2, “The Native Authentication Plugin”, and
Section 6.3.7.4, “The SHA-256 Authentication Plugin”. This option
was added in MySQL 5.6.6.
If you use this option to change the default authentication
plugin to a value other than
mysql_native_password
, clients older than
MySQL 5.5.6 will no longer be able to connect because they
will not understand the resulting change to the
authentication protocol.
The
--default-authentication-plugin
value affects these aspects of server operation:
It determines which authentication plugin the server
assigns to new accounts created by
CREATE USER
and
GRANT
statements that do
not name a plugin explicitly with an IDENTIFIED
WITH
clause.
It sets the old_passwords
system variable at startup to the value that is consistent
with the password hashing method required by the default
plugin. The old_passwords
value affects hashing of passwords specified in the
IDENTIFIED BY
clause of
CREATE USER
and
GRANT
, and passwords
specified as the argument to the
PASSWORD()
function.
For an account created with either of the following
statements, the server associates the account with the
default authentication plugin and assigns the account the
given password, hashed according to the value of
old_passwords
.
CREATE USER ... IDENTIFIED BY 'cleartext password
'; GRANT ... IDENTIFIED BY 'cleartext password
';
For an account created with either of the following statements, the statement fails if the password hash is not encrypted using the hash format required by the default authentication plugin. Otherwise, the server associates the account with the default authentication plugin and assigns the account the given password hash.
CREATE USER ... IDENTIFIED BY PASSWORD 'encrypted password
'; GRANT ... IDENTIFIED BY PASSWORD 'encrypted password
';
Command-Line Format | --default-storage-engine=name | ||
Option-File Format | default-storage-engine | ||
System Variable Name | default_storage_engine | ||
Variable Scope | Global, Session | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | |||
Type | enumeration | ||
Default | InnoDB |
Set the default storage engine for tables. See
Chapter 14, Storage Engines. As of MySQL 5.6.3, this
option sets the storage engine for permanent tables only. To
set the storage engine for TEMPORARY
tables, set the
default_tmp_storage_engine
system variable.
If you disable the default storage engine at server startup,
you must set the default engine for both permanent and
TEMPORARY
tables to a different engine or
the server will not start.
Command-Line Format | --default-time-zone=name | ||
Option-File Format | default-time-zone | ||
Permitted Values | |||
Type | string |
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.
--delay-key-write[={OFF|ON|ALL}]
Command-Line Format | --delay-key-write[=name] | ||
Option-File Format | delay-key-write | ||
System Variable Name | delay_key_write | ||
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | |||
Type | enumeration | ||
Default | ON | ||
Valid Values | ON | ||
OFF | |||
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. See
Section 8.11.2, “Tuning Server Parameters”, and
Section 14.3.1, “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.
Command-Line Format | --des-key-file=file_name | ||
Option-File Format | des-key-file |
Read the default DES keys from this file. These keys are used
by the DES_ENCRYPT()
and
DES_DECRYPT()
functions.
Command-Line Format | --enable-named-pipe | ||
Option-File Format | enable-named-pipe | ||
Platform Specific | windows |
Enable support for named pipes. This option applies only on Windows.
--engine-condition-pushdown={ON|OFF}
Deprecated | 5.5.3, by optimizer_switch | ||
Removed | 5.6.1 | ||
Command-Line Format | --engine-condition-pushdown | ||
Option-File Format | engine-condition-pushdown | ||
System Variable Name | engine_condition_pushdown | ||
Variable Scope | Global, Session | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | |||
Type | boolean | ||
Default | ON |
Formerly, this option set the
engine_condition_pushdown
system variable; the option and the variable were both removed
in MySQL 5.6.1. For more information, see
Section 8.2.1.5, “Engine Condition Pushdown Optimization”.
Command-Line Format | --event-scheduler[=value] | ||
Option-File Format | event-scheduler | ||
System Variable Name | event_scheduler | ||
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | |||
Type | enumeration | ||
Default | OFF | ||
Valid Values | ON | ||
OFF | |||
DISABLED |
Enable or disable, and start or stop, the event scheduler.
For detailed information, see
The
--event-scheduler
Option.
--exit-info[=
,
flags
]-T [
flags
]
Command-Line Format | --exit-info[=flags] | ||
-T [flags] | |||
Option-File Format | exit-info | ||
Permitted Values | |||
Type | numeric |
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!
Command-Line Format | --external-locking | ||
Option-File Format | external-locking | ||
Permitted Values | |||
Type | boolean | ||
Default | FALSE |
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.
To disable external locking explicitly, use
--skip-external-locking
.
External locking affects only
MyISAM
table access. For more
information, including conditions under which it can and
cannot be used, see Section 8.10.5, “External Locking”.
Command-Line Format | --flush | ||
Option-File Format | flush | ||
System Variable Name | flush | ||
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | |||
Type | boolean | ||
Default | OFF |
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 C.5.4.2, “What to Do If MySQL Keeps Crashing”.
Command-Line Format | --gdb | ||
Option-File Format | gdb | ||
Permitted Values | |||
Type | boolean | ||
Default | FALSE |
Install an interrupt handler for SIGINT
(needed to stop mysqld with
^C
to set breakpoints) and disable stack
tracing and core file handling. See Section 23.4, “Debugging and Porting MySQL”.
Command-Line Format | --general-log | ||
Option-File Format | general-log | ||
System Variable Name | general_log | ||
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | |||
Type | boolean | ||
Default | OFF |
Specify the initial general query log state. With no argument
or an argument of 1, the
--general-log
option enables
the log. If omitted or given with an argument of 0, the option
disables the log.
Introduced | 5.6.3 | ||
Command-Line Format | --ignore-db-dir | ||
Option-File Format | ignore-db-dir | ||
Permitted Values | |||
Type | directory name |
This option tells the server to ignore the given directory
name for purposes of the SHOW
DATABASES
statement or
INFORMATION_SCHEMA
tables. For example, if
a MySQL configuration locates the data directory at the root
of a file system on Unix, the system might create a
lost+found
directory there that the
server should ignore. Starting the server with
--ignore-db-dir=lost+found
causes that name not to be listed as a database.
To specify more than one name, use this option multiple times,
once for each name. Specifying the option with an empty value
(that is, as --ignore-db-dir=
)
resets the directory list to the empty list.
Instances of this option given at server startup are used to
set the ignore_db_dirs
system
variable.
This option was added in MySQL 5.6.3.
Command-Line Format | --init-file=file_name | ||
Option-File Format | init-file | ||
System Variable Name | init_file | ||
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | No | ||
Permitted Values | |||
Type | file name |
Read SQL statements from this file at startup. Each statement must be on a single line and should not include comments.
--innodb-
xxx
Set an option for the InnoDB
storage
engine. The InnoDB
options are listed in
Section 14.2.14, “InnoDB
Startup Options and System Variables”.
Command-Line Format | --install [service_name] |
(Windows only) Install the server as a Windows service that
starts automatically during Windows startup. The default
service name is MySQL
if no
service_name
value is given. For
more information, see Section 2.3.5.7, “Starting MySQL as a Windows Service”.
If the server is started with the
--defaults-file
and
--install
options,
--install
must be first.
--install-manual
[
service_name
]
Command-Line Format | --install-manual [service_name] |
(Windows only) Install the server as a Windows service that
must be started manually. It does not start automatically
during Windows startup. The default service name is
MySQL
if no
service_name
value is given. For
more information, see Section 2.3.5.7, “Starting MySQL as a Windows Service”.
If the server is started with the
--defaults-file
and
--install-manual
options,
--install-manual
must be
first.
--language=
lang_name
,
-L lang_name
Deprecated | 5.6.1, by lc-messages-dir | ||
Command-Line Format | --language=name | ||
-L | |||
Option-File Format | language | ||
System Variable Name | language | ||
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | No | ||
Permitted Values | |||
Type | directory name | ||
Default | /usr/local/mysql/share/mysql/english/ |
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 10.2, “Setting the Error Message Language”.
In MySQL 5.6,
--lc-messages-dir
and
--lc-messages
should be used
rather than --language
, which
is deprecated as of MySQL 5.6.1 and handled as an alias for
--lc-messages-dir
. The
--language
option will be
removed in a future MySQL release.
Command-Line Format | --large-pages | ||
Option-File Format | large-pages | ||
System Variable Name | large_pages | ||
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | No | ||
Platform Specific | linux | ||
Permitted Values | |||
Type (linux) | boolean | ||
Default | FALSE |
Some hardware/operating system architectures support memory pages greater than the default (usually 4KB). The actual implementation of this support depends on the underlying hardware and operating system. Applications that perform a lot of memory accesses may obtain performance improvements by using large pages due to reduced Translation Lookaside Buffer (TLB) misses.
MySQL 5.6 supports the Linux implementation of
large page support (which is called HugeTLB in Linux). See
Section 8.11.4.2, “Enabling Large Page Support”. For Solaris support of
large pages, see the description of the
--super-large-pages
option.
--large-pages
is disabled by
default.
Command-Line Format | --lc-messages=name | ||
Option-File Format | lc-messages | ||
System Variable Name | lc_messages | ||
Variable Scope | Global, Session | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | |||
Type | string |
The locale to use for error messages. The server converts the
argument to a language name and combines it with the value of
the --lc-messages-dir
to produce the location
for the error message file. See
Section 10.2, “Setting the Error Message Language”.
Command-Line Format | --lc-messages-dir=path | ||
Option-File Format | lc-messages-dir | ||
System Variable Name | lc_messages_dir | ||
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | No | ||
Permitted Values | |||
Type | directory name |
The directory where error messages are located. The value is
used together with the value of --lc-messages
to produce the location for the error message file. See
Section 10.2, “Setting the Error Message Language”.
--log[=
,
file_name
]-l [
file_name
]
Deprecated | 5.1.29, by general-log | ||
Removed | 5.6.1 | ||
Command-Line Format | --log[=name] | ||
-l | |||
Option-File Format | log | ||
System Variable Name | log | ||
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | |||
Type | string | ||
Default | OFF |
The --log
option was removed in
MySQL 5.6.1 (along with the
log
system variable).
Instead, use the --general_log
option to enable the general query log and the
--general_log_file=
option to set the general query log file name.
file_name
Command-Line Format | --log-error[=name] | ||
Option-File Format | log-error | ||
System Variable Name | log_error | ||
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | No | ||
Permitted Values | |||
Type | file name |
Log errors and startup messages to this file. See
Section 5.2.2, “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
.
Command-Line Format | --log-isam[=name] | ||
Option-File Format | log-isam | ||
Permitted Values | |||
Type | file name |
Log all MyISAM
changes to this file (used
only when debugging MyISAM
).
Command-Line Format | --log-output=name | ||
Option-File Format | log-output | ||
System Variable Name | log_output | ||
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | |||
Type | set | ||
Default | FILE | ||
Valid Values | TABLE | ||
FILE | |||
NONE |
This option determines the destination for general query log
and slow query log output. The option value can be given as
one or more of the words TABLE
,
FILE
, or NONE
.
TABLE
select logging to the
general_log
and
slow_log
tables in the
mysql
database as a destination.
FILE
selects logging to log files as a
destination. NONE
disables logging. If
NONE
is present in the option value, it
takes precedence over any other words that are present.
TABLE
and FILE
can both
be given to select to both log output destinations.
This option selects log output destinations, but does not
enable log output. To do that, use the
--general_log
and
--slow_query_log
options. For
FILE
logging, the
--general_log_file
and
-slow_query_log_file
options determine the
log file location. For more information, see
Section 5.2.1, “Selecting General Query and Slow Query Log Output Destinations”.
--log-queries-not-using-indexes
Command-Line Format | --log-queries-not-using-indexes | ||
Option-File Format | log-queries-not-using-indexes | ||
System Variable Name | log_queries_not_using_indexes | ||
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | |||
Type | boolean | ||
Default | OFF |
If you are using this option with the slow query log enabled, queries that are expected to retrieve all rows are logged. See Section 5.2.5, “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.
Introduced | 5.6.3 | ||
Command-Line Format | --log-raw[=value] | ||
Option-File Format | log-raw | ||
Permitted Values | |||
Type | boolean | ||
Default | OFF |
As of MySQL 5.6.3, passwords in certain statements written to
the general query log, slow query log, and binary log are
rewritten by the server not to occur literally in plain text.
Password rewriting can be suppressed for the general query log
by starting the server with the
--log-raw
option. This option
may be useful for diagnostic purposes, to see the exact text
of statements as received by the server, but for security
reasons is not recommended for production use.
Before MySQL 5.6.3, passwords in statements are not rewritten and the general query log should be protected. See Section 6.1.2.3, “Passwords and Logging”.
This option was added in MySQL 5.6.3.
Command-Line Format | --log-short-format | ||
Option-File Format | log-short-format | ||
Permitted Values | |||
Type | boolean | ||
Default | FALSE |
Log less information to the binary log and slow query log, if they have been activated.
Removed | 5.6.11 | ||
Command-Line Format | --log-slow-admin-statements | through 5.6.10 | |
Option-File Format | log-slow-admin-statements | ||
Permitted Values | |||
Type | boolean | ||
Default | OFF |
Include slow administrative statements in the statements
written to the slow query log. Administrative statements
include ALTER TABLE
,
ANALYZE TABLE
,
CHECK TABLE
,
CREATE INDEX
,
DROP INDEX
,
OPTIMIZE TABLE
, and
REPAIR TABLE
.
This command-line option was removed in MySQL 5.6.11 and
replaced by the
log_slow_admin_statements
system variable. The system variable can be set on the command
line or in option files the same way as the option, so there
is no need for any changes at server startup, but the system
variable also makes it possible to examine or set the value at
runtime.
--log-slow-queries[=
file_name
]
Deprecated | 5.1.29, by slow-query-log | ||
Removed | 5.6.1 | ||
Command-Line Format | --log-slow-queries[=name] | ||
Option-File Format | log-slow-queries | ||
System Variable Name | log_slow_queries | ||
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | |||
Type | boolean |
The --log-slow-queries
option
was removed in MySQL 5.6.1 (along with the
log_slow_queries
system
variable). Instead, use the
--slow_query_log
option to
enable the slow query log and the
--slow_query_log_file=
option to set the slow query log file name.
file_name
Command-Line Format | --log-tc=name | ||
Option-File Format | log-tc | ||
Permitted Values | |||
Type | file name | ||
Default | tc.log |
The name of the memory-mapped transaction coordinator log file
(for XA transactions that affect multiple storage engines when
the binary log is disabled). The default name is
tc.log
. The file is created under the
data directory if not given as a full path name. Currently,
this option is unused.
Command-Line Format | --log-tc-size=# | ||
Option-File Format | log-tc-size | ||
Permitted Values | |||
Platform Bit Size | 32 | ||
Type | numeric | ||
Default | 24576 | ||
Max Value | 4294967295 | ||
Permitted Values | |||
Platform Bit Size | 64 | ||
Type | numeric | ||
Default | 24576 | ||
Max Value | 18446744073709547520 |
The size in bytes of the memory-mapped transaction coordinator log. The default size is 24KB.
--log-warnings[=
,
level
]-W [
level
]
Command-Line Format | --log-warnings[=#] | ||
-W [#] | |||
Option-File Format | log-warnings[=#] | ||
System Variable Name | log_warnings | ||
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | |||
Platform Bit Size | 32 | ||
Type | numeric | ||
Default | 1 | ||
Range | 0 .. 4294967295 | ||
Permitted Values | |||
Platform Bit Size | 64 | ||
Type | numeric | ||
Default | 1 | ||
Range | 0 .. 18446744073709547520 |
Print out warnings such as Aborted
connection...
to the error log. This option is
enabled (1) by default. To disable it, use
--log-warnings=0
. Specifying
the option without a level
value
increments the current value by 1. Enabling this option by
setting it greater than 0 is recommended, for example, if you
use replication (you get more information about what is
happening, such as messages about network failures and
reconnections). If the value is greater than 1, aborted
connections are written to the error log, and access-denied
errors for new connection attempts are written. See
Section C.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. The server logs messages about statements that are
unsafe for statement-based logging if
--log-warnings
is greater than
0.
Command-Line Format | --low-priority-updates | ||
Option-File Format | low-priority-updates | ||
System Variable Name | low_priority_updates | ||
Variable Scope | Global, Session | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | |||
Type | boolean | ||
Default | FALSE |
Give table-modifying operations
(INSERT
,
REPLACE
,
DELETE
,
UPDATE
) lower priority than
selects. This can also be done using {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 8.10.2, “Table Locking Issues”.
--min-examined-row-limit=
number
Command-Line Format | --min-examined-row-limit=# | ||
Option-File Format | min-examined-row-limit | ||
System Variable Name | min_examined_row_limit | ||
Variable Scope | Global, Session | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | |||
Platform Bit Size | 32 | ||
Type | numeric | ||
Default | 0 | ||
Range | 0 .. 4294967295 | ||
Permitted Values | |||
Platform Bit Size | 64 | ||
Type | numeric | ||
Default | 0 | ||
Range | 0 .. 18446744073709547520 |
When this option is set, queries which examine fewer than
number
rows are not written to the
slow query log. The default is 0.
Command-Line Format | --memlock | ||
Option-File Format | memlock | ||
System Variable Name | locked_in_memory | ||
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | No | ||
Permitted Values | |||
Type | boolean | ||
Default | FALSE |
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, most Linux distributions that use a 2.4 or
newer kernel, and perhaps other Unix systems. 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;
Use of this option may require you to run the server as
root
, which, for reasons of security, is
normally not a good idea. See
Section 6.1.5, “How to Run MySQL as a Normal User”.
On Linux and perhaps other systems, you can avoid the need
to run the server as root
by changing the
limits.conf
file. See the notes
regarding the memlock limit in
Section 8.11.4.2, “Enabling Large Page Support”.
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.
Command-Line Format | --myisam-block-size=# | ||
Option-File Format | myisam-block-size | ||
Permitted Values | |||
Type | numeric | ||
Default | 1024 | ||
Range | 1024 .. 16384 |
The block size to be used for MyISAM
index
pages.
--myisam-recover-options[=
option
[,option
]...]]
Command-Line Format | --myisam-recover-options[=name] | ||
Option-File Format | myisam-recover-options | ||
Permitted Values | |||
Type | enumeration | ||
Default | OFF | ||
Valid Values | OFF | ||
DEFAULT | |||
BACKUP | |||
FORCE | |||
QUICK |
Set the MyISAM
storage engine recovery
mode. The option value is any combination of the values of
OFF
, DEFAULT
,
BACKUP
, FORCE
, or
QUICK
. If you specify multiple values,
separate them by commas. Specifying the option with no
argument is the same as specifying DEFAULT
,
and specifying with an explicit value of ""
disables recovery (same as a value of OFF
).
If recovery is enabled, each time mysqld
opens a MyISAM
table, it checks whether the
table is marked as crashed or was not 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 |
---|---|
OFF | No recovery. |
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.
Command-Line Format | --old-alter-table | ||
Option-File Format | old-alter-table | ||
System Variable Name | old_alter_table | ||
Variable Scope | Global, Session | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | |||
Type | boolean | ||
Default | OFF |
When this option is given, the server does not use the
optimized method of processing an ALTER
TABLE
operation. It reverts to using a temporary
table, copying over the data, and then renaming the temporary
table to the original, as used by MySQL 5.0 and earlier. For
more information on the operation of
ALTER TABLE
, see
Section 13.1.7, “ALTER TABLE
Syntax”.
Command-Line Format | --old-style-user-limits | ||
Option-File Format | old-style-user-limits | ||
Permitted Values | |||
Type | boolean | ||
Default | FALSE |
Enable old-style user limits. (Before MySQL 5.0.3, account
resource limits were counted separately for each host from
which a user connected rather than per account row in the
user
table.) See
Section 6.3.4, “Setting Account Resource Limits”.
Removed | 5.6.1 | ||
Command-Line Format | --one-thread | ||
Option-File Format | one-thread |
This option was removed in MySQL 5.6.1. Use
--thread_handling=no-threads
instead.
Command-Line Format | --open-files-limit=# | ||
Option-File Format | open-files-limit | ||
System Variable Name | open_files_limit | ||
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | No | ||
Permitted Values (<= 5.6.7) | |||
Type | numeric | ||
Default | 0 | ||
Range | 0 .. 65535 | ||
Permitted Values (>= 5.6.8) | |||
Type | numeric | ||
Default | -1 (autosized) | ||
Range | 0 .. 65535 |
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_open_cache
to estimate
whether more descriptors will be needed.
On Unix, the value cannot be set less than ulimit -n.
Command-Line Format | --partition | ||
Option-File Format | partition | ||
Disabled by | skip-partition | ||
Permitted Values | |||
Type | boolean | ||
Default | ON |
Enables or disables user-defined partitioning support in the MySQL Server.
--performance-schema-xxx
Configure a Performance Schema option. For details, see Section 21.11, “Performance Schema Command Options”.
Command-Line Format | --pid-file=file_name | ||
Option-File Format | pid-file | ||
System Variable Name | pid_file | ||
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | No | ||
Permitted Values | |||
Type | file name |
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.
Specifies an option that pertains to a server plugin. For
example, many storage engines can be built as plugins, and for
such engines, options for them can be specified with a
--plugin
prefix. Thus, the
--innodb_file_per_table
option
for InnoDB
can be specified as
--plugin-innodb_file_per_table
.
For boolean options that can be enabled or disabled, the
--skip
prefix and other alternative formats
are supported as well (see
Section 4.2.3.2, “Program Option Modifiers”). For example,
--skip-plugin-innodb_file_per_table
disables innodb_file_per_table
.
The rationale for the --plugin
prefix is that
it enables plugin options to be specified unambiguously if
there is a name conflict with a built-in server option. For
example, were a plugin writer to name a plugin
“sql” and implement a “mode” option,
the option name might be
--sql-mode
, which would
conflict with the built-in option of the same name. In such
cases, references to the conflicting name are resolved in
favor of the built-in option. To avoid the ambiguity, users
can specify the plugin option as
--plugin-sql-mode
. Use of the
--plugin
prefix for plugin options is
recommended to avoid any question of ambiguity.
Command-Line Format | --plugin-load=plugin_list | ||
Option-File Format | plugin-load | ||
Permitted Values | |||
Type | string |
This option tells the server to load the named plugins at
startup. The option value is a semicolon-separated list of
pairs. Each name
=plugin_library
name
is the name of the
plugin, and plugin_library
is the
name of the shared library that contains the plugin code. Each
library file must be located in the directory named by the
plugin_dir
system variable.
For example, if plugins named myplug1
and
myplug2
have library files
myplug1.so
and
myplug2.so
, use this option to load them
at startup:
shell> mysqld --plugin-load="myplug1=myplug1.so;myplug2=myplug2.so"
Quotes are used around the argument value here because
semicolon (;
) is interpreted as a special
character by some command interpreters. (Unix shells treat it
as a command terminator, for example.)
If multiple --plugin-load
options are given, only the last one is used. Additional
plugins to load may be specified using
--plugin-load-add
options.
If a plugin library is named without any preceding plugin name, the server loads all plugins in the library.
Each plugin is loaded for a single invocation of
mysqld only. After a restart, the plugin is
not loaded unless --plugin-load
is used again. This is in contrast to
INSTALL PLUGIN
, which adds an
entry to the mysql.plugins
table to cause
the plugin to be loaded for every normal server startup.
Under normal startup, the server determines which plugins to
load by reading the mysql.plugins
system
table. If the server is started with the
--skip-grant-tables
option, it
does not consult the mysql.plugins
table
and does not load plugins listed there.
--plugin-load
enables plugins
to be loaded even when
--skip-grant-tables
is given.
--plugin-load
also enables
plugins to be loaded at startup under configurations when
plugins cannot be loaded at runtime.
For additional information about plugin loading, see Section 5.1.8.1, “Installing and Uninstalling Plugins”.
Introduced | 5.6.3 | ||
Command-Line Format | --plugin-load-add=plugin_list | ||
Option-File Format | plugin-load-add | ||
Permitted Values | |||
Type | string |
This option complements the
--plugin-load
option.
--plugin-load-add
adds a plugin
or plugins to the set of plugins to be loaded at startup. The
argument format is the same as for
--plugin-load
.
--plugin-load-add
can be used
to avoid specifying a large set of plugins as a single long
unwieldy --plugin-load
argument. This option was added in MySQL 5.6.3.
--plugin-load-add
can be given
in the absence of
--plugin-load
, but any instance
of --plugin-load-add
that
appears before --plugin-load
.
has no effect because
--plugin-load
resets the set of
plugins to load. In other words, these options:
--plugin-load=x --plugin-load-add=y
are equivalent to this option:
--plugin-load="x;y"
But these options:
--plugin-load-add=y --plugin-load=x
are equivalent to this option:
--plugin-load=x
For additional information about plugin loading, see Section 5.1.8.1, “Installing and Uninstalling Plugins”.
--port=
,
port_num
-P
port_num
Command-Line Format | --port=# | ||
-P | |||
Option-File Format | port | ||
System Variable Name | port | ||
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | No | ||
Permitted Values | |||
Type | numeric | ||
Default | 3306 | ||
Range | 0 .. 65535 |
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.
Command-Line Format | --port-open-timeout=# | ||
Option-File Format | port-open-timeout | ||
Permitted Values | |||
Type | numeric | ||
Default | 0 |
On some systems, when the server is stopped, the TCP/IP port might not become available immediately. If the server is restarted quickly afterward, its attempt to reopen the port can fail. This option indicates how many seconds the server should wait for the TCP/IP port to become free if it cannot be opened. The default is not to wait.
Command-Line Format | --remove [service_name] |
(Windows only) Remove a MySQL Windows service. The default
service name is MySQL
if no
service_name
value is given. For
more information, see Section 2.3.5.7, “Starting MySQL as a Windows Service”.
Deprecated | 5.5.26 | ||
Removed | 5.6.6 | ||
Command-Line Format | --safe-mode | ||
Option-File Format | safe-mode |
Skip some optimization stages. This option was removed in MySQL 5.6.6.
Command-Line Format | --safe-user-create | ||
Option-File Format | safe-user-create | ||
Permitted Values | |||
Type | boolean | ||
Default | FALSE |
If this option is enabled, a user cannot create new MySQL
users by using the GRANT
statement unless the user has the
INSERT
privilege for the
mysql.user
table or any column in the
table. If you want a user to have the ability to create new
users that have those privileges that the user has the right
to grant, you should grant the user the following privilege:
GRANT INSERT(user) ON mysql.user TO 'user_name
'@'host_name
';
This ensures that the user cannot change any privilege columns
directly, but has to use the
GRANT
statement to give
privileges to other users.
Command-Line Format | --secure-auth | ||
Option-File Format | secure-auth | ||
System Variable Name | secure_auth | ||
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values (<= 5.6.4) | |||
Type | boolean | ||
Default | OFF | ||
Permitted Values (>= 5.6.5) | |||
Type | boolean | ||
Default | ON |
This option causes the server to block connections by clients
that attempt to use accounts that have passwords stored in the
old (pre-4.1) format. Use it to prevent all use of passwords
employing the old format (and hence insecure communication
over the network). Before MySQL 5.6.5, this option is disabled
by default. As of MySQL 5.6.5, it is enabled by default; to
disable it, use
--skip-secure-auth
.
Server startup fails with an error if this option is enabled
and the privilege tables are in pre-4.1 format. See
Section C.5.2.4, “Client does not support authentication protocol
”.
The mysql client also has a
--secure-auth
option, which
prevents connections to a server if the server requires a
password in old format for the client account.
Passwords that use the pre-4.1 hashing method are less secure than passwords that use the native password hashing method and should be avoided. Pre-4.1 passwords are deprecated and support for them will be removed in a future MySQL release.
Command-Line Format | --secure-file-priv=path | ||
Option-File Format | secure-file-priv | ||
System Variable Name | secure_file_priv | ||
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | No | ||
Permitted Values | |||
Type | string |
This option limits the effect of the
LOAD_FILE()
function and the
LOAD DATA
and
SELECT ... INTO
OUTFILE
statements to work only with files in the
specified directory.
System Variable Name | shared_memory | ||
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | No | ||
Platform Specific | windows |
Enable shared-memory connections by local clients. This option is available only on Windows.
--shared-memory-base-name=
name
System Variable Name | shared_memory_base_name | ||
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | No | ||
Platform Specific | windows |
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.
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 8.10.3, “Concurrent Inserts”.
Command-Line Format | --skip-event-scheduler | ||
--disable-event-scheduler | |||
Option-File Format | skip-event-scheduler |
Turns the Event Scheduler OFF
. This is not
the same as disabling the Event Scheduler, which requires
setting
--event-scheduler=DISABLED
; see
The
--event-scheduler
Option, for more
information.
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 plugins that were
installed with the INSTALL
PLUGIN
statement, user-defined functions (UDFs), and
scheduled events. To cause plugins to be loaded anyway, use
the --plugin-load
option.
Note that FLUSH
PRIVILEGES
might be executed implicitly by other
actions performed after startup. For example,
mysql_upgrade flushes the privileges during
the upgrade procedure.
Disable use of the internal host cache for faster name-to-IP resolution. In this case, the server performs a DNS lookup every time a client connects. See Section 8.11.5.2, “DNS Lookup Optimization and the Host Cache”.
Use of --skip-host-cache
is
similar to setting the
host_cache_size
system
variable to 0, but
host_cache_size
is more
flexible because it can also be used to resize, enable, or
disable the host cache at runtime, not just at server startup.
If you start the server with
--skip-host-cache
, that does
not prevent changes to the value of
host_cache_size
, but such
changes have no effect and the cache is not re-enabled even if
host_cache_size
is set larger
than 0.
Disable the InnoDB
storage engine. 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.
Do not resolve host names when checking client connections.
Use only IP addresses. If you use this option, all
Host
column values in the grant tables must
be IP addresses or localhost
. See
Section 8.11.5.2, “DNS Lookup Optimization and the Host Cache”.
Depending on the network configuration of your system and the
Host
values for your accounts, clients may
need to connect using an explicit --host
option, such as --host=localhost
,
--host=127.0.0.1
, or
--host=::1
.
Do not listen for TCP/IP connections at all. All interaction with mysqld must be made using 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 permitted. See Section 8.11.5.2, “DNS Lookup Optimization and the Host Cache”.
Command-Line Format | --skip-partition | ||
--disable-partition | |||
Option-File Format | skip-partition |
Disables user-defined partitioning. Partitioned tables can be
seen using SHOW TABLES
or by
querying the
INFORMATION_SCHEMA.TABLES
table,
but cannot be created or modified, nor can data in such tables
be accessed. All partition-specific columns in the
INFORMATION_SCHEMA.PARTITIONS
table display NULL
.
Since DROP TABLE
removes table
definition (.frm
) files, this statement
works on partitioned tables even when partitioning is disabled
using the option. The statement, however, does not remove
.par
files associated with partitioned
tables in such cases. For this reason, you should avoid
dropping partitioned tables with partitioning disabled, or
take action to remove the orphaned .par
files manually.
Options that begin with --ssl
specify whether to permit clients to connect using SSL and
indicate where to find SSL keys and certificates. See
Section 6.3.9.4, “SSL Command Options”.
Command-Line Format | --standalone | ||
Option-File Format | standalone | ||
Platform Specific | windows |
Available on Windows only; instructs the MySQL server not to run as a service.
Command-Line Format | --super-large-pages | ||
Option-File Format | super-large-pages | ||
Platform Specific | solaris | ||
Permitted Values | |||
Type (solaris) | boolean | ||
Default | FALSE |
Standard use of large pages in MySQL attempts to use the
largest size supported, up to 4MB. Under Solaris, a
“super large pages” feature enables uses of pages
up to 256MB. This feature is available for recent SPARC
platforms. It can be enabled or disabled by using the
--super-large-pages
or
--skip-super-large-pages
option.
--symbolic-links
,
--skip-symbolic-links
Command-Line Format | --symbolic-links | ||
Option-File Format | symbolic-links |
Enable or disable symbolic link support. This option has different effects on Windows and Unix:
On Windows, enabling symbolic links enables you to
establish a symbolic link to a database directory by
creating a
file that contains the path to the real directory. See
Section 8.11.3.1.3, “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 8.11.3.1.2, “Using Symbolic Links for MyISAM
Tables on Unix”.
Command-Line Format | --skip-show-database | ||
Option-File Format | skip-show-database | ||
System Variable Name | skip_show_database | ||
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | No |
This option sets the
skip_show_database
system
variable that controls who is permitted to use the
SHOW DATABASES
statement. See
Section 5.1.4, “Server System Variables”.
Command-Line Format | --skip-stack-trace | ||
Option-File Format | skip-stack-trace |
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 Section 23.4, “Debugging and Porting MySQL”.
Deprecated | 5.1.29 | ||
Removed | 5.6.1 | ||
Command-Line Format | --skip-thread-priority | ||
Option-File Format | skip-thread-priority |
Disable using thread priorities for faster response time. This option was unused and was removed in MySQL 5.6.1.
Command-Line Format | --slow-query-log | ||
Option-File Format | slow-query-log | ||
System Variable Name | slow_query_log | ||
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values | |||
Type | boolean | ||
Default | OFF |
Specify the initial slow query log state. With no argument or
an argument of 1, the
--slow-query-log
option enables
the log. If omitted or given with an argument of 0, the option
disables the log.
Introduced | 5.6.5 | ||
Command-Line Format | --slow-start-timeout=# | ||
Option-File Format | slow-start-timeout | ||
Permitted Values | |||
Type (windows) | numeric | ||
Default | 15000 |
This option controls the Windows service control manager's service start timeout. The value is the maximum number of milliseconds that the service control manager waits before trying to kill the windows service during startup. The default value is 15000 (15 seconds). If the MySQL service takes too long to start, you may need to increase this value. A value of 0 means there is no timeout.
Command-Line Format | --socket=name | ||
Option-File Format | socket | ||
System Variable Name | socket | ||
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | No | ||
Permitted Values | |||
Type | file name | ||
Default | /tmp/mysql.sock |
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
...]]
Command-Line Format | --sql-mode=name | ||
Option-File Format | sql-mode | ||
System Variable Name | sql_mode | ||
Variable Scope | Global, Session | ||
Dynamic Variable | Yes | ||
Permitted Values (<= 5.6.5) | |||
Type | set | ||
Default | '' | ||
Valid Values | ALLOW_INVALID_DATES | ||
ANSI_QUOTES | |||
ERROR_FOR_DIVISION_BY_ZERO | |||
HIGH_NOT_PRECEDENCE | |||
IGNORE_SPACE | |||
NO_AUTO_CREATE_USER | |||
NO_AUTO_VALUE_ON_ZERO | |||
NO_BACKSLASH_ESCAPES | |||
NO_DIR_IN_CREATE | |||
NO_ENGINE_SUBSTITUTION | |||
NO_FIELD_OPTIONS | |||
NO_KEY_OPTIONS | |||
NO_TABLE_OPTIONS | |||
NO_UNSIGNED_SUBTRACTION | |||
NO_ZERO_DATE | |||
NO_ZERO_IN_DATE | |||
ONLY_FULL_GROUP_BY | |||
PAD_CHAR_TO_FULL_LENGTH | |||
PIPES_AS_CONCAT | |||
REAL_AS_FLOAT | |||
STRICT_ALL_TABLES | |||
STRICT_TRANS_TABLES | |||
Permitted Values (>= 5.6.6) | |||
Type | set | ||
Default | NO_ENGINE_SUBSTITUTION | ||
Valid Values | ALLOW_INVALID_DATES | ||
ANSI_QUOTES | |||
ERROR_FOR_DIVISION_BY_ZERO | |||
HIGH_NOT_PRECEDENCE | |||
IGNORE_SPACE | |||
NO_AUTO_CREATE_USER | |||
NO_AUTO_VALUE_ON_ZERO | |||
NO_BACKSLASH_ESCAPES | |||
NO_DIR_IN_CREATE | |||
NO_ENGINE_SUBSTITUTION | |||
NO_FIELD_OPTIONS | |||
NO_KEY_OPTIONS | |||
NO_TABLE_OPTIONS | |||
NO_UNSIGNED_SUBTRACTION | |||
NO_ZERO_DATE | |||
NO_ZERO_IN_DATE | |||
ONLY_FULL_GROUP_BY | |||
PAD_CHAR_TO_FULL_LENGTH | |||
PIPES_AS_CONCAT | |||
REAL_AS_FLOAT | |||
STRICT_ALL_TABLES | |||
STRICT_TRANS_TABLES |
Set the SQL mode. Prior to MySQL 5.6.6, the default was
''
(an empty string); beginning with MySQL
5.6.6, the default is
NO_ENGINE_SUBSTITUTION
. See
Section 5.1.7, “Server SQL Modes”.
MySQL installation programs may configure the SQL mode
during the installation process. For example,
mysql_install_db creates a default option
file named my.cnf
in the base
installation directory. This file contains a line that sets
the SQL mode; see Section 4.4.3, “mysql_install_db — Initialize MySQL Data Directory”.
If the SQL mode differs from the default or from what you expect, check for a setting in an option file that the server reads at startup.
Command-Line Format | --sysdate-is-now | ||
Option-File Format | sysdate-is-now | ||
Permitted Values | |||
Type | boolean | ||
Default | FALSE |
SYSDATE()
by default returns
the time at which it executes, not the time at which the
statement in which it occurs begins executing. This differs
from the behavior of NOW()
.
This option causes SYSDATE()
to
be an alias for NOW()
. For
information about the implications for binary logging and
replication, see the description for
SYSDATE()
in
Section 12.7, “Date and Time Functions” and for SET
TIMESTAMP
in
Section 5.1.4, “Server System Variables”.
--tc-heuristic-recover={COMMIT|ROLLBACK}
Command-Line Format | --tc-heuristic-recover=name | ||
Option-File Format | tc-heuristic-recover | ||
Permitted Values | |||
Type | enumeration | ||
Valid Values | COMMIT | ||
RECOVER |
The type of decision to use in the heuristic recovery process. Currently, this option is unused.
Command-Line Format | --temp-pool | ||
Option-File Format | temp-pool | ||
Permitted Values | |||
Type | boolean | ||
Default | TRUE |
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. This option is ignored except on Linux.
Command-Line Format | --transaction-isolation=name | ||
Option-File Format | transaction-isolation | ||
Permitted Values | |||
Type | enumeration | ||
Valid Values | READ-UNCOMMITTED | ||
READ-COMMITTED | |||
REPEATABLE-READ | |||
SERIALIZABLE |
Sets the default transaction isolation level. The
level
value can be
READ-UNCOMMITTED
,
READ-COMMITTED
,
REPEATABLE-READ
, or
SERIALIZABLE
. See
Section 13.3.6, “SET TRANSACTION
Syntax”.
The default transaction isolation level can also be set at
runtime using the SET
TRANSACTION
statement or by setting the
tx_isolation
system variable.
Introduced | 5.6.5 | ||
Command-Line Format | --transaction-read-only | ||
Option-File Format | transaction-read-only | ||
Permitted Values | |||
Type | boolean | ||
Default | OFF |
Sets the default transaction access mode. By default, read-only mode is disabled, so the mode is read/write.
To set the default transaction access mode at runtime, use the
SET TRANSACTION
statement or
set the tx_read_only
system
variable. See Section 13.3.6, “SET TRANSACTION
Syntax”.
This option was added in MySQL 5.6.5.
--tmpdir=
,
path
-t
path
Command-Line Format | --tmpdir=path | ||
-t | |||
Option-File Format | tmpdir | ||
System Variable Name | tmpdir | ||
Variable Scope | Global | ||
Dynamic Variable | No | ||
Permitted Values | |||
Type | file name |
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. 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. 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 C.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
}
Command-Line Format | --user=name | ||
-u name | |||
Option-File Format | user | ||
Permitted Values | |||
Type | string |
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 6.1.1, “Security Guidelines”.
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.
Use this option with the --help
option for detailed help.
--version
, -V
Display version information and exit.
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 permissible value if only certain values are permitted.
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
You can change the values of most system variables for a running
server with the
SET
statement. See Section 13.7.4, “SET
Syntax”.
Section 5.1.4, “Server System Variables”, provides a full description for all variables, and additional information for setting them at server startup and runtime. Section 8.11.2, “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
OS: Ubuntu (Debian) deployments
Option: open-files-limit
It seems that the Debian upstart doesn't use the parameters defined at /etc/security/limits.conf, so when you launch mysql through the service command (and so, under upstart), it overrides those defined limits and uses the default 1024.
The solution is to modify the mysql.conf file that defines the upstart service, it is located at /etc/init/mysql.conf and add the following lines before the pre-start block:
# NB: Upstart scripts do not respect
# /etc/security/limits.conf, so the open-file limits
# settings need to be applied here.
limit nofile 32000 32000
limit nproc 32000 32000
References:
http://serverfault.com/questions/440878/changing-open-files-limit-in-mysql-5-5
http://askubuntu.com/questions/288471/cant-open-files-after-updating-server-what-changed
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