After the server accepts a connection, it enters Stage 2 of access
control. For each request that you issue through the connection,
the server determines what operation you want to perform, then
checks whether your privileges are sufficient. This is where the
privilege columns in the grant tables come into play. These
privileges can come from any of the user,
global_grants, db,
tables_priv, columns_priv,
or procs_priv tables. (You may find it helpful
to refer to Section 8.2.3, “Grant Tables”, which lists the
columns present in each grant table.)
The user and global_grants
tables grant global privileges. The rows in these tables for a
given account indicate the account privileges that apply on a
global basis no matter what the default database is. For example,
if the user table grants you the
DELETE privilege, you can delete
rows from any table in any database on the server host. It is wise
to grant privileges in the user table only to
people who need them, such as database administrators. For other
users, leave all privileges in the user table
set to 'N' and grant privileges at more
specific levels only (for particular databases, tables, columns,
or routines). It is also possible to grant database privileges
globally but use partial revokes to restrict them from being
exercised on specific databases (see
Section 8.2.12, “Privilege Restriction Using Partial Revokes”).
The db table grants database-specific
privileges. Values in the scope columns of this table can take the
following forms:
A blank
Uservalue matches the anonymous user. A nonblank value matches literally; there are no wildcards in user names.The wildcard characters
%and_can be used in theHostandDbcolumns. These have the same meaning as for pattern-matching operations performed with theLIKEoperator. If you want to use either character literally when granting privileges, you must escape it with a backslash. For example, to include the underscore character (_) as part of a database name, specify it as\_in theGRANTstatement.A
'%'or blankHostvalue means “any host.”A
'%'or blankDbvalue means “any database.”
The server reads the db table into memory and
sorts it at the same time that it reads the
user table. The server sorts the
db table based on the Host,
Db, and User scope columns.
As with the user table, sorting puts the
most-specific values first and least-specific values last, and
when the server looks for matching rows, it uses the first match
that it finds.
The tables_priv,
columns_priv, and procs_priv
tables grant table-specific, column-specific, and routine-specific
privileges. Values in the scope columns of these tables can take
the following forms:
The wildcard characters
%and_can be used in theHostcolumn. These have the same meaning as for pattern-matching operations performed with theLIKEoperator.A
'%'or blankHostvalue means “any host.”The
Db,Table_name,Column_name, andRoutine_namecolumns cannot contain wildcards or be blank.
The server sorts the tables_priv,
columns_priv, and procs_priv
tables based on the Host,
Db, and User columns. This
is similar to db table sorting, but simpler
because only the Host column can contain
wildcards.
The server uses the sorted tables to verify each request that it
receives. For requests that require administrative privileges such
as SHUTDOWN or
RELOAD, the server checks only the
user and global_privilege
tables because those are the only tables that specify
administrative privileges. The server grants access if a row for
the account in those tables permits the requested operation and
denies access otherwise. For example, if you want to execute
mysqladmin shutdown but your
user table row does not grant the
SHUTDOWN privilege to you, the
server denies access without even checking the
db table. (The latter table contains no
Shutdown_priv column, so there is no need to
check it.)
For database-related requests
(INSERT,
UPDATE, and so on), the server
first checks the user's global privileges in the
user table row (less any privilege restrictions
imposed by partial revokes). If the row permits the requested
operation, access is granted. If the global privileges in the
user table are insufficient, the server
determines the user's database-specific privileges from the
db table:
The server looks in the
dbtable for a match on theHost,Db, andUsercolumns.The
HostandUsercolumns are matched to the connecting user's host name and MySQL user name.The
Dbcolumn is matched to the database that the user wants to access.If there is no row for the
HostandUser, access is denied.
After determining the database-specific privileges granted by the
db table rows, the server adds them to the
global privileges granted by the user table. If
the result permits the requested operation, access is granted.
Otherwise, the server successively checks the user's table and
column privileges in the tables_priv and
columns_priv tables, adds those to the user's
privileges, and permits or denies access based on the result. For
stored-routine operations, the server uses the
procs_priv table rather than
tables_priv and
columns_priv.
Expressed in boolean terms, the preceding description of how a user's privileges are calculated may be summarized like this:
global privileges
OR database privileges
OR table privileges
OR column privileges
OR routine privileges
It may not be apparent why, if the global privileges are initially
found to be insufficient for the requested operation, the server
adds those privileges to the database, table, and column
privileges later. The reason is that a request might require more
than one type of privilege. For example, if you execute an
INSERT INTO ...
SELECT statement, you need both the
INSERT and the
SELECT privileges. Your privileges
might be such that the user table row grants
one privilege global and the db table row
grants the other specifically for the relevant database. In this
case, you have the necessary privileges to perform the request,
but the server cannot tell that from either your global or
database privileges alone. It must make an access-control decision
based on the combined privileges.