MySQL Cluster Manager 8.4.5 User Manual
This section covers starting the MySQL Cluster Manager client and connecting to the MySQL Cluster Manager agent.
MySQL Cluster Manager 8.4.5 includes a command-line client
mcm, located in the installation
bin
directory. mcm can be
invoked with any one of the options shown in the following table
(see Connecting to the agent with the mcm client for detailed
descriptions of some of the options):
Table 4.3 mcm options
Long form | Short form | Description |
---|---|---|
--help |
-? |
Display mcm client options |
|
|
Host to use when connecting to mcmd |
|
|
The user name for connecting to the agent |
|
|
The password for connecting to the agent |
--port = |
|
Optional port to use when connecting to mcmd |
--version |
-V |
Shows MySQL Cluster Manager agent/client version |
The client/server protocol used by MySQL Cluster Manager is platform-independent. You can connect to any MySQL Cluster Manager agent with an mcm client on any platform where it is available. This means, for example, that you can use an mcm client on Microsoft Windows to connect to a MySQL Cluster Manager agent that is running on a Linux host.
You can also use the mysql client to run MySQL Cluster Manager client sessions on platforms where mcm itself (or even mcmd) is not available. For more information, see Connecting to the agent using the mysql client.
If you experience problems starting an MySQL Cluster Manager client session because the client fails to connect, see Can't connect to [local] MySQL server, for some reasons why this might occur, as well as suggestions for some possible solutions.
To end a client session, use the exit
or
quit
command (short form:
\q
). Neither of these commands requires a
separator or terminator character.
For more information, see Chapter 5, MySQL Cluster Manager Client Commands.
Connecting to the agent with the mcm client. You can connect to the MySQL Cluster Manager agent by invoking mcm (or, on Windows, mcm.exe). You may also need to specify one or more of the following command-line options:
--host
=hostname
or -h
[
]hostname
This option takes the name or IP address of the host to
connect to. The default is localhost
(which
may not be recognized on all platforms when starting a
mcm client session even if it works for
starting mysql client sessions).
You should keep in mind that the mcm client does not perform host name resolution; any name resolution information comes from the operating system on the host where the client is run. For this reason, it is usually best to use a numeric IP address rather than a hostname for this option.
--port
=portnumber
or -P
[
]portnumber
This option specifies the TCP/IP port for the client to use.
This must be the same port that is used by the MySQL Cluster Manager agent. As
mentioned elsewhere, if no agent port is specified in the
MySQL Cluster Manager agent configuration file
(mcmd.ini
), the default number of the
port used by the MySQL Cluster Manager agent is 1862, which is also used by
default by mcm.
--user
=username
or -u
[
]username
The option specifies the user name for connecting to the
agent. The default value of
“mcmd
” is used if the option
is not specified. To connect successfully, the value of the
option must match that specified by the
mcmd configuration option
mcmd-user
of the agent you are
connecting to, which is also
“mcmd
” by default.
--password
[=password
]
or
-p
[password
]
The option specifies the password for connecting to the agent.
The default value of “super
”
is used if the option is not specified. To connect
successfully, the value of the option must match that
specified by the mcmd configuration option
mcmd_password
of the agent you
are connecting to, which is also
“super
” by default.
If you use the short option form
(-p
), you
must not leave a space between this
option and the password. If you omit the
password
value following the
--password
or
-p
option on
the command line, the mcm client prompts
you for one.
Specifying a password on the command line should be considered insecure. It is preferable that you either omit the password when invoking the client and then supply it when prompted, or put the password in a startup script or configuration file.
mcm accepts additional mysql
client options, some of which may possibly be of use for MySQL Cluster Manager
client sessions. For example, the
--pager
option might prove helpful
when the output of get
contains
too many rows to fit in a single screen. The
--prompt
option can be used to
provide a distinctive prompt to help avoid confusion between
multiple client sessions. However, options not shown in the
current manual have not been extensively tested with
mcm and so cannot be guaranteed to work
correctly (or even at all). See
mysql Client Options, for a complete listing
and descriptions of all mysql client options.
Like the mysql client, mcm
also supports \G
as a statement terminator,
which causes the output to be formatted vertically. This can be
helpful when using a terminal whose width is restricted to some
number of (typically 80) characters. See
Chapter 5, MySQL Cluster Manager Client Commands, for examples.
Connecting to the agent using the mysql client. A mysql client from any MySQL distribution should work without any issues for connecting to mcmd. In addition, since the client/server protocol used by MySQL Cluster Manager is platform-independent, you can use a mysql client on any platform supported by MySQL. (This means, for example, that you can use a mysql client on Microsoft Windows to connect to a MySQL Cluster Manager agent that is running on a Linux host.) Connecting to the MySQL Cluster Manager agent using the mysql client is accomplished by invoking mysql and specifying a hostname, port number, username and password using the following command-line options:
--host
=hostname
or -h
hostname
This option takes the name or IP address of the host to
connect to. The default is localhost
. Like
the mcm client, the
mysql client does not perform host name
resolution, and relies on the host operating system for this
task. For this reason, it is usually best to use a numeric IP
address rather than a hostname for this option.
--port
=portnumber
or -P
portnumber
This option specifies the TCP/IP port for the client to use. This must be the same port that is used by the MySQL Cluster Manager agent. Although the default number of the port used by the MySQL Cluster Manager agent is 1862 (which is also used by default by mcm), this default value is not known to the mysql client, which uses port 3306 (the default port for the MySQL server) if this option is not specified when mysql is invoked.
Thus, you must use the
--port
or -P
option to connect to the MySQL Cluster Manager agent using the
mysql client, even if the agent
process is using the MySQL Cluster Manager default port, and even
if the agent process is running on the same host as the
mysql client. Unless the correct agent port
number is supplied to it on startup, mysql
is unable to connect to the agent.
--user
=username
or -u
username
The option specifies the user name for connecting to the agent. By default, the mysql client tries to use the name of the current system user on Unix systems and “ODBC” on Windows, so you must supply this option and the username when trying to access the MySQL Cluster Manager agent with the mysql client; otherwise, mysql cannot connect to the agent.
To connect successfully, the value of the option must match
that specified by the mcmd configuration
option --mcmd-user
of the agent
you are connecting to, which is
“mcmd
” by default.
--password
[=password
]
or
-p
[password
]
The option specifies the password for connecting to the agent.
If you do not include the
--password
or
-p
option when invoking
mysql, it cannot connect to the agent. To
connect successfully, the value of the option must match that
specified by the mcmd configuration option
mcmd_password
of the agent you
are connecting to, which is
“super
” by default.
If you use the short option form
(-p
), you
must not leave a space between this
option and the password. If you omit the
password
value following the
--password
or
-p
option
on the command line, the mysql client
prompts you for one.
Specifying a password on the command line should be considered insecure. It is preferable that you either omit the password when invoking the client and then supply it when prompted, or put the password in a startup script or configuration file.
In addition, you can use the
--prompt
option to set the
mysql client's prompt. This is
recommended, since allowing the default prompt
(mysql>
) to be used could lead to confusion
between a MySQL Cluster Manager client session and a MySQL client session.
Thus, you can connect to a MySQL Cluster Manager agent by invoking the mysql client on the same machine from the system shell in a manner similar to what is shown here.
$> mysql -h127.0.0.1 -P1862 -umcmd -p --prompt='mcm> '
For convenience, on systems where mcm itself is
not available, you might even want to put this invocation in a
startup script. On a Linux or similar system, this script might be
named mcm-client.sh
, with contents similar to
what is shown here:
#!/bin/sh /usr/local/mysql/bin/mysql -h127.0.0.1 -P1862 -umcmd -p --prompt='mcm> '
In this case, you could then start up a MySQL Cluster Manager client session using something like this in the system shell:
$> ./mcm-client
On Windows, you can create a batch file with a name such as
mcm-client.bat
containing something like
this:
C:\mysql\bin\mysql.exe -umcmd -psuper -h localhost -P 1862 --prompt="mcm> "
(Adjust the path to the mysql.exe client executable as necessary to match its location on your system.)
If you save this file to a convenient location such as the Windows desktop, you can start a MySQL Cluster Manager client session merely by double-clicking the corresponding file icon on the desktop (or in Windows Explorer); the client session opens in a new cmd.exe (DOS) window.