phpMyAdmin 2.11.6 Documentation
Requirements
- PHP
- You need PHP 4.2.0 or newer, with session support
(see
FAQ 1.31)
- You need GD2 support in PHP to display inline
thumbnails of JPEGs ("image/jpeg: inline") with their
original aspect ratio
- You need PHP 4.3.0 or newer to use the
"text/plain: external" MIME-based transformation
- When using the "cookie"
authentication method, the
mcrypt extension
is strongly suggested for most users and is required for
64–bit machines. Not using mcrypt will cause phpMyAdmin to
load pages significantly slower.
- MySQL 3.23.32 or newer (details);
- Web browser with cookies enabled.
Introduction
phpMyAdmin can manage a whole MySQL server (needs a super-user) as well as
a single database. To accomplish the latter you'll need a properly set up
MySQL user who can read/write only the desired database. It's up to you to
look up the appropriate part in the MySQL manual.
Currently phpMyAdmin can:
- browse and drop databases, tables, views, fields and indexes
- create, copy, drop, rename and alter databases, tables, fields and
indexes
- maintenance server, databases and tables, with proposals on server
configuration
- execute, edit and bookmark any
SQL-statement, even
batch-queries
- load text files into tables
- create1 and read dumps of tables
- export1 data to various formats:
CSV,
XML,
PDF,
ISO/IEC 26300 -
OpenDocument Text and Spreadsheet,
Word,
Excel and LATEX formats
- administer multiple servers
- manage MySQL users and privileges
- check referential integrity in MyISAM tables
- using Query-by-example (QBE), create complex queries automatically
connecting required tables
- create PDF graphics of
your Database layout
- search globally in a database or a subset of it
- transform stored data into any format using a set of predefined
functions, like displaying BLOB-data as image or download-link
- support InnoDB tables and foreign keys (see
FAQ 3.6)
- support mysqli, the improved MySQL extension
(see FAQ 1.17)
- communicate in 54 different languages
A word about users:
Many people have difficulty
understanding the concept of user management with regards to phpMyAdmin. When
a user logs in to phpMyAdmin, that username and password are passed directly
to MySQL. phpMyAdmin does no account management on its own (other than
allowing one to manipulate the MySQL user account information); all users
must be valid MySQL users.
Installation
- Quick Install
- Setup script usage
- Linked-tables infrastructure
- Upgrading from an older version
- Using authentication modes
phpMyAdmin does not apply any special security methods to the MySQL database
server. It is still the system administrator's job to grant permissions on
the MySQL databases properly. phpMyAdmin's "Privileges" page can
be used for this.
Warning for Mac users:
if you are on a Mac
OS version before
OS X, StuffIt unstuffs with
Mac formats.
So you'll have to resave as in BBEdit to Unix style ALL phpMyAdmin scripts
before uploading them to your server, as PHP seems not to like
Mac-style end of lines character
("\r").
Quick Install
- Choose an appropriate distribution kit from the phpmyadmin.net
Downloads page. Some kits contain only the English messages,
others contain all languages in UTF-8 format (this should be fine
in most situations), others contain all
languages and all character sets. We'll assume you chose a kit whose
name looks like phpMyAdmin-x.x.x-all-languages.tar.gz.
- Untar or unzip the distribution (be sure to unzip the subdirectories):
tar -xzvf phpMyAdmin_x.x.x-all-languages.tar.gz in your webserver's
document root. If you don't have direct access to your document root,
put the files in a directory on your local machine, and, after step 4,
transfer the directory on your web server using, for example, ftp.
- Ensure that all the scripts have the appropriate owner (if PHP is
running in safe mode, having some scripts with an owner different
from the owner of other scripts will be a
problem). See
FAQ 4.2 and
FAQ
1.26 for suggestions.
- Now you must configure your installation. There are two methods that
can be used. Traditionally, users have hand-edited a copy of
config.inc.php, but now a wizard-style setup script is
provided for those who prefer a graphical installation. Creating a
config.inc.php file is
still a quick way to get started and needed for some advanced features.
- To manually create the file, simply use your text editor to
create the file config.inc.php (you can copy
config.sample.inc.php to get minimal configuration
file) in the main (top-level) phpMyAdmin directory (the one
that contains index.php). phpMyAdmin first loads
libraries/config.default.php and then overrides those
values with anything found in config.inc.php. If the
default value is okay for a particular setting, there is no
need to include it in config.inc.php. You'll need a
few directives to get going, a simple configuration may look
like this:
<?php
$cfg['blowfish_secret'] = 'ba17c1ec07d65003'; // use here a value of your choice
$i=0;
$i++;
$cfg['Servers'][$i]['auth_type'] = 'cookie';
?>
Or, if you prefer to not be prompted every time you log in:
<?php
$i=0;
$i++;
$cfg['Servers'][$i]['user'] = 'root';
$cfg['Servers'][$i]['password'] = 'cbb74bc'; // use here your password
?>
For a full explanation of possible configuration values, see the
Configuration Section of this document.
- Instead of manually editing
config.inc.php, you can use the
Setup Script. First you must
manually create a folder config in the phpMyAdmin
directory. This is a security measure. On a Linux/Unix system you
can use the following commands:
cd phpMyAdmin
mkdir config # create directory for saving
chmod o+rw config # give it world writable permissions
And to edit an existing configuration, copy it over first:
cp config.inc.php config/ # copy current configuration for editing
chmod o+w config/config.inc.php # give it world writable permissions
On other platforms, simply create the folder and ensure that your
web server has read and write access to it. FAQ
1.26 can help with this.
Next, open scripts/setup.php
in your browser. Note that changes are not saved to
disk until explicitly choose Save from the
Configuration area of the screen. Normally the script saves
the new config.inc.php to the config/ directory, but if
the webserver does not have the proper permissions you may see the
error "Cannot load or save configuration." Ensure that the
config/ directory exists and has the proper permissions -
or use the Download link to save the config file locally
and upload (via FTP or some similar means) to the proper location.
Once the file has been saved, it must be moved out of the
config/ directory and the permissions must be reset, again
as a security measure:
mv config/config.inc.php . # move file to current directory
chmod o-rw config.inc.php # remove world read and write permissions
Now the file is ready to be used. You can choose to review or edit
the file with your favorite editor, if you prefer to set some
advanced options which the setup script does not provide.
- If you are using the
auth_type "config", it is suggested that you
protect the phpMyAdmin installation directory because using
config does not require a user to
enter a password to access the phpMyAdmin installation. Use of an alternate
authentication method is recommended, for example with
HTTP–AUTH in a .htaccess file or switch to using
auth_type cookie or http. See the
multi–user sub–section of this
FAQ for additional
information, especially
FAQ 4.4.
- Open the main phpMyAdmin directory
in your browser. phpMyAdmin should now display a welcome screen
and your databases, or a login dialog if using
HTTP or cookie
authentication mode.
- You should deny access to the ./libraries subfolder in your
webserver configuration. For Apache you can use supplied .htaccess file
in that folder, for other webservers, you should configure this yourself.
Such configuration prevents from possible path exposure and cross side
scripting vulnerabilities that might happen to be found in that code.
Linked-tables infrastructure
For a whole set of new features (bookmarks, comments,
SQL-history,
PDF-generation, field contents
transformation, etc.) you need to create a set of special tables. Those
tables can be located in your own database, or in a central database for a
multi-user installation (this database would then be accessed by the
controluser, so no other user should have rights to it).
Please look at your ./scripts/ directory, where you should find a
file called create_tables.sql. (If you are using a Windows server, pay
special attention to
FAQ 1.23).
If your MySQL server's version is 4.1.2 or later, please use
./scripts/create_tables_mysql_4_1_2+.sql instead, for a new
installation.
If you already had this infrastructure and upgraded to MySQL 4.1.2
or later, please use ./scripts/upgrade_tables_mysql_4_1_2+.sql.
You can use your phpMyAdmin to create the tables for you. Please be aware
that you may need special (administrator) privileges to create the database
and tables, and that the script may need some tuning, depending on the
database name.
After having imported the ./scripts/create_tables.sql file, you
should specify the table names in your ./config.inc.php file. The
directives used for that can be found in the Configuration
section. You will also need to have a controluser with the proper rights
to those tables (see section Using
authentication modes below).
Upgrading from an older version
Simply copy ./config.inc.php from your previous installation into the newly
unpacked one. Configuration files from very old versions (2.3.0 or before) may
require some tweaking as some options have been changed or removed.
For compatibility with PHP 6, remove a set_magic_quotes_runtime(0);
statement that you might find near the end of your configuration file.
You should not copy libraries/config.default.php
over config.inc.php because the default configuration file
is version-specific.
If you have upgraded your MySQL server from a version previous to 4.1.2 to
version 4.1.2 or newer and if you use the pmadb/linked table infrastructure,
you should run the SQL script found in
scripts/upgrade_tables_mysql_4_1_2+.sql.
Using authentication modes
- HTTP and cookie
authentication modes are recommended in a multi-user environment
where you want to give users access to their own database and don't want
them to play around with others.
Nevertheless be aware that MS Internet Explorer seems to be really buggy
about cookies, at least till version 6, and PHP 4.1.1 is also a bit buggy
in this area!
Even in a single-user environment, you might prefer to use
HTTP or cookie mode so
that your user/password pair are not in clear in the configuration file.
- HTTP and cookie
authentication modes are more secure: the MySQL login information does
not need to be set in the phpMyAdmin configuration file (except possibly
for the controluser).
However, keep in mind that the password travels in plain text, unless
you are using the HTTPS protocol.
In cookie mode, the password is stored, encrypted with the blowfish
algorithm, in a temporary cookie.
- Note: starting with phpMyAdmin 2.6.1, this section is only applicable if
your MySQL server is previous to 4.1.2, or is running with
--skip-show-database.
For 'HTTP' and 'cookie'
modes, phpMyAdmin needs a controluser that has only the
SELECT privilege on the `mysql`.`user` (all columns except
`Password`), `mysql`.`db` (all columns), `mysql`.`host`
(all columns) and `mysql`.`tables_priv` (all columns except
`Grantor` and `Timestamp`) tables.
You must specify the details
for the controluser in the config.inc.php
file under the
$cfg['Servers'][$i]['controluser'] and
$cfg['Servers'][$i]['controlpass'] settings.
The following example assumes you want to use pma as the
controluser and pmapass as the controlpass, but this is
only an example: use something else in your file! Input these
statements from the phpMyAdmin SQL Query window or mysql command–line
client.
Of course you have to replace localhost with the webserver's host
if it's not the same as the MySQL server's one.
GRANT USAGE ON mysql.* TO 'pma'@'localhost' IDENTIFIED BY 'pmapass';
GRANT SELECT (
Host, User, Select_priv, Insert_priv, Update_priv, Delete_priv,
Create_priv, Drop_priv, Reload_priv, Shutdown_priv, Process_priv,
File_priv, Grant_priv, References_priv, Index_priv, Alter_priv,
Show_db_priv, Super_priv, Create_tmp_table_priv, Lock_tables_priv,
Execute_priv, Repl_slave_priv, Repl_client_priv
) ON mysql.user TO 'pma'@'localhost';
GRANT SELECT ON mysql.db TO 'pma'@'localhost';
GRANT SELECT ON mysql.host TO 'pma'@'localhost';
GRANT SELECT (Host, Db, User, Table_name, Table_priv, Column_priv)
ON mysql.tables_priv TO 'pma'@'localhost';
If you are using an old MySQL version (below 4.0.2), please replace
the first GRANT SELECT query by this one:
GRANT SELECT (
Host, User, Select_priv, Insert_priv, Update_priv, Delete_priv,
Create_priv, Drop_priv, Reload_priv, Shutdown_priv, Process_priv,
File_priv, Grant_priv, References_priv, Index_priv, Alter_priv
) ON mysql.user TO 'pma'@'localhost';
... and if you want to use the many new relation and bookmark features:
GRANT SELECT, INSERT, UPDATE, DELETE ON <pma_db>.* TO 'pma'@'localhost';
(this of course requires that your linked-tables
infrastructure be set up).
Of course, the above queries only work if your MySQL version supports
the GRANT command. This is the case since 3.22.11.
- Then each of the true users should be granted a set of privileges
on a set of particular databases. Normally you shouldn't give global
privileges to an ordinary user, unless you understand the impact of those
privileges (for example, you are creating a superuser).
For example, to grant the user real_user with all privileges on
the database user_base:
GRANT ALL PRIVILEGES ON user_base.* TO 'real_user'@localhost IDENTIFIED BY 'real_password';
What the user may now do is controlled entirely by the MySQL user
management system.
With HTTP or cookie
authentication mode, you don't need to fill the user/password fields
inside the $cfg['Servers']
array.
'HTTP' authentication mode
- Uses HTTP Basic authentication
method and allows you to log in as any valid MySQL user.
- Is supported with most PHP configurations. For
IIS
(ISAPI)
support using CGI PHP see
FAQ
1.32, for using with Apache
CGI see
FAQ
1.35.
- See also
FAQ 4.4 about not
using the .htaccess mechanism along with
'HTTP' authentication
mode.
'cookie' authentication mode
- You can use this method as a replacement for the
HTTP authentication
(for example, if you're running
IIS).
- Obviously, the user must enable cookies in the browser, but this is
now a requirement for all authentication modes.
- With this mode, the user can truly log out of phpMyAdmin and log in back
with the same username.
- If you want to log in to arbitrary server see
$cfg['AllowArbitraryServer'] directive.
- As mentioned in the requirements section, having
the mcrypt extension will speed up access considerably, but is
not required.
'signon' authentication mode
- This mode is a convenient way of using credentials from another
application to authenticate to phpMyAdmin.
- The other application has to store login information into
session data.
- More details in the auth_type
section.
'config' authentication mode
- This mode is the less secure one because it requires you to fill the
$cfg['Servers'][$i]['user'] and
$cfg['Servers'][$i]['password'] fields (and as a result, anyone who
can read your config.inc.php can discover your username and password).
But you don't need to setup a "controluser" here: using the
$cfg['Servers'][$i]['only_db'] might be enough.
- In the
ISP
FAQ section, there
is an entry explaining how to protect your configuration file.
- For additional security in this mode, you may wish to consider the Host
authentication
$cfg['Servers'][$i]['AllowDeny']['order'] and
$cfg['Servers'][$i]['AllowDeny']['rules'] configuration
directives.
- Unlike cookie and http, does not require a user to log in when first
loading the phpMyAdmin site. This is by design but could allow any
user to access your installation. Use of some restriction method is
suggested, perhaps a .htaccess file with the
HTTP-AUTH directive or disallowing incoming HTTP requests at
one’s router or firewall will suffice (both of which
are beyond the scope of this manual but easily searchable with Google).
Configuration
Warning for Mac
users: PHP does not seem to like
Mac end of lines character
("\r"). So ensure you choose the option that allows to use
the *nix end of line character ("\n") in your text editor
before saving a script you have modified.
Configuration note:
Almost all configurable data is placed in config.inc.php. If this file
does not exist, please refer to the Quick install
section to create one. This file only needs to contain the parameters you want to
change from their corresponding default value in
libraries/config.default.php.
The parameters which relate to design (like colors) are placed in
themes/themename/layout.inc.php. You might also want to create
config.footer.inc.php and config.header.inc.php files to add
your site specific code to be included on start and end of each page.
- $cfg['PmaAbsoluteUri'] string
- Sets here the complete URL
(with full path) to your phpMyAdmin installation's directory.
E.g. http://www.your_web.net/path_to_your_phpMyAdmin_directory/.
Note also that the URL on
some web servers are case–sensitive.
Don’t forget the trailing slash at the end.
Starting with version 2.3.0, it is advisable to try leaving this
blank. In most cases phpMyAdmin automatically detects the proper
setting. Users of port forwarding will need to set PmaAbsoluteUri (more info).
A good test is to browse a table, edit a row and save it. There should
be an error message if phpMyAdmin is having trouble auto–detecting
the correct value. If you get an error that this must be set or if
the autodetect code fails to detect your path, please post a bug
report on our bug tracker so we can improve the code.
- $cfg['PmaNoRelation_DisableWarning'] boolean
- Starting with version 2.3.0 phpMyAdmin offers a lot of features to work
with master / foreign – tables (see
$cfg['Servers'][$i]['pmadb']).
If you tried to set this up and it does not work for you, have a look on
the "Structure" page of one database where you would like to
use it. You will find a link that will analyze why those features have
been disabled.
If you do not want to use those features set this variable to
TRUE to stop this message from appearing.
- $cfg['SuhosinDisableWarning'] boolean
- A warning is displayed on the main page if Suhosin is detected.
You can set this parameter to TRUE to stop this message
from appearing.
- $cfg['blowfish_secret'] string
- The "cookie" auth_type uses blowfish
algorithm to encrypt the password.
If you are using the "cookie" auth_type, enter here a random
passphrase of your choice. It will be used internally by the blowfish
algorithm: you won’t be prompted for this passphrase. The maximum
number of characters for this parameter seems to be 46.
- $cfg['Servers'] array
- Since version 1.4.2, phpMyAdmin supports the administration of multiple
MySQL servers. Therefore, a
$cfg['Servers']-array has
been added which contains the login information for the different servers.
The first
$cfg['Servers'][$i]['host']
contains the hostname of the first server, the second
$cfg['Servers'][$i]['host']
the hostname of the second server, etc. In
./libraries/config.default.php, there is only one section for
server definition, however you can put as many as you need in
./config.inc.php, copy that block or needed parts (you don't
have to define all settings, just those you need to change).
- $cfg['Servers'][$i]['host'] string
- The hostname or IP address of your
$i-th MySQL-server. E.g. localhost.
- $cfg['Servers'][$i]['port'] string
- The port-number of your $i-th MySQL-server. Default is 3306 (leave
blank). If you use "localhost" as the hostname, MySQL
ignores this port number and connects with the socket, so if you want
to connect to a port different from the default port, use
"127.0.0.1" or the real hostname in
$cfg['Servers'][$i]['host'].
- $cfg['Servers'][$i]['socket'] string
- The path to the socket to use. Leave blank for default.
To determine the correct socket, check your MySQL configuration or, using the
mysql command–line client, issue the status command.
Among the resulting information displayed will be the socket used.
- $cfg['Servers'][$i]['ssl'] boolean
- Whether to enable SSL for connection to MySQL server.
- $cfg['Servers'][$i]['connect_type'] string
- What type connection to use with the MySQL server. Your options are
'socket' and 'tcp'. It defaults to 'tcp' as that
is nearly guaranteed to be available on all MySQL servers, while
sockets are not supported on some platforms.
To use the socket mode, your MySQL server must be on the same machine
as the Web server.
- $cfg['Servers'][$i]['extension'] string
- What php MySQL extension to use for the connection. Valid options are:
mysql :
The classic MySQL extension. This is the recommended and default
method at this time.
mysqli :
The improved MySQL extension. This extension became available
with php 5.0.0 and is the recommended way to connect to a server
running MySQL 4.1.x.
- $cfg['Servers'][$i]['compress'] boolean
- Whether to use a compressed protocol for the MySQL server connection
or not (experimental).
This feature requires PHP >= 4.3.0.
-
$cfg['Servers'][$i]['controluser'] string
$cfg['Servers'][$i]['controlpass'] string
- This special account is used for 2 distinct purposes: to make possible
all relational features (see
$cfg['Servers'][$i]['pmadb'])
and, for a MySQL server previous to 4.1.2 or running with
--skip-show-database, to enable a multi-user installation
(HTTP or cookie
authentication mode).
When using HTTP or
cookie authentication modes (or 'config'
authentication mode since phpMyAdmin 2.2.1), you need to supply the
details of a MySQL account that has SELECT privilege on the
mysql.user (all columns except "Password"),
mysql.db (all columns) and mysql.tables_priv (all columns
except "Grantor" and "Timestamp") tables.
This account is used to check what databases the user will see at
login.
Please see the install section on
"Using authentication modes" for more information.
In phpMyAdmin versions before 2.2.5, those were called
"stduser/stdpass".
- $cfg['Servers'][$i]['auth_type'] string
['HTTP'|'http'|'cookie'|'config'|'signon']
- Whether config or cookie or
HTTP or signon authentication
should be used for this server.
- 'config' authentication ($auth_type = 'config')
is the plain old way: username and password are stored in
config.inc.php.
- 'cookie' authentication mode
($auth_type = 'cookie') as introduced in
2.2.3 allows you to log in as any valid MySQL user with the
help of cookies. Username and password are stored in
cookies during the session and password is deleted when it
ends. This can also allow you to log in in arbitrary server if
$cfg['AllowArbitraryServer'] enabled.
- 'HTTP' authentication (was called 'advanced' in previous versions and can be written also as 'http')
($auth_type = 'HTTP') as introduced in 1.3.0
allows you to log in as any valid MySQL user via HTTP-Auth.
- 'signon' authentication mode
($auth_type = 'signon')
as introduced in 2.10.0 allows you to log in from prepared PHP
session data. This is useful for implementing single signon
from another application. Sample way how to seed session is in
signon example:
scripts/signon.php
. You need to
configure session name and signon
URL to use this authentication method.
Please see the install section on "Using authentication modes"
for more information.
-
$cfg['Servers'][$i]['user'] string
$cfg['Servers'][$i]['password'] string
-
When using auth_type = 'config', this is the user/password-pair
which phpMyAdmin will use to connect to the
MySQL server. This user/password pair is not needed when HTTP or
cookie authentication is used and should be empty.
-
$cfg['Servers'][$i]['nopassword'] boolean
-
Allow attempt to log in without password when a login with password
fails. This can be used together with http authentication, when
authentication is done some other way and phpMyAdmin gets user name
from auth and uses empty password for connecting to MySQL. Password
login is still tried first, but as fallback, no password method is
tried.
-
$cfg['Servers'][$i]['only_db'] string or array
-
If set to a (an array of) database name(s), only this (these) database(s)
will be shown to the user. Since phpMyAdmin 2.2.1, this/these
database(s) name(s) may contain MySQL wildcards characters
("_" and "%"): if you want to use literal instances
of these characters, escape them (I.E. use 'my\_db' and not
'my_db').
This setting is an efficient way to lower the server load since the
latter does not need to send MySQL requests to build the available
database list. But it does not replace the
privileges rules of the MySQL database server. If set, it just
means only these databases will be displayed but
not that all other databases can't be used.
An example of using more that one database:
$cfg['Servers'][$i]['only_db'] = array('db1', 'db2');
As of phpMyAdmin 2.5.5 the order inside the array is used for sorting the
databases in the left frame, so that you can individually arrange your databases.
If you want to have certain databases at the top, but don't care about the others, you do not
need to specify all other databases. Use:
$cfg['Servers'][$i]['only_db'] = array('db3', 'db4', '*');
instead to tell phpMyAdmin that it should display db3 and db4 on top, and the rest in alphabetic
order.
- $cfg['Servers'][$i]['hide_db'] string
- Regular expression for hiding some databases. This only hides them
from listing, but a user is still able to access them (using, for example,
the SQL query area). To limit access, use the MySQL privilege system.
For example, to hide all databases starting with the letter "a", use
$cfg['Servers'][$i]['hide_db'] = '^a';
and to hide both "db1" and "db2" use
$cfg['Servers'][$i]['hide_db'] = '(db1|db2)';
More information on regular expressions can be found in the
PCRE pattern syntax portion of the PHP reference manual.
- $cfg['Servers'][$i]['verbose'] string
- Only useful when using phpMyAdmin with multiple server entries. If set,
this string will be displayed instead of the hostname in the pull-down
menu on the main page. This can be useful if you want to show only
certain databases on your system, for example. For HTTP auth, all
non-US-ASCII characters will be stripped.
-
$cfg['Servers'][$i]['pmadb'] string
- The name of the database containing the linked-tables infrastructure.
See the Linked-tables infrastructure
section in this document to see the benefits of this infrastructure,
and for a quick way of creating this database and the needed tables.
If you are the only user of this phpMyAdmin installation, you can
use your current database to store those special tables; in this
case, just put your current database name in
$cfg['Servers'][$i]['pmadb']. For a multi-user installation,
set this parameter to the name of your central database containing
the linked-tables infrastructure.
-
$cfg['Servers'][$i]['bookmarktable'] string
- Since release 2.2.0 phpMyAdmin allows users to bookmark queries. This can be
useful for queries you often run.
To allow the usage of this functionality:
- set up pmadb and the linked-tables infrastructure
- enter the table name in
$cfg['Servers'][$i]['bookmarktable']
-
$cfg['Servers'][$i]['relation'] string
- Since release 2.2.4 you can describe, in a special 'relation' table,
which field is a key in another table (a foreign key). phpMyAdmin
currently uses this to
- make clickable, when you browse the master table, the data values
that point to the foreign table;
- display in an optional tool-tip the "display field"
when browsing the master table, if you move the mouse to a column
containing a foreign key (use also the 'table_info' table);
(see
FAQ 6.7)
- in edit/insert mode, display a drop-down list of possible foreign
keys (key value and "display field" are shown)
(see
FAQ 6.21)
- display links on the table properties page, to check referential
integrity (display missing foreign keys) for each described key;
- in query-by-example, create automatic joins (see
FAQ 6.6)
- enable you to get a PDF
schema of your database (also uses the table_coords table).
The keys can be numeric or character.
To allow the usage of this functionality:
- set up pmadb and the linked-tables
infrastructure
- put the relation table name in
$cfg['Servers'][$i]['relation']
- now as normal user open phpMyAdmin and for each one of your
tables where you want to use this feature, click
"Structure/Relation view/" and choose foreign fields.
Please note that in the current version, master_db
must be the same as foreign_db. Those fields have been put in
future development of the cross-db relations.
-
$cfg['Servers'][$i]['table_info'] string
-
Since release 2.3.0 you can describe, in a special 'table_info'
table, which field is to be displayed as a tool-tip when moving the
cursor over the corresponding key.
This configuration variable will hold the name of this special
table. To allow the usage of this functionality:
- set up pmadb and the linked-tables infrastructure
- put the table name in
$cfg['Servers'][$i]['table_info']
- then for each table where you want to use this feature,
click "Structure/Relation view/Choose field to display"
to choose the field.
Usage tip: Display field.
-
$cfg['Servers'][$i]['table_coords'] string
$cfg['Servers'][$i]['pdf_pages'] string
- Since release 2.3.0 you can have phpMyAdmin create
PDF pages showing
the relations between your tables. To do this it needs two tables
"pdf_pages" (storing information about the available
PDF
pages) and "table_coords" (storing coordinates where each
table will be placed on a PDF
schema output).
You must be using the "relation" feature.
To allow the usage of this functionality:
- set up pmadb and the linked-tables
infrastructure
- put the correct table names in
$cfg['Servers'][$i]['table_coords'] and
$cfg['Servers'][$i]['pdf_pages']
Usage tips: PDF output.
-
$cfg['Servers'][$i]['column_info'] string
-
Since release 2.3.0 you can store comments to describe each column for
each table. These will then be shown on the "printview".
Starting with release 2.5.0, comments are consequently used on the table
property pages and table browse view, showing up as tool-tips above the
column name (properties page) or embedded within the header of table in
browse view. They can also be shown in a table dump. Please see the
relevant configuration directives later on.
Also new in release 2.5.0 is a MIME-transformation system which is also
based on the following table structure. See
Transformations for further information. To use the
MIME-transformation system, your column_info table has to have the three
new fields 'mimetype', 'transformation', 'transformation_options'.
To allow the usage of this functionality:
-
$cfg['Servers'][$i]['history'] string
- Since release 2.5.0 you can store your
SQL history, which means
all queries you entered manually into the phpMyAdmin interface. If you
don't want to use a table-based history, you can use the JavaScript-based
history. Using that, all your history items are deleted when closing the
window.
Using
$cfg['QueryHistoryMax']
you can specify an amount of history items you want to have on hold. On
every login, this list gets cut to the maximum amount.
The query history is only available if JavaScript is enabled in your
browser.
To allow the usage of this functionality:
- set up pmadb and the linked-tables
infrastructure
- put the table name in $cfg['Servers'][$i]['history']
-
$cfg['Servers'][$i]['designer_coords'] string
- Since release 2.10.0 a Designer interface is available; it permits
to visually manage the relations.
To allow the usage of this functionality:
- set up pmadb and the linked-tables
infrastructure
- put the table name in $cfg['Servers'][$i]['designer_coords']
- $cfg['Servers'][$i]['verbose_check'] boolean
- Because release 2.5.0 introduced the new MIME-transformation support, the
column_info table got enhanced with three new fields. If the above variable
is set to TRUE (default) phpMyAdmin will check if you have the
latest table structure available. If not, it will emit a warning to the
superuser.
You can disable this checking behavior by setting the variable to false,
which should offer a performance increase.
Recommended to set to FALSE, when you are sure, your table structure is
up to date.
- $cfg['Servers'][$i]['AllowRoot']
boolean
- Whether to allow root access. This is just simplification of rules below.
-
$cfg['Servers'][$i]['AllowDeny']['order'] string
- If your rule order is empty, then IP
authentication is disabled.
If your rule order is set to 'deny,allow' then the system applies
all deny rules followed by allow rules. Access is allowed by default. Any
client which does not match a Deny command or does match an Allow command
will be allowed access to the server.
If your rule order is set to 'allow,deny' then the system
applies all allow rules followed by deny rules. Access is denied by
default. Any client which does not match an Allow directive or does
match a Deny directive will be denied access to the server.
If your rule order is set to 'explicit', the authentication is
performed in a similar fashion to rule order 'deny,allow', with the
added restriction that your host/username combination must be
listed in the allow rules, and not listed in the deny
rules. This is the most secure means of using Allow/Deny rules,
and was available in Apache by specifying allow and deny rules without
setting any order.
Please also see $cfg['TrustedProxies'] for detecting IP
address behind proxies.
-
$cfg['Servers'][$i]['AllowDeny']['rules'] array of strings
- The general format for the rules is as such:
<'allow' | 'deny'> <username> [from] <ipmask>
If you wish to match all users, it is possible to use a '%' as
a wildcard in the username field.
There are a few shortcuts you can use in the ipmask field as
well (please note that those containing SERVER_ADDRESS might not be
available on all webservers):
'all' -> 0.0.0.0/0
'localhost' -> 127.0.0.1/8
'localnetA' -> SERVER_ADDRESS/8
'localnetB' -> SERVER_ADDRESS/16
'localnetC' -> SERVER_ADDRESS/24
Having an empty rule list is equivalent to either using
'allow % from all' if your rule order is set to
'deny,allow' or 'deny % from all' if your rule order
is set to 'allow,deny' or 'explicit'.
For the IP matching system, the
following work:
xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx (an exact IP address)
xxx.xxx.xxx.[yyy-zzz] (an IP address range)
xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx/nn (CIDR, Classless Inter-Domain Routing type IP addresses)
But the following does not work:
xxx.xxx.xxx.xx[yyy-zzz] (partial
IP address range)
- $cfg['Servers'][$i]['SignonSession'] string
- Name of session which will be used for signon authentication method.
- $cfg['Servers'][$i]['SignonURL'] string
- URL where user will be redirected to log in for signon authentication method. Should be absolute including protocol.
- $cfg['Servers'][$i]['LogoutURL'] string
- URL where user will be redirected after logout (doesn't affect config authentication method). Should be absolute including protocol.
- $cfg['ServerDefault'] integer
- If you have more than one server configured, you can set
$cfg['ServerDefault'] to any one of them to autoconnect to
that server when phpMyAdmin is started, or set it to 0 to be given a
list of servers without logging in.
If you have only one server configured, $cfg['ServerDefault']
MUST be set to that server.
- $cfg['MaxDbList'] integer
- The maximum number of database names to be displayed in the
navigation frame and the database list.
- $cfg['MaxTableList'] integer
- The maximum number of table names to be displayed in the
main panel's list (except on the Export page). This limit is also enforced in the navigation panel
when in Light mode.
- $cfg['MaxCharactersInDisplayedSQL'] integer
- The maximum number of characters when a SQL query is displayed. The
default limit of 1000 should be correct to avoid the display of tons
of hexadecimal codes that represent BLOBs, but some users have real
SQL queries that are longer than 1000 characters.
- $cfg['OBGzip'] string/boolean
- Defines whether to use GZip output buffering for increased
speed in HTTP transfers.
Set to true/false for enabling/disabling. When set to 'auto' (string),
phpMyAdmin tries to enable output buffering and will automatically disable
it if your browser has some problems with buffering. IE6 with a certain patch
is known to cause data corruption when having enabled buffering.
- $cfg['PersistentConnections'] boolean
- Whether persistent connections should be used or not (mysql_connect or
mysql_pconnect).
- $cfg['ForceSSL'] boolean
- Whether to force using https while accessing phpMyAdmin.
- $cfg['ExecTimeLimit'] integer [number of seconds]
- Set the number of seconds a script is allowed to run. If seconds is set
to zero, no time limit is imposed.
This setting is used while importing/exporting dump files but has no
effect when PHP is running in safe mode.
- $cfg['MemoryLimit'] integer [number of bytes]
- Set the number of bytes a script is allowed to allocate. If number set
to zero, no limit is imposed.
This setting is used while importing/exporting dump files but has no
effect when PHP is running in safe mode.
You can also use any string as in php.ini, eg. '16M'.
- $cfg['SkipLockedTables'] boolean
- Mark used tables and make it possible to show databases with locked
tables (since MySQL 3.23.30).
- $cfg['ShowSQL'] boolean
- Defines whether SQL queries
generated by phpMyAdmin should be displayed or not.
- $cfg['AllowUserDropDatabase'] boolean
- Defines whether normal users (non-administrator) are allowed to
delete their own database or not. If set as FALSE, the link "Drop
Database" will not be shown, and even a "DROP DATABASE
mydatabase" will be rejected. Quite practical for
ISP's with many
customers.
Please note that this limitation of SQL queries is not as strict as
when using MySQL privileges. This is due to nature of SQL queries
which might be quite complicated. So this choice should be viewed as
help to avoid accidental dropping rather than strict privilege
limitation.
- $cfg['Confirm'] boolean
- Whether a warning ("Are your really sure...") should be
displayed when you're about to lose data.
- $cfg['LoginCookieRecall'] boolean
- Define whether the previous login should be recalled or not in cookie
authentication mode.
- $cfg['LoginCookieValidity'] integer [number of seconds]
- Define how long is login cookie valid.
- $cfg['LoginCookieStore'] integer [number of seconds]
- Define how long is login cookie should be stored in browser. Default 0
means that it will be kept for existing session. This is recommended
for not trusted environments.
- $cfg['LoginCookieDeleteAll'] boolean
- If enabled (default), logout deletes cookies for all servers,
otherwise only for current one. Setting this to false makes it easy to
forget to log out from other server, when you are using more of
them.
- $cfg['UseDbSearch'] boolean
- Define whether the "search string inside database" is enabled or not.
- $cfg['IgnoreMultiSubmitErrors'] boolean
- Define whether phpMyAdmin will continue executing a multi-query
statement if one of the queries fails. Default is to abort execution.
- $cfg['VerboseMultiSubmit'] boolean
- Define whether phpMyAdmin will output the results of each query of a
multi-query statement embedded into the
SQL output as inline
comments. Defaults to TRUE.
-
$cfg['AllowArbitraryServer'] boolean
- If enabled allows you to log in to arbitrary servers using cookie auth.
NOTE: Please use this carefully, as this may allow users access to
MySQL servers behind the firewall where your
HTTP server is placed.
- $cfg['LeftFrameLight'] boolean
- Defines whether to use a select-based menu and display only the current
tables in the left frame (smaller page). Only in Non-Lightmode you can
use the feature to display nested folders using
$cfg['LeftFrameTableSeparator']
- $cfg['LeftFrameDBTree'] boolean
- In light mode, defines whether to display the names of databases (in the
selector) using a tree, see also
$cfg['LeftFrameDBSeparator'].
- $cfg['LeftFrameDBSeparator'] string
- The string used to separate the parts of the database name when showing
them in a tree.
- $cfg['LeftFrameTableSeparator'] string
- Defines a string to be used to nest table spaces. Defaults to '__'.
This means if you have tables like 'first__second__third' this will be
shown as a three-level hierarchy like: first > second > third.
If set to FALSE or empty, the feature is disabled. NOTE: You should
not use this separator at the beginning or end of a
table name or multiple times after another without any other
characters in between.
- $cfg['LeftFrameTableLevel'] string
- Defines how many sublevels should be displayed when splitting
up tables by the above separator.
- $cfg['ShowTooltip'] boolean
- Defines whether to display table comment as tool-tip in left frame or
not.
- $cfg['ShowTooltipAliasDB'] boolean
- If tool-tips are enabled and a DB comment is set, this will flip the
comment and the real name. That means that if you have a table called
'user0001' and add the comment 'MyName' on it, you will see the name
'MyName' used consequently in the left frame and the tool-tip shows
the real name of the DB.
- $cfg['ShowTooltipAliasTB'] boolean/string
- Same as $cfg['ShowTooltipAliasDB'], except this works for table names.
When setting this to 'nested', the Alias of the Tablename is only used
to split/nest the tables according to the
$cfg['LeftFrameTableSeparator']
directive. So only the folder is called like the Alias, the tablename itself
stays the real tablename.
- $cfg['LeftDisplayLogo'] boolean
- Defines whether or not to display the phpMyAdmin logo at the top of the left frame.
Defaults to TRUE.
- $cfg['LeftLogoLink'] string
- Enter URL where logo in the navigation frame will point to.
For use especially with self made theme which changes this.
The default value for this is main.php.
- $cfg['LeftLogoLinkWindow'] string
- Whether to open the linked page in the main window (main)
or in a new one (new). Note: use new if you are
linking to phpmyadmin.net.
- $cfg['LeftDisplayServers'] boolean
- Defines whether or not to display a server choice at the top of the left frame.
Defaults to FALSE.
- $cfg['DisplayServersList'] boolean
- Defines whether to display this server choice as links instead of in a drop-down.
Defaults to FALSE (drop-down).
- $cfg['DisplayDatabasesList'] boolean or text
- Defines whether to display database choice in light navigation frame as links
instead of in a drop-down. Defaults to 'auto' - on main page list is
shown, when database is selected, only drop down is displayed.
- $cfg['ShowStats'] boolean
- Defines whether or not to display space usage and statistics about databases
and tables.
Note that statistics requires at least MySQL 3.23.3 and that, at this
date, MySQL doesn't return such information for Berkeley DB tables.
- $cfg['ShowServerInfo'] boolean
- Defines whether to display detailed server information on main page.
You can additionally hide more information by using
$cfg['Servers'][$i]['verbose'].
- $cfg['ShowPhpInfo'] boolean
$cfg['ShowChgPassword'] boolean
$cfg['ShowCreateDb'] boolean
- Defines whether to display the "PHP information" and
"Change password " links and form for creating database or
not at the starting main (right) frame. This setting
does not check MySQL commands entered directly.
Please note that to block the usage of phpinfo() in scripts, you
have to put this in your php.ini:
disable_functions = phpinfo()
Also note that enabling the "Change password " link has no
effect with "config" authentication mode: because of the
hard coded password value in the configuration file, end users can't
be allowed to change their passwords.
- $cfg['SuggestDBName'] boolean
- Defines whether to suggest a database name on the
"Create Database" form or to keep the textfield empty.
- $cfg['ShowBlob'] boolean
- Defines whether or not BLOB fields are shown when browsing a table's
content.
- $cfg['NavigationBarIconic'] string
- Defines whether navigation bar buttons and the right panel top menu
contain text or symbols only. A value of TRUE displays icons, FALSE
displays text and 'both' displays both icons and text.
- $cfg['ShowAll'] boolean
- Defines whether a user should be displayed a
"show all (records)" button in browse mode or not.
- $cfg['MaxRows'] integer
- Number of rows displayed when browsing a result set. If the result set
contains more rows, "Previous" and "Next" links will be shown.
- $cfg['Order'] string [DESC|ASC|SMART]
- Defines whether fields are displayed in ascending (ASC) order,
in descending (DESC) order or in a "smart"
(SMART) order - I.E. descending order for fields of type TIME,
DATE, DATETIME and TIMESTAMP, ascending order else- by default.
- $cfg['ProtectBinary'] boolean or string
- Defines whether BLOB or BINARY fields are protected
from editing when browsing a table's content. Valid values are:
- FALSE to allow editing of all fields;
- 'blob' to allow editing of all fields except BLOBS;
- 'all' to disallow editing of all BINARY or
BLOB fields.
- $cfg['ShowFunctionFields'] boolean
- Defines whether or not MySQL functions fields should be initially
displayed in edit/insert mode. Since version 2.10, the user can
toggle this setting from the interface.
- $cfg['CharEditing'] string
- Defines which type of editing controls should be used for CHAR and
VARCHAR fields. Possible values are:
- input - this allows to limit size of text to size of field in
MySQL, but has problems with newlines in fields
- textarea - no problems with newlines in fields, but also no
length limitations
Default is old behavior so input.
- $cfg['InsertRows'] integer
- Defines the maximum number of concurrent entries for the Insert page.
- $cfg['ForeignKeyMaxLimit'] integer
- If there are fewer items than this in the set of foreign keys, then a
drop-down box of foreign keys is presented, in the style described by the
$cfg['ForeignKeyDropdownOrder']
setting.
- $cfg['ForeignKeyDropdownOrder'] array
- For the foreign key drop-down fields, there are several methods of
display, offering both the key and value data. The contents of the
array should be one or both of the following strings:
'content-id', 'id-content'.
- $cfg['ZipDump'] boolean
$cfg['GZipDump'] boolean
$cfg['BZipDump'] boolean
- Defines whether to allow the use of zip/GZip/BZip2 compression when
creating a dump file
- $cfg['CompressOnFly'] boolean
- Defines whether to allow on the fly compression for GZip/BZip2
compressed exports. This doesn't affect smaller dumps and allows users to
create larger dumps that won't otherwise fit in memory due to php
memory limit. Produced files contain more GZip/BZip2 headers, but all
normal programs handle this correctly.
- $cfg['LightTabs'] boolean
- If set to TRUE, use less graphically intense tabs on the top of the
mainframe.
- $cfg['PropertiesIconic'] string
- If set to TRUE, will display icons instead of text for db and table
properties links (like 'Browse', 'Select', 'Insert', ...).
Can be
set to 'both' if you want icons AND text.
When set to FALSE, will only show text.
- $cfg['PropertiesNumColumns'] integer
- How many columns will be utilized to display the tables on the
database property view? Default is 1 column. When setting this to a
value larger than 1, the type of the database will be omitted for more
display space.
- $cfg['DefaultTabServer'] string
- Defines the tab displayed by default on server view. Possible
values: "main.php" (recommended for multi-user setups),
"server_databases.php", "server_status.php",
"server_variables.php", "server_privileges.php"
or "server_processlist.php".
- $cfg['DefaultTabDatabase'] string
- Defines the tab displayed by default on database view. Possible
values: "db_structure.php",
"db_sql.php" or "db_search.php".
- $cfg['DefaultTabTable'] string
- Defines the tab displayed by default on table view. Possible
values: "tbl_structure.php",
"tbl_sql.php", "tbl_select.php",
"tbl_change.php" or "sql.php".
- $cfg['MySQLManualBase'] string
- If set to an URL which
points to the MySQL documentation (type depends
on $cfg['MySQLManualType']), appropriate help links are
generated.
See MySQL Documentation page
for more information about MySQL manuals and their types.
- $cfg['MySQLManualType'] string
- Type of MySQL documentation:
- viewable - "viewable online", current one used on MySQL website
- searchable - "Searchable, with user comments"
- chapters - "HTML, one page per chapter"
- big - "HTML, all on one page"
- none - do not show documentation links
- $cfg['DefaultLang'] string
- Defines the default language to use, if not browser-defined or
user-defined.
See the select_lang.lib.php script to know the valid values for
this setting.
- $cfg['DefaultConnectionCollation'] string
- Defines the default connection collation to use, if not
user-defined.
See the MySQL
documentation for list of possible values.
- $cfg['Lang'] string
- Force: always use this language (must be defined in the
select_lang.lib.php script).
- $cfg['FilterLanguages'] string
- Limit list of available languages to those matching the given regular
expression. For example if you want only Czech and English, you should
set filter to
'^(cs|en)'
.
- $cfg['DefaultCharset'] string
- Default character set to use for recoding of MySQL queries. This must be
enabled and it's described by
$cfg['AllowAnywhereRecoding']
option.
You can give here any character set which is in
$cfg['AvailableCharsets']
array and this is just default choice, user can select any of them.
- $cfg['AllowAnywhereRecoding'] boolean
- Allow character set recoding of MySQL queries. You need recode or iconv
support (compiled in or module) in PHP to allow MySQL queries recoding
and used language file must have it enabled (by default only these
which are in Unicode, just to avoid losing some characters).
Setting this to TRUE also activates a pull-down menu
in the Export page, to choose the character set when exporting a file.
- $cfg['RecodingEngine'] string
- You can select here which functions will be used for character set
conversion. Possible values are:
- auto - automatically use available one (first is tested
iconv, then recode)
- iconv - use iconv or libiconv functions
- recode - use recode_string function
Default is auto.
- Specify some parameters for iconv used in charset conversion. See
iconv
documentation for details. By default
//TRANSLIT
is
used, so that invalid characters will be transliterated.
- $cfg['AvailableCharsets'] array
- Available character sets for MySQL conversion. You can add your own (any of
supported by recode/iconv) or remove these which you don't use.
Character sets will be shown in same order as here listed, so if you
frequently use some of these move them to the top.
- $cfg['TrustedProxies'] array
- Lists proxies and HTTP headers which are trusted for IP Allow/Deny. This list is by
default empty, you need to fill in some trusted proxy servers if you
want to use rules for IP addresses behind proxy.
The following example specifies that phpMyAdmin should trust a
HTTP_X_FORWARDED_FOR (X-Forwarded-For) header coming from the proxy 1.2.3.4:
$cfg['TrustedProxies'] =
array('1.2.3.4' => 'HTTP_X_FORWARDED_FOR');
The $cfg['Servers'][$i]['AllowDeny']['rules'] directive uses the
client's IP address as usual.
- $cfg['GD2Available'] string
- Specifies whether GD >= 2 is available. If yes it can be used for
MIME transformations.
Possible values are:
- auto - automatically detect, this is a bit expensive
operation for php < 4.3.0 so it is preferred to change this
according to your server real possibilities
- yes - GD 2 functions can be used
- no - GD 2 function cannot be used
Default is auto.
- $cfg['NaviWidth'] integer
- Navi frame width in pixels. See themes/themename/layout.inc.php.
- $cfg['NaviBackground'] string [valid css code for background]
$cfg['MainBackground'] string [valid css code for background]
- The background styles used for both the frames.
See themes/themename/layout.inc.php.
- $cfg['NaviPointerBackground'] string [valid css code for background]
$cfg['NaviPointerColor'] string [valid css color]
- The style used for the pointer in the navi frame.
See themes/themename/layout.inc.php.
- $cfg['NaviDatabaseNameColor'] string [valid css code]
- The color used for the database name in the navi frame.
See themes/themename/layout.inc.php.
- $cfg['LeftPointerEnable'] boolean
- A value of TRUE activates the navi pointer (when LeftFrameLight
is FALSE).
- $cfg['Border'] integer
- The size of a table's border. See themes/themename/layout.inc.php.
- $cfg['ThBackground'] string [valid css code for background]
$cfg['ThColor'] string [valid css color]
- The style used for table headers. See
themes/themename/layout.inc.php.
- $cfg['BgOne'] string [HTML color]
- The color (HTML) #1 for table rows. See themes/themename/layout.inc.php.
- $cfg['BgTwo'] string [HTML color]
- The color (HTML) #2 for table rows. See themes/themename/layout.inc.php.
- $cfg['BrowsePointerBackground'] string [HTML color]
$cfg['BrowsePointerColor'] string [HTML color]
$cfg['BrowseMarkerBackground'] string [HTML color]
$cfg['BrowseMarkerColor'] string [HTML color]
- The colors (HTML) uses for the pointer and the marker in browse mode.
The former feature highlights the row over which your mouse is passing
and the latter lets you visually mark/unmark rows by clicking on
them.
See themes/themename/layout.inc.php.
- $cfg['FontFamily'] string
- You put here a valid CSS font family value, for example
arial, sans-serif.
See themes/themename/layout.inc.php.
- $cfg['FontFamilyFixed'] string
- You put here a valid CSS font family value, for example
monospace. This one is used in textarea.
See themes/themename/layout.inc.php.
- $cfg['BrowsePointerEnable'] boolean
- Whether to activate the browse pointer or not.
- $cfg['BrowseMarkerEnable'] boolean
- Whether to activate the browse marker or not.
- $cfg['TextareaCols'] integer
$cfg['TextareaRows'] integer
$cfg['CharTextareaCols'] integer
$cfg['CharTextareaRows'] integer
- Number of columns and rows for the textareas.
This value will be emphasized (*2) for SQL query textareas and (*1.25) for
SQL textareas inside the query window.
The Char* values are used for CHAR and VARCHAR editing (if configured
via $cfg['CharEditing']).
- $cfg['LongtextDoubleTextarea'] boolean
- Defines whether textarea for LONGTEXT fields should have double size.
- $cfg['TextareaAutoSelect'] boolean
- Defines if the whole textarea of the query box will be selected on
click.
-
$cfg['CtrlArrowsMoving'] boolean
- Enable Ctrl+Arrows (Option+Arrows in Safari) moving between fields when
editing.
- $cfg['LimitChars'] integer
- Maximum number of characters showen in any non-numeric field on browse view.
Can be turned off by a toggle button on the browse page.
- $cfg['ModifyDeleteAtLeft'] boolean
$cfg['ModifyDeleteAtRight'] boolean
- Defines the place where modify and delete links would be put when
tables contents are displayed (you may have them displayed both at the
left and at the right).
"Left" and "right" are parsed as "top"
and "bottom" with vertical display mode.
- $cfg['DefaultDisplay'] string
string
- There are 3 display modes: horizontal, horizontalflipped and vertical.
Define which one is displayed by default. The first mode displays each
row on a horizontal line, the second rotates the headers by 90
degrees, so you can use descriptive headers even though fields only
contain small values and still print them out. The vertical mode sorts
each row on a vertical lineup.
The HeaderFlipType can be set to 'css' or 'fake'. When using 'css'
the rotation of the header for horizontalflipped is done via CSS. If
set to 'fake' PHP does the transformation for you, but of course this
does not look as good as CSS.
-
$cfg['DefaultPropDisplay']
string or integer
- When editing/creating new columns in a table all fields normally get
lined up one field a line. (default: 'horizontal'). If you set this to
'vertical' you can have each field lined up vertically beneath each
other. You can save up a lot of place on the horizontal direction and
no longer have to scroll. If you set this to integer, editing of fewer
columns will appear in 'vertical' mode, while editing of more fields
still in 'horizontal' mode. This way you can still effectively edit
large number of fields, while having full view on few of them.
- By setting the corresponding variable to TRUE you can enable the
display of column comments in Browse or Property display. In browse
mode, the comments are shown inside the header. In property mode,
comments are displayed using a CSS-formatted dashed-line below the
name of the field. The comment is shown as a tool-tip for that field.
- $cfg['SQLQuery']['Edit'] boolean
- Whether to display an edit link to change a query in any SQL Query box.
- $cfg['SQLQuery']['Explain'] boolean
- Whether to display a link to explain a SELECT query in any SQL Query box.
- $cfg['SQLQuery']['ShowAsPHP'] boolean
- Whether to display a link to wrap a query in PHP code in any SQL Query box.
- $cfg['SQLQuery']['Validate'] boolean
- Whether to display a link to validate a query in any SQL Query box.
See also $cfg_SQLValidator.
- $cfg['SQLQuery']['Refresh'] boolean
- Whether to display a link to refresh a query in any SQL Query box.
- $cfg['UploadDir'] string
-
The name of the directory where
SQL files have been
uploaded by other means than phpMyAdmin (for example, ftp). Those files
are available under a drop-down box when you click the database or
table name, then the Import tab.
If you want different directory for each user, %u will be replaced
with username.
Please note that the file names must have the suffix ".sql"
(or ".sql.bz2" or ".sql.gz" if support for
compressed formats is enabled).
This feature is useful when your file is too big to be uploaded via
HTTP, or when file
uploads are disabled in PHP.
Please note that if PHP is running in safe mode, this directory must
be owned by the same user as the owner of the phpMyAdmin scripts.
See also
FAQ 1.16 for
alternatives.
- $cfg['SaveDir'] string
-
The name of the directory where dumps can be saved.
If you want different directory for each user, %u will be replaced
with username.
Please note that the directory must exist and has to be writable
for the user running the webserver.
Please note that if PHP is running in safe mode, this directory must
be owned by the same user as the owner of the phpMyAdmin scripts.
- $cfg['TempDir'] string
-
The name of the directory where temporary files can be stored.
This is needed for native MS Excel export, see
FAQ
6.23
- $cfg['Export'] array
-
In this array are defined default parameters for export, names of
items are similar to texts seen on export page, so you can easily
identify what they mean.
- $cfg['Import'] array
-
In this array are defined default parameters for import, names of
items are similar to texts seen on import page, so you can easily
identify what they mean.
- $cfg['RepeatCells'] integer
-
Repeat the headers every X cells, or 0 to deactivate.
- $cfg['EditInWindow'] boolean
$cfg['QueryWindowWidth'] integer
$cfg['QueryWindowHeight'] integer
$cfg['QueryHistoryDB'] boolean
$cfg['QueryWindowDefTab'] string
$cfg['QueryHistoryMax'] integer
-
All those variables affect the query window feature. A SQL link
or icon is always displayed on the left panel. If JavaScript is enabled in
your browser, a click on this opens a distinct query window, which is
a direct interface to enter SQL queries. Otherwise, the right panel
changes to display a query box.
The size of this query window can be customized with
$cfg['QueryWindowWidth'] and $cfg['QueryWindowWidth']
- both integers for the size in pixels. Note that normally, those
parameters will be modified in layout.inc.php for the
theme you are using.
If $cfg['EditInWindow'] is set to true, a click on [Edit]
from the results page (in the "Showing Rows" section)
opens the query window and puts the current query
inside it. If set to false, clicking on the link puts the SQL
query in the right panel's query box.
The usage of the JavaScript query window is recommended if you have a
JavaScript enabled browser. Basic functions are used to exchange quite
a few variables, so most 4th generation browsers should be capable to
use that feature. It currently is only tested with Internet Explorer 6
and Mozilla 1.x.
If $cfg['QueryHistoryDB'] is set to TRUE, all your Queries are logged
to a table, which has to be created by you (see $cfg['Servers'][$i]['history']). If set to FALSE,
all your queries will be appended to the form, but only as long as
your window is opened they remain saved.
When using the JavaScript based query window, it will always get
updated when you click on a new table/db to browse and will focus if
you click on "Edit SQL" after using a query. You can suppress updating
the query window by checking the box "Do not overwrite this query from
outside the window" below the query textarea. Then you can browse
tables/databases in the background without losing the contents of the
textarea, so this is especially useful when composing a query with
tables you first have to look in. The checkbox will get automatically
checked whenever you change the contents of the textarea. Please
uncheck the button whenever you definitely want the query window to
get updated even though you have made alterations.
If $cfg['QueryHistoryDB'] is set to TRUE you can specify the amount of
saved history items using $cfg['QueryHistoryMax'].
The query window also has a custom tabbed look to group the features.
Using the variable $cfg['QueryWindowDefTab'] you can specify the
default tab to be used when opening the query window. It can be set to
either 'sql', 'files', 'history' or 'full'.
- $cfg['BrowseMIME'] boolean
- Enable MIME-transformations.
- $cfg['MaxExactCount'] integer
- For InnoDB tables, determines for how large tables phpMyAdmin
should get the exact row count using
SELECT COUNT
.
If the approximate row count as returned by
SHOW TABLE STATUS
is smaller than this value,
SELECT COUNT
will be used, otherwise the approximate
count will be used.
- $cfg['MaxExactCountViews'] integer
- For VIEWs, since obtaining the exact count could have an
impact on performance, this value is the maximum to be displayed, using
a
SELECT COUNT ... LIMIT
. The default value of 0 bypasses
any row counting.
-
$cfg['WYSIWYG-PDF'] boolean
- Utilizes a WYSIWYG editing control to easily place elements of a
PDF
page. By clicking on the button 'toggle scratchboard' on the page
where you edit x/y coordinates of those elements you can activate a
scratchboard where all your elements are placed. By clicking on an
element, you can move them around in the pre-defined area and the x/y
coordinates will get updated dynamically. Likewise, when entering a
new position directly into the input field, the new position in the
scratchboard changes after your cursor leaves the input field.
You have to click on the 'OK'-button below the tables to save the new
positions. If you want to place a new element, first add it to the
table of elements and then you can drag the new element around.
By changing the paper size and the orientation you can change the size
of the scratchboard as well. You can do so by just changing the
dropdown field below, and the scratchboard will resize automatically,
without interfering with the current placement of the elements.
If ever an element gets out of range you can either enlarge the paper
size or click on the 'reset' button to place all elements below each
other.
NOTE: You have to use a recent browser like IE6 or Mozilla to
get this control to work. The basic Drag&Drop script functionality
was kindly borrowed from www.youngpup.net and is underlying so
specific license.
- $cfg['NaturalOrder'] boolean
- Sorts database and table names according to natural order (for example,
t1, t2, t10). Currently implemented in the left panel (Light mode)
and in Database view, for the table list.
- $cfg['TitleTable'] string
- $cfg['TitleDatabase'] string
- $cfg['TitleServer'] string
- $cfg['TitleDefault'] string
- Allows you to specify window's title bar. Following magic string can
be used to get special values:
@HTTP_HOST@
- HTTP host that runs phpMyAdmin
@SERVER@
- MySQL server name
@VERBOSE@
- Verbose MySQL server name as defined in server configuration
@VSERVER@
- Verbose MySQL server name if set, otherwise normal
@DATABASE@
- Currently opened database
@TABLE@
- Currently opened table
@PHPMYADMIN@
- phpMyAdmin with version
- $cfg['ErrorIconic'] boolean
- Uses icons for warnings, errors and informations.
- $cfg['MainPageIconic'] boolean
- Uses icons on main page in lists and menu tabs.
- $cfg['ReplaceHelpImg'] boolean
- Shows a help button instead of the "Documentation" message.
- $cfg['ThemePath'] string
- If theme manager is active, use this as the path of the subdirectory
containing all the themes.
- $cfg['ThemeManager'] boolean
- Enables user-selectable themes. See
FAQ 2.7.
- $cfg['ThemeDefault'] string
- The default theme (a subdirectory under cfg['ThemePath']).
- $cfg['ThemePerServer'] boolean
- Whether to allow different theme for each server.
- $cfg['DefaultQueryTable'] string
$cfg['DefaultQueryDatabase'] string
- Default queries that will be displayed in query boxes when user didn't
specify any. Use %d for database name, %t for table name and %f for a
comma separated list of field names. Note that %t and %f are only
applicable to $cfg['DefaultQueryTable'].
- $cfg['SQP']['fmtType'] string [html|none]
-
The main use of the new SQL Parser is to pretty-print SQL queries. By
default we use HTML to format the query, but you can disable this by
setting this variable to 'none'.
- $cfg['SQP']['fmtInd'] float
$cfg['SQP']['fmtIndUnit'] string [em|px|pt|ex]
- For the pretty-printing of SQL queries, under some cases the part of a
query inside a bracket is indented. By changing
$cfg['SQP']['fmtInd'] you can change the amount of this indent.
Related in purpose is $cfg['SQP']['fmtIndUnit'] which
specifies the units of the indent amount that you specified. This is
used via stylesheets.
- $cfg['SQP']['fmtColor'] array of string tuples
- This array is used to define the colours for each type of element of
the pretty-printed SQL queries. The tuple format is
class => [HTML colour code | empty string]
If you specify an empty string for the color of a class, it is ignored
in creating the stylesheet.
You should not alter the class names, only the colour strings.
Class name key:
- comment Applies to all comment sub-classes
- comment_mysql Comments as "#...\n"
- comment_ansi Comments as "-- ...\n"
- comment_c Comments as "/*...*/"
- digit Applies to all digit sub-classes
- digit_hex Hexadecimal numbers
- digit_integer Integer numbers
- digit_float Floating point numbers
- punct Applies to all punctuation sub-classes
- punct_bracket_open_round Opening brackets"("
- punct_bracket_close_round Closing brackets ")"
- punct_listsep List item Separator ","
- punct_qualifier Table/Column Qualifier "."
- punct_queryend End of query marker ";"
- alpha Applies to all alphabetic classes
- alpha_columnType Identifiers matching a column type
- alpha_columnAttrib Identifiers matching a database/table/column attribute
- alpha_functionName Identifiers matching a MySQL function name
- alpha_reservedWord Identifiers matching any other reserved word
- alpha_variable Identifiers matching a SQL variable "@foo"
- alpha_identifier All other identifiers
- quote Applies to all quotation mark classes
- quote_double Double quotes "
- quote_single Single quotes '
- quote_backtick Backtick quotes `
- $cfg['SQLValidator'] boolean
- $cfg['SQLValidator']['use'] boolean
- phpMyAdmin now supports use of the Mimer SQL Validator service,
as originally published on
Slashdot.
For help in setting up your system to use the service, see the
FAQ 6.14.
- $cfg['SQLValidator']['username'] string
$cfg['SQLValidator']['password'] string
- The SOAP service allows you to log in with anonymous
and any password, so we use those by default. Instead, if
you have an account with them, you can put your login details
here, and it will be used in place of the anonymous login.
- $cfg['DBG']
- DEVELOPERS ONLY!
- $cfg['DBG']['enable'] boolean
- DEVELOPERS ONLY!
Enable the DBG extension for debugging phpMyAdmin. Required for profiling
the code.
For help in setting up your system to this, see the
Developers section.
- $cfg['DBG']['profile']['enable'] boolean
- DEVELOPERS ONLY!
Enable profiling support for phpMyAdmin. This will append a chunk of data
to the end of every page displayed in the main window with profiling
statistics for that page.
You may need to increase the maximum execution time for this to
complete successfully.Profiling was removed from the code for
version 2.9.0 due to licensing issues.
- $cfg['DBG']['profile']['threshold'] float (units in milliseconds)
- DEVELOPERS ONLY!
When profiling data is displayed, this variable controls the threshold of
display for any profiling data, based on the average time each time has
taken. If it is over the threshold it is displayed, otherwise it is not
displayed. This takes a value in milliseconds. In most cases you don't need
to edit this.
- $cfg['ColumnTypes'] array
- All possible types of a MySQL column. In most cases you don't need to
edit this.
- $cfg['AttributeTypes'] array
- Possible attributes for fields. In most cases you don't need to edit
this.
- $cfg['Functions'] array
- A list of functions MySQL supports. In most cases you don't need to
edit this.
- $cfg['RestrictColumnTypes'] array
- Mapping of column types to meta types used for preferring displayed
functions. In most cases you don't need to edit this.
- $cfg['RestrictFunctions'] array
- Functions preferred for column meta types as defined in
$cfg['RestrictColumnTypes']. In most cases you don't need
to edit this.
- $cfg['DefaultFunctions'] array
- Functions selected by default when inserting/changing row, Functions
are defined for meta types from
$cfg['RestrictColumnTypes'] and for
first_timestamp
, which is used for first timestamp column
in table.
- $cfg['NumOperators'] array
- Operators available for search operations on numeric and date fields.
- $cfg['TextOperators'] array
- Operators available for search operations on character fields.
Note that we put
LIKE
by default instead of
LIKE %...%
, to avoid unintended performance problems
in case of huge tables.
- $cfg['EnumOperators'] array
- Operators available for search operations on enum fields.
- $cfg['NullOperators'] array
- Additional operators available for search operations when the
field can be null.
- Introduction
- Usage
- File structure
To enable transformations, you have to setup the column_info table
and the proper directives. Please see the Configuration
section on how to do so.
You can apply different transformations to the contents of each field. The
transformation will take the content of each field and transform it with
certain rules defined in the selected transformation.
Say you have a field 'filename' which contains a filename. Normally you would
see in phpMyAdmin only this filename. Using transformations you can transform
that filename into a HTML link, so you can click inside of the phpMyAdmin
structure on the field's link and will see the file displayed in a new browser
window. Using transformation options you can also specify strings to
append/prepend to a string or the format you want the output stored in.
For a general overview of all available transformations and their options,
you can consult your
<www.your-host.com>/<your-install-dir>/transformation_overview.php
installation.
For a tutorial on how to effectively use transformations, see our
Link section on
the official phpMyAdmin homepage.
Go to your tbl_structure.php page (i.e. reached through
clicking on the 'Structure' link for a table). There click on
"Change" (or change icon) and there you will see three new fields at
the end of the line. They are called 'MIME-type', 'Browser transformation' and
'Transformation options'.
- The field 'MIME-type' is a drop-down field. Select the MIME-type
that corresponds to the column's contents. Please note that
transformations are inactive as long as no MIME-type is selected.
- The field 'Browser transformation' is a drop-down field. You can choose from a
hopefully growing amount of pre-defined transformations. See below for information on
how to build your own transformation.
There are global transformations and mimetype-bound transformations. Global transformations
can be used for any mimetype. They will take the mimetype, if necessary, into regard.
Mimetype-bound transformations usually only operate on a certain mimetype. There are
transformations which operate on the main mimetype (like 'image'), which will most likely
take the subtype into regard, and those who only operate on a
specific subtype (like 'image/jpeg').
You can use transformations on mimetypes for which the function was not defined for. There
is no security check for you selected the right transformation, so take care of what the
output will be like.
- The field 'Transformation options' is a free-type textfield. You have to enter
transform-function specific options here. Usually the transforms can operate with default
options, but it is generally a good idea to look up the overview to see which options are
necessary.
Much like the ENUM/SET-Fields, you have to split up several options using the format
'a','b','c',...(NOTE THE MISSING BLANKS). This is because internally the options will be
parsed as an array, leaving the first value the first element in the array, and so
forth.
If you want to specify a MIME character set you can define it in the transformation_options.
You have to put that outside of the pre-defined options of the specific mime-transform,
as the last value of the set. Use the format "'; charset=XXX'". If you use a transform,
for which you can specify 2 options and you want to append a character set, enter "'first
parameter','second parameter','charset=us-ascii'". You can, however use the defaults for
the parameters: "'','','charset=us-ascii'".
All mimetypes and their transformations are defined through single files in
the directory 'libraries/transformations/'.
They are stored in files to ease up customization and easy adding of new
transformations.
Because the user cannot enter own mimetypes, it is kept sure that transformations
always work. It makes no sense to apply a transformation to a mimetype, the
transform-function doesn't know to handle.
One can, however, use empty mime-types and global transformations which should work
for many mimetypes. You can also use transforms on a different mimetype they where built
for, but pay attention to option usage as well as what the transformation does to your
field.
There is a basic file called 'global.inc.php'. This function can be included by
any other transform function and provides some basic functions.
There are 5 possible file names:
- A mimetype+subtype transform:
[mimetype]_[subtype]__[transform].inc.php
Please not that mimetype and subtype are separated via '_', which shall
not be contained in their names. The transform function/filename may
contain only characters which cause no problems in the file system as
well as the PHP function naming convention.
The transform function will the be called
'PMA_transform_[mimetype]_[subtype]__[transform]()'.
Example:
text_html__formatted.inc.php
PMA_transform_text_html__formatted()
- A mimetype (w/o subtype) transform:
[mimetype]__[transform].inc.php
Please note that there are no single '_' characters.
The transform function/filename may contain only characters which cause
no problems in the file system as well as the PHP function naming
convention.
The transform function will the be called
'PMA_transform_[mimetype]__[transform]()'.
Example:
text__formatted.inc.php
PMA_transform_text__formatted()
- A mimetype+subtype without specific transform function
[mimetype]_[subtype].inc.php
Please note that there are no '__' characters in the filename. Do not
use special characters in the filename causing problems with the file
system.
No transformation function is defined in the file itself.
Example:
text_plain.inc.php
(No function)
- A mimetype (w/o subtype) without specific transform function
[mimetype].inc.php
Please note that there are no '_' characters in the filename. Do not use
special characters in the filename causing problems with the file system.
No transformation function is defined in the file itself.
Example:
text.inc.php
(No function)
- A global transform function with no specific mimetype
global__[transform].inc.php
The transform function will the be called
'PMA_transform_global__[transform]()'.
Example:
global__formatted
PMA_transform_global__formatted()
So generally use '_' to split up mimetype and subtype, and '__' to provide a
transform function.
All filenames containing no '__' in themselves are not shown as valid transform
functions in the dropdown.
Please see the libraries/transformations/TEMPLATE file for adding your own transform
function. See the libraries/transformations/TEMPLATE_MIMETYPE for adding a mimetype
without a transform function. Also note the introduction of a function description in
the language files. For each function a $strTransformation_[filename without .inc.php]
has to exist.
You can use the template generator to generate new functions and entries in the
language file.
To create a new transform function please see
libraries/transformations/template_generator.sh.
To create a new, empty mimetype please see
libraries/transformations/template_generator_mimetype.sh.
A transform function always gets passed three variables:
- $buffer - Contains the text inside of the column. This is the text,
you want to transform.
- $options - Contains any user-passed options to a transform function
as an array.
- $meta - Contains an object with field information to your column.
The data is drawn from the output of the
mysql_fetch_field()
function. This means, all object properties described on the
manual page are
available in this variable and can be used to transform a field accordingly
to unsigned/zerofill/not_null/... properties.
The $meta->mimetype variable contains the original MIME-type of the
field (i.e. 'text/plain', 'image/jpeg' etc.)
FAQ - Frequently Asked Questions
- Server
- Configuration
- Known limitations
- ISPs, multi-user installations
- Browsers or client OS
- Using phpMyAdmin
- phpMyAdmin project
- Security
Please have a look at our
Link section on
the official phpMyAdmin homepage for in-depth coverage of phpMyAdmin's
features and or interface.
Server
There are some known PHP bugs with output buffering and compression.
Try to set the $cfg['OBGzip']
directive to FALSE in your config.inc.php file and the
zlib.output_compression directive to Off in your php
configuration file.
Furthermore, we know about such problems connected to the release
candidates of PHP 4.2.0 (tested with PHP 4.2.0 RC1 to RC4) together with
MS Internet Explorer. Please upgrade to the release version PHP 4.2.0.
You should first try the latest versions of Apache (and possibly MySQL).
See also the
FAQ 1.1
entry about PHP bugs with output buffering.
If your server keeps crashing, please ask for help in the various Apache
support groups.
This is a known PHP bug (see this
bug report) from the
official PHP bug database. It means there is and won't be any phpMyAdmin
fix against it because there is no way to code a fix.
You just forgot to read the install.txt file from the php distribution.
Have a look at the last message in this
bug report from the
official PHP bug database.
This is a known problem with the PHP
ISAPI
filter: it's not so stable. Please use instead the cookie authentication mode.
This seems to be a PWS bug. Filippo Simoncini found a workaround (at this
time there is no better fix): remove or comment the DOCTYPE
declarations (2 lines) from the scripts libraries/header.inc.php,
libraries/header_printview.inc.php, index.php,
navigation.php and libraries/common.lib.php.
These features are based on the gzencode() and bzcompress()
PHP functions to be more independent of the platform (Unix/Windows, Safe Mode
or not, and so on). So, you must have PHP4 >= 4.0.4 and Zlib/Bzip2
support (--with-zlib and --with-bz2).
We faced PHP crashes when trying to download a dump with MS Internet
Explorer when phpMyAdmin is run with a release candidate of PHP 4.2.0. In
this case you should switch to the release version of PHP 4.2.0.
Your uploaded file is saved by PHP in the "upload dir", as
defined in php.ini by the variable upload_tmp_dir (usually
the system default is /tmp).
We recommend the following setup for Apache servers running in safe mode,
to enable uploads of files while being reasonably secure:
- create a separate directory for uploads: mkdir /tmp/php
- give ownership to the Apache server's user.group:
chown apache.apache /tmp/php
- give proper permission: chmod 600 /tmp/php
- put upload_tmp_dir = /tmp/php in php.ini
- restart Apache
It's not really phpMyAdmin related but RedHat 7.0. You have a RedHat 7.0
and you updated your PHP RPM to php-4.0.4pl1-3.i386.rpm, didn't you?
So the problem is that this package has a serious bug that was corrected
ages ago in PHP (2001-01-28: see
PHP's bug tracking system
for more details). The problem is that the bugged package is still
available though it was corrected (see
RedHat's BugZilla
for more details).
So please download
the fixed package (4.0.4pl1-9)
and the problem should go away.
And that fixes the \r\n problem with file uploads!
As suggested by "Rob M" in the phpWizard forum, add this line to
your httpd.conf:
SetEnvIf User-Agent ".*MSIE.*" nokeepalive ssl-unclean-shutdown
It seems to clear up many problems between Internet Explorer and SSL.
Since version 2.2.4, phpMyAdmin supports servers with open_basedir
restrictions. Assuming that the restriction allows you to open files in the
current directory ('.'), all you have to do is create a 'tmp' directory
under the phpMyAdmin install directory, with permissions 777 and the same
owner as the owner of your phpMyAdmin directory. The uploaded files will
be moved there, and after execution of your
SQL commands, removed.
The MySQL manual explains how to
reset the permissions.
If PHP does not have read/write access to its upload_tmp_dir, it
cannot access the uploaded query.
Check the post_max_size directive from your PHP configuration file
and try to increase it.
In previous MySQL versions, the User and Password fields
were named user and password. Please modify your field
names to align with current standards.
Starting with version 2.7.0, the import engine has been re–written and these
problems should not occur. If possible, upgrade your phpMyAdmin to the latest version
to take advantage of the new import features.
The first things to check (or ask your host provider to check) are the
values of upload_max_filesize, memory_limit and
post_max_size in the php.ini configuration file.
All of these three settings limit the maximum size of data that can be
submitted and handled by PHP. One user also said that post_max_size
and memory_limit need to be larger than upload_max_filesize.
There exist several workarounds if your upload is too big or your
hosting provider is unwilling to change the settings:
- Look at the $cfg['UploadDir']
feature. This allows one to
upload a file to the server via scp, ftp, or your favorite file transfer
method. PhpMyAdmin is then able to import the files from the temporary
directory. More information is available in the Configuration
section of this document.
- Using a utility (such as
BigDump) to split the files before uploading. We cannot support this
or any third party applications, but are aware of users having success
with it.
- If you have shell (command line) access, use MySQL to import the files
directly. You can do this by issuing the "source" command from
within MySQL: source filename.sql.
All MySQL versions from 3.23.32 till 5.0 (except for 4.1.0 and 4.1.1) are
fully supported. Please note that the older your MySQL version is, the more
limitations you will have to face.
phpMyAdmin may connect to your MySQL server using php's classic
MySQL extension as well as the
improved MySQL extension (MySQLi) that
is available in php 5.0.
Either way, the developers of both extensions recommend to use the classic
extension for MySQL 4.0 and below and MySQLi for MySQL 4.1 and newer.
When compiling php, we strongly recommend that you manually link the MySQL
extension of your choice to a MySQL client library of at least the same
minor version since the one that is bundled with some php distributions is
rather old and might cause problems
(see FAQ 1.17a).
If your webserver is running on a windows system, you might want to try
MySQL's
Connector/PHP
instead of the MySQL / MySQLi extensions that are bundled with the official
php Win32 builds.
MySQL 5.1 is not yet supported.
You tried to access MySQL with an old MySQL client library. The version of
your MySQL client library can be checked in your phpinfo() output.
In general, it should have at least the same minor version as your server
- as mentioned in
FAQ 1.17.
This problem is generally caused by using MySQL version 4.1 or newer. MySQL
changed the authentication hash and your PHP is trying to use the old method.
The proper solution is to use the mysqli extension
with the proper client library to match your MySQL installation. Your
chosen extension is specified in $cfg['Servers'][$i]['extension'].
More information (and several workarounds) are located in the
MySQL Documentation.
This is a bug of MySQL <= 4.0.1. Please upgrade to at least
MySQL 4.0.2 or turn off your lower_case_table_names
directive.
The "FPDF" library we're using for this feature requires some
special files to use font faces.
Please refers to the FPDF manual to build
these files.
To connect to a MySQL server, PHP needs a set of MySQL functions called
"MySQL extension". This extension may be part of the PHP
distribution (compiled-in), otherwise it needs to be loaded dynamically. Its
name is probably mysql.so or php_mysql.dll. phpMyAdmin tried
to load the extension but failed.
Usually, the problem is solved by installing a software package called
"PHP-MySQL" or something similar.
In php.ini, set mysql.max_links higher than 1.
This is most likely because in php.ini, your file_uploads
parameter is not set to "on".
This happens because the MySQL directive lower_case_table_names
defaults to 1 (ON) in the Win32 version of MySQL. You can change
this behavior by simply changing the directive to 0 (OFF):
Just edit your my.ini file that should be located in your Windows
directory and add the following line to the group [mysqld]:
set-variable = lower_case_table_names=0
Next, save the file and restart the MySQL service. You can always check the
value of this directive using the query
SHOW VARIABLES LIKE 'lower_case_table_names';
This is a PHP 4.2.3 bug.
A tip from Jose Fandos: put a comment on the following two lines
in httpd.conf, like this:
# mod_gzip_item_include file \.php$
# mod_gzip_item_include mime "application/x-httpd-php.*"
as this version of mod_gzip on Apache (Windows) has problems handling
PHP scripts. Of course you have to restart Apache.
This is a permission problem. Right-click on the phpmyadmin folder
and choose properties. Under the tab Security, click on "Add"
and select the user "IUSR_machine" from the list. Now set his
permissions and it should work.
This is a PHP bug that occur when
GZIP output buffering is enabled. If you turn off it (by
$cfg['OBGzip'] = false
in config.inc.php), it should work. This bug will be fixed in
PHP 5.0.0.
This can happen due to a MySQL bug when having database / table names with
upper case characters although lower_case_table_names is set to 1.
To fix this, turn off this directive, convert all database and table names
to lower case and turn it on again. Alternatively, there's a bug-fix
available starting with MySQL 3.23.56 / 4.0.11-gamma.
It is possible to configure Apache in such a way that PHP has problems
interpreting .php files.
The problems occur when two different (and conflicting) set of directives
are used:
SetOutputFilter PHP
SetInputFilter PHP
and
AddType application/x-httpd-php .php
In the case we saw, one set of directives was in
/etc/httpd/conf/httpd.conf, while
the other set was in /etc/httpd/conf/addon-modules/php.conf.
The recommended way is with AddType, so just comment out
the first set of lines and restart Apache:
#SetOutputFilter PHP
#SetInputFilter PHP
This problem is known to happen when the server is running Turck MMCache
but upgrading MMCache to version 2.3.21 solves the problem.
Yes.
However, phpMyAdmin needs to be backwards compatible to php4. This is why
phpMyAdmin disables the E_STRICT error_level in
error_reporting settings.
Yes. This procedure was tested with phpMyAdmin 2.6.1, PHP 4.3.9 in ISAPI
mode under IIS 5.1.
- In your php.ini file, set cgi.rfc2616_headers = 0
- In Web Site Properties -> File/Directory Security -> Anonymous
Access dialog box, check the Anonymous access checkbox and
uncheck any other checkboxes (i.e. uncheck Basic authentication,
Integrated Windows authentication, and Digest if it's
enabled.) Click OK.
- In Custom Errors, select the range of 401;1 through
401;5 and click the Set to Default button.
Yes. This problem affects phpMyAdmin ("Call to undefined function
pma_reloadnavigation"), so upgrade your PHP to the next version.
Yes. Out of the box, you can use URLs like
http://server/phpMyAdmin/index.php?db=database&table=table&target=script.
Table and script parts are optional. If you want
http://server/phpMyAdmin/database[/table][/script] URLs, you need to do
some configuration. Following lines apply only for Apache web server. First make sure,
that you have enabled some features within global configuration. You need
Options FollowSymLinks
and AllowOverride
FileInfo
enabled for directory where phpMyAdmin is installed and
you need mod_rewrite to be enabled. Then you just need to create following
.htaccess
file in root folder of phpMyAdmin installation
(don't forget to change directory name inside of it):
RewriteEngine On
RewriteBase /path_to_phpMyAdmin
RewriteRule ^([a-zA-Z0-9_]+)/([a-zA-Z0-9_]+)/([a-z_]+\.php)$ index.php?db=$1&table=$2&target=$3 [R]
RewriteRule ^([a-zA-Z0-9_]+)/([a-z_]+\.php)$ index.php?db=$1&target=$2 [R]
RewriteRule ^([a-zA-Z0-9_]+)/([a-zA-Z0-9_]+)$ index.php?db=$1&table=$2 [R]
RewriteRule ^([a-zA-Z0-9_]+)$ index.php?db=$1 [R]
Yes. However you need to pass authentication variable to CGI using
following rewrite rule:
RewriteEngine On
RewriteRule .* - [E=REMOTE_USER:%{HTTP:Authorization},L]
There can be many explanations to this and a look at your server's
error log file might give a clue.
If your cluster consist of different architectures, PHP code used for
encryption/decryption won't work correct. This is caused by use of
pack/unpack functions in code. Only solution is to use mcrypt extension
which works fine in this case.
Yes but the default configuration values of Suhosin are known to cause
problems with some operations, for example editing a table with many
columns and no primary key. Tuning information is available at
http://www.hardened-php.net/hphp/troubleshooting.html,
although the parameter names have changed (suhosin instead
of hphp). See also the
SuhosinDisableWarning directive.
Configuration
Edit your config.inc.php file and ensure there is nothing
(I.E. no blank lines, no spaces, no characters...) neither before the
<?php tag at the beginning, neither after the ?>
tag at the end. We also got a report from a user under IIS, that used
a zipped distribution kit: the file libraries/Config.class.php
contained an end-of-line character (hex 0A) at the end; removing this character
cleared his errors.
Either there is an error with your PHP setup or your username/password is
wrong. Try to make a small script which uses mysql_connect and see if it
works. If it doesn't, it may be you haven't even compiled MySQL support
into PHP.
For RedHat users, Harald Legner suggests this on the mailing list:
On my RedHat-Box the socket of MySQL is /var/lib/mysql/mysql.sock.
In your php.ini you will find a line
mysql.default_socket = /tmp/mysql.sock
change it to
mysql.default_socket = /var/lib/mysql/mysql.sock
Then restart apache and it will work.
Here is a fix suggested by Brad Ummer:
- First, you need to determine what socket is being used by MySQL.
To do this, telnet to your server and go to the MySQL bin directory. In
this directory there should be a file named mysqladmin. Type
./mysqladmin variables, and this should give you a bunch of
info about your MySQL server, including the socket
(/tmp/mysql.sock, for example).
- Then, you need to tell PHP to use this socket.
To do this in
phpMyAdmin, you need to complete the socket information in the
config.inc.php.
For example:
$cfg['Servers'][$i]['socket'] = '/tmp/mysql.sock';
Please also make sure that the permissions of this file allow to be readable
by your webserver (i.e. '0755').
Have also a look at the
corresponding section of the MySQL documentation.
Try to set the $cfg['OBGZip']
directive to FALSE in the phpMyAdmin configuration file. It helps
sometime.
Also have a look at your PHP version number: if it contains "4.0b..."
it means you're running a beta version of PHP. That's not a so good idea,
please upgrade to a plain revision.
Check the value you set for the
$cfg['PmaAbsoluteUri']
directive in the phpMyAdmin configuration file.
When you are using a port on your localhost, which you redirect via
port-forwarding to another host, MySQL is not resolving the localhost
as expected.
Erik Wasser explains: The solution is: if your host is "localhost"
MySQL (the commandline tool 'mysql' as well) always tries to use the socket
connection for speeding up things. And that doesn't work in this configuration
with port forwarding.
If you enter "127.0.0.1" as hostname, everything is right and MySQL uses the
TCP connection.
Themes are configured with
$cfg['ThemePath'],
$cfg['ThemeManager'] and
$cfg['ThemeDefault'].
Under $cfg['ThemePath'], you
should not delete the directory "original" or its underlying
structure, because this is the system theme used by phpMyAdmin.
"original" contains all images and styles, for backwards
compatibility and for all themes that would not include images or css-files.
If $cfg['ThemeManager']
is enabled, you can select your favorite theme on the main page. Your
selected theme will be stored in a cookie.
To create a theme:
- make a new subdirectory (for example "your_theme_name") under
$cfg['ThemePath']
(by default themes)
- copy the files and directories from "original" to
"your_theme_name"
- edit the css-files in "your_theme_name/css"
- put your new images in "your_theme_name/img"
- edit layout.inc.php in "your_theme_name"
- edit info.inc.php in "your_theme_name" to
contain your chosen theme name, that will be visible in user interface
- make a new screenshot of your theme and save it under
"your_theme_name/screen.png"
In theme directory there is file info.inc.php which contains
theme verbose name, theme generation and theme version. These versions and
generations are enumerated from 1 and do not have any direct dependence on
phpMyAdmin version. Themes within same generation should be backwards
compatible - theme with version 2 should work in phpMyAdmin requiring
version 1. Themes with different generation are incompatible.
If you do not want to use your own symbols and buttons, remove the
directory "img" in "your_theme_name". phpMyAdmin will
use the default icons and buttons (from the system-theme "original").
Here are a few points to check:
- In config.inc.php, try to leave the
$cfg['PmaAbsoluteUri']
directive empty. See also
FAQ 4.7.
- Maybe you have a broken PHP installation or you need to upgrade
your Zend Optimizer. See
http://bugs.php.net/bug.php?id=31134.
- If you are using Hardened PHP with the ini directive varfilter.max_request_variables
set to the default (200) or another low value, you could get this
error if your table has a high number of columns. Adjust this setting
accordingly. (Thanks to Klaus Dorninger for the hint).
- In the php.ini directive arg_separator.input, a value
of ";" will cause this error. Replace it with "&;".
- If you are using Hardened-PHP,
you might want to increase
request limits.
- The directory specified in the php.ini directive session.save_path does not exist or is read-only.
Known limitations
This is related to the authentication mechanism (protocol) used by
phpMyAdmin. To bypass this problem: just close all the opened
browser windows and then go back to phpMyAdmin. You should be able to
log in again.
Compressed dumps are built in memory and because of this are limited to
php's memory limit. For GZip/BZip2 exports this can be overcome since 2.5.4
using
$cfg['CompressOnFly']
(enabled by default). Zip exports can not be handled this way, so if you need
Zip files for larger dump, you have to use another way.
This seems to be a InnoDB bug (fixed in MySQL 3.23.50?).
The problem is that older versions of mysqldump created invalid comments like this:
-- MySQL dump 8.22
--
-- Host: localhost Database: database
---------------------------------------------------------
-- Server version 3.23.54
The invalid part of the code is the horizontal line made of dashes that
appears once in every dump created with mysqldump. If you want to run your
dump you have to turn it into valid MySQL. This means, you have to add a
whitespace after the first two dashes of the line or add a # before it:
-- -------------------------------------------------------
or
#---------------------------------------------------------
Please note that you should not use the separating string multiple times
without any characters between them, or at the beginning/end of your table
name. If you have to, think about using another TableSeparator or disabling
that feature
In Relation view, being able to choose a table in another database,
or having more than one index field in the foreign key.
In Query-by-example (Query), automatic generation of the query
LEFT JOIN from the foreign table.
Your table neither have a primary key nor an unique one, so we must use a
long expression to identify this row. This causes problems to parse_url
function. The workaround is to create a primary or unique key.
Due to a surrounding form-container (for multi-row delete checkboxes), no
nested forms can be put inside the table where phpMyAdmin displays the results.
You can, however, use any form inside of a table if keep the parent
form-container with the target to tbl_row_delete.php and just put your own
input-elements inside. If you use a custom submit input field, the form will
submit itself to the displaying page again, where you can validate the
$HTTP_POST_VARS in a transformation.
For a tutorial on how to effectively use transformations, see our
Link section
on the official phpMyAdmin-homepage.
When MySQL is running in ANSI-compatibility mode, there are some major
differences in how SQL is
structured (see
http://dev.mysql.com/doc/mysql/en/ANSI_mode.html). Most important of all,
the quote-character (") is interpreted as an identifier quote character and
not as a string quote character, which makes many internal phpMyAdmin
operations into invalid SQL
statements. There is no workaround to this behaviour. News to this item will
be posted in Bug report
#816858
Please make sure that your table has a primary key, so that phpMyAdmin
can use it for the Edit and Delete links.
phpMyAdmin uses a quick method to get the row count, and this method
only returns an approximate count in the case of InnoDB tables. See
$cfg['MaxExactCount'] for
a way to modify those results, but
this could have a serious impact on performance.
The number of records in queries containing COUNT and GROUP BY is
not correctly calculated. Also, sorting results of a query like
"SELECT * from table GROUP BY" ... is problematic.
The tests I have made with current MySQL 4.1.11 API shows that the
API does not accept this syntax for the USE command. Enclosing the
db name with backquotes works. For further confusion, no backquotes
are needed with command-line mysql.
This has been a known limitation of phpMyAdmin since the beginning and
it's not likely to be solved in the future.
ISPs, multi-user installations
Since version 2.0.3, you can setup a central copy of phpMyAdmin for all
your users. The development of this feature was kindly sponsored by
NetCologne GmbH.
This requires a properly setup MySQL user management and phpMyAdmin
HTTP or cookie authentication. See the install section on
"Using HTTP authentication".
This depends on your system.
If you're running a server which cannot be accessed by other people, it's
sufficient to use the directory protection bundled with your webserver
(with Apache you can use .htaccess files, for example).
If other people have telnet access to your server, you should use
phpMyAdmin's HTTP or cookie authentication features.
Suggestions:
-
Your config.inc.php file should be chmod 660.
-
All your phpMyAdmin files should be chown -R phpmy.apache, where phpmy
is a user whose password is only known to you, and apache is the
group under which Apache runs.
-
You should use PHP safe mode, to protect from other users that try
to include your config.inc.php in their scripts.
Check php.ini, or ask your sysadmin to check it. The
include_path must contain "." somewhere in it, and
open_basedir, if used, must contain "." and
"./lang" to allow normal operation of phpMyAdmin.
This could happen for several reasons:
Starting with 2.2.5, in the user management page, you can enter a wildcard
database name for a user (for example "joe%"),
and put the privileges you want. For example,
adding SELECT, INSERT, UPDATE, DELETE, CREATE, DROP, INDEX, ALTER
would let a user create/manage his/her database(s).
If you have existing rules from an old .htaccess file, you can take them
and add a username between the 'deny'/'allow' and
'from' strings. Using the username wildcard of '%' would
be a major benefit here if your installation is suited to using it. Then
you can just add those updated lines into the
$cfg['Servers'][$i]['AllowDeny']['rules'] array.
If you want a pre-made sample, you can try this fragment. It stops the
'root' user from logging in from any networks other than the private
network IP blocks.
//block root from logging in except from the private networks
$cfg['Servers'][$i]['AllowDeny']['order'] = 'deny,allow';
$cfg['Servers'][$i]['AllowDeny']['rules'] = array(
'deny root from all',
'allow root from localhost',
'allow root from 10.0.0.0/8',
'allow root from 192.168.0.0/16',
'allow root from 172.16.0.0/12',
);
This happens if you are using a URL to start phpMyAdmin which is
different than the one set in your
$cfg['PmaAbsoluteUri'].
For example, a missing "www", or entering with an IP address
while a domain name is defined in the config file.
When starting phpMyAdmin, you can use the db, pma_username, pma_password and server parameters. This last one can contain either the numeric host index (from $i of the configuration file) or one of the host names present in the configuration file. Using pma_username and pma_password has been tested along with the usage of 'cookie' auth_type.
Browsers or client OS
We could reproduce this problem only under Win98/98SE. Testing under
WinNT4 or Win2K, we could easily create more than 60 fields.
A workaround is to create a smaller number of fields, then come back to
your table properties and add the other fields.
This is not a phpMyAdmin problem but a Xitami known bug: you'll face it
with each script/website that use forms.
Upgrade or downgrade your Xitami server.
With Konqueror 2.1.1: plain dumps, zip and GZip dumps work ok, except that
the proposed file name for the dump is always 'tbl_dump.php'. Bzip2 dumps
don't seem to work.
With Konqueror 2.2.1: plain dumps work; zip dumps are placed into
the user's temporary directory, so they must be moved before closing
Konqueror, or else they disappear. GZip dumps give an error message.
Testing needs to be done for Konqueror 2.2.2.
MS Internet Explorer seems to be really buggy about cookies, at least till
version 6. And thanks to Andrew Zivolup we've traced also a PHP 4.1.1 bug
in this area!
Then, if you're running PHP 4.1.1, try to upgrade or downgrade... it may
work!
Upgrade to at least Internet Explorer 5.5 SP2.
Your table neither have a primary key nor an unique one, so we must use a
long URL to identify this row. There is a limit on the length of the URL in
those browsers, and this not happen in Netscape, for example. The
workaround is to create a primary or unique key, or use another browser.
Some browsers support right-clicking into the frame you want to refresh,
just do this in the right frame.
Looks like a Mozilla bug: 0.9.6 was OK. We will keep an eye on future
Mozilla versions.
This is a Mozilla bug (see bug #26882 at
BugZilla).
This is a known Netscape 4.75 bug: it adds some line feeds when exporting
data in octet-stream mode. Since we can't detect the specific Netscape
version, we cannot workaround this bug.
Please ensure that you have set your browser's character set to the one of the
language file you have selected on phpMyAdmin's start page.
Alternatively, you can try the auto detection mode that is supported by the
recent versions of the most browsers.
This issue has been reported by a OS X user, who adds that Chimera,
Netscape and Mozilla do not have this problem.
This is a bug in Internet Explorer, other browsers do not behave this way.
Having $cfg['QueryFrameJS'] set o TRUE, this leads to a
bug in Opera6, because it is not able to interpret frameset definitions
written by JavaScript. Please upgrade your phpMyAdmin installtion or to
Opera7 at least.
Please upgrade to at least version 1.2.3.
Please check the following points:
- Maybe you have defined your PmaAbsoluteUri setting
in config.inc.php to an IP
address and you are starting
phpMyAdmin with a URL
containing a domain name, or the reverse situation.
- Security settings in IE and/or Microsoft Security Center are
too high, thus blocking scripts execution.
- The Windows Firewall is blocking Apache and MySQL. You must
allow HTTP ports
(80 or 443) and MySQL port (usually 3306)
in the "in" and "out" directions.
Many users have confirmed that the Tabbrowser Extensions plugin they
installed in their Firefox is causing the problem.
Using phpMyAdmin
Examine the SQL error with care. Often the problem is caused by
specifying a wrong field-type.
Common errors include:
- Using VARCHAR without a size argument
- Using TEXT or BLOB with a size argument
Also, look at the syntax chapter in the MySQL manual to confirm that your
syntax is correct.
In phpMyAdmin 2.2.0 and 2.2.1, this is the way to create a multi-fields
index. If you want two indexes, create the first one when creating the
table, save, then display the table properties and click the Index link to
create the other index.
Since version 2.2.3, you have a checkbox for each field that can be null.
Before 2.2.3, you had to enter "null", without the quotes, as the
field's value. Since version 2.5.5, you have to use the checkbox to get
a real NULL value, so if you enter "NULL" this means you want
a literal NULL in the field, and not a NULL value (this works in PHP4).
Click on a database or table name in the left frame, the properties will be
displayed. Then on the menu, click "Export", you can dump
the structure, the data, or both. This will generate standard SQL
statements that can be used to recreate your database/table.
You will need to choose "Save as file", so that phpMyAdmin can
transmit the resulting dump to your station. Depending on your PHP
configuration, you will see options to compress the dump. See also the
$cfg['ExecTimeLimit']
configuration variable.
For additional help on this subject, look for the word "dump" in
this document.
Click on a database name in the left frame, the properties will be
displayed. Select "Import" from the list
of tabs in the right–hand frame (or "SQL" if your phpMyAdmin
version is previous to 2.7.0). In the "Location of the text file" section, type in
the path to your dump filename, or use the Browse button. Then click Go.
With version 2.7.0, the import engine has been re–written, if possible it is suggested
that you upgrade to take advantage of the new features.
For additional help on this subject, look for the word "upload"
in this document.
Here is an example with the tables persons, towns and countries, all
located in the database mydb. If you don't have a pma_relation
table, create it as explained in the configuration section. Then create the
example tables:
CREATE TABLE REL_countries (
country_code char(1) NOT NULL default '',
description varchar(10) NOT NULL default '',
PRIMARY KEY (country_code)
) TYPE=MyISAM;
INSERT INTO REL_countries VALUES ('C', 'Canada');
CREATE TABLE REL_persons (
id tinyint(4) NOT NULL auto_increment,
person_name varchar(32) NOT NULL default '',
town_code varchar(5) default '0',
country_code char(1) NOT NULL default '',
PRIMARY KEY (id)
) TYPE=MyISAM;
INSERT INTO REL_persons VALUES (11, 'Marc', 'S', '');
INSERT INTO REL_persons VALUES (15, 'Paul', 'S', 'C');
CREATE TABLE REL_towns (
town_code varchar(5) NOT NULL default '0',
description varchar(30) NOT NULL default '',
PRIMARY KEY (town_code)
) TYPE=MyISAM;
INSERT INTO REL_towns VALUES ('S', 'Sherbrooke');
INSERT INTO REL_towns VALUES ('M', 'Montréal');
To setup appropriate links and display information:
- on table "REL_persons" click Structure, then Relation view
- in Links, for "town_code" choose "REL_towns->code"
- in Links, for "country_code" choose "REL_countries->country_code"
- on table "REL_towns" click Structure, then Relation view
- in "Choose field to display", choose "description"
- repeat the two previous steps for table "REL_countries"
Then test like this:
- Click on your db name in the left frame
- Choose "Query"
- Use tables: persons, towns, countries
- Click "Update query"
- In the fields row, choose persons.person_name and click the
"Show" tickbox
- Do the same for towns.description and countries.descriptions in the
other 2 columns
- Click "Update query" and you will see in the query box that
the correct joins have been generated
- Click "Submit query"
Starting from the previous example, create the pma_table_info as explained
in the configuration section, then browse your persons table,
and move the mouse over a town code or country code.
See also FAQ 6.21 for an additional feature that "display field"
enables: drop-down list of possible values.
First the configuration variables "relation",
"table_coords" and "pdf_pages" have to be filled in.
Then you need to think about your schema layout. Which tables will go on
which pages?
- Select your database in the left frame.
- Choose "Operations" in the navigation bar at the top.
- Choose "Edit PDF
Pages" near the bottom of the page.
- Enter a name for the first PDF
page and click Go. If you like, you
can use the "automatic layout," which will put all your
linked tables onto the new page.
- Select the name of the new page (making sure the Edit radio button
is selected) and click Go.
- Select a table from the list, enter its coordinates and click Save.
Coordinates are relative; your diagram will
be automatically scaled to fit the page. When initially placing tables
on the page, just pick any coordinates -- say, 50x50. After clicking
Save, you can then use the graphical editor to
position the element correctly.
- When you'd like to look at your PDF,
first be sure to click the Save
button beneath the list of tables and coordinates, to save any changes
you made there. Then scroll all the way down, select the
PDF options
you want, and click Go.
- Internet Explorer for Windows may suggest an incorrect filename when
you try to save a generated PDF.
When saving a generated PDF, be
sure that the filename ends in ".pdf", for example
"schema.pdf". Browsers on other operating systems, and other
browsers on Windows, do not have this problem.
No, it's MySQL that is doing
silent
column type changing.
If you do not put a backslash before the underscore, this is a wildcard
grant, and the underscore means "any character". So, if the
database name is "john_db", the user would get rights to john1db,
john2db ...
If you put a backslash before the underscore, it means that the database
name will have a real underscore.
It means "average".
Structure:
- "Add DROP TABLE" will add a line telling MySQL to
drop the table,
if it already exists during the import. It does NOT drop the table after
your export, it only affects the import file.
- "If Not Exists" will only create the table if it doesn't exist.
Otherwise, you may get an error if the table name exists but has a
different structure.
- "Add AUTO_INCREMENT value" ensures that AUTO_INCREMENT value
(if any) will be included in backup.
- "Enclose table and field names with backquotes" ensures that
field and table names formed with special characters are protected.
- "Add into comments" includes column comments, relations, and MIME
types set in the pmadb in the dump as
SQL comments (/* xxx */).
Data:
- "Complete inserts" adds the column names on every INSERT
command, for better documentation (but resulting file is bigger).
- "Extended inserts" provides a shorter dump file by using only
once the INSERT verb and the table name.
- "Delayed inserts" are best explained in the
MySQL manual.
- "Ignore inserts" treats errors as a warning instead. Again,
more info is provided in the
MySQL manual,
but basically with this selected, invalid values are adjusted and
inserted rather than causing the entire statement to fail.
This is a bad idea, because in MySQL the syntax "database.table"
is the normal way to reference a database and table name. Worse, MySQL
will usually let you create a database with a dot, but then you cannot
work with it, nor delete it.
To use it, you need a very recent version of PHP, 4.3.0 recommended, with
XML,
PCRE and
PEAR support.
On your system command line, run "pear install Net_Socket Net_URL
HTTP_Request Mail_Mime Net_DIME SOAP" to get the necessary
PEAR modules
for usage.
On a more recent pear version, I had problems with the state of Net_DIME
being beta, so this single command
"pear -d preferred_state=beta install -a SOAP" installed all the
needed modules.
If you use the Validator, you should be aware that any
SQL statement you
submit will be stored anonymously (database/table/column names,
strings, numbers replaced with generic values). The Mimer
SQL
Validator itself, is © 2001 Upright Database Technology.
We utilize it as free SOAP service.
The right way to do this, is to create the field without any indexes,
then display the table structure and use the "Create an index"
dialog. On this page, you will be able to choose your BLOB field, and
set a size to the index, which is the condition to create an index on
a BLOB field.
You can use Ctrl+arrows (Option+Arrows in Safari) for moving on most pages
with many editing fields (table structure changes, row editing, etc.)
(must be enabled in configuration - see.
$cfg['CtrlArrowsMoving']).
You can also have a look at the directive
$cfg['DefaultPropDisplay']
('vertical') and see if this eases up editing for you.
Slow down :). Defining mimetypes is of no use, if you can't put transformations
on them. Otherwise you could just put a comment on the field. Because entering
your own mimetype will cause serious syntax checking issues and validation,
this introduces a high-risk false-user-input situation. Instead you have to
initialize mimetypes using functions or empty mimetype definitions.
Plus, you have a whole overview of available mimetypes. Who knows all those
mimetypes by heart so he/she can enter it at will?
Any query you have executed can be stored as a bookmark on the page where the
results are displayed. You will find a button labeled 'Bookmark this query'
just at the end of the page.
As soon as you have stored a bookmark, it is related to the database you run
the query on. You can now access a bookmark dropdown on each page, the query
box appears on for that database.
Since phpMyAdmin 2.5.0 you are also able to store variables for the bookmarks.
Just use the string /*[VARIABLE]*/ anywhere in your query. Everything
which is put into the value input box on the query box page will
replace the string "/*[VARIABLE]*/" in your stored query. Just be
aware of that you HAVE to create a valid query, otherwise your query won't be
even able to be stored in the database.
Also remember, that everything else inside the /*[VARIABLE]*/ string
for your query will remain the way it is, but will be stripped of the /**/
chars. So you can use:
/*, [VARIABLE] AS myname */
which will be expanded to
, VARIABLE as myname
in your query, where VARIABLE is the string you entered in the input box. If
an empty string is provided, no replacements are made.
A more complex example. Say you have stored this query:
SELECT Name, Address FROM addresses WHERE 1 /* AND Name LIKE '%[VARIABLE]%' */
Say, you now enter "phpMyAdmin" as the variable for the stored query,
the full query will be:
SELECT Name, Address FROM addresses WHERE 1 AND Name LIKE '%phpMyAdmin%'
You can use multiple occurrences of /*[VARIABLE]*/ in a single query.
NOTE THE ABSENCE OF SPACES inside the "/**/" construct. Any
spaces inserted there
will be later also inserted as spaces in your query and may lead to unexpected
results especially when
using the variable expansion inside of a "LIKE ''" expression.
Your initial query which is going to be stored as a bookmark has to yield at
least one result row so
you can store the bookmark. You may have that to work around using well
positioned "/**/" comments.
You can simply include table in your LATEX documents, minimal sample
document should look like following one (assuming you have table
exported in file table.tex
):
\documentclass{article} % or any class you want
\usepackage{longtable} % for displaying table
\begin{document} % start of document
\include{table} % including exported table
\end{document} % end of document
Upgrading to MySQL 4 usually gives users those global privileges: CREATE
TEMPORARY TABLES, SHOW DATABASES, LOCK TABLES. Those privileges also
enable users to see all the database names.
See this bug report.
So if your users do not need those privileges, you can remove them and their
databases list will shorten.
You have to setup appropriate links between the tables, and also
setup the "display field" in the foreign table. See
FAQ
6.6 for an example. Then, if there are 200 values or less in the
foreign table, a drop-down list of values will be available.
You will see two lists of values, the first list containing the key
and the display field, the second list containing the display field
and the key. The reason for this is to be able to type the first
letter of either the key or the display field.
For 200 values or more, a distinct window will appear, to browse foreign
key values and choose one.
Yes. If a bookmark has the same label as a table name, it will be executed.
Current version does support direct export to Microsoft Excel and Word
versions 2000 and newer. If you need export older versions, you can use
CSV suitable for Microsoft Excel,
which works out of the box or you can
try native experimental MS Excel exporter. This export has
several problems, most important are limitation of cell content to 255
chars and no support for charsets, so think carefully whether you want to
enable this.. For enabling this you need to set
$cfg['TempDir'] to
place where web server user can write (for example './tmp') and
install PEAR
module Spreadsheet_Excel_Writer into php include path. The
installation can be done by following command:
pear -d preferred_state=beta install -a Spreadsheet_Excel_Writer
First part of switches set we want to install beta version of that module
(no stable version available yet) and then we tell pear we want to satisfy
dependencies.
If you are running in PHP safe mode, you will have to set
in php.ini the safe_mode_include_dir to the directory
where your PEAR
modules are located, for example:
safe_mode_include_dir = /usr/local/lib/php
To create the temporary directory on a UNIX-based system, you can do:
cd phpMyAdmin
mkdir tmp
chmod o+rwx tmp
Automatic migration of a table's pmadb-style column comments to the native
ones is done whenever you enter Structure page for this table.
phpMyAdmin project
Our Bug Tracker is located at
http://sf.net/projects/phpmyadmin/
under the Bugs section.
But please first discuss your bug with other users:
http://sf.net/projects/phpmyadmin/ (and choose Forums)
Always use the current SVN version of your language file.
For a new language, start from english-iso-8859-1.inc.php. If you
don't know how to get the SVN version, please ask one of the developers.
Please note that we try not to use HTML entities like é in
the translations, since we define the right character set in the file.
With HTML entities, the text on JavaScript messages would not
display correctly.
However there are some entities that need to be there, for quotes
,non-breakable spaces, ampersands, less than, greater than.
You can then put your translations, as a zip file to avoid losing special
characters, on the sourceforge.net translation tracker.
It would be a good idea to subscribe to the phpmyadmin-translators mailing
list, because this is where we ask for translations of new messages.
The following method is preferred for new developers:
- fetch the current SVN tree over anonymous SVN:
svn co https://phpmyadmin.svn.sourceforge.net/svnroot/phpmyadmin/trunk/phpMyAdmin
- add your stuff
- generate patch with your changes:
svn diff
- put the patch inside the patch
tracker of the phpMyAdmin project.
Write access to the SVN tree is granted only to experienced developers who
have already contributed something useful to phpMyAdmin.
Also, have a look at the Developers section.
Security
Please refer to
http://www.phpmyadmin.net/home_page/security.php
Developers Information
phpMyAdmin is Open Source, so you're invited to contribute to it. Many
great features have been written by other people and you too can help to
make phpMyAdmin a useful tool.
If you're planning to contribute source, please read the following
information:
- All files include libraries/header.inc.php (layout),.
libraries/common.lib.php (common functions) and
config.inc.php.
Only configuration data should go in config.inc.php. Please keep
it free from other code.
Commonly used functions should be added to
libraries/common.lib.php and more specific ones may be added
within a library stored into the libraries sub-directory.
- Obviously, you're free to use whatever coding style you want. But
please try to keep your code as simple as possible: beginners are
using phpMyAdmin as an example application.
As far as possible, we want the scripts to be XHTML1.0 and CSS2
compliant on one hand, they fit the
PEAR
coding standards
on the other hand. Please pay attention to this.
- Please try to keep up the file-naming conventions. Table-related stuff
goes to tbl_*.php, db-related code to db_*.php,
server-related tools to server_*.php and so on.
- Please don't use verbose strings in your code, instead add the string
(at least) to english-iso-8859-1.inc.php and print() it out.
- If you want to be really helpful, write an entry for the ChangeLog.
-
The DBG extension (PHP
Debugger DBG) is now supported by phpMyAdmin for developers to
better debug and profile their code.
Please see the
$cfg['DBG']* configuration
options for more information.
This is in memoriam of the Space Shuttle Columbia (STS-107) which was
lost during its re-entry into Earth's atmosphere and in memory of the
brave men and women who gave their lives for the people of Earth.
Credits
phpMyAdmin - Credits
====================
CREDITS, in chronological order
-------------------------------
- Tobias Ratschiller <tobias_at_ratschiller.com>
* creator of the phpmyadmin project
* maintainer from 1998 to summer 2000
- Marc Delisle <Marc.Delisle_at_cegepsherbrooke.qc.ca>
* multi-language version
* various fixes and improvements
* SQL analyser (most of it)
* current project maintainer
- Olivier Müller <om_at_omnis.ch>
* started SourceForge phpMyAdmin project in March 2001
* sync'ed different existing CVS trees with new features and bugfixes
* multi-language improvements, dynamic language selection
* current project maintainer
* many bugfixes and improvements
- Loïc Chapeaux <lolo_at_phpheaven.net>
* rewrote and optimized javascript, DHTML and DOM stuff
* rewrote the scripts so they fit the PEAR coding standards and
generate XHTML1.0 and CSS2 compliant codes
* improved the language detection system
* many bugfixes and improvements
- Robin Johnson <robbat2_at_users.sourceforge.net>
* database maintenance controls
* table type code
* Host authentication IP Allow/Deny
* DB-based configuration (Not completed)
* SQL parser and pretty-printer
* SQL validator
* many bugfixes and improvements
- Armel Fauveau <armel.fauveau_at_globalis-ms.com>
* bookmarks feature
* multiple dump feature
* gzip dump feature
* zip dump feature
- Geert Lund <glund_at_silversoft.dk>
* various fixes
* moderator of the phpMyAdmin former users forum at phpwizard.net
- Korakot Chaovavanich <korakot_at_iname.com>
* "insert as new row" feature
- Pete Kelly <webmaster_at_trafficg.com>
* rewrote and fix dump code
* bugfixes
- Steve Alberty <alberty_at_neptunlabs.de>
* rewrote dump code for PHP4
* mySQL table statistics
* bugfixes
- Benjamin Gandon <gandon_at_isia.cma.fr>
* main author of the version 2.1.0.1
* bugfixes
- Alexander M. Turek <me_at_derrabus.de>
* MySQL 4.0 / 4.1 / 5.0 compatibility
* abstract database interface (PMA_DBI) with MySQLi support
* privileges administration
* XML exports
* various features and fixes
* German language file updates
- Mike Beck <mike.beck_at_web.de>
* automatic joins in QBE
* links column in printview
* Relation view
- Michal Čihař <michal_at_cihar.com>
* enhanced index creation/display feature
* feature to use a different charset for HTML than for MySQL
* improvements of export feature
* various features and fixes
* Czech language file updates
- Christophe Gesché from the "MySQL Form Generator for PHPMyAdmin"
(http://sf.net/projects/phpmysqlformgen/)
* suggested the patch for multiple table printviews
- Garvin Hicking <me_at_supergarv.de>
* built the patch for vertical display of table rows
* built the Javascript based Query window + SQL history
* Improvement of column/db comments
* (MIME)-Transformations for columns
* Use custom alias names for Databases in left frame
* hierarchical/nested table display
* PDF-scratchboard for WYSIWYG-distribution of PDF relations
* new icon sets
* vertical display of column properties page
* some bugfixes, features, support, German language additions
- Yukihiro Kawada <kawada_at_den.fujifilm.co.jp>
* japanese kanji encoding conversion feature
- Piotr Roszatycki <d3xter_at_users.sourceforge.net> and Dan Wilson
* the Cookie authentication mode
- Axel Sander <n8falke_at_users.sourceforge.net>
* table relation-links feature
- Maxime Delorme <delorme.maxime_at_free.fr>
* PDF schema output, thanks also to Olivier Plathey for the
"FPDF" library (see http://www.fpdf.org/) and Steven Wittens
for the "UFPDF" library (see http://www.acko.net/node/56).
- Olof Edlund <olof.edlund_at_upright.se>
* SQL validator server
- Ivan R. Lanin <ivanlanin_at_users.sourceforge.net>
* phpMyAdmin logo (until June 2004)
- Mike Cochrane <mike_at_graftonhall.co.nz>
* blowfish library from the Horde project
- Marcel Tschopp <ne0x_at_users.sourceforge.net>
* mysqli support
* many bugfixes and improvements
- Michael Keck <mkkeck_at_users.sourceforge.net>
* redesign for 2.6.0
* phpMyAdmin sailboat logo (June 2004)
- Mathias Landhäußer
* Representation at conferences
- Sebastian Mendel <cybot_tm_at_users.sourceforge.net>
* interface improvements
* various bugfixes
- Ivan A Kirillov
* new relations Designer
And also to the following people who have contributed minor changes,
enhancements, bugfixes or support for a new language since version 2.1.0:
Bora Alioglu, Ricardo ?, Sven-Erik Andersen, Alessandro Astarita,
Péter Bakondy, Borges Botelho, Olivier Bussier, Neil Darlow,
Mats Engstrom, Ian Davidson, Laurent Dhima, Kristof Hamann, Thomas Kläger,
Lubos Klokner, Martin Marconcini, Girish Nair, David Nordenberg, Andreas Pauley,
Bernard M. Piller, Laurent Haas, "Sakamoto", Yuval Sarna,
www.securereality.com.au, Alexis Soulard, Alvar Soome, Siu Sun, Peter Svec,
Michael Tacelosky, Rachim Tamsjadi, Kositer Uros,
Luís V., Martijn W. van der Lee,
Algis Vainauskas, Daniel Villanueva, Vinay, Ignacio Vazquez-Abrams, Chee Wai,
Jakub Wilk, Thomas Michael Winningham, Vilius Zigmantas, "Manuzhai".
Original Credits of Version 2.1.0
---------------------------------
This work is based on Peter Kuppelwieser's MySQL-Webadmin. It was his idea
to create a web-based interface to MySQL using PHP3. Although I have not
used any of his source-code, there are some concepts I've borrowed from
him. phpMyAdmin was created because Peter told me he wasn't going to
further develop his (great) tool.
Thanks go to
- Amalesh Kempf <ak-lsml_at_living-source.com> who contributed the
code for the check when dropping a table or database. He also suggested
that you should be able to specify the primary key on tbl_create.php3. To
version 1.1.1 he contributed the ldi_*.php3-set (Import text-files) as
well as a bug-report. Plus many smaller improvements.
- Jan Legenhausen <jan_at_nrw.net>: He made many of the changes that
were introduced in 1.3.0 (including quite significant ones like the
authentication). For 1.4.1 he enhanced the table-dump feature. Plus
bug-fixes and help.
- Marc Delisle <DelislMa_at_CollegeSherbrooke.qc.ca> made phpMyAdmin
language-independent by outsourcing the strings to a separate file. He
also contributed the French translation.
- Alexandr Bravo <abravo_at_hq.admiral.ru> who contributed
tbl_select.php3, a feature to display only some fields from a table.
- Chris Jackson <chrisj_at_ctel.net> added support for MySQL
functions in tbl_change.php3. He also added the
"Query by Example" feature in 2.0.
- Dave Walton <walton_at_nordicdms.com> added support for multiple
servers and is a regular contributor for bug-fixes.
- Gabriel Ash <ga244_at_is8.nyu.edu> contributed the random access
features for 2.0.6.
The following people have contributed minor changes, enhancements, bugfixes
or support for a new language:
Jim Kraai, Jordi Bruguera, Miquel Obrador, Geert Lund, Thomas Kleemann,
Alexander Leidinger, Kiko Albiol, Daniel C. Chao, Pavel Piankov,
Sascha Kettler, Joe Pruett, Renato Lins, Mark Kronsbein, Jannis Hermanns,
G. Wieggers.
And thanks to everyone else who sent me email with suggestions, bug-reports
and or just some feedback.
Glossary
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
- .htaccess
- the default name of Apache's directory-level configuration file.
- Blowfish
- a keyed, symmetric block cipher, designed in 1993 by Bruce Schneier.
- Browser (Web Browser)
- a software application that enables a user to display and interact with
text, images, and other information typically located on a web page at a
website on the World Wide Web.
- bzip2
- a free software/open source data compression algorithm and program
developed by Julian Seward.
- CGI (Common Gateway Interface)
- an important World Wide Web technology that enables a client web browser
to request data from a program executed on the Web server.
- Changelog
- a log or record of changes made to a project.
- Client
- a computer system that accesses a (remote) service on another computer
by some kind of network.
- column
- a set of data values of a particular simple type, one for each row of
the table.
- Cookie
- a packet of information sent by a server to a World Wide Web browser
and then sent back by the browser each time it accesses that server.
- CSV
- Comma-seperated values
- DB - look at Database.
- database
- an organized collection of data.
- Engine - look at Storage Engines.
- extension
- a PHP module that extends PHP with additional functionality.
- FAQ (Frequently Asked Questions)
- a list of commonly asked question and there answers.
- Field
- one part of divided data/columns.
- foreign key
- a field or group of fields in a database record that point to a key
field or group of fields forming a key of another database record in some
(usually different) table.
- FPDF (FreePDF)
- the free PDF library
-
GD Graphics Library - a library by Thomas Boutell and others for
dynamically manipulating images.
- GD2 - look at GD Graphics Library.
- gzip
- gzip is short for GNU zip, a GNU free software file compression
program.
- host
- any machine connected to a computer network, a node that has a hostname.
- hostname
- the unique name by which a network attached device is known on a network.
- HTTP
(HyperText Transfer Protocol)
- the primary method used to transfer or convey information on the World
Wide Web.
- https
- a HTTP-connection with
additional security measures.
- IIS (Internet Information Services)
- a set of Internet-based services for servers using Microsoft Windows.
- Index
- a feature that allows quick access to the rows in a table.
- IP (Internet Protocol)
- a data-oriented protocol used by source and destination hosts for
communicating data across a packet-switched internetwork.
- IP Address
- a unique number that devices use in order to identify and communicate
with each other on a network utilizing the Internet Protocol standard.
- ISAPI
(Internet Server Application Programming Interface)
- the API of Internet Information Services (IIS).
- ISP (Internet service provider)
- a business or organization that offers users access to the Internet and related services.
- JPEG
- a most commonly used standard method of lossy compression for
photographic images.
- JPG - look at JPEG.
- Key - look at index.
- LATEX
- a document preparation system for the TEX typesetting program.
- Mac (Apple Macintosh)
- line of personal computers is designed, developed, manufactured, and
marketed by Apple Computer.
- Mac OS X
- the operating system which is included with all currently shipping Apple
Macintosh computers in the consumer and professional markets.
- MCrypt
- a cryptographic library.
- mcrypt
- the MCrypt PHP extension.
- MIME (Multipurpose Internet Mail Extensions)
- an Internet Standard for the format of e-mail.
- module
- some sort of extension for the Apache Webserver.
- MySQL
- a multithreaded, multi-user, SQL (Structured Query Language) Database
Management System (DBMS).
- mysqli
- the improved MySQL client PHP extension.
- mysql
- the MySQL client PHP extension.
- OpenDocument
- open standard for office documents.
- OS X
- look at Mac OS X.
- PDF
(Portable Document Format)
- a file format developed by Adobe Systems for representing two
dimensional documents in a device independent and resolution independent
format.
- PEAR
- the PHP Extension and Application Repository.
- PCRE (Perl Compatible Regular Expressions)
- the perl-compatible regular expression functions for PHP
- PHP
- short for "PHP: Hypertext Preprocessor", is an open-source, reflective
programming language used mainly for developing server-side applications
and dynamic web content, and more recently, a broader range of software
applications.
- port
- a connection through which data is sent and received.
- RFC
- Request for Comments (RFC) documents are a series of memoranda
encompassing new research, innovations, and methodologies applicable to
Internet technologies.
- RFC 1952
- GZIP file format specification version 4.3
- Row (record, tulpel)
- represents a single, implicitly structured data item in a table.
- Server
- a computer system that provides services to other computing
systems over a network.
- Storage Engines
- handlers for different table types
- socket
- a form of inter-process communication.
- SSL (Secure
Sockets Layer)
- a cryptographic protocol which provides secure communication on the Internet.
- SQL
- Structured Query Language
- table
- a set of data elements (cells) that is organized, defined and stored as
horizontal rows and vertical columns where each item can be uniquely
identified by a label or key or by it?s position in relation to other items.
- Table type
- tar
- a type of archive file format: the Tape ARchive format.
- TCP (Transmission Control Protocol)
- one of the core protocols of the Internet protocol suite.
- UFPDF
- Unicode/UTF-8 extension for FPDF
- URL (Uniform Resource Locator)
- a sequence of characters, conforming to a standardized format, that is
used for referring to resources, such as documents and images on the
Internet, by their location.
- Webserver
- A computer (program) that is responsible for accepting HTTP requests
from clients and serving them Web pages.
- XML (Extensible Markup Language)
- a W3C-recommended general-purpose markup language for creating
special-purpose markup languages, capable of describing many different
kinds of data.
- ZIP
- a popular data compression and archival format.
- zlib
- an open-source, cross-platform data compression library by Jean-loup
Gailly and Mark Adler.