The world's most popular open source database
One means of limiting use of MySQL server resources is to set the
max_user_connections system
variable to a non-zero value. However, this method is strictly
global, and does not allow for management of individual accounts.
In addition, it limits only the number of simultaneous connections
made using a single account, and not what a client can do once
connected. Both types of control are of interest to many MySQL
administrators, particularly those working for Internet Service
Providers.
In MySQL 5.0, you can limit the following server resources for individual accounts:
The number of queries that an account can issue per hour
The number of updates that an account can issue per hour
The number of times an account can connect to the server per hour
The number of simultaneous connections to the server an account can have (as of MySQL 5.0.3)
Any statement that a client can issue counts against the query limit. Only statements that modify databases or tables count against the update limit.
Before MySQL 5.0.3, an “account” in this context is
assessed against the actual host from which a user connects.
Suppose that there is a row in the user table
that has User and Host
values of usera and
%.example.com, to allow
usera to connect from any host in the
example.com domain. If usera
connects simultaneously from host1.example.com
and host2.example.com, the server applies the
account resource limits separately to each connection. If
usera connects again from
host1.example.com, the server applies the
limits for that connection together with the existing connection
from that host.
As of MySQL 5.0.3, an “account” is assessed as a
single row in the user table. That is,
connections are assessed against the Host value
in the user table row that applies to the
connection. In this case, the server applies resource limits
collectively to all connections by usera from
any host in the example.com domain. The
pre-5.0.3 method of accounting may be selected by starting the
server with the --old-style-user-limits option.
As a prerequisite for using this feature, the
user table in the mysql
database must contain the resource-related columns. Resource
limits are stored in the max_questions,
max_updates,
max_connections, and
max_user_connections columns. If
your user table doesn't have these columns, it
must be upgraded; see Section 4.4.9, “mysql_upgrade — Check Tables for MySQL Upgrade”.
To set resource limits with a GRANT
statement, use a WITH clause that names each
resource to be limited and a per-hour count indicating the limit
value. For example, to create a new account that can access the
customer database, but only in a limited
fashion, issue this statement:
mysql>GRANT ALL ON customer.* TO 'francis'@'localhost'->IDENTIFIED BY 'frank'->WITH MAX_QUERIES_PER_HOUR 20->MAX_UPDATES_PER_HOUR 10->MAX_CONNECTIONS_PER_HOUR 5->MAX_USER_CONNECTIONS 2;
The limit types need not all be named in the
WITH clause, but those named can be present in
any order. The value for each per-hour limit should be an integer
representing a count per hour. If the
GRANT statement has no
WITH clause, the limits are each set to the
default value of zero (that is, no limit). For
MAX_USER_CONNECTIONS, the limit is an integer
indicating the maximum number of simultaneous connections the
account can make at any one time. If the limit is set to the
default value of zero, the
max_user_connections system
variable determines the number of simultaneous connections for the
account.
To set or change limits for an existing account, use a
GRANT USAGE statement at the global level
(ON *.*). The following statement changes the
query limit for francis to 100:
mysql>GRANT USAGE ON *.* TO 'francis'@'localhost'->WITH MAX_QUERIES_PER_HOUR 100;
This statement leaves the account's existing privileges unchanged and modifies only the limit values specified.
To remove an existing limit, set its value to zero. For example,
to remove the limit on how many times per hour
francis can connect, use this statement:
mysql>GRANT USAGE ON *.* TO 'francis'@'localhost'->WITH MAX_CONNECTIONS_PER_HOUR 0;
Resource-use counting takes place when any account has a non-zero limit placed on its use of any of the resources.
As the server runs, it counts the number of times each account uses resources. If an account reaches its limit on number of connections within the last hour, further connections for the account are rejected until that hour is up. Similarly, if the account reaches its limit on the number of queries or updates, further queries or updates are rejected until the hour is up. In all such cases, an appropriate error message is issued.
Resource counting is done per account, not per client. For example, if your account has a query limit of 50, you cannot increase your limit to 100 by making two simultaneous client connections to the server. Queries issued on both connections are counted together.
Queries for which results are served from the query cache do not
count against the MAX_QUERIES_PER_HOUR limit.
The current per-hour resource-use counts can be reset globally for all accounts, or individually for a given account:
To reset the current counts to zero for all accounts, issue a
FLUSH
USER_RESOURCES statement. The counts also can be
reset by reloading the grant tables (for example, with a
FLUSH
PRIVILEGES statement or a mysqladmin
reload command).
The counts for an individual account can be set to zero by
re-granting it any of its limits. To do this, use
GRANT USAGE as described earlier and
specify a limit value equal to the value that the account
currently has.
Counter resets do not affect the
MAX_USER_CONNECTIONS limit.
All counts begin at zero when the server starts; counts are not carried over through a restart.
For the MAX_USER_CONNECTIONS limit, an edge
case can occur if the account currently has open the maximum
number of connections allowed to it: A disconnect followed quickly
by a connect can result in an error
(ER_TOO_MANY_USER_CONNECTIONS or
ER_USER_LIMIT_REACHED) if the server has not
fully processed the disconnect by the time the connect occurs.
When the server finishes disconnect processing, another connection
will once more be allowed.


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