Book Image

Getting Started with MariaDB

By : Daniel Bartholomew
Book Image

Getting Started with MariaDB

By: Daniel Bartholomew

Overview of this book

MariaDB is a database that has become very popular in the few short years that it has been around. It does not require a big server or expensive support contract. It is also powerful enough to be the database of choice for some of the biggest and most popular websites in the world, taking full advantage of the latest computing hardware available. From installing and configuring through basic usage and maintenance, each chapter in this revised and expanded guide leads on sequentially and logically from the one before it, introducing topics in their natural order so you learn what you need, when you need it. The book is based on the latest release of MariaDB and covers all the latest features and functions. By the end of this beginner-friendly book, not only will you have a running installation of MariaDB, but you will have practical, hands-on experience in the basics of how to install, configure, administer, use, and maintain it.
Table of Contents (16 chapters)
Getting Started with MariaDB Second Edition
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
MariaDB Next Steps
Index

Creating users


Creating a user in MariaDB involves a two-step process. First, we create the user using the CREATE USER statement, and then we give or GRANT the user the privileges that we want them to have. We'll go over the CREATE USER statement in this section and the GRANT statement in the granting, revoking, and showing permissions section.

A CREATE USER statement has the following pattern:

CREATE USER 'username'@'host' IDENTIFIED BY 'password';

We customize the username, host, and password parts to the appropriate values. If we don't want to specify a password (though this is not recommended!) then we can drop the IDENTIFIED BY 'password' part. This, and all the other SQL statements that we input into MariaDB, need to end with a semicolon (;).

The host part can be several things. It can be the hostname of the computer which the user connects from, the IP address of the computer that the user connects from, the network that the user connects from, or it can be the wildcard symbol %, which...