| 1 to 5 of 5 |
Note: The search term 'mysql' was dropped from your query as it returns too many results, please narrow your search terms
17.4.6. Accessing authentication information with read_auth_result() The return packet from the server during authentication is captured by read_auth_result() . The only argument to this function is the authentication packet returned by the server. As the packet is a raw MySQL network protocol packet, you must access the first byte to identify the packet type and contents. The MYSQLD_PACKET_ERR and MYSQLD_PACKET_OK constants can be used to identify whether the authentication was successful: function read_au
» http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.1/en/mysql-proxy-scripting-read-auth-result.html
26.4.6. Accessing authentication information with read_auth_result() The return packet from the server during authentication is captured by read_auth_result() . The only argument to this function is the authentication packet returned by the server. As the packet is a raw MySQL network protocol packet, you must access the first byte to identify the packet type and contents. The MYSQLD_PACKET_ERR and MYSQLD_PACKET_OK constants can be used to identify whether the authentication was successful: function read_au
» http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.0/en/mysql-proxy-scripting-read-auth-result.html
29.4.6. Accessing authentication information with read_auth_result() The return packet from the server during authentication is captured by read_auth_result() . The only argument to this function is the authentication packet returned by the server. As the packet is a raw MySQL network protocol packet, you must access the first byte to identify the packet type and contents. The MYSQLD_PACKET_ERR and MYSQLD_PACKET_OK constants can be used to identify whether the authentication was successful: function read_au
» http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/6.0/en/mysql-proxy-scripting-read-auth-result.html
28.4.6. Accessing authentication information with read_auth_result() The return packet from the server during authentication is captured by read_auth_result() . The only argument to this function is the authentication packet returned by the server. As the packet is a raw MySQL network protocol packet, you must access the first byte to identify the packet type and contents. The MYSQLD_PACKET_ERR and MYSQLD_PACKET_OK constants can be used to identify whether the authentication was successful: function read_au
» http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.1-maria/en/mysql-proxy-scripting-read-auth-result.html
19.4.6. Accessing authentication information with read_auth_result() The return packet from the server during authentication is captured by read_auth_result() . The only argument to this function is the authentication packet returned by the server. As the packet is a raw MySQL network protocol packet, you must access the first byte to identify the packet type and contents. The MYSQLD_PACKET_ERR and MYSQLD_PACKET_OK constants can be used to identify whether the authentication was successful: function read_au
» http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/4.1/en/mysql-proxy-scripting-read-auth-result.html
| 1 to 5 of 5 |