There are some related posts to this but I still can't figure this out. I have a working install of XAMPP(latest version) and MySQL Workbench 8.0.17 installed. I just want to be able to use Workbench with the MySQL that ships with the XAMPP install.
In the latest version of XAMPP, it first sets an IP address before I can start apache and mysql. MySQL seems to be running on port 3307.
Here is the Workbench screen to make a new connection. XAMPP is running on localhost - should that be my hostname?
If I try a localhost or 127.0.0.1 hostname with port 3307 (where I think XAMPP's MySQL is) I get this popup alert. If I continue, I still don't see any of my databases listed on the main screen.
This is the way I have used to connecting MySQL workbench to Xampp MySQL.
01) Click on the Plus icon.
02) Check the Xampp MySQL port number.
03)Type the connection name and check the port number with your Xampp MySql port number.
04) Click on the "Continue Anyway" button.
05) Then click on the "OK" button to save the connection.
06) Now you can see the connection you just created and click on it to connect to the MySQL database.
07) Just try to run some SQL code to if properly connected to Xampp Mysql.
I finally find solution on mac:
Notice that XAMPP server works on virtue machine inside with debian system and MoriaDB, so if you'd like to run Mysql WorkBench on MacOS outside, you must not use 127.0.0.1 or localhost as host name.
Please check your ip address of XAMPP on its panel General tab, mainly like 192.xxx.xxx.x, this is your host name!
And if you disable or uninstall mysql in your system, you can safely use default port 3306, or if you must use both XAMPP and local version, modify one pls.
Then, when it comes to user part, do not use root! Please add a new user in phpMyAdmin with hostname %, or open XAMPP terminal and use mysql instructions.
After filling all those above, Mysql will be able to start (although with warning, you can ignore it).
The way I 'fixed' this issue was to install an older version of xampp (5.4x) which ships with mysql, not mariadb. Before the install, I dumped all my dbs into a file and then imported them again after the install. Through XAMPP/phpMyAdmin I could see the fresh database. I tried to connect with MySQL Workbench and walla!
If you are on Ubuntu, run this command on terminal
sudo /opt/lampp/bin/mysql_upgrade
and then follow #prasadgayan 's answer above.
Note: It is a slight chance that your mysql_upgrade be in some other directory. If that's the case, run it from that path.
Please comment, if something similar work for Windows as well.
Namaste🙏
Reference: Tables could not be fetched - Error loading schema content
Normally the issue is that one is trying to use root as a user, which is somewhat prohibited. So just create a new user with the correct access privileges granted. Here's a solution, that worked on a Mac (but should be relevant to most OS's).
Start the XAMPP stack. For simplicity, open phpMyAdmin, by default accessible via 127.0.0.1:80/phpmyadmin/ or 127.0.0.1:80/phpmyadmin/ locally.
In case needed, log in with the username root and an empty password field.
Create or pick a database for the user, to grant access to, for example "test_db". Enter the following in any SQL prompt (which normally can be executed by pressing [ctrl] + [enter]):
create user userbob identified by 'Pass2bob!';
grant all privileges on test_db.* to userbob#localhost;
Note your Xampp IP-adress which tends to default to "192.168.64.2" and port 3306. Now you should be able to access that database.
I tested the connection with some PHP-code, which I included here and might come handy for someone. 3306 is default as MySQL/Maria the database port, but I left it here in case someone, sometime, have to use a different port.
<?php
$con = mysqli_connect("192.168.64.2","userbob","Pass2bob!","test_db", 3306);
if (mysqli_connect_errno()) { echo "Failed to connect to MySQL: " . mysqli_connect_error(); }
?>
I'm currently trying to run an application on a server but my customer is very 'picky' about their data and wish to store the database on their own internal office server. I've installed MySQL and can get the application to run locally but for a few specific reasons the application needs to run else where.
I basically can't get access to MySQL from a different location. I think my main stumbling block is port forwarding to the correct location. MySQL is installed on a mac mini with local IP address 192.168.1.242 and the router/modem is an Apple Time Capsule. I've tried looking at tutorials but they all have options that I don't have access to. I've attached a screenshot of the options I have access to and the settings I've tried so far.
Other information possibly needed is:
I need to connect from PHP
I've set a user up within MySQL with a wildcard (%)
I'm testing it using the following: command on my local machine in CMD: mysql -u username -h remote_ip_address -p
I get the following error: ERROR 2003 (HY000): Can't connect to MySQL server on 'REMOTE_IP_ADDRESS' (10061)
Firewall is turned off completely on the Mac Mini
There is nothing in the my.cnf file
OS is Sierra
That's all I can think of at the moment but any advice would be greatly appreciated and any more information required can be provided.
PS. evidently I'm not very good with MAC machines/networks
For anyone that reads this I had a very specific issue. I installed MySQL using homebrew. Homebrew binds MySQL to 127.0.0.1 therefore will only allow connections to MySQL from the same machine no matter what you try to do. To fix it I've had to edit /usr/local/Cellar/mysql//homebrew.mxcl.mysql.plist and replace --bind-address=127.0.0.1 with bind-address=*.
MySQL has an internal firewall of users/IPs. Even if you can connect locally, you might not have permission remotely:
Try this as root user on the MySQL server (locally first!)
GRANT ALL ON <db>.* TO '<user>'#'<remoteIP>' IDENTIFIED BY '<password>';
Where
<db> is the name of the DB
<user> is name under which you connect
<remoteIP> is your external office IP FROM which you are trying to connect
<password> should be self-explanatory!
This will explain the options better
I'm trying to connect to mysql workbench but I get the following error
Error Message
Cannot Connect to Database Server
Your connection attempt failed for user 'root' from your host to server at
127.0.0.1:3306:
Could not open database.
Please:
1. Check that mysql is running on server 127.0.0.1
Check that mysql is running on port 3306 (note: 3306 is the default, but this can be changed)
Check the root has rights to connect to 127.0.0.1 from your address (mysql rights define what clients can connect to the server and from which machines)
Make sure you are both providing a password if needed and using the correct
password for 127.0.0.1 connecting from the host address you're connecting
When I Test Connection, the parameters are correct, and actually I can enter and manage database in console.
When I installed Mysql for first time I could enter to Workbench one time and if I closed Workbench I had to restart my PC to connect another time.
I reinstalled 2 or 3 times Mysql server and Workbench and now I cannot connect from Workbench even once.
I faced similar issue and resolved it by following these steps:
In the terminal, execute this command
mysql -u root -p -h localhost -P 3306
Enter the password
This will be displayed
Welcome to the MySQL monitor. Commands end with ; or \g.
Your MySQL connection id is 18
Server version: 8.0.16 Homebrew
Now do,
ALTER USER 'root'#'localhost' IDENTIFIED WITH mysql_native_password BY 'root';
Now you should be able to login and connect to DB in the workbench with password 'root'
I don't know if it helps anyone, but I had the same problem on windows after updating from MySQL 5.7 to 8.0.
The solution for me was to go to services.msc, stop the MySQL service and start the "MySQL80" service instead.
Then I restarted MySQL Workbench (run as admin) and it worked.
Please make sure that You have Downloaded MySQl server while dowloading MySQl workbench from MySQl installer (if you have checked Custom download)
I had the same issue a few days ago. As I could see in the original question, there has been multiple MySQL installation on the same computer - the same flow I tried after failing in the first attempt.
In the case we are trying to reinstall MySQL, we should be aware of remaining hidden files after MySQL has been uninstalled for the first time. In order to remove them all (and make one successful installation), we should:
Make hidden files visible on your computer (instructions)
Delete all files related to MySQL after choosing uninstalling of the MySQL (I had to check C://ProgramData hidden folder)
Try a new installation
I think that during the first installation, I didn't have all required dependencies on the computer (for example Python) and the installation failed. After installing it, uninstalling the MySQL, and taking steps from above, I finally managed to run it successfully :)
I hope this could help someone! :)
This solved it for me (MAC OS)
Open MySQL from System Preferences > MySQL
Click 'Stop MySQL Server' if the server is running
Select 'Initialize Database'
Type your new password.
Choose 'Use legacy password'
Start the Server again.
Now connect the MySQL Workbench
Could you help me solve this problem ?
When I try to click "query database" under database menu in Mysql workbench. it gives me an error:
Cannot Connect to Database Server
Your connection attempt failed for user 'root' from your host to server at
127.0.0.1:3306:Can't connect to mysql server on '127.0.0.1'(10061)
Please:
Check that mysql is running on server 127.0.0.1
Check that mysql is running on port 3306 (note: 3306 is the default, but this can be changed)
Check the root has rights to connect to 127.0.0.1 from your address (mysql rights define what clients can connect to the server and from which machines)
Make sure you are both providing a password if needed and using the correct password for 127.0.0.1 connecting from the host address you're connecting from
The issue is likely due to socket authentication being enabled for the root user by default when no password is set, during the upgrade to ubuntu 16.04.
The solution is to revert back to native password authentication. You can do this by logging in to MySQL using socket authentication by doing:
sudo mysql -u root
Once logged in:
ALTER USER 'root'#'localhost' IDENTIFIED WITH mysql_native_password BY 'password';
which will revert back to the native (old default) password authentication.
Now use password as the password whenever required by MySQL.
Try opening services.msc from the start menu search box and try manually starting the MySQL service or directly write services.msc in Run box
It looks like there are a lot of causes of this error.
My Cause / Solution
In my case, the cause was that my server was configured to only accept connections from localhost. I fixed it by following this article: How Do I Enable Remote Access To MySQL Database Server?. My my.cnf file had no skip-networking line, so I just changed the line
bind-address = 127.0.0.1
to
bind-address = 0.0.0.0
This allows connections from any IP, not just 127.0.0.1.
Then, I created a MySql user that could connect from my client machine by running the following terminal commands:
# mysql -u root -p
mysql> CREATE USER 'username'#'1.2.3.4' IDENTIFIED BY 'password';
-> GRANT ALL PRIVILEGES ON *.* TO 'username'#'1.2.3.4' WITH GRANT OPTION;
-> \q
where 1.2.3.4 is the IP of the client you are trying to connect from. If you really have trouble, you can use '%' instead of '1.2.3.4' to allow the user to connect from any IP.
Other Causes
For a fairly extensive list, see Causes of Access-Denied Errors.
Did you try to determine if this is a problem with Workbench or a general connection problem? Try this:
Open a terminal
Type mysql -u root -p -h 127.0.0.1 -P 3306
If you can connect successfully you will see a mysql prompt after you type your password (type quit and Enter there to exit).
Report back how this worked.
I had a similar issue on Mac OS and I was able to fix it this way:
From the terminal, run:
mysql -u root -p -h 127.0.0.1 -P 3306
Then, I was asked to enter the password. I just pressed enter since no password was setup.
I got a message as follows:
Welcome to the MySQL monitor. Commands end with ; or \g. Your MySQL
connection id is 181. Server version: 8.0.11 Homebrew.
If you succeeded to log into mysql>, run the following command:
ALTER USER 'root'#'localhost' IDENTIFIED WITH mysql_native_password BY 'password';
You should get a message like this:
Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.19 sec)
Now, your password is "password" and your username is "root".
Happy coding :)
Run the ALTER USER command. Be sure to change password to a strong password of your choosing.
sudo mysql # Login to mysql`
Run the below command
ALTER USER 'root'#'localhost' IDENTIFIED WITH mysql_native_password BY 'password';
Now you can access it by using the new password.
Ref : https://www.digitalocean.com/community/tutorials/how-to-install-mysql-on-ubuntu-18-04
I had to start Workbench as Administrator. Apparently it didn't have the required permissions to connect to my localhost database server process.
Right-click the Workbench shortcut and select Run as Administrator. In the shortcut's Properties window, you can click on "Advanced" and tick the box next to "Run as Administrator" to always run the Workbench with Admin privileges.
The error occur because the mysql server is not starting on your computer. You should start it manually. Do following steps:
Download and install wamp server according to your bit version(32bit or 64bit) in your computer(http://wampserver-64bit.en.softonic.com/) this link allows you to download wamp server for 64bit.
As soon as you install it you can double click and run it..(you can see a icon in the right hand of the taskbar.It may be hidden .so you can click the arrow which show you the hide apps runing).So click the icon and go to Mysql
Then go to Service and there you can find Start/Resume Services click on it..
And now it is done.Open mysql workbench and see.It will work..
I had same problem with Workbench on Ubuntu, problem was with permission.
Find Workbench app
Click button Permissions
Give all permission for this app
I struggled with this problem for awhile and did several reinstalls of MySQL before discovering this.
I know that MySQL server was running OK because I could access all my DB's using the command line.
Hope this works for you.
In MySQL Workbench (5.2.47 CE)
click Mange Server Instances (bottom right corner)
click Connection
in the Connection box select:
Local Instance ($ServerName) - root#127.0.0.1:3306 '<'Standard(TCP/IP)>
click Edit Selected...
under Parameters, Hostname change localhost or 127.0.0.1 to your NetBIOS name
click Test Connection
If this works for you, great. If not change the hostname back to what it was.
Even I faced a similar error when I opened MySQL Workbench.
The solution that worked for me was:
Click on the Start button on a Windows machine
Type services and press Enter
Find MySQL and click on it
On the top side of the left panel, you will find an option as Start the service
Click on Start which is visible as a hyperlink
Forr me reason was that I tried to use newest MySQL Workbench 8.x to connect to MySQL Server 5.1 (both running on Windows Server 2012).
When I uninstalled MySQL Workbench 8.x and installed MySQL Workbench 6.3.10 it successfully connected to localhost database
For those who ignored that the initial error message displaying is the following one:
The name org.freedesktop.secrets was not provided by any .service files
Make sure to install gnome-keyring using the following
sudo apt install gnome-keyring
I tried these steps -
Step 1 : Go to Ubuntu Software Center
Step 2 : Searched for MySql Workbench
Step 3 : And Click on Permissions
Step 4 : Enable Read, add, change or remove saved passwords
Then, enter Login Password
And then, I found that my problem solved
The problem is that MySQL server is not installed.
You can get the installer from here.
Then watch this 6-minute installation tutorial.
If then creating a new connection in MySQL Workbench is not working, make sure you run that connection as root as show below:
If you don't find your .ini file, check this answer (also written below).
Enter "services.msc" on the Start menu search box.
Find MySQL service under Name column, for example, MySQL56.
Right click on MySQL service, and select Properties menu.
Look for "Path To Executable" under General tab, and there is your .ini file, for instance, "C:\Program Files (x86)\MySQL\MySQL Server 5.6\bin\mysqld.exe" --defaults-file="C:\ProgramData\MySQL\MySQL Server 5.6\my.ini" MYSQL56
I was in similar situations before and last time I found it was some Windows update issue(not sure). This time, I opened MySQL workbench and found no connection to my local database. I cannot see my tables, but yesterday I could connect to the database.
I found that my cause is that, after letting my computer sleeping for some time and wake it again, the mysql service is not running.
My solution: restart the service named "mysql" and rerun the workbench. Restarting the service takes a while, but it works.
To be up to date for upper versions and later visitors :
Currently I'm working on a win7 64bit having different tools on it including python 2.7.4 as a prerequisite for google android ...
When I upgraded from WB 6.0.8-win32 to upper versions to have 64bit performance I had some problems for example on 6.3.5-winx64 I had a bug in the details view of tables (disordered view) caused me to downgrade to 6.2.5-winx64.
As a GUI user, easy forward/backward engineering and db server relative items were working well but when we try to Database>Connect to Database we will have Not connected and will have python error if we try to execute a query however the DB server service is absolutely ran and is working well and this problem is not from the server and is from workbench. To resolve it we must use Query>Reconnect to Server to choose the DB connection explicitly and then almost everything looks good (this may be due to my multiple db connections and I couldn't find some solution to define the default db connection in workbench).
As a note : because I'm using latest Xampp version (even in linux addictively :) ), recently Xampp uses mariadb 10 instead of mysql 5.x causes the mysql file version to be 10 may cause some problems such as forward engineering of procedures which can be resolved via mysql_upgrade.exe but still when we try to check a db connection wb will inform about the wrong version however it is not critical and works well.
Conclusion : Thus sometimes db connection problems in workbench may be due to itself and not server (if you don't have other db connection relative problems).
My problem was that the MySQL server wasn't actually installed. I had run the MySQL Installer, but it didn't install the MySQL server.
I reran the installer, click "Add", and then added MySQL server to the list. Now it works fine.
In my case I have just installed MySQL Workbench but after uninstalling MySQL Workbench and installing MySQL installer and is same for both 32 and 64 bit then after it working like a charm. Hope it could be useful.
I just use:
sudo snap connect mysql-workbench-community:ssh-keys
sudo snap connect mysql-workbench-community:password-manager-service
I also struggled with this problem for quite a while.
I came accross this interesting thread from MySQL forum: http://forums.mysql.com/read.php?11,11388,11388#msg-11388
I also came accross (obviously) some good SO Q/A.
It seems that the message mentioned in "user948950" 's question can be coming from a wide range of reasons: log file too big, incorrect mysql.ini file values, spaces in the file path, security/acl issue, old entries in the registry, and so on.
So, after trying for 3h to fix this... I abandonned and decided to do a good old re-install.
This is where this post from (again) this MySQL thread came in useful, I quote:
Gary Williams wrote: Hi Guys,
I've had exactly the same problem and this is how I got it working
for me, starting with a non working installation.
Stop the windows service for any existing mysql installation.
Uninstall Mysql.
As with most uninstalls, old files are left behind. If your directory
is C:\mysql\ etc then delete the innob, etc, files but leave the
directories themselves as well as any existing databases in 'data'.
If your directory is C:\Program Files\ etc, delete all the mysql
directories.
It's now worth running regedit to make sure the old registry entries are deleted as well by the uninstall. If not, delete them.
It's ok to use the new .msi installer (essential files only), however ....
Do not use their default install path! Some genius set a path with spaces in it! Choose the custom install and select a sensible path,
ie, C:\mysql (note from Adrien: C:\mysqldata for ... the data)
Do not choose to alter the security settings. Uncheck the relevant box and the install will complete without having to set a root
password.
I think I have remembered everything.
Good luck
Gary
I did get into troubles when simply copy/pasting the databases I had in my previous "data" directory to the new one. So the work around I found was to export each database (I know... a lot of fun) and then re-import them one by one.
FYI: I used the following command to import C:/<MySQLInstallDir>/My SQL Server x.x/bin/mysql -u root -p <dbName> < "<dirPathOfDump>\<dumpName>.sql", that is for instance C:/mysql/MySQL Server 5.6/bin/mysql -u root -p mySupaCoolDb < "C:\mySupaCoolDbDump20130901.sql"
2022 and beyond this works for me:
sudo nano /etc/mysql/mysql.conf.d/mysqld.cnf
change
bind-address = 127.0.0.1
to
bind-address = 0.0.0.0
Then remember to restart mysql sudo systemctl restart mysql
Initially I was confused, but I was able to solve the problem.
If your workbench was downloaded through the Snap package manager you could easily use this command to solve the problem, very simple:
sudo snap connect mysql-workbench-community:password-manager-service :password-manager-service
Go to services.msc and find MySQL.
If "Log on As" section is 'Network Service', then:
Double click on the MySQL row to open a pop-up
go to "Log on" tab
Select Log on as: "Local System account" and check "Allow service to interact with desktop"
Voilà, now you can start your service on localhost and make sure you enter correct root/user password on your MySQL Workbench, and you are good to go.
If you are using snap to install mysql workbench, try this:
sudo snap connect mysql-workbench-community:password-manager-service :password-manager-service to allow sandboxed package to access password service
askubuntu.com/a/1242777/1621549
This Solution was made as a comment before by Rohim Chou