星期一, 6月 12, 2006

SA1 Operational Support:

Last updated: 31/01/2005 (Wei Xing)
Uploaded: 02/08/2005

In a Unix environment, the procedure for resetting the root password is as follows:

1. Log on to your system as either the Unix root user or as the same user that the mysqld server runs as.

2. Locate the .pid file that contains the server's process ID. The exact location and name of this file depend on your distribution, hostname, and configuration. Common locations are /var/lib/mysql/, /var/run/mysqld/, and /usr/local/mysql/data/. Generally, the filename has the extension of .pid and begins with either mysqld or your system's hostname.

You can stop the MySQL server by sending a normal kill (not kill -9) to the mysqld process, using the pathname of the .pid file in the following command:

shell> kill `cat /mysql-data-directory/host_name.pid`

Note the use of backticks rather than forward quotes with the cat command; these cause the output of cat to be substituted into the kill command.

3. Restart the MySQL server with the special --skip-grant-tables option:

shell> mysqld_safe --skip-grant-tables &

4. Set a new password for the root@localhost MySQL account:

shell> mysqladmin -u root flush-privileges password "newpwd"

Replace "newpwd'' with the actual root password that you want to use.

5. You should be able to connect using the new password.

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