Problems Connecting with SSL

2011-02-24 Thread Tim Gustafson
I have three mySQL server, all of which are SSL-enable and all of which are 
generally accessible from remote clients over SSL.

However, one of my FreeBSD mySQL clients is having problems connecting to any 
of the servers.  Running mySQL under truss reports the following:

--
clock_gettime(13,{1298593067.0 })= 0 (0x0)
open("/dev/urandom",O_RDONLY,00) = 4 (0x4)
read(4,"\a\^V\M-)\^C\M-L{`\M^O\M^@\M-v"...,32)   = 32 (0x20)
sendto(2,"\^V\^C\^A\0Y\^A\0\0U\^C\^A\M-m"...,94,0x0,NULL,0x0) = 94 (0x5e)
recvfrom(2,"\^V",1,0x2,NULL,0x0) = 1 (0x1)
ioctl(2,FIONREAD,0xd784) = 0 (0x0)
recvfrom(2,"\^V\^C\^A\0J\^B\0\0F\^C\^AMf\M-u"...,1819,0x0,NULL,0x0) = 1819 
(0x71b)
clock_gettime(13,{1298593067.0 })= 0 (0x0)
clock_gettime(13,{1298593067.0 })= 0 (0x0)
gettimeofday({1298593067.844592 },0x0)   = 0 (0x0)
sendto(2,"\^V\^C\^A\0F\^P\0\0B\0@\M-B\M^Y"...,134,0x0,NULL,0x0) = 134 (0x86)
recvfrom(2,"\^U",1,0x2,NULL,0x0) = 1 (0x1)
ioctl(2,FIONREAD,0xd784) = 0 (0x0)
recvfrom(2,"\^U\^C\^A\0\^B\^B\n\^V\0\0\^B"...,33,0x0,NULL,0x0) = 33 (0x21)
close(3) = 0 (0x0)
shutdown(2,SHUT_RDWR)= 0 (0x0)
close(2) = 0 (0x0)
fstat(1,{ mode=crw--w ,inode=113,size=0,blksize=4096 }) = 0 (0x0)
ioctl(1,TIOCGETA,0xe390) = 0 (0x0)
write(2,"ERROR 2026 (HY000): ",20)   ERR#9 'Bad file descriptor'
write(2,"SSL connection error",20)   ERR#9 'Bad file descriptor'
write(2,"\n",1)  ERR#9 'Bad file descriptor'
write(1,"\a",1)  = 1 (0x1)
close(4) = 0 (0x0)
process exit, rval = 1
--

Can anyone tell me, based on the truss output above, what might be going wrong? 
 I'm using the exact same command line options and ssl-ca file that I am using 
on other clients, which can connect successfully.

(As an aside: feature request: better SSL connection debugging, please!)

Tim Gustafson
Baskin School of Engineering
UC Santa Cruz
t...@soe.ucsc.edu
831-459-5354



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[X-POST] Free sample data (US & Canada) for testing

2011-02-24 Thread Brian Dunning
Hey all -

I've just uploaded some free Canada sample data to complement the US data that 
was already available. Testing apps with a representation amount of sample data 
is crucial to evaluate performance. Download the data here:

http://www.briandunning.com/sample-data/

Enjoy,
- Brian
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RE: Changing the timezone

2011-02-24 Thread Travis Ard
set time_zone='Europe/Kiev';

-Original Message-
From: Andre Polykanine [mailto:an...@oire.org] 
Sent: Thursday, February 24, 2011 10:23 AM
To: mysql@lists.mysql.com
Subject: Changing the timezone

Hi everyone,
since  I'm  using  the  shared  hosting,  I  can't  change the default
timezone for MySql.
Question  is: is there any query that I could launch in my connect.php
before other queries to make my timezone change?
For instance, I make a
mysql_query("SET CHARACTER_SET_DATABASE='utf8'") or die ("Unable to change 
database charset: ".mysql_error());
and a
mysql_query("SET NAMES 'utf8'") or die ("Unable to set names: ".mysql_error());

Maybe is there a way to change my timezone to Europe/Kiev?
Thank you!
  

-- 
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Andre
Skype: Francophile
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Facebook: http://facebook.com/menelion


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Changing the timezone

2011-02-24 Thread Andre Polykanine
Hi everyone,
since  I'm  using  the  shared  hosting,  I  can't  change the default
timezone for MySql.
Question  is: is there any query that I could launch in my connect.php
before other queries to make my timezone change?
For instance, I make a
mysql_query("SET CHARACTER_SET_DATABASE='utf8'") or die ("Unable to change 
database charset: ".mysql_error());
and a
mysql_query("SET NAMES 'utf8'") or die ("Unable to set names: ".mysql_error());

Maybe is there a way to change my timezone to Europe/Kiev?
Thank you!
  

-- 
With best regards from Ukraine,
Andre
Skype: Francophile
Twitter: http://twitter.com/m_elensule
Facebook: http://facebook.com/menelion


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Re: Get date from unix_timestamp only up to the hour

2011-02-24 Thread Pintér Tibor
On 02/24/2011 05:56 PM, Nathan Sullivan wrote:
> Bryan,
> 
> Maybe something like this would work?
> 
> select 1296158500 - (1296158500 % 3600)

ah, yes, even this one:

mysql> select now() - interval (unix_timestamp() % 3600) second;
+---+
| now() - interval (unix_timestamp() % 3600) second |
+---+
| 2011-02-24 18:00:00   |
+---+
1 row in set (0.00 sec)

t

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Re: Get date from unix_timestamp only up to the hour

2011-02-24 Thread Bryan Cantwell

Yes perfect! Thanks, I knew I was over thinking this.

On 02/24/2011 10:56 AM, Nathan Sullivan wrote:

Bryan,

Maybe something like this would work?

select 1296158500 - (1296158500 % 3600)


Hope that helps,

Nathan

On Thu, Feb 24, 2011 at 08:41:58AM -0800, Bryan Cantwell wrote:

How would I go about modifying a unix timestamp to actually represent
the 'top of the hour' that it represents?
For instance:
1296158500 = 1/27/2011 2:01:40 PM
That is in the 2:00 pm hour, how can I find that out and modify it to
1296158400 which = 1/27/2011 2:00:00 PM?




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Re: Get date from unix_timestamp only up to the hour

2011-02-24 Thread Pintér Tibor
On 02/24/2011 05:41 PM, Bryan Cantwell wrote:
> How would I go about modifying a unix timestamp to actually represent
> the 'top of the hour' that it represents?
> For instance:
> 1296158500 = 1/27/2011 2:01:40 PM
> That is in the 2:00 pm hour, how can I find that out and modify it to
> 1296158400 which = 1/27/2011 2:00:00 PM?

something like this:

mysql> set @now:=now(), @foo:=unix_timestamp(); select @now, @foo, @foo
- minute(@now) * 60 - second(@now) as hour_unix, from_unixtime(@foo -
minute(@now) * 60 - second(@now));
Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.00 sec)

+-++++
| @now| @foo   | hour_unix  | from_unixtime(@foo -
minute(@now) * 60 - second(@now)) |
+-++++
| 2011-02-24 18:06:24 | 1298567184 | 1298566800 | 2011-02-24 18:00:00
 |
+-++++
1 row in set (0.00 sec)



t

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Re: Get date from unix_timestamp only up to the hour

2011-02-24 Thread Michael Dykman
If the timestmp is in seconds, the result is simply   mod(timestamp,3600)

 - michael dykman

On Thu, Feb 24, 2011 at 11:41 AM, Bryan Cantwell
 wrote:
> How would I go about modifying a unix timestamp to actually represent the
> 'top of the hour' that it represents?
> For instance:
> 1296158500 = 1/27/2011 2:01:40 PM
> That is in the 2:00 pm hour, how can I find that out and modify it to
> 1296158400 which = 1/27/2011 2:00:00 PM?
>
>
>
>
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>
>



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 - mdyk...@gmail.com

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Re: Get date from unix_timestamp only up to the hour

2011-02-24 Thread Nathan Sullivan
Bryan,

Maybe something like this would work?

select 1296158500 - (1296158500 % 3600)


Hope that helps,

Nathan

On Thu, Feb 24, 2011 at 08:41:58AM -0800, Bryan Cantwell wrote:
> How would I go about modifying a unix timestamp to actually represent 
> the 'top of the hour' that it represents?
> For instance:
> 1296158500 = 1/27/2011 2:01:40 PM
> That is in the 2:00 pm hour, how can I find that out and modify it to 
> 1296158400 which = 1/27/2011 2:00:00 PM?
> 
> 
> 
> 
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> 

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Get date from unix_timestamp only up to the hour

2011-02-24 Thread Bryan Cantwell
How would I go about modifying a unix timestamp to actually represent 
the 'top of the hour' that it represents?

For instance:
1296158500 = 1/27/2011 2:01:40 PM
That is in the 2:00 pm hour, how can I find that out and modify it to 
1296158400 which = 1/27/2011 2:00:00 PM?





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Re: I can't have "group" as a column name in a table?

2011-02-24 Thread Jo�o C�ndido de Souza Neto
LOL

-- 
João Cândido de Souza Neto

"mos"  escreveu na mensagem 
news:6.0.0.22.2.20110224093057.044a0...@mail.messagingengine.com...
> At 05:13 AM 2/24/2011, you wrote:
>>Use a quote around the column name or explicitly specify the column as 
>>. (as for e.g. mytable.group) in the query. For more 
>>details refer to 
>>http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.5/en/reserved-words.html
>>
>>Thanks
>>Aveek
>
> Hmmm. Everyone has given me a great idea. I am going to change my table 
> names to "Table", "Group", "Having", "Select", "Into", "Order By", 
> "Update", "Delete" etc. just to confuse hackers so they won't be able to 
> launch a sql injection attack against my website. The naming convention 
> will drive them crazy.
>
> Mike
> (Just kidding)
>
>
>
>>On Feb 24, 2011, at 4:36 PM, Dave M G wrote:
>>
>> > MySQL users,
>> >
>> > Simple question:
>> >
>> > In one table in my database, the column was named "group".
>> >
>> > I kept getting failed query errors until I renamed the column.
>> >
>> > I've never before encountered a situation where MySQL mistook a column
>> > name for part of the query syntax.
>> >
>> > Should I never use the word "group" for column names? Seems a little
>> > silly. Is there a way to protect column names to that there is no
>> confusion?
>> >
>> > --
>> > Dave M G
>> >
>> > --
>> > MySQL General Mailing List
>> > For list archives: http://lists.mysql.com/mysql
>> > To unsubscribe: 
>> > http://lists.mysql.com/mysql?unsub=ave...@yahoo-inc.com
>> >
> 



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Re: I can't have "group" as a column name in a table?

2011-02-24 Thread mos

At 05:13 AM 2/24/2011, you wrote:
Use a quote around the column name or explicitly specify the column as 
. (as for e.g. mytable.group) in the query. For more 
details refer to http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.5/en/reserved-words.html


Thanks
Aveek


Hmmm. Everyone has given me a great idea. I am going to change my table 
names to "Table", "Group", "Having", "Select", "Into", "Order By", 
"Update", "Delete" etc. just to confuse hackers so they won't be able to 
launch a sql injection attack against my website. The naming convention 
will drive them crazy.


Mike
(Just kidding)




On Feb 24, 2011, at 4:36 PM, Dave M G wrote:

> MySQL users,
>
> Simple question:
>
> In one table in my database, the column was named "group".
>
> I kept getting failed query errors until I renamed the column.
>
> I've never before encountered a situation where MySQL mistook a column
> name for part of the query syntax.
>
> Should I never use the word "group" for column names? Seems a little
> silly. Is there a way to protect column names to that there is no 
confusion?

>
> --
> Dave M G
>
> --
> MySQL General Mailing List
> For list archives: http://lists.mysql.com/mysql
> To unsubscribe:http://lists.mysql.com/mysql?unsub=ave...@yahoo-inc.com
>



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a crash bug

2011-02-24 Thread tanzhongt
Hi:
   I find a crash bug, version is  mysql 5.5.8

   Just try:
   use test;

   drop table if exists t1,t2;
   create table t1(a int);
   create table t2(b int);
  PREPAREstmt FROM "select sum(b) from t2 group by b having b in (select b from 
t1)";
   execute stmt;   --  crash
   zhongtao
   
2011-02-23

Re: I can't have "group" as a column name in a table?

2011-02-24 Thread Jo�o C�ndido de Souza Neto
The best comparison I´ve never seen in my life was the TNT.

LOL

-- 
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"Johan De Meersman"  escreveu na mensagem 
news:AANLkTikPeVuTpj9E0iepFncCJZQOF6sn_dbrhp0=p...@mail.gmail.com...
> On Thu, Feb 24, 2011 at 12:06 PM, Dave M G  wrote:
>
>> Should I never use the word "group" for column names? Seems a little
>> silly. Is there a way to protect column names to that there is no
>> confusion?
>>
>
> As several people already pointed out, simply use backticks. Simple quotes
> have started to work in more and more places in newer versions of MySQL.
>
> However, it is considered bad form to name columns for reserved words - 
> even
> ones as obvious as "group" or "index". Bad form in the same way that you
> wouldn't name any variables "define" or "if" while programming; or in a 
> very
> similar way that you wouldn't put a box of TNT next to a burning candle -
> it's an accident waiting to happen.
>
> The escapes are there in case an upgrade creates new reserved words that
> you've already used in column names - "partition" comes to mind - but if 
> you
> are still in a phase where you can avoid using reserved words, please 
> spare
> yourself and others a lot of trouble and do so; even if only because while
> you can fix your code, you can't fix someone else's - think management
> tools, backup scripts, whatever may touch the db in the future.
>
>
> -- 
> Bier met grenadyn
> Is als mosterd by den wyn
> Sy die't drinkt, is eene kwezel
> Hy die't drinkt, is ras een ezel
> 



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Re: I can't have "group" as a column name in a table?

2011-02-24 Thread Johan De Meersman
On Thu, Feb 24, 2011 at 12:06 PM, Dave M G  wrote:

> Should I never use the word "group" for column names? Seems a little
> silly. Is there a way to protect column names to that there is no
> confusion?
>

As several people already pointed out, simply use backticks. Simple quotes
have started to work in more and more places in newer versions of MySQL.

However, it is considered bad form to name columns for reserved words - even
ones as obvious as "group" or "index". Bad form in the same way that you
wouldn't name any variables "define" or "if" while programming; or in a very
similar way that you wouldn't put a box of TNT next to a burning candle -
it's an accident waiting to happen.

The escapes are there in case an upgrade creates new reserved words that
you've already used in column names - "partition" comes to mind - but if you
are still in a phase where you can avoid using reserved words, please spare
yourself and others a lot of trouble and do so; even if only because while
you can fix your code, you can't fix someone else's - think management
tools, backup scripts, whatever may touch the db in the future.


-- 
Bier met grenadyn
Is als mosterd by den wyn
Sy die't drinkt, is eene kwezel
Hy die't drinkt, is ras een ezel


Re: I can't have "group" as a column name in a table?

2011-02-24 Thread Simcha Younger
On Thu, 24 Feb 2011 16:43:56 +0530
Aveek Misra  wrote:

> Use a quote around the column name or explicitly specify the column as 
> . (as for e.g. mytable.group) in the query. For more details 
> refer to http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.5/en/reserved-words.html
> 

use backticks, not quotes. 
`group`, not 'group'.


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Re: I can't have "group" as a column name in a table?

2011-02-24 Thread Jo�o C�ndido de Souza Neto
Have you read about reserved words in MySql?

http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.1/en/reserved-words.html

-- 
João Cândido de Souza Neto

"Dave M G"  escreveu na mensagem 
news:4d663ba0.5090...@articlass.org...
> MySQL users,
>
> Simple question:
>
> In one table in my database, the column was named "group".
>
> I kept getting failed query errors until I renamed the column.
>
> I've never before encountered a situation where MySQL mistook a column
> name for part of the query syntax.
>
> Should I never use the word "group" for column names? Seems a little
> silly. Is there a way to protect column names to that there is no 
> confusion?
>
> -- 
> Dave M G 



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Re: I can't have "group" as a column name in a table?

2011-02-24 Thread Aveek Misra
Use a quote around the column name or explicitly specify the column as 
. (as for e.g. mytable.group) in the query. For more details 
refer to http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.5/en/reserved-words.html

Thanks
Aveek

On Feb 24, 2011, at 4:36 PM, Dave M G wrote:

> MySQL users,
> 
> Simple question:
> 
> In one table in my database, the column was named "group".
> 
> I kept getting failed query errors until I renamed the column.
> 
> I've never before encountered a situation where MySQL mistook a column
> name for part of the query syntax.
> 
> Should I never use the word "group" for column names? Seems a little
> silly. Is there a way to protect column names to that there is no confusion?
> 
> -- 
> Dave M G
> 
> -- 
> MySQL General Mailing List
> For list archives: http://lists.mysql.com/mysql
> To unsubscribe:http://lists.mysql.com/mysql?unsub=ave...@yahoo-inc.com
> 



I can't have "group" as a column name in a table?

2011-02-24 Thread Dave M G
MySQL users,

Simple question:

In one table in my database, the column was named "group".

I kept getting failed query errors until I renamed the column.

I've never before encountered a situation where MySQL mistook a column
name for part of the query syntax.

Should I never use the word "group" for column names? Seems a little
silly. Is there a way to protect column names to that there is no confusion?

-- 
Dave M G

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