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    The primary function of the MySQL privilege system is to
    authenticate a user who connects from a given host and to associate
    that user with privileges on a database such as
    SELECT,
    INSERT,
    UPDATE, and
    DELETE. Additional functionality
    includes the ability to have anonymous users and to grant privileges
    for MySQL-specific functions such as
    LOAD DATA
    INFILE and administrative operations.
  
There are some things that you cannot do with the MySQL privilege system:
You cannot explicitly specify that a given user should be denied access. That is, you cannot explicitly match a user and then refuse the connection.
You cannot specify that a user has privileges to create or drop tables in a database but not to create or drop the database itself.
A password applies globally to an account. You cannot associate a password with a specific object such as a database, table, or routine.
    The user interface to the MySQL privilege system consists of SQL
    statements such as CREATE USER,
    GRANT, and
    REVOKE. See
    Section 12.4.1, “Account Management Statements”.
  
    Internally, the server stores privilege information in the grant
    tables of the mysql database (that is, in the
    database named mysql). The MySQL server reads the
    contents of these tables into memory when it starts and bases
    access-control decisions on the in-memory copies of the grant
    tables.
  
The MySQL privilege system ensures that all users may perform only the operations allowed to them. As a user, when you connect to a MySQL server, your identity is determined by the host from which you connect and the user name you specify. When you issue requests after connecting, the system grants privileges according to your identity and what you want to do.
    MySQL considers both your host name and user name in identifying you
    because there is no reason to assume that a given user name belongs
    to the same person on all hosts. For example, the user
    joe who connects from
    office.example.com need not be the same person as
    the user joe who connects from
    home.example.com. MySQL handles this by allowing
    you to distinguish users on different hosts that happen to have the
    same name: You can grant one set of privileges for connections by
    joe from office.example.com,
    and a different set of privileges for connections by
    joe from home.example.com. To
    see what privileges a given account has, use the
    SHOW GRANTS statement. For example:
  
SHOW GRANTS FOR 'joe'@'office.example.com'; SHOW GRANTS FOR 'joe'@'home.example.com';
MySQL access control involves two stages when you run a client program that connects to the server:
Stage 1: The server accepts or rejects the connection based on your identity and whether you can verify your identity by supplying the correct password.
    Stage 2: Assuming that you can
    connect, the server checks each statement you issue to determine
    whether you have sufficient privileges to perform it. For example,
    if you try to select rows from a table in a database or drop a table
    from the database, the server verifies that you have the
    SELECT privilege for the table or the
    DROP privilege for the database.
  
For a more detailed description of what happens during each stage, see Section 5.4.4, “Access Control, Stage 1: Connection Verification”, and Section 5.4.5, “Access Control, Stage 2: Request Verification”.
If your privileges are changed (either by yourself or someone else) while you are connected, those changes do not necessarily take effect immediately for the next statement that you issue. For details about the conditions under which the server reloads the grant tables, see Section 5.4.6, “When Privilege Changes Take Effect”.
For general security-related advice, see Section 5.3, “General Security Issues”. For help in diagnosing privilege-related problems, see Section 5.4.7, “Causes of Access-Denied Errors”.


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