Passwords can be written as plain text in SQL statements such as
        CREATE USER,
        GRANT and
        SET PASSWORD. 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 ...
SET PASSWORD ...
START REPLICA ... 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.
      
By default, contents of audit log files produced by the audit log plugin are not encrypted and may contain sensitive information, such as the text of SQL statements. For security reasons, audit log files should be written to a directory accessible only to the MySQL server and to users with a legitimate reason to view the log. See Section 8.4.5.3, “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.
        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 server in
        their connection metadata repository, which by default is a
        table in the mysql database named
        slave_master_info. The use of a file in the
        data directory for the connection metadata repository is now
        deprecated, but still possible (see
        Section 19.2.4, “Relay Log and Replication Metadata Repositories”). Ensure that the connection
        metadata repository can be accessed only by the database
        administrator. An alternative to storing the password in the
        connection metadata repository is to use the
        START REPLICA or
        START GROUP_REPLICATION 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.