MySQL 5.1 uses an authentication protocol based on a password hashing algorithm that is incompatible with that used by older (pre-4.1) clients. If you upgrade the server from 4.0, attempts to connect to it with an older client may fail with the following message:
shell> mysql
Client does not support authentication protocol requested
by server; consider upgrading MySQL client
To solve this problem, you should use one of the following approaches:
Upgrade all client programs to use a 4.1.1 or newer client library.
When connecting to the server with a pre-4.1 client program, use an account that still has a pre-4.1-style password.
Reset the password to pre-4.1 style for each user that
needs to use a pre-4.1 client program. This can be done
using the SET PASSWORD
statement and
the OLD_PASSWORD()
function:
mysql>SET PASSWORD FOR
->'
some_user
'@'some_host
' = OLD_PASSWORD('newpwd
');
Alternatively, use UPDATE
and
FLUSH PRIVILEGES
:
mysql>UPDATE mysql.user SET Password = OLD_PASSWORD('
->newpwd
')WHERE Host = '
mysql>some_host
' AND User = 'some_user
';FLUSH PRIVILEGES;
Substitute the password you want to use for
「newpwd
」 in the
preceding examples. MySQL cannot tell you what the
original password was, so you'll need to pick a new one.
Tell the server to use the older password hashing algorithm:
Start mysqld with the
--old-passwords
option.
Assign an old-format password to each account that has had its password updated to the longer 4.1 format. You can identify these accounts with the following query:
mysql>SELECT Host, User, Password FROM mysql.user
->WHERE LENGTH(Password) > 16;
For each account record displayed by the query, use
the Host
and
User
values and assign a password
using the OLD_PASSWORD()
function
and either SET PASSWORD
or
UPDATE
, as described earlier.
Note: In older versions of
PHP, the mysql
extension does not support
the authentication protocol in MySQL 4.1.1 and higher. This is
true regardless of the PHP version being used. If you wish to
use the mysql
extension with MySQL 4.1 or
newer, you may need to follow one of the options discussed
above for configuring MySQL to work with old clients. The
mysqli
extension (stands for "MySQL,
Improved"; added in PHP 5) is compatible with the improved
password hashing employed in MySQL 4.1 and higher, and no
special configuration of MySQL need be done to use this MySQL
client library. For more information about the
mysqli
extension, see
http://php.net/mysqli.
It may also be possible to compile the older
mysql
extension against the new MySQL
client library. This is beyond the scope of this Manual;
consult the PHP documentation for more information. You also
be able to obtain assistance with these issues in our
MySQL with PHP
forum.
For additional background on password hashing and authentication, see 項4.7.9. 「MySQL 4.1 のパスワードハッシュ」.