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Passwords may be assigned from the command line by using the mysqladmin command:
shell> mysqladmin -u user_name -h host_name password "newpwd"
The account for which this command resets the password is the one
with a user table row that matches
user_name in the
User column and the client host from
which you connect in the Host
column.
Another way to assign a password to an account is to issue a
SET PASSWORD statement:
mysql> SET PASSWORD FOR 'jeffrey'@'%' = PASSWORD('biscuit');
Only users such as root that have update access
to the mysql database can change the password
for other users. If you are not connected as an anonymous user,
you can change your own password by omitting the
FOR clause:
mysql> SET PASSWORD = PASSWORD('biscuit');
You can also use a GRANT USAGE statement at the
global level (ON *.*) to assign a password to
an account without affecting the account's current privileges:
mysql> GRANT USAGE ON *.* TO 'jeffrey'@'%' IDENTIFIED BY 'biscuit';
Although it is generally preferable to assign passwords using one
of the preceding methods, you can also do so by modifying the
user table directly:
To establish a password when creating a new account, provide a
value for the Password column:
shell>mysql -u root mysqlmysql>INSERT INTO user (Host,User,Password)->VALUES('%','jeffrey',PASSWORD('biscuit'));mysql>FLUSH PRIVILEGES;
To change the password for an existing account, use
UPDATE to set the
Password column value:
shell>mysql -u root mysqlmysql>UPDATE user SET Password = PASSWORD('bagel')->WHERE Host = '%' AND User = 'francis';mysql>FLUSH PRIVILEGES;
When you assign an account a non-empty password using
SET PASSWORD,
INSERT, or
UPDATE, you must use the
PASSWORD() function to encrypt it.
PASSWORD() is necessary because the
user table stores passwords in encrypted form,
not as plaintext. If you forget that fact, you are likely to set
passwords like this:
shell>mysql -u root mysqlmysql>INSERT INTO user (Host,User,Password)->VALUES('%','jeffrey','biscuit');mysql>FLUSH PRIVILEGES;
The result is that the literal value 'biscuit'
is stored as the password in the user table,
not the encrypted value. When jeffrey attempts
to connect to the server using this password, the value is
encrypted and compared to the value stored in the
user table. However, the stored value is the
literal string 'biscuit', so the comparison
fails and the server rejects the connection:
shell> mysql -u jeffrey -pbiscuit test
Access denied
If you assign passwords using the GRANT ... IDENTIFIED
BY statement or the mysqladmin
password command, they both take care of encrypting the
password for you. In these cases, using
PASSWORD() function is unnecessary.
PASSWORD() encryption is
different from Unix password encryption. See
Section 5.5.1, “MySQL Usernames and Passwords”.


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