An upgrade to MySQL version 4.1 or later can cause
compatibility issues for applications that use
PASSWORD() to generate
passwords for their own purposes. Applications really should
not do this, because
PASSWORD() should be used only
to manage passwords for MySQL accounts. But some applications
use PASSWORD() for their own
purposes anyway.
If you upgrade to 4.1 or later from a pre-4.1 version of MySQL
and run the server under conditions where it generates long
password hashes, an application using
PASSWORD() for its own
passwords breaks. The recommended course of action in such
cases is to modify the application to use another function,
such as SHA1() or
MD5(), to produce hashed
values. If that is not possible, you can use the
OLD_PASSWORD() function, which
is provided for generate short hashes in the old format.
However, you should note that
OLD_PASSWORD() may one day no
longer be supported.
If the server is running under circumstances where it
generates short hashes,
OLD_PASSWORD() is available
but is equivalent to
PASSWORD().
PHP programmers migrating their MySQL databases from version 4.0 or lower to version 4.1 or higher should see Section 19.8, “MySQL PHP API”.


User Comments
Add your own comment.