For homebrew mysql installs, where's my.cnf? Does it install one?
There is no my.cnf by default. As such, MySQL starts with all of the default settings. If you want to create your own my.cnf to override any defaults, place it at /etc/my.cnf.
Also, you can run mysql --help
and look through it for the conf locations listed.
Default options are read from the following files in the given order:
/etc/my.cnf /etc/mysql/my.cnf /usr/etc/my.cnf ~/.my.cnf
The following groups are read: mysql client
The following options may be given as the first argument:
--print-defaults Print the program argument list and exit.
--no-defaults Don't read default options from any option file.
--defaults-file=# Only read default options from the given file #.
--defaults-extra-file=# Read this file after the global files are read.
As you can see, there are also some options for bypassing the conf files, or specifying other files to read when you invoke mysql on the command line.
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50This no longer seems to be the case; I see a my.cnf file in /usr/local/Cellar/mysql/5.6.15/ (or whichever version you have installed) – William Turrell Dec 30 '13 at 20:02
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6@williamt "mysql --help" doesn't list that file as being used, I think it's just a default that comes with the installation files – Vinicius Pinto Jan 27 '14 at 17:01
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3
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4On on 5.6.26 can be lolcated by running:
ls $(brew --prefix mysql)/*.cnf
– danielgpm Jan 12 '16 at 0:59 -
29
The homebrew mysql contains sample configuration files in the installation's support-files folder.
ls $(brew --prefix mysql)/support-files/my-*
If you need to change the default settings you can use one of these as a starting point.
cp $(brew --prefix mysql)/support-files/my-default.cnf /usr/local/etc/my.cnf
As @rednaw points out, a homebrew install of MySQL will most likely be in /usr/local
so the my.cnf file should not be added to the system /etc
folder, so I’ve changed the command to copy the file into /usr/local/etc
.
If you are using MariaDB rather than MySQL use the following:
cp $(brew --prefix mariadb)/support-files/my-small.cnf /usr/local/etc/my.cnf
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4
sudo cp $(brew --prefix mysql)/support-files/my-default.cnf /etc/my.cnf
– Matt Clegg Aug 29 '13 at 12:23 -
7If Homebrew installed MySQL in
/usr/local/
(which is the default I think), you can also place themy.conf
in/usr/local/etc/
, which don't require root privileges. – gitaarik Oct 8 '15 at 11:23 -
1brew --prefix mysql doesn't give the correct path, for me, it shows '/usr/local/Cellar/mysql/5.7.16', but indeed mariadb is installed in '/usr/local/opt/mariadb/' – zhaozhi Dec 7 '16 at 10:28
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@zhaozhi Use
brew --prefix mariadb
. In the MariaDB distribution themy-default.cnf
does not exist - so usemy-small.cnf
. Try thiscp $(brew --prefix mariadb)/support-files/my-small.cnf /usr/local/etc/my.cnf
– ewalshe Dec 8 '16 at 13:05 -
This needs to be the accepted answer. The first one is incorrect. The question asked was relating to homebrew. – BugHunterUK Dec 11 '16 at 18:41
One way to find out:
sudo /usr/libexec/locate.updatedb
# wait a few minutes for it to finish
locate my.cnf
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4Awesome answer, I learned about locate.updatedb. However, there is no config file by default, see the answer below – glebm Dec 1 '12 at 23:24
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17
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For me
locate my.cnf
worked directly. I didn't runsudo /usr/libexec/locate.updatedb
– Andru Feb 9 '18 at 11:20 -
1
/usr/local/Cellar/mysql/8.0.16/.bottle/etc/my.cnf
and/usr/local/etc/my.cnf
was what I got – Vincent Tang Jun 3 '19 at 3:27
in my system it was
nano /usr/local/etc/my.cnf.default
as template and
nano /usr/local/etc/my.cnf
as working.
Nothing really helped me - I could not overwrite settings in a /etc/my.cnf file. So I searched like John suggested https://stackoverflow.com/a/7974114/717251
sudo /usr/libexec/locate.updatedb
# wait a few minutes for it to finish
locate my.cnf
It found another my.cnf in
/usr/local/Cellar/mysql/5.6.21/my.cnf
changing this file worked for me! Don't forget to restart the launch Agent:
launchctl unload ~/Library/LaunchAgents/homebrew.mxcl.mysql.plist
launchctl load ~/Library/LaunchAgents/homebrew.mxcl.mysql.plist
Update:
If you have a fairly recent installation of homebrew you should use the brew services commands to restart mysql (use your installed homebrew mysql version, i.e. mysql or mysql@5.7):
brew services stop mysql
brew services start mysql
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I think you can also run
brew services stop mysql
andbrew services start mysql
in place of thelaunchctl unload ...
lines. – mhulse Mar 18 '19 at 22:05 -
1That ist true - but at the time of writing this answer these homebrew commands were not yet available. I'll update the answer – naabster Mar 19 '19 at 19:51
Since mysql --help
shows a list of files, I find it useful to pipe the result to ls
to see which of them exist:
$ mysql --help | grep /my.cnf | xargs ls
ls: /etc/my.cnf: No such file or directory
ls: /etc/mysql/my.cnf: No such file or directory
ls: ~/.my.cnf: No such file or directory
/usr/local/etc/my.cnf
For my (Homebrew installed) MySQL 5.7, it seems the files is on /usr/local/etc/my.cnf
.
On your shell type my_print_defaults --help
At the bottom of the result, you should be able to see the file from which the server reads the configurations. It prints something like this:
Default options are read from the following files in the given order:
/etc/my.cnf /etc/mysql/my.cnf /usr/local/etc/my.cnf ~/.my.cnf
You can find where the my.cnf
file has been provided by the specific package, e.g.
brew list mysql # or: mariadb
In addition to verify if that file is read, you can run:
sudo fs_usage | grep my.cnf
which will show you filesystem activity in real-time related to that file.
I believe the answer is no. Installing one in ~/.my.cnf or /usr/local/etc seems to be the preferred solution.
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2On my MBP only /etc/my.cnf allows me affect the Homebrew installation of mysql. – ewalshe Dec 22 '11 at 1:11
Server version: 8.0.19 Homebrew. macOS Catalina 10.15.5 and installed MySQL via Homebrew. Found this file here:
/usr/local/etc/my.cnf
This solution helped :)
In case of Homebrew, mysql would also look for my.cnf in it's Cellar directory, for example:
/usr/local/Cellar/mysql/5.7.21/my.cnf
For the case one prefers to keep the config close to the binaries - create my.cnf
here if it's missing.
Restart mysql after change:
brew services restart mysql
run
sudo find / -name my.cnf
Usually the first result is the correct one. Should be in
/usr/local/etc/
For MacOS (High Sierra), MySQL that has been installed with home brew.
Increasing the global variables from mysql environment was not successful. So in that case creating of ~/.my.cnf is the safest option. Adding variables with [mysqld] will include the changes (Note: if you change with [mysql] , the change might not work).
<~/.my.cnf> [mysqld] connect_timeout = 43200 max_allowed_packet = 2048M net_buffer_length = 512M
Restart the mysql server. and check the variables. y
sql> SELECT @@max_allowed_packet; +----------------------+ | @@max_allowed_packet | +----------------------+ | 1073741824 | +----------------------+
1 row in set (0.00 sec)
$ps aux | grep mysqld /usr/local/opt/mysql/bin/mysqld --basedir=/usr/local/opt/mysql --datadir=/usr/local/var/mysql --plugin-dir=/usr/local/opt/mysql/lib/plugin
Drop your my.cf file to
/usr/local/opt/mysql
brew services restart mysql