I am trying to set up a database for a class project and we are using MySqlWorkbench 8.0. I am able to set up a database and connect to it locally but I cant seem to get remote connections to work. I have already researched the problem and here are a list of things I've already tried. (I am using windows 10)
I have looked at the my.ini file for the bind-adress property as this seemed to be the most common problem but it isn't even in the my.ini file.
I have added a user using this query to grant permission for others to connect using other ips
CREATE USER 'USER'#'%' IDENTIFIED BY 'PASSWORD';
GRANT ALL PRIVILEGES ON *.* TO 'USER'#'%' WITH GRANT OPTION;
FLUSH privileges;
I have tried disabling my firewalls as well as just allowing connections to port 3306 to no avail
Anything would help. All of the answers i found online were outdated or pertained to the bind-adress which i cannot find in the my.ini file
Hmm, Let double-check these points: but this's NOT a problem of MySqlWorkbench
Same as you did so far. Update bind-address to 0.0.0.0 which accept all
Yes, It's same but double check by select user, host from mysql.user;
NO disable the firewall, add TCP port of mysql
If you're using a cloud server you have to add MySQL port in network policy setting, if you're using LAN you may need to open port in the gateway
When you make sure all work then I belive that you can connect via command line or MySqlWorkbench or any SQL Tools which support MySQL.
I've looked in so many areas to try to fix this problem and I can't seem to find a solution. Im running ubuntu linux with the latest mysql and phpmyadmin installation. I found that connecting to the database locally works but if I try to connect remotely it keeps denying the connections. The only way I can login to phpmyadmin is if I put the ip address in the bar, connecting via the web address will not work.
Are you trying to connect to MySQL remotely or PHPMyAdmin remotely?
If you are trying to access MySQL remotely, you need to do the following:
Edit the bind-address variable in /etc/my.cnf, to 0.0.0.0 or the IP address of your server
Make sure your MySQL user has permissions from remote hosts, do this using:
CREATE USER 'myuser'#'localhost' IDENTIFIED BY 'mypass';
CREATE USER 'myuser'#'%' IDENTIFIED BY 'mypass';
Then:
GRANT ALL ON . TO 'myuser'#'localhost';
GRANT ALL ON . TO 'myuser'#'%';
Then go ahead and restart the mysql instance on your server. This also assumes you have set IP tables up to allow port 3306 TCP incoming to your server.
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 a remote Server which is running mysql. I have enabled remote access by changing the bind address to the public ip, and commenting the "skip-networking" line. I then used ufw (ubuntu firewall) to open the mysql port 3306
However my client times out when trying to connect to the server. So I test the connection with telnet, and I get the expect response, the same as I get on the local server.
I'm getting no errors, and no response when using a mysql client, but access would appear to be there in telnet.
Can anybody suggest what I've missed?
Thanks
If its not a firewall issue then maybe its a permission problem , try this for the user you use to connect from that host:
CREATE USER 'user'#'host' IDENTIFIED BY 'pass';
GRANT ALL on *.* to 'user'#'host';
FLUSH PRIVILEGES;
UPDATE:
Also check the bind-address from my.cnf file
For example, if you bind to 0.0.0.0, you can connect to the server
using all existing accounts. But if you bind to 127.0.0.1, the server
accepts connections only on that address. In this case, first make
sure that the 'root'#'127.0.0.1' account is present in the mysql.user
table so that you can still connect to the server to shut it down.
I am running MySQL on an Amazon AWS Instance. I was able to previously connect to the MySQL Database via MySQL Query Browser. Now I am traveling outside the U.S. and I am having trouble connecting via the Query Browser. I am able to use Terminal to create an ssh connection and then login to MySQL, so it does not appear to be a larger issue with the MySQL Database.
Has anyone else had a similar problem? Any ideas how I can fix this?
This is the error I get from the MySQL Browser
Your connection attempt
failed for user 'admin' from your host to server at
ec2-XXX-XXX-XXX-XXX.compute-1.amazonaws.com:3306: Can't connect to
MySQL server on 'ec2-XXX-XXX-XXX-XXX.compute-1.amazonaws.com' (4)
Please: 1 Check that mysql is running on server
ec2-XXX-XXX-XXX-XXX.compute-1.amazonaws.com
2 Check that mysql is
running on port 3306 (note: 3306 is the default, but this can be
changed)
3 Check the admin has rights to connect to
ec2-XXX-XXX-XXX-XXX.compute-1.amazonaws.com from your address (mysql
rights define what clients can connect to the server and from which
machines)
4 Make sure you are both providing a password if needed and
using the correct password for
ec2-XXX-XXX-XXX-XXX.compute-1.amazonaws.com connecting from the host
address you're connecting from
The only possible problem I see could be #4, but I ran and re-ran this command via Terminal:
grant all privileges on *.* to 'admin'#'%' identified by '<pass>' with grant option;