66
votes

I have installed mySQL on a Centos7 vm but I have problems logging in with root. I tried logging in without password or tried any default ones (like mysql, admin etc) I looked in the my.cnf file and there's no password. I tried changing the password by stopping the service and restarting it with mysqld_safe --skip-grant-tables & but I get that mysqld_safe:command not found I have no idea what else to do. Any tips/ideas would be greatly appreciated!

7
You'll need to specify the full path to the command. If you don't know what that is, find is your friend. The password will not be, should not be expressed in my.cnf.tadman

7 Answers

300
votes

What version of mySQL are you using? I''m using 5.7.10 and had the same problem with logging on as root

There is 2 issues - why can't I log in as root to start with, and why can I not use 'mysqld_safe` to start mySQL to reset the root password.

I have no answer to setting up the root password during installation, but here's what you do to reset the root password

Edit the initial root password on install can be found by running

grep 'temporary password' /var/log/mysqld.log

http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.7/en/linux-installation-yum-repo.html


  1. systemd is now used to look after mySQL instead of mysqld_safe (which is why you get the -bash: mysqld_safe: command not found error - it's not installed)

  2. 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

*** Edit ***
As mentioned my shokulei in the comments, for 5.7.6 and later, you should use 
   mysql> ALTER USER 'root'@'localhost' IDENTIFIED BY 'MyNewPass';
Or you'll get a warning

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

21
votes

I used the advice of Kevin Jones above with the following --skip-networking change for slightly better security:

sudo systemctl set-environment MYSQLD_OPTS="--skip-grant-tables --skip-networking"

[user@machine ~]$ mysql -u root

Then when attempting to reset the password I received an error, but googling elsewhere suggested I could simply forge ahead. The following worked:

mysql> select user(), current_user();
+--------+-----------------------------------+
| user() | current_user()                    |
+--------+-----------------------------------+
| root@  | skip-grants user@skip-grants host |
+--------+-----------------------------------+
1 row in set (0.00 sec)

mysql> ALTER USER 'root'@'localhost' IDENTIFIED BY 'sup3rPw#'
ERROR 1290 (HY000): The MySQL server is running with the --skip-grant-tables option so it cannot execute this statement
mysql> FLUSH PRIVILEGES;
Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.02 sec)

mysql> ALTER USER 'root'@'localhost' IDENTIFIED BY 'sup3rPw#'
Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.08 sec)

mysql> exit
Bye
[user@machine ~]$ systemctl stop mysqld
[user@machine ~]$ sudo systemctl unset-environment MYSQLD_OPTS
[user@machine ~]$ systemctl start mysqld

At that point I was able to log in.

14
votes

Use the below Steps to reset the password.

$ sudo systemctl start mysqld

Reset the MySql server root password.

$sudo grep 'temporary password' /var/log/mysqld.log

Output Something like-:

 10.744785Z 1 [Note] A temporary password is generated for root@localhost: o!5y,oJGALQa

Use the above password during reset mysql_secure_installation process.

<pre>
    $ sudo mysql_secure_installation
</pre>
   Securing the MySQL server deployment.

   Enter password for user root: 

You have successfully reset the root password of MySql Server. Use the below command to check the mysql server connecting or not.

$ mysql -u root -p

http://gotechnies.com/install-latest-mysql-5-7-rhelcentos-7/

8
votes

For CentOS 7 and MariaDB 10.4, I had success with the following commands:

su -
systemctl set-environment MYSQLD_OPTS="--skip-grant-tables --user=mysql"
systemctl restart mariadb
mysql -u root

flush privileges;
ALTER USER 'root'@'localhost' IDENTIFIED BY 'MyNewPass';
flush privileges;
quit

systemctl unset-environment MYSQLD_OPTS
systemctl restart mariadb
7
votes

All,

Here a little bit twist with mysql-community-server 5.7 I share some steps, how to reset mysql5.7 root password or set password. it will work centos7 and RHEL7 as well.

step1. 1st stop your databases

service mysqld stop

step2. 2nd modify /etc/my.cnf file add "skip-grant-tables"

vi /etc/my.cnf

[mysqld] skip-grant-tables

step3. 3rd start mysql

service mysqld start

step4. select mysql default database

mysql -u root

mysql>use mysql;

step4. set a new password

mysql> update user set authentication_string=PASSWORD("yourpassword") where User='root';

step5 restart mysql database

service mysqld restart

 mysql -u root -p

enjoy :)

3
votes

Please stop all services MySQL with following command /etc/init.d/mysqld stop After it use this

mysqld_safe --skip-grant-tables

its may work properly

1
votes

For me work like this: 1. Stop mysql: systemctl stop mysqld

  1. Set the mySQL environment option systemctl set-environment MYSQLD_OPTS="--skip-grant-tables"

  2. Start mysql usig the options you just set systemctl start mysqld

  3. Login as root mysql -u root

  4. After login I use FLUSH PRIVILEGES; tell the server to reload the grant tables so that account-management statements work. If i don't do that i receive this error trying to update the password: "Can't find any matching row in the user table"