thanks amanda...  the "local" worked for some reason...

in about 10 years of using mysql i have never had to do that.

i still wonder why would the thing not stat it.

file and dir are both 777 and owned by mysql...

one thing i noticed thou is that the actual user is not mysql but _mysql. that's how is stored in passwd and that's how it's represented by ls -al.

the process thou was started with --user=mysql...

but i still don't get the necessity of "local". i have never used it before.

this is all on os x - 10.8.2...



On 10/17/12 1:25 PM, Ananda Kumar wrote:
also try using "load data local infile 'file path' and see if it works

On Wed, Oct 17, 2012 at 10:52 PM, Ananda Kumar <anan...@gmail.com
<mailto:anan...@gmail.com>> wrote:

    does both directory have permission "777"


    On Wed, Oct 17, 2012 at 9:27 PM, Rick James <rja...@yahoo-inc.com
    <mailto:rja...@yahoo-inc.com>> wrote:

        SELinux ?

         > -----Original Message-----
         > From: Lixun Peng [mailto:pengli...@gmail.com
        <mailto:pengli...@gmail.com>]
         > Sent: Tuesday, October 16, 2012 9:03 PM
         > To: kalin
         > Cc: Michael Dykman; mysql@lists.mysql.com
        <mailto:mysql@lists.mysql.com>
         > Subject: Re: error 13
         >
         > Hi,
         >
         > you can switch to mysql user "su - mysql", and then stat this
        file.
         > if you can't access, mysql user have not permissions.
         >
         > On Wed, Oct 17, 2012 at 11:49 AM, kalin <ka...@el.net
        <mailto:ka...@el.net>> wrote:
         >
         > >
         > >
         > >
         > > On 10/16/12 10:49 PM, Michael Dykman wrote:
         > >
         > >> is your mysql client on the same host as the mysql server?
        if not,
         > >> google the docs for 'local infile'
         > >>
         > >
         > > yes. my laptop.
         > >
         > >
         > >
         > >
         > >
         > >> On 2012-10-16 10:45 PM, "Lixun Peng" <pengli...@gmail.com
        <mailto:pengli...@gmail.com>> wrote:
         > >>
         > >> Hi,
         > >>
         > >> What's the dir permissions?
         > >>
         > >> For example, if we have a file in /a/b/file, dir a is 644,
        even
         > >> though file is 777, we can't access file, too.
         > >>
         > >>
         > >> On Wed, Oct 17, 2012 at 10:31 AM, kalin <ka...@el.net
        <mailto:ka...@el.net>> wrote:
         > >>
         > >>
         > >>>
         > >>> hi all..
         > >>>
         > >>> this hasn't happe...
         > >>>
         > >> --
         > >> Senior MySQL Developer @ Taobao.com
         > >>
         > >> Mobile Phone: +86 18658156856 (Hangzhou)
         > >> Gtalk: penglixun(at)gmail.com <http://gmail.com>
         > >> Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/plinux
         > >> Blog: http://www.penglixun.com
         > >>
         > >>
         > > --
         > > MySQL General Mailing List
         > > For list archives: http://lists.mysql.com/mysql
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         > >
         > >
         >
         >
         > --
         > Senior MySQL Developer @ Taobao.com
         >
         > Mobile Phone: +86 18658156856 (Hangzhou)
         > Gtalk: penglixun(at)gmail.com <http://gmail.com>
         > Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/plinux
         > Blog: http://www.penglixun.com




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