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I have installed a recent community version of MySQL from MySQL site. The version is 5.6.x.

It was done using an installer and I also chose the option to create a MySQL service on Windows so that I can simply start the service. The service was set to not start automatically.

Although I am not actively using MySQL, while I am working on my PC on something else, a strange pop-up displays,

MySQL Running in community mode.

Does something, prints on screen, and closes:

MySql installer

I am surprised to see this and wonder: what is it doing - connecting to a remote server and doing what? Does someone know the internals and how to prevent it from connecting to a remote server?

Could this be a security issue?

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  • 62
    kudos for being able to get a snap shot of it. If it wasn't for the fact my sql command window has a unique background color I would have never known what it was. Apr 20, 2015 at 18:30
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    i ran into it today and it scared me a bit. what a dirty little phone-home feature. i don't remembering agreeing to automatic updates.
    – nl-x
    Jun 3, 2015 at 7:43
  • 6
    Popped up and made me run through and check every process currently running.... Nasty feature. Jan 8, 2016 at 0:06
  • 4
    It's running exactly midnight (if your PC is turned on), so it is not that hard to catch. And it pops up for several seconds. But it scared me the first time too. Thought I was hacked...
    – StanE
    Aug 11, 2016 at 22:07
  • 1
    @StanE, I think other factors determine when it runs. FE, if your laptop postpones tasks with low battery while unplugged. Mine would run most often at the moment I began charging. Also, the running time is machine and network dependent of course. Mine was an instantaneous flash. Jan 13, 2017 at 3:12

5 Answers 5

531

Go to Control Panel > System and Security > Administrative Tools and open Task Scheduler.

In the Task Scheduler navigate to Task Scheduler Library > MySQL and select Installer.

From the list at the center of the window right-click ManifestUpdate and select Disable.

Disable MySQL ManifestUpdate

Answer found here.

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  • 27
    You should use the MySQL way as stated by @ChiefTwoPencils
    – MensSana
    Sep 1, 2015 at 12:48
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    I just changed the time from daily 12:00 AM to 06:30 AM which I'm sure I'm asleep unlike the midnight! ;) Oct 19, 2016 at 20:34
  • 4
    Faster way to start Task Scheduler: 1. press WIN + R 2. in poped up window type Taskschd.msc and press enter. Sep 10, 2017 at 17:12
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    Popping out from ingame while playing cs go, the SQL update was a secure way to lose that round. THX SO MUCH!
    – kaiser
    Oct 19, 2018 at 22:24
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    instead of disable it made it weekly or monthly just to keep it securely updated, thanks for the tip anyways! Mar 11, 2019 at 3:26
303

Since the other answers require OS interaction I figured it would be beneficial to provide the "MySQL" way.

I am surprised to see and wonder what is it doing and connecting to a remote server and doing what?

It's keeping the MySQL Product Catalog up to date. As described in the documentation,

This option uses the Windows Task Scheduler to schedule a task named "ManifestUpdate". (this is the scheduled task that is disabled the OS way)

Does someone know the internals and how to prevent it from connecting to a remote server?

To prevent it from connecting you can disable it without going through the OS:

  1. Start the MySQL installer
  2. Click the wrench image

enter image description here

  1. Uncheck the checkbox to disable automatic updating

enter image description here

You're ready to go...

This could be a security issue?

I'm not a security expert but it's connecting to the same people you trusted to get the software from so I think it's more of a nuisance than a risk.

Luckily, you can manually update it as needed by clicking the Catalog... button seen above and force it.

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  • 5
    Thanks for the info, always like it to change settings directly in the software instead of changing thing from the os side.
    – Dominik
    Jul 31, 2015 at 22:05
  • 63
    Thanks. This was such an annoyance... popping up and stealing focus while working or worse, while playing a game. A console really isn't the way to run software updates. Jan 6, 2016 at 22:38
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    My MySQL install came with XAMPP and I don't have this GUI so the manual way had to do.
    – SeinopSys
    Mar 13, 2017 at 15:05
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    the most unimportant part of the update process is the most visible and intrusive one? sure, why not... throwing an ugly look MySQL's way good answer, though.
    – sh code
    May 29, 2017 at 8:02
  • Thank you; so annoying! Catalog for MySQL is confusing nonetheless. It is needed when you use it to identify objects? Which I haven't found when this is applicable on WIndows OS just yet? May 30, 2017 at 7:27
27

It's just the MySQL update function.

Following these http://answers.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/forum/windows_7-security/what-is-taskengexe/526f43d3-d311-4637-a19a-a76f1ce351fb you should be able to turn it off:

  1. Go to the Start menu.
  2. Type task scheduler and press enter.
  3. Press continue on the UAC popup.
  4. In the left pane of task scheduler, underneath Task Scheduler Local, right-click on Task Scheduler Library.
  5. In the View submenu, make sure the Show Hidden Tasks option is checked.
  6. Widen the Name column in the center pane. The hidden task that is likely at fault has a name that starts with User_Feed_Synchronization, followed by a dash and a bunch of digits inside a curly brace.
  7. Select that task in the middle pane by clicking on its name.
  8. To verify that this scheduled task is creating all those taskeng.exe processes, select the History tab in the middle pane near the middle of the screen. If you expand out the Level and Date and Time Columns, you should see a bunch of errors and date and times that are 5 minutes apart. If that's the case, then this task is the problem.
  9. On the rightmost pane, select Disable.
  10. There may be more than one scheduled task like this, so you'd need to disable any or all that were causing problems.

From an answer by Liza.Z on question "What is taskeng.exe?" on http://answers.microsoft.com/, written April 23, 2013 retrieved Feb. 22, 2016

19

It may be better not to completely disable the updater but make it check less often than once a day, which seems over the top. You can not do that without using the Task Scheduler. Double-click the "ManifestUpdate" Name in the Task Scheduler to open the Properties window and select the Triggers tab, here you can use the "Edit..." button to set the task to run as [in]frequently as you like. This is what I have done:

ManifestUpdate Properties

Be warned that the next MySQL update you do decide to install might undo anything done directly in the Task Scheduler.

15

A lot of answers are suggesting disabling the updater, or having it run less frequently.

If you'd like to keep it running, but not just have the console popping up to intrude on what you're doing, consider running it under another account, or checking the box to run whether or not the current user is logged in. Either of these will make it run silently in the background.

Here's a screenshot of the option to run under another account

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