To reset your mysqld password just follow these instructions :
- Stop the mysql demon process using this command :
sudo /etc/init.d/mysql stop
- Start the mysqld demon process using the --skip-grant-tables option with this command
sudo /usr/sbin/mysqld --skip-grant-tables --skip-networking &
Because you are not checking user privs at this point, it's safest to disable networking. In Dapper, /usr/bin/mysgld... did not work. However, mysqld --skip-grant-tables did.
- start the mysql client process using this command
mysql -u root
- from the mysql prompt execute this command to be able to change any password
FLUSH PRIVILEGES;
- Then reset/update your password
SET PASSWORD FOR root@'localhost' = PASSWORD('password');
- If you have a mysql root account that can connect from everywhere, you should also do:
UPDATE mysql.user SET Password=PASSWORD('newpwd') WHERE User='root';
- Alternate Method:
USE mysql UPDATE user SET Password = PASSWORD('newpwd') WHERE Host = 'localhost' AND User = 'root';
- And if you have a root account that can access from everywhere:
USE mysql UPDATE user SET Password = PASSWORD('newpwd') WHERE Host = '%' AND User = 'root';
For either method, once have received a message indicating a successful query (one or more rows affected), flush privileges:
FLUSH PRIVILEGES;
Then stop the mysqld process and relaunch it with the classical way:
sudo /etc/init.d/mysql stop sudo /etc/init.d/mysql start
When
you have completed all this steps ,you can easily access to your mysql
server with the password you have set in the step before. An
easy way to have a full control of your mysql server is phpmyadmin
(www.phpmyadmin.net), software made in php that can give you a web
interface that can be very usefull to people that havent got a lot of
confidence with bash .To install phpmyadmin on you server you will need
to have 4 things:
- web server apache
- php
- mysql server/mysql client installed
- php_mysql support for apache
Another Way:
USE THIS AS A LAST RESORT METHOD, YOU WILL LOSE ALL YOUR MYSQL DATA
sudo apt-get --purge remove mysql-server mysql-common mysql-client
sudo apt-get install mysql-server mysql-common mysql-client
In the next step be sure to chance the your-new-password with the password you want!
mysqladmin -u root password your-new-password sudo /etc/init.d/mysql restart
mysql -u root -pYou should now be logged in as root. Make sure to notedown your password
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