When you attempt to connect to a MySQL server, the server accepts or rejects the connection based on these conditions:
-
Your identity and whether you can verify it by supplying the proper credentials.
-
Whether your account is locked or unlocked.
The server checks credentials first, then account locking state. A failure at either step causes the server to deny access to you completely. Otherwise, the server accepts the connection, and then enters Stage 2 and waits for requests.
The server performs identity and credentials checking using columns in the user
table, accepting the connection only if these conditions are satisfied:
-
The client host name and user name match the
Host
andUser
columns in someuser
table row. For the rules governing permissibleHost
andUser
values, see Section 8.2.4, “Specifying Account Names”. -
The client supplies the credentials specified in the row (for example, a password), as indicated by the
authentication_string
column. Credentials are interpreted using the authentication plugin named in theplugin
column. -
The row indicates that the account is unlocked. Locking state is recorded in the
account_locked
column, which must have a value of'N'
. Account locking can be set or changed with theCREATE USER
orALTER USER
statement.
Your identity is based on two pieces of information:
-
Your MySQL user name.
-
The client host from which you connect.
If the User
column value is nonblank, the user name in an incoming connection must match exactly. If the User
value is blank, it matches any user name. If the user
table row that matches an incoming connection has a blank user name, the user is considered to be an anonymous user with no name, not a user with the name that the client actually specified. This means that a blank user name is used for all further access checking for the duration of the connection (that is, during Stage 2).
The authentication_string
column can be blank. This is not a wildcard and does not mean that any password matches. It means that the user must connect without specifying a password. The authentication method implemented by the plugin that authenticates the client may or may not use the password in the authentication_string
column. In this case, it is possible that an external password is also used to authenticate to the MySQL server.
Nonblank password values stored in the authentication_string
column of the user
table are encrypted. MySQL does not store passwords as cleartext for anyone to see. Rather, the password supplied by a user who is attempting to connect is encrypted (using the password hashing method implemented by the account authentication plugin). The encrypted password then is used during the connection process when checking whether the password is correct. This is done without the encrypted password ever traveling over the connection. See Section 8.2.1, “Account User Names and Passwords”.
From the MySQL server's point of view, the encrypted password is the real password, so you should never give anyone access to it. In particular, do not give nonadministrative users read access to tables in the mysql
system database.
The following table shows how various combinations of User
and Host
values in the user
table apply to incoming connections.
User Value |
Host Value |
Permissible Connections |
---|---|---|
'fred' |
'h1.example.net' |
fred , connecting from h1.example.net |
'' |
'h1.example.net' |
Any user, connecting from h1.example.net |
'fred' |
'%' |
fred , connecting from any host |
'' |
'%' |
Any user, connecting from any host |
'fred' |
'%.example.net' |
fred , connecting from any host in the example.net domain |
'fred' |
'x.example.%' |
fred , connecting from x.example.net , x.example.com , x.example.edu , and so on; this is probably not useful |
'fred' |
'198.51.100.177' |
fred , connecting from the host with IP address 198.51.100.177 |
'fred' |
'198.51.100.%' |
fred , connecting from any host in the 198.51.100 class C subnet |
'fred' |
'198.51.100.0/255.255.255.0' |
Same as previous example |
It is possible for the client host name and user name of an incoming connection to match more than one row in the user
table. The preceding set of examples demonstrates this: Several of the entries shown match a connection from h1.example.net
by fred
.
When multiple matches are possible, the server must determine which of them to use. It resolves this issue as follows:
-
Whenever the server reads the
user
table into memory, it sorts the rows. -
When a client attempts to connect, the server looks through the rows in sorted order.
-
The server uses the first row that matches the client host name and user name.
The server uses sorting rules that order rows with the most-specific Host
values first:
-
Literal IP addresses and host names are the most specific.
-
Accounts with an IP address in the host part have this order of specificity:
-
Accounts that have the host part given as an IP address:
CREATE USER 'user_name'@'127.0.0.1'; CREATE USER 'user_name'@'198.51.100.44';
-
Accounts that have the host part given as an IP address using CIDR notation:
CREATE USER 'user_name'@'192.0.2.21/8'; CREATE USER 'user_name'@'198.51.100.44/16';
-
Accounts that have the host part given as an IP address with a subnet mask:
CREATE USER 'user_name'@'192.0.2.0/255.255.255.0'; CREATE USER 'user_name'@'198.51.0.0/255.255.0.0';
-
-
The pattern
'%'
means “any host” and is least specific. -
The empty string
''
also means “any host” but sorts after'%'
.
Non-TCP (socket file, named pipe, and shared memory) connections are treated as local connections and match a host part of localhost
if there are any such accounts, or host parts with wildcards that match localhost
otherwise (for example, local%
, l%
, %
).
The treatment of '%'
as equivalent to localhost
is deprecated as of MySQL 8.2.0; you should expect this behavior to removed from a future version of MySQL.
Rows with the same Host
value are ordered with the most-specific User
values first. A blank User
value means “any user” and is least specific, so for rows with the same Host
value, nonanonymous users sort before anonymous users.
For rows with equally-specific Host
and User
values, the order is nondeterministic.
To see how this works, suppose that the user
table looks like this:
+-----------+----------+-
| Host | User | ...
+-----------+----------+-
| % | root | ...
| % | jeffrey | ...
| localhost | root | ...
| localhost | | ...
+-----------+----------+-
When the server reads the table into memory, it sorts the rows using the rules just described. The result after sorting looks like this:
+-----------+----------+-
| Host | User | ...
+-----------+----------+-
| localhost | root | ...
| localhost | | ...
| % | jeffrey | ...
| % | root | ...
+-----------+----------+-
When a client attempts to connect, the server looks through the sorted rows and uses the first match found. For a connection from localhost
by jeffrey
, two of the rows from the table match: the one with Host
and User
values of 'localhost'
and ''
, and the one with values of '%'
and 'jeffrey'
. The 'localhost'
row appears first in sorted order, so that is the one the server uses.
Here is another example. Suppose that the user
table looks like this:
+----------------+----------+-
| Host | User | ...
+----------------+----------+-
| % | jeffrey | ...
| h1.example.net | | ...
+----------------+----------+-
The sorted table looks like this:
+----------------+----------+-
| Host | User | ...
+----------------+----------+-
| h1.example.net | | ...
| % | jeffrey | ...
+----------------+----------+-
The first row matches a connection by any user from h1.example.net
, whereas the second row matches a connection by jeffrey
from any host.
It is a common misconception to think that, for a given user name, all rows that explicitly name that user are used first when the server attempts to find a match for the connection. This is not true. The preceding example illustrates this, where a connection from h1.example.net
by jeffrey
is first matched not by the row containing 'jeffrey'
as the User
column value, but by the row with no user name. As a result, jeffrey
is authenticated as an anonymous user, even though he specified a user name when connecting.
If you are able to connect to the server, but your privileges are not what you expect, you probably are being authenticated as some other account. To find out what account the server used to authenticate you, use the CURRENT_USER()
function. (See Section 14.15, “Information Functions”.) It returns a value in
format that indicates the user_name
@host_name
User
and Host
values from the matching user
table row. Suppose that jeffrey
connects and issues the following query:
mysql> SELECT CURRENT_USER();
+----------------+
| CURRENT_USER() |
+----------------+
| @localhost |
+----------------+
The result shown here indicates that the matching user
table row had a blank User
column value. In other words, the server is treating jeffrey
as an anonymous user.
Another way to diagnose authentication problems is to print out the user
table and sort it by hand to see where the first match is being made.