When I was connecting to the database I always used "localhost" as a host name.
Now I want to connect to my MYSQL database from Windows program and I have to use the real IP instead of localhost.
I tried to use the server IP and IP from this:
SHOW VARIABLES WHERE Variable_name = 'hostname'
But both don't work. How can I check the real IP adress, which can be used to connect to MYSQL DB?
MYSQL database was installed on my Debian server without any special settings I think.
Check the user table in MySQL.
select user, host from mysql.user;
Check either they have privileges to connect remotely or not.
Also check bind-address in configuration file, it has to be commented.
Related
I'm having a trouble accessing the database in my godaddy account. I already created a database in phpmyadmin and a user in mysql database
I need to access the database in my godaddy account using my localhost.
But when i run my code, i'm getting a host xxxx is not allowed to connect to this mysql server
below is what i used in config
Public consqlonline As String = "server=Website_ipAddress;user=uname;password=pass;database=syncing;Connect Timeout=2000"
you need to give a privilege to connect the specific database that the application need to connect, via PHPmyadmin >> choose database >> use privileges tab.
by the way i had this problem also and my server was running on Linux, by default the configuration of the server permit connection only from localhost, so to fix that ive edited /etc/mysql/ my.cnf file: changed the bind-address from 127.0.0.1 to 0.0.0.0 (if the version is kind of old you have to comment the "skip-networking" command
I've bought a server from CloudAtCost.com and all the information it gives me about my server is Server ID, IP Address, Netmask, and Gateway. I can SSH in just fine, but I can't get MySQL Workbench to connect to it. I've tried both Standard (TCP/IP) and Standard TCP/IP Over SSH.
I figured it out. I was using "user" as my username when I needed to use "root".
MySQL server needs to be running.
Network connections need to be enabled.
You need to know what port MySQL is running on (default is 3306).
If reverse DNS lookup has not been disabled, MySQL has to be able to resolve IP address to hostname.
MySQL User has to be created and assigned a password, a username and host, host is either the specific host connecting or (less secure) a '%' wildcard for host. If DNS lookups are disabled, host will be an IP address.
Connections to the MySQL port (by default it's 3306) may be "blocked" by firewall...
There are a lot of possible reasons.
When we can't connect, there's usually a MySQL error message that indicates the kind of problem encountered.
But, my preference would be to only allow IP connections from 127.0.0.1. (We always turn off reverse dns lookups on our MySQL servers.)
I'd use ssh port forwarding (tunneling). Choose a port to use on your local machine, e.g. 13306, and configure SSH to "forward" connections to that port through the ssh connection...
You can configure that in the .ssh/config for the specific remote server, e.g.
Host remoteserver
LocalForward 13306 localhost:3306
You'd need to first ssh to the remoteserver, and keep that session open.
Then on your local machine, MySQL Workbench would connect to localhost port 13306. On the MySQL server side, that will be seen as coming from IP address 127.0.0.1,
Obviously, you'd need to have a user created, e.g.
GRANT USAGE ON *.* TO myusername#'127.0.0.1' IDENTIFIED BY 'mypassword'
And grant appropriate privileges.
Go to Mysql Workbench>Server Status>Note down the port number
and give hostname as localhost:your port number,usually its 3306
We have a MySQL server in one of the remote Virtual Machine (Windows Server 2008). Till yesterday we were able to connect to the MySQL server, with the help of workbench installed in our local machine.
Yesterday there was a restart to the machine which has the Virtual Machine installed. After that we are unable to connect to MYSQL. Though I can ping and remote connect this particular VM. I can even execute the queries inside the workbench installed in the VM.
I am not too good at networking or security related stuffs. Please help me to solve this issue.
Error :
Your connection attempt failed for user 'root' from your host to server at ABC:3306: Can't connect to MySQL server on 'ABC' (10060)
Really this could be a magnitude of possible reasons, hopefully this is a start:
Check basic network
From the MySQL virtual machine open up a command prompt and type IPCONFIG /ALL. This will show you all the IP addresses bound to different network adapters.
Check that the IP address you're connected to is listed there, the virtual machine might have got a new IP from DHCP rather than having a static IP after its restart.
Hostname vs IP
You should check the hostname resolution, from your quoted error it would suggest you are you are connecting to a hostname rather than a server IP. Check your machine can resolve to the hostname using the correct IP address - it could also be worth changing the hostname for the actual IP of the server in the connection string.
MySQL config file
You've said you're running MySQL on Windows, it was customary to rename the my.cnf to my.ini. The configuration file for older versions of MySQL previous to 4.1.5 was usually stored in either c:\my.ini or c:\windows\my.ini. For versions after this the default location is the installation directory usually %PROGRAMDATA%\MySQL\MySQL Server xxx.
When you have located the configuration file please open it on Notepad (or similar text editor), locate the [mysqld] section and make sure that port= the port you're trying to connect to and bind-address= the IP address you're trying to connect to.
Server ports
From the MySQL virtual server open a command prompt and type netstat –ano, this will show you a list of processes and what IP's / ports they are listening on. The MySQL server should be listed here and should be listening on the same port and IP as the config file defines.
Windows firewall
You should have a firewall rule to allow MySQL, the following will add one on the default port of 3306
netsh advfirewall firewall add rule name="MySQL Server" action=allow protocol=TCP dir=in localport=3306
Identify if this is machine specific
You could setup the MySQL Workbench application on another workstation and try to connect to identify if this is a global problem or just one related to your specific workstation.
mysql administrator of your database should allow remote connection to the mysql server.
change this in my.cnf:
bind-address = 127.0.0.1 # this shoul be your mysql server ip
and comment this:
# skip-networking
Chances are that your configuration was set up for an IP that has changed. By default, mysql won't let you connect from remote hosts unless you explicitly give permissions for a specific user on a specific schema or a group of schemas, for example if you did something like this:
GRANT ALL PRIVILEGES ON *.* TO 'USERNAME'#'1.2.3.4' IDENTIFIED BY 'PASSWORD' WITH GRANT OPTION;
Maybe what you actually did was to set the grant onto your own IP address, that is the address of your local machine, and if your local machine (not the remote server) has changed it's IP address, then mysql will not let you connect unless you have the "1.2.3.4" IP address which obviously you don't have anymore if you have a dynamic IP address (common with DSL/Cable connections)
So connect through SSH or Telnet or whatever you use to your windows server and go to mysql as root and do this:
SELECT * from information_schema.user_privileges;
That will show you the grants on all users and how they are allowed to connect. If you don't see your local IP Address listed there or a wildcard (which would allow you to connect from any remote machine to the server) then you have to set it up like this:
GRANT ALL PRIVILEGES ON *.* TO 'USERNAME'#'%' IDENTIFIED BY 'PASSWORD' WITH GRANT OPTION;
Where USERNAME of course is your user. See that after the on there is a wildcard / dot /wildcard that means you want that user to be able to connect to any schema (database, for mysql) from any user from any network. But I'd recommend that you only do the grant for the user for the specific schema you need to connect to.
Then after that, if you actually had the right information and still can't connect than use a portscanner like nmap or something like that to do a port scan and see if mysql is:
Open and listening to external network
Running on the port that you actually want to connect through
If 1 is true, then check 2 because maybe there is a misconfiguration of the port. But if any of these 2 points do work then it sounds definitely not like a network configuration but a user setting or something else.
GRANT ALL ON *.* to user#'%' IDENTIFIED BY 'password';
this command should do the trick for all users #Gustavo Rubio has already given the proper explanation.
To ensure what ports are open run cmd in the virtual machine and type.
netstat -a
TCP 127.0.0.1:3360 Hostname:3360 LISTENING
The my.cnf is located Mysql-install-path\MySQL\MySQL Server xxx make sure you backup original before changing
Can't connect to [local] MySQL server
Testing The MySQL Server Installation on Microsoft Windows
MySQL Workbench: Manage MySQL on Windows Servers the Windows way
For the first time you need to test and make sure your connection to mysql is not blocked by the firewall.
To disable the firewall on each host in your cluster, perform the following steps on each host.
1. Save the existing iptables rule set.
iptables-save > /root/firewall.rules
2. Disable iptables.
For RHEL, CentOS, Oracle, and Debian:
chkconfig iptables off
and
/etc/init.d/iptables stop
For SLES:
chkconfig SuSEfirewall2_setup off
and
rcSuSEfirewall2 stop
For Ubuntu:
service ufw stop
https://www.cloudera.com/documentation/enterprise/5-7-x/topics/install_cdh_disable_iptables.html
Depends on your setup, but if you're using cPanel just go to RemoteMYSQL and enter your host. You can also use a wildcard. Below worked for me when I was getting the error
"Could not connect to DB server '' as user ''. port : Host '' is not
allowed to connect to this MySQL server"
On MySQL v5.6 this may be the case.
When another server communicate by advertising its hostname instead of IP address, the resolution might fails (because your user is using IP address instead of hostname for example).
So, you need to disable the following,
skip-host-cache
skip-name-resolve
Or maybe create the user with appropriate hostname (instead of IP address). You may find the hostname when establishing the connection to the remote MySQL.
I have MySql server setup on my dedicated server with an IP address 12.12.123.123 . I have configured MySql to allow remote access. Now I want to access the server from remote application. How can I do this? How will I get the host/server name of MySql to put in my connection string?
Thanks
You can just put the IP address of the server as the hostname.
Make sure that
The mysql server is listening on the public IP, so in my.cnf:
bind-address = 0.0.0.0
The user you configured on the mysql server is permitted to access the schema remotely:
GRANT ALL PRIVILEGES TO `user`#% ...
To be more secure, you don't have to use the wildcard, you can use a specific host or IP pattern.
Assuming your server is fully accessible and the server instance adequately configured, you can test the connection using mysql's -h switch like so:
mysql -u username -p -h 44.55.66.77
Once this connection has been made successfully, you can use the same details in your application.
When I am at the office, MySQL runs on a specific server which is called "mysqldev". In my /etc/hosts file I have set "mysqldev" to match the IP of this server. So far, so good. However, when I am out of the office using my laptop, I want to use my local MySQL database, as I clone specific databases there and have no internet to connect to the office database. I do not want to change my scripts, but rather my laptop configuration. So on my laptop I have set in /etc/hosts:
127.0.0.1 localhost mysqldev
However, for some reason this does not work as expected. If I log in to MySQL using the server at localhost, all good. But when I try to log in on the mysqldev server (same IP as localhost), I get the error:
Warning: mysqli::mysqli() [mysqli.mysqli]: [2002] Connection refused (trying to connect via tcp://mysqldev:3306)
(this is using PHP, but using the command line it is the same error)
The users that are set up on the system have specific permission to log in on this server:
CREATE USER 'test'#'mysqldev' IDENTIFIED BY '123';
GRANT ALL PRIVILEGES ON testdb.* TO 'test'#'mysqldev';
I have also turned off the firewall to test, and it does not make a difference. What could it be?
The MySQL client library tries to guess how to connect to your database. When you give localhost as the hostname, it assumes, that you're using a local socket (search your computer for a file named mysql.sock, probably under /var/lib/mysql or /usr/local/mysql/.
However, when you use anything else, like an ip address, a different hostname, or, in your case, mysqldev, it tries to connect to the host via tcp. From the error message, it seems as if your local mysql server is not listening on the tcp port 3306 (the mysql default)
Check, if your my.cnf (probably /etc/my.cnf or /etc/mysql/my.cnf) allows the use of tcp. If you find a line like
skip-networking
comment it out:
#skip-networking
and restart the server. Then try again to connect.
To find out, where your socket is, connect through localhost and issue the following command:
mysql> show global variables like '%socket%';
+---------------+-----------------------------+
| Variable_name | Value |
+---------------+-----------------------------+
| socket | /var/run/mysqld/mysqld.sock |
+---------------+-----------------------------+
If you are using MAMP Pro and are running into issues, you can simple uncheck the box labeled "Allow local access only" within the MySQL Server settings.