If I run something like: mysql -e "select ... into outfile ...", it will create file with owner of "mysql:mysql" instead of current user. Then I have to do chown after, which is not convenient. Is there a way to do it better? Thanks.
1 Answer
If you're using Unix, an option is to use the system
command (4.5.1.2 mysql Commands).
$ mysql -e "select ... into outfile ...; system chown $USER:$USER ...;"
Evaluate the necessary permissions.
-
At least for me that does not work executed from
$USER
context:chown: changing ownership of '/tmp/test.csv': Operation not permitted
Oct 31, 2019 at 14:05 -
@membersound I am not using
chown
but trying to delete the file, I get the same error. I got around this by creating a subdir in/tmp
and setting its permissions to 777. If the file is written in there it can be deleted, whereas the sticky bit in/tmp
prevents that. Perhaps it works withchown
too. Feb 26, 2021 at 10:39