MySQL Cheat Sheet

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General use

[1]

Advanced Queries

Sub Query

Select from an "array" created from another query. You can only pull from a single column. In this example I am looking for users that are members of a group that has access to a directory.

select user_name from groups where group_name = any (select user_group from permissions where directory like '%some/directory%');

Alter Table

Add columnn

[2]

alter table <tablename> add COLUMN hash VARCHAR(32) after <name of another column>;

Alter column

[3]

alter table

modify column <column name> DECIMAL(10, 2);

Delete rows older than certain date

[4]

DELETE FROM `table` WHERE `column` < DATE_SUB(NOW(), INTERVAL 3 MONTH);

Remove history

(this is kept in your home directory)

rm -rf ~/.mysql_history

Remove user

drop user <username>@<host>;

Remove database

drop database <databasename>;

Grant privileges

grant all on <database>.<table> to <user>@<host> identified by '<password>';
grant all on test.* to 'michael'@'172.17.0.34' identified by 'mypassword';

[5]

Show granted privileges

SHOW GRANTS FOR 'root'@'localhost';

View users

select host, user, password from mysql.user;

[6]

AWS RDS

After creating the RDS instance, download the CA public key[7].

wget https://s3.amazonaws.com/rds-downloads/rds-combined-ca-bundle.pem

At this point you can log into the instance using TLS.

mysql -u<root user> -p -h xxxxxxx.xxxxxxxxxx.us-east-2.rds.amazonaws.com --ssl-ca=rds-combined-ca-bundle.pem

Then, as you create users makes sure to require the use of TLS[8]

grant all privileges on <database>.* to '<user name>'@'%' identified by '<password>' require ssl;