Passwords can be written as plain text in SQL statements such as
CREATE USER
,
GRANT
, SET
PASSWORD
, and statements that invoke the
PASSWORD()
function. If such
statements are logged by the MySQL server as written, passwords
in them become visible to anyone with access to the logs.
Statement logging avoids writing passwords as cleartext for the following statements:
CREATE USER ... IDENTIFIED BY ...
ALTER USER ... IDENTIFIED BY ...
GRANT ... IDENTIFIED BY ...
SET PASSWORD ...
SLAVE START ... PASSWORD = ...
CREATE SERVER ... OPTIONS(... PASSWORD ...)
ALTER SERVER ... OPTIONS(... PASSWORD ...)
Passwords in those statements are rewritten to not appear
literally in statement text written to the general query log,
slow query log, and binary log. Rewriting does not apply to
other statements. In particular,
INSERT
or
UPDATE
statements for the
mysql.user
system table that refer to literal
passwords are logged as is, so you should avoid such statements.
(Direct modification of grant tables is discouraged, anyway.)
For the general query log, password rewriting can be suppressed
by starting the server with the
--log-raw
option. For security
reasons, this option is not recommended for production use. For
diagnostic purposes, it may be useful to see the exact text of
statements as received by the server.
Contents of the audit log file produced by the audit log plugin are not encrypted. For security reasons, this file should be written to a directory accessible only to the MySQL server and users with a legitimate reason to view the log. See Section 6.4.5.3, “MySQL Enterprise Audit Security Considerations”.
Statements received by the server may be rewritten if a query
rewrite plugin is installed (see
Query Rewrite Plugins). In this case, the
--log-raw
option affects
statement logging as follows:
An implication of password rewriting is that statements that
cannot be parsed (due, for example, to syntax errors) are not
written to the general query log because they cannot be known to
be password free. Use cases that require logging of all
statements including those with errors should use the
--log-raw
option, bearing in mind
that this also bypasses password rewriting.
Password rewriting occurs only when plain text passwords are expected. For statements with syntax that expect a password hash value, no rewriting occurs. If a plain text password is supplied erroneously for such syntax, the password is logged as given, without rewriting. For example, the following statement is logged as shown because a password hash value is expected:
CREATE USER 'user1'@'localhost' IDENTIFIED BY PASSWORD 'not-so-secret';
To guard log files against unwarranted exposure, locate them in
a directory that restricts access to the server and the database
administrator. If the server logs to tables in the
mysql
database, grant access to those tables
only to the database administrator.
Replicas store the password for the replication source in the
source info repository, which can be either a file or a table
(see Section 16.2.4, “Relay Log and Replication Metadata Repositories”). Ensure that the repository
can be accessed only by the database administrator. An
alternative to storing the password in a file is to use the
START SLAVE
statement to specify
credentials for connecting to the source.
Use a restricted access mode to protect database backups that include log tables or log files containing passwords.