I am connecting MySQL - 8.0 with MySQL Workbench and getting the below error:
Authentication plugin 'caching_sha2_password' cannot be loaded:
dlopen(/usr/local/mysql/lib/plugin/caching_sha2_password.so, 2): image
not found
I have tried with other client tool as well.
Any solution for this?
you can change the encryption of the password like this.
ALTER USER 'yourusername'#'localhost' IDENTIFIED WITH mysql_native_password BY 'youpassword';
Note: For MAC OS
Open MySQL from System Preferences > Initialize Database >
Type your new password.
Choose 'Use legacy password'
Start the Server again.
Now connect the MySQL Workbench
For Windows 10:
Open the command prompt:
cd "C:\Program Files\MySQL\MySQL Server 8.0\bin"
C:\Program Files\MySQL\MySQL Server 8.0\bin> mysql -u root -p
Enter password: *********
mysql> ALTER USER 'root'#'localhost' IDENTIFIED WITH mysql_native_password BY 'newrootpassword';
Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.10 sec)
mysql> exit
Alternatively, you can change the my.ini configuration as the following:
[mysqld]
default_authentication_plugin=mysql_native_password
Restart the MySQL Server and open the Workbench again.
I had the same problem, but the answer by Aman Aggarwal didn't work for me with a Docker container running mysql 8.X.
I loged in the container
docker exec -it CONTAINER_ID bash
then log into mysql as root
mysql --user=root --password
Enter the password for root (Default is 'root')
Finally Run:
ALTER USER 'username' IDENTIFIED WITH mysql_native_password BY 'password';
You're all set.
You can change the encryption of the user's password by altering the user with below Alter command :
ALTER USER 'username'#'ip_address' IDENTIFIED WITH mysql_native_password BY
'password';
OR
We can avoid this error by make it work with old password plugin:
First change the authentication plugin in my.cnf file for Linux / my.ini file in Windows:
[mysqld]
default_authentication_plugin=mysql_native_password
Restart the mysql server to take the changes in affect and try connecting via MySQL with any mysql client.
If still unable to connect and getting the below error:
Unable to load plugin 'caching_sha2_password'
It means your user needs the above plugin. So try creating new user with create user or grant command after changing default plugin. then new user need the native plugin and you will able to connect MySQL.
Thanks
Currently (on 2018/04/23), you need to download a development release. The GA ones do not work.
I was not able to connect with the latest GA version (6.3.10).
It worked with mysql-workbench-community-8.0.11-rc-winx64.msi (from https://dev.mysql.com/downloads/workbench/, tab Development Releases).
Ok, wasted a lot of time on this so here is a summary as of 19 March 2019
If you are specifically trying to use a Docker image with MySql 8+, and then use SequelPro to access your database(s) running on that docker container, you are out of luck.
See the sequelpro issue 2699
My setup is sequelpro 1.1.2 using docker desktop 2.0.3.0 (mac - mojave), and tried using mysql:latest (v8.0.15).
As others have reported, using mysql 5.7 works with nothing required:
docker run -p 3306:3306 --name mysql1 -e MYSQL_ROOT_PASSWORD=secret -d mysql:5.7
Of course, it is possible to use MySql 8+ on docker, and in that situation (if needed), other answers provided here for caching_sha2_password type issues do work. But sequelpro is a NO GO with MySql 8+
Finally, I abandoned sequelpro (a trusted friend from back in 2013-2014) and instead installed DBeaver. Everything worked out of the box. For docker, I used:
docker run -p 3306:3306 --name mysql1 -e MYSQL_ROOT_PASSWORD=secret -d mysql:latest --default-authentication-plugin=mysql_native_password
You can quickly peek at the mysql databases using:
docker exec -it mysql1 bash
mysql -u root -p
show databases;
I was installing MySQL on my Windows 10 PC using "MySQL Web Installer" and was facing the same issue while trying to connect using MySQL workbench. I fixed the issue by reconfiguring the server form the Installer window.
Clicking on the "Reconfigure" option it will allow to reconfigure the server. Click on "Next" until you reach "Authentication Method".
Once on this tab, use the second option "Use Legacy Authentication Method (Retain MySQL 5.x Compatibility)".
Keep everything else as is and that is how I solved my issue.
Note: For Linux (Debian, Ubuntu, Mint)
I got this error:
MySQL Error Message: Plugin caching_sha2_password could not be loaded: /usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/mariadb19/plugin/caching_sha2_password.so: cannot open shared object file: No such file or directory
I solved it with these steps:
Enter on mysql console: $ mysql -u root -p, if you don't have a password for root user, then:
Use mysql db: mysql> use mysql;
Alter your user for solve the problem: mysql> ALTER USER 'root'#'localhost' IDENTIFIED WITH mysql_native_password BY 'password';
Exit... mysql> quit;
Done!
like this?
docker run -p 3306:3306 -e MYSQL_ALLOW_EMPTY_PASSWORD=yes -d mysql --default-authentication-plugin=mysql_native_password
mysql -uroot --protocol tcp
Try in PWD
https://github.com/GitHub30/docs/blob/change-default_authentication_plugin/mysql/stack.yml
or You shoud use MySQL Workbench 8.0.11.
Open MySQL Command Line Client
Create a new user with a new pass
Considering an example of a path to a bin folder on top, here's the code you need to run in the command prompt, line by line:
cd C:\Program Files\MySQL\MySQL Server 5.7\bin
MySQL -u root -p
current password...***
CREATE USER 'nativeuser'#'localhost'
IDENTIFIED WITH mysql_native_password BY 'new_password';
Then, you can access Workbench again (you should be able to do that after creating a new localhost connection and using the new credentials to start using the program).
Set up a new local host connection with the user name mentioned above (native user), login using the password (new_password)
Courtesy: UDEMY FAQs answered by Career365 Team
For Windows 10,
Modify my.ini file in C:\ProgramData\MySQL\MySQL Server 8.0\
[mysqld]
default_authentication_plugin=mysql_native_password
Restart the MySQL Service.
Login to MySQL on the command line, and execute the following commands in MySQL:
Create a new user.
CREATE USER 'user'#'localhost' IDENTIFIED BY 'password';
Grant all privileges.
GRANT ALL PRIVILEGES ON * .* TO 'user'#'localhost';
Open MySQL workbench, and open a new connection using the new user credentials.
I was facing the same issue and this worked.
Although this shouldn't be a real
solution, it does work locally if you are stuck
ALTER USER 'root'#'localhost' IDENTIFIED WITH mysql_native_password BY '';
This is my databdase definition in my docker-compose:
dataBase:
image: mysql:8.0
volumes:
- db_data:/var/lib/mysql
networks:
z-net:
ipv4_address: 172.26.0.2
restart: always
entrypoint: ['docker-entrypoint.sh', '--default-authentication-plugin=mysql_native_password']
environment:
MYSQL_ROOT_PASSWORD: supersecret
MYSQL_DATABASE: zdb
MYSQL_USER: zuser
MYSQL_PASSWORD: zpass
ports:
- "3333:3306"
The relevant line there is entrypoint.
After build and up it, you can test it with:
$ mysql -u zuser -pzpass --host=172.26.0.2 zdb -e "select 1;"
Warning: Using a password on the command line interface can be insecure.
+---+
| 1 |
+---+
| 1 |
+---+
For those using Docker or Docker Compose, I experienced this error because I didn't set my MySQL image version. Docker will automatically attempt to get the latest version which is 8.
I set MySQL to 5.7 and rebuilt the image and it worked as normal:
version: '2'
services:
db:
image: mysql:5.7
I found that
ALTER USER 'username'#'ip_address' IDENTIFIED WITH mysql_native_password BY 'password';
didn't work by itself. I also needed to set
[mysqld]
default_authentication_plugin=mysql_native_password
in /etc/mysql/mysql.conf.d/mysqld.cnf
on Ubuntu 18.04 running PHP 7.0
Here is the solution which worked for me after MySQL 8.0 Installation on Windows 10.
Suppose MySQL username is root and password is admin
Open command prompt and enter the following commands:
cd C:\Program Files\MySQL\MySQL Server 8.0\bin
mysql_upgrade -uroot -padmin
mysql -uroot -padmin
ALTER USER 'root'#'localhost' IDENTIFIED WITH mysql_native_password BY
'admin'
If you are getting this error on GitLab CI like me:
Just change from latest to 5.7 version ;)
# .gitlab-ci.yml
rspec:
services:
# - mysql:latest (I'm using latest version and it causes error)
- mysql:5.7 #(then I've changed to this specific version and fix!)
Open my sql command promt:
then enter mysql password
finally use:
ALTER USER 'username'#'ip_address' IDENTIFIED WITH mysql_native_password BY 'password';
refer:https://stackoverflow.com/a/49228443/6097074
Thanks.
For me this started happening because on a project, I was using Docker image mysql:latest (which was version 5, and which was working fine), and during a later build, the latest version was switched to version 8, and stopped working. I changed my image to mysql:5 and I was no longer getting this error.
This error comes up when the tool being used is not compatible with MySQL8, try updating to the latest version of MySQL Workbench for MySQL8
If you still want to use the new authentication method, the proper solution is to install the mariadb-connector-c package. For Alpine, run:
apk add mariadb-connector-c
This will add the missing caching_sha2_password.so library into /usr/lib/mariadb/plugin/caching_sha2_password.so.
Almost like answers above but may be in simple queries, I was getting this error in my spring boot application along with hibernate after MySQL upgrade. We created a new user by running the queries below against our DB. I believe this is a temp work around to use sha256_password instead of latest and good authentication caching_sha2_password.
CREATE USER 'username'#'localhost' IDENTIFIED WITH mysql_native_password BY 'pa$$word';
GRANT ALL PRIVILEGES ON * .* TO 'username'#'localhost';
MySQLWorkbench 8.0.11 for macOS addresses this.
I can establish connection with root password protected mysql instance running in docker.
If you are trying to connect to a MySQL server from a text-based MySQL client from another computer (be it Docker or not)
Most answers here involve connecting from a desktop client, or ask you to switch to an older authentication method. If you're connecting it with the MySQL client (text-based), I made it work with a Debian Buster in a Docker container.
Say you have the apt system and wget set up, do the following:
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install lsb-release -y
Download a Debian package which update apt sources for you from the MySQL web site.
sudo dpkg -i mysql-apt-config_0.8.13-1_all.deb and select the options you want. In my case I only need MySQL Tools & Connectors to be enabled.
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install mysql-client -y
Done. You can now run the new MySQL client and connect with the new authentication method.
The below solution worked for me
Go to Mysql Workbench -> Server-> Users and Privileges
1.Click Add Account
2.Under Login Tab provide new details and make sure to choose the Authentication Type as standard and choose respective administrative roles and Schema Privileges
Actually MySql allows two type of authentication at the time of installation.
Password Encryption
Legacy Encryption
Read Here
So by checking legacy authentication the issue was resolved.
Try using legacy password while downloading and installing MySql, that helped me.
Or follow the method posted by Santhosh Shivan for Mac OS.
Just downloaded the latest mysqlworkbench which is compatible with the latest encryption:
https://downloads.mysql.com/archives/workbench/
Note: On Mac big Sur, the latest two versions: 8.0.22 and 8.0.23 are buggy and do not work.
Use 8.0.21 until these are fixed
I run docker in M1 (arm64), the direct way of changing in the docker bash does not work for me. Instead, I change the mysql image to be
mysql:8.0.26
and the platform is set as
linux/x86_64
and add default_authentication_plugin=mysql_native_password to my.cnf
Then, you rebuild your container.
Related
I have a problem that I've been trying to solve for a very long time and it seems like I'm missing something very basic.
I use a Linux server with Anaconda, Oracle client, Pycharm and jupyter-notebook installed.
I use python scripts in which I write and read data to Oracle DB, and I use the Cx_oracle extension.
The server has several users with a personal username for each and each of them has sudo privileges.
I performed all the installations on the server with sudo privileges.
When I try to connect from the server to Oracle DB I connect properly.
When I connect to Python on the server itself, I connect properly to Oracle DB.
When I connect using Pycharm and I define ORACLE_HOME=/OracleTools/19.0.0/ in the environment variables, I connect properly to the Oracle DB.
My problem starts when I want to use jupyter-notebook
When I try to connect to the DB I get the error -
DatabaseError: Error while trying to retrieve text for error ORA-12715
I noticed when I execute os.environ I see that it is defined for me:
ORACLE_HOME: /OracleTools/19.0.0/bin
and should be
/OracleTools/19.0.0
So I changed using command os.environ['ORACLE_HOME'] = '/OracleTools/19.0.0'
Then I get an error:
DatabaseError: ORA-12715: invalid character set specified
And of course this change is not permanently saved ...
If on the server itself I execute the env command both in the private user and in sudo I see ORACLE_HOME: /OracleTools/19.0.0 and not ORACLE_HOME: /OracleTools/19.0.0/bin
My questions:
Where does the data I get in the os.environ command come from?
How can I edit them permanently ?
Is this even the problem I'm having or should I check something else?
I manage to import cx_oracle, which means that there is no problem of expansion
Thanks!
I am using postgresql as my database and I am using Pgadmin as a management tool. I was having an issue and I learned I need to use "python manage.py myapp zero" So This was universal solution in Stackoverflow for my problem and It didnt work even after whatever I did. So I had the genius idea of deleting the database from pgadmin and recreating again. Since there was nothing important in it. Now I cant makemigration. and Cloning app from Github didnt solve my problem. What can I do?
Main Error I am getting when tried to makemigration:
django.db.migrations.exceptions.BadMigrationError
Edit: I tried to delete my migrations folder from app and run
DELETE FROM django_migrations WHERE app = 'app_name'
command on the database. I got an error there as well
"django_migrations" obeject does not exist. On my database management tool.
If you've deleted the DB then you can go ahead and recreate it.
You're settings.py file should let you know the creds to use for it but the commands for postgres are:
Creating user
$ sudo -u postgres createuser <username>
Creating Database
$ sudo -u postgres createdb <dbname>
Giving the user a password
$ sudo -u postgres psql
psql=# alter user <username> with encrypted password '<password>';
Granting privileges on database
psql=# grant all privileges on database <dbname> to <username> ;
I have a MariaDB 5.5.57-1ubuntu0.14.04.1 installed on Ubuntu Linux 14.04 and configured with the following to authenticate MySQL users using our OpenLDAP infrastructure via PAM:
# cat /etc/mysql/conf.d/ldap.cnf
[mysqld]
pam-use-cleartext-plugin
plugin-load = auth_pam.so
# cat /etc/mysql/conf.d/ssl.cnf
[mysqld]
ssl-cipher = DHE-RSA-AES256-SHA
ssl-ca=/etc/mysql/ssl/ca-cert.pem
ssl-cert=/etc/mysql/ssl/server-cert.pem
ssl-key=/etc/mysql/ssl/server-key.pem
I've created my user in mysql like this:
MariaDB [(none)]> CREATE user 'ldap1'#'%' IDENTIFIED VIA pam;
Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.00 sec)
MariaDB [(none)]> GRANT ALL PRIVILEGES ON test.* TO 'ldap1'#'%' IDENTIFIED VIA pam REQUIRE SSL;
I can authenticate from a remote Linux host doing this:
mysql -u ldap1 -p -h my.server.net --ssl --enable-cleartext-plugin
When I connect from MySQL Workbench on Windows 7 I can tick 'Enable Cleartext Authentication Plugin' under the Advanced tab (Require SSL of course) and authenticate as well there too.
When I run my Python script, I get the error message below. Anyone know a fix or is there a DLL I need to install?
NOTE:The code I'm using was sent to me from an outside developer and not so sure I can share the code so just posting the error output. If this is not a common problem with a known workaround (It's been difficult finding all the right pieces to do this from both Linux and Windows platforms) I can certainly email said developer and ask about posting watered down version of the connect routine. The code does import MySQLdb to establish the DB connection if it matters.
My aim is to connect a MySQL database to a python web scraper I have written.
I have started the process of installing mysql shell, which seems to be the correct version of mysql for my needs. I am following the documentation for downloading X Protocol and am stuck.
Following the instructions to download using MySQL Shell, it says
navigate to the MySQL binaries location (for example, /usr/bin/ on Linux).
Run the following command:
mysqlsh -u user -h localhost --classic --dba enableXProtocol\
Which when I run this command, after being promted to type in my password:
Creating a Classic Session to 'user#localhost'
Enter password:
I then receive this error:
ERROR: 2003 (HY000): Can't connect to MySQL server on 'localhost' (61)
How do I get around this situation?
P.s. I'm not sure if I should be entering 'user' or my actual username 'Frankie'
Error message indicated that you don't have installed MySQL Server.
Firstly, you need to install or upgrade to MySQL 5.7.12 or higher. How to do it is described here https://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.7/en/installing.html
Current Problemset:
Python application including mysql_connector object
Remote Server only accessible using mysql (no ssh, rsh, telnet, etc.)
Target:
Use mysql connector to create a database backup to file (either on the local machine or a network place - e.g. Samba Share)
I want to avoid collecting each row from each table and dump single rows into ascii files.
Environment:
Operating systems: Windows, Linux
Python Version: 2.7
What i tried so far:
Checked the API Reference and Extension API Reference
EDIT: I also searched SO using keywords mysql-connector and backup as well as copy table
Any help and hints are welcome!
On Ubuntu based linux distro run the following commands to get a full backup(including schema) of database named my_database.
sudo apt-get install mysql-client
mysqldump -h<your_db_server> -u <your_user> -p<your_password> -e --databases my_database > my_backup.sql
You only have to run this on the server if your local machine has no access to the db, but you said you have mysql access to the server, so this should work fine. Remember not to add a space between your password and the -p. (If password is passwd, write -ppasswd)
I'm using mysqldump - it means i have to install that on the client machine, but it's more reliable (for me) than a complex script that selects every row from every table.
try:
mysqldump_process = run(["/usr/bin/mysqldump","-h",host_endpoint,"-P","3306","-u","admin",master_user_password,"--result-file=/tmp/sanitised_dump.sql","--databases",schema_name], capture_output=True, check=True, text=True)
print ("mysqldumping")
print ("Process: ", mysqldump_process)
print ("Command output: ", mysqldump_process.stdout)
except:
print("mysqldump failed (but i don't know how to get the output in the exception handler)")
print ("Process: ", mysqldump_process)