* Mysql uses the underscore character to represent a single character
wildcard.
* A grant on table `the_database`.* would match `theAdatabase`.*, so
underscores must be escaped to avoid this match.
* The output from mysql escapes special characters (\n, \t, \0, and \\),
but the input does not need to be escaped.
* In order for the provider to compare the tables, the output of
mysql -NBe <query> must have \\ substituted with \.
Old regex is : /^GRANT\s(.+)\sON\s(.+)\sTO\s(.*)@(.*?)(\s.*)$/ . The
last part (\s.*)$ means "a space followed by anything". The issue is
that when user has no GRANT privileges, the "SHOW GRANTS FOR #{user_string}" returns
"GRANT SELECT ON `database`.* TO 'user'@'%'" which does not match (\s.*)$ .
This small patch fixes this making last bloc optional (thanks to '?').
If database grant has backslash in database name (for example: example\_dev), then puppet will try to apply same resource every run because MySQL reports that table name with double backslash (for example: example\\_dev). By global replace of double backslash with single one, this issue is fixed.
In the grant provider users are fetched by querying mysql.user table. Grants
for those users are fetched using show grants for... syntax. This can lead to
errors, when some of the users in mysql.user table do not have currently
active grants.
This happens at least when MySQL is started with --skip-name-resolve option,
when there are users with the hostname part specified as a FQDN. Such users are
created by mysql_install_db. This leads to problems if mysql::account_security
is included for the node and skip-name-resolve is specified in override_options
hash for mysql::server.
Includes acceptance test for the change.
Because arrays are ordered lists, Puppet compares the list of retrieved
privileges against the defined privilege list. This causes it to
reapply privilege if the ordering differs. We now forcibly order in
the type and the provider to make sure we never falsely reapply
privileges.
The quote is need for username and host in mysql grant. revoke and grant function is already doing it with cmd_user(). not sure why the constructor didn't do it. This patch fixed#261 and #262.
This provider has undergone the largest set of changes and currently
just accepts a full SQL grant string as the name and then applies it,
making things easier for DBAs and removes the awkward attempts at
modelling grants into Puppet.