Two things have changed since earlier versions of mySQL (I''m using 5.7.10):
systemd
is now used to look after mySQL instead of mysqld_safe
(which is why I was getting the -bash: mysqld_safe: command not found
error - it's not installed)
The user
table structure has changed.
So to reset the root password, you still start mySQL with --skip-grant-tables
options and update the user
table, but how you do it has changed.
1. Stop mysql:
systemctl stop mysqld
2. Set the mySQL environment option
systemctl set-environment MYSQLD_OPTS="--skip-grant-tables"
3. Start mysql usig the options you just set
systemctl start mysqld
4. Login as root
mysql -u root
5. Update the root user password with these mysql commands
mysql> UPDATE mysql.user SET authentication_string = PASSWORD('MyNewPassword')
-> WHERE User = 'root' AND Host = 'localhost';
mysql> FLUSH PRIVILEGES;
mysql> quit
6. Stop mysql
systemctl stop mysqld
7. Unset the mySQL envitroment option so it starts normally next time
systemctl unset-environment MYSQLD_OPTS
8. Start mysql normally:
systemctl start mysqld
Try to login using your new password:
7. mysql -u root -p
Reference
As it says at http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.7/en/mysqld-safe.html,
Note
As of MySQL 5.7.6, for MySQL installation using an RPM
distribution, server startup and shutdown is managed by systemd on
several Linux platforms. On these platforms, mysqld_safe is no longer
installed because it is unnecessary. For more information, see Section
2.5.10, “Managing MySQL Server with systemd”.
Which takes you to http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.7/en/server-management-using-systemd.html where it mentions the systemctl set-environment MYSQLD_OPTS=
towards the bottom of the page.
The password reset commands are at the bottom of http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.7/en/resetting-permissions.html