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Closed 8 years ago.
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I needed to change mysql root password on host localhost, 127.0.0.1 and %. Locally, in the server I can login with the new password. But on remote machines this isn't the case. I tried entering the old password and it logs in. What's the cause for this??? anyone
I double checked and is the same mysql server instance... MySQL is running on a Linux Fedora installation
Logins from remote clients are authenticated based on the credentials that you define in the privileges. The root password is only used to authenticate the root user.
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Closed 9 days ago.
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Error: MySQL shutdown unexpectedly.
This may be due to a blocked port, missing dependencies,
improper privileges, a crash, or a shutdown by another method.
Press the Logs button to view error logs and check
the Windows Event Viewer for more clues
If you need more help, copy and post this
entire log window on the forums
Tried the 3 methods which are listed on internet like:-
Delete imdata1 file
Backup thing
Changing port
also I have tried reinstallation but got same error.
This happened yesturday night everything was fine before that.
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Closed 2 years ago.
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I am using bunyan to log a nodejs app on my ubuntu server. As a result, I get JSON logs.
I tried to find a tool which I can run on my windows computer which connects like every 5 sec via FTP to my ubuntu server, gets the latest log lines from the log, and displays the updated log in a nice way on my windows machine.
I thought this must be really easy to find, but I found nothing.
Can anyone recommend me something useful?
https://github.com/sevdokimov/log-viewer can help. You can install it on the ubuntu server, specify the path to log files in the configuration, then observe logs via Web interface.
UI will not look nice for JSON logs, but I can improve it in the next version.
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Closed 2 years ago.
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I opened my /etc/passwd file only to find that all databases i have installed have created a user during their installation. Why do databases when installed (at least on Linux) create a user? What purpose does it serve?
It is dangerous to run software as root, because any security breach would give the attacker control over the machine. Also, bugs in the software could cause more damage.
For that reason, software only runs as root when that is absolutely required. With databases, there is no such requirement.
Therefore, the installation packages will normally create an operating system user that is used to run the database server processes. If there is also a database user of the same name, that is mostly by accident, or because it seemed like a natural choice.
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Closed 5 years ago.
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I've set up a home server with Apache Web Server on Ubuntu 16.04. I'm able to see my website externally. But I'm unable to display a video stream that's on my local network on the website.
How would I configure Apache to recognize http://192.168.1.215:8081 and allow it to be shown externally?
Not a programming question, but you would need to setup a forward in your router.
If your IP Address allocated by ISP can be accessed on the Internet(NOT behind a NAT):
Setup port-forwarding on your router
(optional) Use an available port. (if some are filtered or blocked by ISP)
(optional) Use DDNS if your address is not fixed like a regular server.
If not:
You must have a server as "Springboard" which can be accessed on Internet, then SSH -R can be used for forwarding a local port behind NAT to remote.
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Closed 9 years ago.
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I'm trying to set up my PC as a webserver so that users on the same network can access the Drupal 6 dev site I have installed locally. I've set a static IP for them to access, and set up the vhost to send the host they use to the site's subfolder in my www folder, but they get the Drupal error page with the message:
"The mysql error was: php_network_getaddresses: getaddrinfo failed: No such host is known."
Can anyone help?
Fixed: it was being caused by incorrect mysql user/pass in Drupal's settings.php