Bug #70443 | mysql client program ignores my.ini settings | ||
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Submitted: | 26 Sep 2013 19:29 | Modified: | 15 Mar 2016 18:39 |
Reporter: | Peter Brawley (Basic Quality Contributor) | Email Updates: | |
Status: | Closed | Impact on me: | |
Category: | MySQL Server: Installing | Severity: | S3 (Non-critical) |
Version: | 5.7.2 | OS: | Windows (win 7 64-bit) |
Assigned to: | CPU Architecture: | Any |
[26 Sep 2013 19:29]
Peter Brawley
[26 Sep 2013 19:39]
MySQL Verification Team
Can you please run: mysql.exe --help and look what is says under "Default options are read from the following files in the given order:"
[26 Sep 2013 19:46]
Peter Brawley
So the bug is actually that the MySQL Windows 7 Installer writes my.ini to a folder which the mysql client does not look at. Well that's much better. Not.
[26 Sep 2013 23:31]
MySQL Verification Team
Thank you for the bug report. Indeed the my.ini file is located where the clients programs don't look for.
[27 Sep 2013 8:01]
Peter Laursen
Documentation says: http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.7/en/option-files.html "On Windows, MySQL programs read startup options from the following files, in the specified order (top items are used first). File Name Purpose %PROGRAMDATA%\MySQL\MySQL Server 5.7\my.ini, %PROGRAMDATA%\MySQL\MySQL Server 5.7\my.cnf Global options %WINDIR%\my.ini, %WINDIR%\my.cnf Global options C:\my.ini, C:\my.cnf Global options INSTALLDIR\my.ini, INSTALLDIR\my.cnf Global options defaults-extra-file The file specified with --defaults-extra-file=path, if any %APPDATA%\MySQL\.mylogin.cnf Login path options %PROGRAMDATA% represents the file system directory that contains application data for all users on the host. This path defaults to C:\ProgramData on Microsoft Windows Vista and greater, and C:\Documents and Settings\All Users\Application Data on older versions of Microsoft Windows." .. so the client does not behave as documented I guess?
[27 Sep 2013 8:10]
Peter Laursen
My guess is that documentation is wrong! This paragraph in docs was edited recently. And I guess just to reflect what "MySQL Installer" does. I doubt that binaries (server and clients) had any such change internally. But maybe I am wrong? The server (installed with "MySQL Installer" will look for the my.ini correctly as the registry key defining the service has a --defaults-file specification pointing to my.ini. But the command line clients don't read this registry key.
[15 Mar 2016 18:39]
Javier TreviƱo
Posted by developer: Confirmed this is working on the latest version of the MySQL Installer for Windows (1.4.15). This bug is too old and it was most likely fixed in the transition from 1.3.x to 1.4.0. Tested with the steps to duplicate and confirmed the prompt changes correctly in the MySQL client.