2

I have a user in mySQL database like this

enter image description here

And I am trying to login to mySQL on serverA from server B, in python, here is what I am currently doing,

db  = MySQLdb.connect(host='IP-address-server-A', user='username', passwd='my-password', db='my-database')

And I am getting this error

(1045, "Access denied for user 'username'@'serverB' (using password: YES)")

What is going on, and why can't I connect?

Thanks for the help

9
  • Have you granted permission to my-database for username from serverB? I'm betting you have not and that you could not connect to the MySQL server from the command line on ServerB either, not just programmatically Nov 29, 2015 at 2:34
  • @EricRenouf I though doing username@% allowed it from all servers
    – spen123
    Nov 29, 2015 at 2:37
  • 1
    Log in as root and issue SELECT user, host, password FROM mysql.user; and check that there's a record for user 'username', host '%'. Also note whether there's a value in the password column; if not then don't specify a password in the connect string. Nov 29, 2015 at 2:39
  • @DarwinvonCorax there is a record of 'username', at the host '%' and there is a password present for that column
    – spen123
    Nov 29, 2015 at 2:41
  • seen this link. i hope meet your answer. Nov 29, 2015 at 2:42

1 Answer 1

4

show logins to the server (note that % means anyhost or wildcard)

select user,host from mysql.user;

+-----------+------------+
| user      | host       |
+-----------+------------+
| ajax_guy  | %          |
| joe7      | %          |
| joe8      | %          |
+-----------+------------+

show what grants exist for a certain user.

show grants for 'ajax_guy'@'%';

+----------------------------------------------------------------------
| Grants for ajax_guy@%                                              
+----------------------------------------------------------------------
| GRANT USAGE ON *.* TO 'ajax_guy'@'%' IDENTIFIED BY PASSWORD ...
| GRANT ALL PRIVILEGES ON `ajax_stuff`.* TO 'ajax_guy'@'%'           
| GRANT ALL PRIVILEGES ON `ajax_stuff`.`ajax_stuff` TO 'ajax_guy'@'%'
+----------------------------------------------------------------------

How to grant access to a certain db to a certain login. Below we are granting all rights to the user to the so_gibberish database.

grant ALL on so_gibberish.* to 'ajax_guy'@'%';

Look at grants in effect now for that login

+----------------------------------------------------------------------
| Grants for ajax_guy@%                                              
+----------------------------------------------------------------------
| GRANT USAGE ON *.* TO 'ajax_guy'@'%' IDENTIFIED BY PASSWORD ...
| GRANT ALL PRIVILEGES ON `ajax_stuff`.* TO 'ajax_guy'@'%'           
| GRANT ALL PRIVILEGES ON `so_gibberish`.* TO 'ajax_guy'@'%'         
| GRANT ALL PRIVILEGES ON `ajax_stuff`.`ajax_stuff` TO 'ajax_guy'@'%'
+----------------------------------------------------------------------

Create a new login drew_saturday with a password friday987. He has all privileges on database so_gibberish and can login from any host (%)

grant ALL on so_gibberish.* to 'drew_saturday'@'%' IDENTIFIED BY 'friday987';

select user,host,password from mysql.user where user='drew_saturday';

+---------------+------+-------------------------------------------+
| user          | host | password                                  |
+---------------+------+-------------------------------------------+
| drew_saturday | %    | *4600ED0F377308959665877BD327D4788DC2071F |
+---------------+------+-------------------------------------------+

That password above is the hashed password by the way.

Note: for MySQL 5.7 the command above would be:

select user,host,authentication_string from mysql.user where user='drew_saturday';

Mysql manual page on Grant. Do not grant excessive rights to users using grant ALL on *. .... That would be for all database in the system. Just read the manual and less is more.

Sometimes, admins want to grant access to just a handful of tables in a database (not all tables in it) to a login. The manual is a must read on this.


And one last thing. 'drew_saturday'@'%' is a different login than 'drew_saturday'@'NOT-local' (borrowing from your title). They are different logins with different rights. That is the point of the first thing I wrote way up there.

4
  • is so_gibberish the name of the database you are granting access to, for the user ajax_guy?
    – spen123
    Nov 29, 2015 at 2:50
  • great, thanks so much. I'm just wondering why do I need to create a second user why can't it all be done with one? if you know what I mean, in your example you have ajax_guy and drew_saturday
    – spen123
    Nov 29, 2015 at 3:41
  • First off I was showing you what pre-existed in my system. Then I showed how to create a user with a password and grant all at once. There are different audiences reading this once you are gone. My answer is for all. Everyone finds their own nugget, perhaps. Sometimes people get frustrated and say hey I wanna just drop all my users here it is so screwed up. etc
    – Drew
    Nov 29, 2015 at 3:46
  • 1
    Makes sense, great answer
    – spen123
    Nov 29, 2015 at 3:48

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.