The following sections provide a reference to MySQL Enterprise Firewall elements:
MySQL Enterprise Firewall maintains profile information on a per-group and per-account basis. It uses tables in the mysql
system database for persistent storage and INFORMATION_SCHEMA
or Performance Schema tables to provide views into in-memory cached data. When enabled, the firewall bases operational decisions on the cached data.
As of MySQL 8.0.23, MySQL Enterprise Firewall maintains group profile information using tables in the mysql
system database for persistent storage and Performance Schema tables to provide views into in-memory cached data.
Each system and Performance Schema table is accessible only by accounts that have the SELECT
privilege for it.
The mysql.firewall_groups
table lists names and operational modes of registered firewall group profiles. The table has the following columns (with the corresponding Performance Schema firewall_groups
table having similar but not necessarily identical columns):
NAME
The group profile name.
MODE
The current operational mode for the profile. Permitted mode values are OFF
, DETECTING
, PROTECTING
, and RECORDING
. For details about their meanings, see Firewall Concepts.
USERHOST
The training account for the group profile, to be used when the profile is in RECORDING
mode. The value is NULL
, or a non-NULL
account that has the format
:user_name
@host_name
If the value is NULL
, the firewall records allowlist rules for statements received from any account that is a member of the group.
If the value is non-NULL
, the firewall records allowlist rules only for statements received from the named account (which should be a member of the group).
The mysql.firewall_group_allowlist
table lists allowlist rules of registered firewall group profiles. The table has the following columns (with the corresponding Performance Schema firewall_group_allowlist
table having similar but not necessarily identical columns):
NAME
The group profile name.
RULE
A normalized statement indicating an acceptable statement pattern for the profile. A profile allowlist is the union of its rules.
ID
An integer column that is a primary key for the table.
The mysql.firewall_membership
table lists the members (accounts) of registered firewall group profiles. The table has the following columns (with the corresponding Performance Schema firewall_membership
table having similar but not necessarily identical columns):
GROUP_ID
The group profile name.
MEMBER_ID
The name of an account that is a member of the profile.
MySQL Enterprise Firewall maintains account profile information using tables in the mysql
system database for persistent storage and INFORMATION_SCHEMA
tables to provide views into in-memory cached data.
Each mysql
system database table is accessible only by accounts that have the SELECT
privilege for it. The INFORMATION_SCHEMA
tables are accessible by anyone.
As of MySQL 8.0.26, these tables are deprecated and subject to removal in a future MySQL version. See Migrating Account Profiles to Group Profiles.
The mysql.firewall_users
table lists names and operational modes of registered firewall account profiles. The table has the following columns (with the corresponding INFORMATION_SCHEMA.MYSQL_FIREWALL_USERS
table having similar but not necessarily identical columns):
USERHOST
The account profile name. Each account name has the format
.user_name
@host_name
MODE
The current operational mode for the profile. Permitted mode values are OFF
, DETECTING
, PROTECTING
, RECORDING
, and RESET
. For details about their meanings, see Firewall Concepts.
The mysql.firewall_whitelist
table lists allowlist rules of registered firewall account profiles. The table has the following columns (with the corresponding INFORMATION_SCHEMA.MYSQL_FIREWALL_WHITELIST
table having similar but not necessarily identical columns):
USERHOST
The account profile name. Each account name has the format
.user_name
@host_name
RULE
A normalized statement indicating an acceptable statement pattern for the profile. A profile allowlist is the union of its rules.
ID
An integer column that is a primary key for the table. This column was added in MySQL 8.0.12.
MySQL Enterprise Firewall stored procedures perform tasks such as registering profiles with the firewall, establishing their operational mode, and managing transfer of firewall data between the cache and persistent storage. These procedures invoke administrative functions that provide an API for lower-level tasks.
Firewall stored procedures are created in the mysql
system database. To invoke a firewall stored procedure, either do so while mysql
is the default database, or qualify the procedure name with the database name. For example:
CALL mysql.sp_set_firewall_group_mode(group
,mode
);
These stored procedures perform management operations on firewall group profiles:
sp_firewall_group_delist(
group
, user
)
This stored procedure removes an account from a firewall group profile.
If the call succeeds, the change in group membership is made to both the in-memory cache and persistent storage.
Arguments:
group
: The name of the affected group profile.
user
: The account to remove, as a string in
format.user_name
@host_name
Example:
CALL sp_firewall_group_delist('g', 'fwuser@localhost');
This procedure was added in MySQL 8.0.23.
sp_firewall_group_enlist(
group
, user
)
This stored procedure adds an account to a firewall group profile. It is not necessary to register the account itself with the firewall before adding the account to the group.
If the call succeeds, the change in group membership is made to both the in-memory cache and persistent storage.
Arguments:
group
: The name of the affected group profile.
user
: The account to add, as a string in
format.user_name
@host_name
Example:
CALL sp_firewall_group_enlist('g', 'fwuser@localhost');
This procedure was added in MySQL 8.0.23.
sp_reload_firewall_group_rules(
group
)
This stored procedure provides control over firewall operation for individual group profiles. The procedure uses firewall administrative functions to reload the in-memory rules for a group profile from the rules stored in the mysql.firewall_group_allowlist
table.
Arguments:
group
: The name of the affected group profile.
Example:
CALL sp_reload_firewall_group_rules('myapp');
This procedure clears the group profile in-memory allowlist rules before reloading them from persistent storage, and sets the profile mode to OFF
. If the profile mode was not OFF
prior to the sp_reload_firewall_group_rules()
call, use sp_set_firewall_group_mode()
to restore its previous mode after reloading the rules. For example, if the profile was in PROTECTING
mode, that is no longer true after calling sp_reload_firewall_group_rules()
and you must set it to PROTECTING
again explicitly.
This procedure was added in MySQL 8.0.23.
sp_set_firewall_group_mode(
group
, mode
)
This stored procedure establishes the operational mode for a firewall group profile, after registering the profile with the firewall if it was not already registered. The procedure also invokes firewall administrative functions as necessary to transfer firewall data between the cache and persistent storage. This procedure may be called even if the mysql_firewall_mode
system variable is OFF
, although setting the mode for a profile has no operational effect until the firewall is enabled.
If the profile previously existed, any recording limitation for it remains unchanged. To set or clear the limitation, call sp_set_firewall_group_mode_and_user()
instead.
Arguments:
group
: The name of the affected group profile.
mode
: The operational mode for the profile, as a string. Permitted mode values are OFF
, DETECTING
, PROTECTING
, and RECORDING
. For details about their meanings, see Firewall Concepts.
Example:
CALL sp_set_firewall_group_mode('myapp', 'PROTECTING');
This procedure was added in MySQL 8.0.23.
sp_set_firewall_group_mode_and_user(
group
, mode
, user
)
This stored procedure registers a group with the firewall and establishes its operational mode, similar to sp_set_firewall_group_mode()
, but also specifies the training account to be used when the group is in RECORDING
mode.
Arguments:
group
: The name of the affected group profile.
mode
: The operational mode for the profile, as a string. Permitted mode values are OFF
, DETECTING
, PROTECTING
, and RECORDING
. For details about their meanings, see Firewall Concepts.
user
: The training account for the group profile, to be used when the profile is in RECORDING
mode. The value is NULL
, or a non-NULL
account that has the format
:user_name
@host_name
If the value is NULL
, the firewall records allowlist rules for statements received from any account that is a member of the group.
If the value is non-NULL
, the firewall records allowlist rules only for statements received from the named account (which should be a member of the group).
Example:
CALL sp_set_firewall_group_mode_and_user('myapp', 'RECORDING', 'myapp_user1@localhost');
This procedure was added in MySQL 8.0.23.
These stored procedures perform management operations on firewall account profiles:
sp_reload_firewall_rules(
user
)
This stored procedure provides control over firewall operation for individual account profiles. The procedure uses firewall administrative functions to reload the in-memory rules for an account profile from the rules stored in the mysql.firewall_whitelist
table.
Arguments:
user
: The name of the affected account profile, as a string in
format.user_name
@host_name
Example:
CALL mysql.sp_reload_firewall_rules('fwuser@localhost');
This procedure clears the account profile in-memory allowlist rules before reloading them from persistent storage, and sets the profile mode to OFF
. If the profile mode was not OFF
prior to the sp_reload_firewall_rules()
call, use sp_set_firewall_mode()
to restore its previous mode after reloading the rules. For example, if the profile was in PROTECTING
mode, that is no longer true after calling sp_reload_firewall_rules()
and you must set it to PROTECTING
again explicitly.
As of MySQL 8.0.26, this procedure is deprecated and subject to removal in a future MySQL version. See Migrating Account Profiles to Group Profiles.
sp_set_firewall_mode(
user
, mode
)
This stored procedure establishes the operational mode for a firewall account profile, after registering the profile with the firewall if it was not already registered. The procedure also invokes firewall administrative functions as necessary to transfer firewall data between the cache and persistent storage. This procedure may be called even if the mysql_firewall_mode
system variable is OFF
, although setting the mode for a profile has no operational effect until the firewall is enabled.
Arguments:
user
: The name of the affected account profile, as a string in
format.user_name
@host_name
mode
: The operational mode for the profile, as a string. Permitted mode values are OFF
, DETECTING
, PROTECTING
, RECORDING
, and RESET
. For details about their meanings, see Firewall Concepts.
Switching an account profile to any mode but RECORDING
synchronizes its firewall cache data to the mysql
system database tables that provide persistent underlying storage. Switching the mode from OFF
to RECORDING
reloads the allowlist from the mysql.firewall_whitelist
table into the cache.
If an account profile has an empty allowlist, its mode cannot be set to PROTECTING
because the profile would reject every statement, effectively prohibiting the account from executing statements. In response to such a mode-setting attempt, the firewall produces a diagnostic message that is returned as a result set rather than as an SQL error:
mysql> CALL mysql.sp_set_firewall_mode('a@b','PROTECTING');
+----------------------------------------------------------------------+
| set_firewall_mode(arg_userhost, arg_mode) |
+----------------------------------------------------------------------+
| ERROR: PROTECTING mode requested for a@b but the allowlist is empty. |
+----------------------------------------------------------------------+
As of MySQL 8.0.26, this procedure is deprecated and subject to removal in a future MySQL version. See Migrating Account Profiles to Group Profiles.
These stored procedures perform miscellaneous firewall management operations.
sp_migrate_firewall_user_to_group(
user
, group
)
As of MySQL 8.0.26, account profiles are deprecated because group profiles can do anything account profiles can do. The sp_migrate_firewall_user_to_group()
stored procedure converts a firewall account profile to a group profile with the acount as its single enlisted member. The conversion procedure is discussed in Migrating Account Profiles to Group Profiles.
This routine requires the FIREWALL_ADMIN
privilege.
Arguments:
user
: The name of the account profile to convert to a group profile, as a string in
format. The account profile must exist, and must not currently be in user_name
@host_name
RECORDING
mode.
group
: The name of the new group profile, which must not already exist. The new group profile has the named account as its single enlisted member, and that member is set as the group training account. The group profile operational mode is taken from the account profile operational mode.
Example:
CALL sp_migrate_firewall_user_to_group('fwuser@localhost', 'mygroup);
This procedure was added in MySQL 8.0.26.
MySQL Enterprise Firewall administrative functions provide an API for lower-level tasks such as synchronizing the firewall cache with the underlying system tables.
Under normal operation, these functions are invoked by the firewall stored procedures, not directly by users. For that reason, these function descriptions do not include details such as information about their arguments and return types.
These functions perform management operations on firewall group profiles:
firewall_group_delist(
group
, user
)
This function removes an account from a group profile. It requires the FIREWALL_ADMIN
privilege.
Example:
SELECT firewall_group_delist('g', 'fwuser@localhost');
This function was added in MySQL 8.0.23.
firewall_group_enlist(
group
, user
)
This function adds an account to a group profile. It requires the FIREWALL_ADMIN
privilege.
It is not necessary to register the account itself with the firewall before adding the account to the group.
Example:
SELECT firewall_group_enlist('g', 'fwuser@localhost');
This function was added in MySQL 8.0.23.
read_firewall_group_allowlist(
group
, rule
)
This aggregate function updates the recorded-statement cache for the named group profile through a SELECT
statement on the mysql.firewall_group_allowlist
table. It requires the FIREWALL_ADMIN
privilege.
Example:
SELECT read_firewall_group_allowlist('my_fw_group', fgw.rule) FROM mysql.firewall_group_allowlist AS fgw WHERE NAME = 'my_fw_group';
This function was added in MySQL 8.0.23.
read_firewall_groups(
group
, mode
, user
)
This aggregate function updates the firewall group profile cache through a SELECT
statement on the mysql.firewall_groups
table. It requires the FIREWALL_ADMIN
privilege.
Example:
SELECT read_firewall_groups('g', 'RECORDING', 'fwuser@localhost') FROM mysql.firewall_groups;
This function was added in MySQL 8.0.23.
set_firewall_group_mode(
group
, mode
[, user
])
This function manages the group profile cache, establishes the profile operational mode, and optionally specifies the profile training account. It requires the FIREWALL_ADMIN
privilege.
If the optional user
argument is not given, any previous user
setting for the profile remains unchanged. To change the setting, call the function with a third argument.
If the optional user
argument is given, it specifies the training account for the group profile, to be used when the profile is in RECORDING
mode. The value is NULL
, or a non-NULL
account that has the format
:user_name
@host_name
If the value is NULL
, the firewall records allowlist rules for statements received from any account that is a member of the group.
If the value is non-NULL
, the firewall records allowlist rules only for statements received from the named account (which should be a member of the group).
Example:
SELECT set_firewall_group_mode('g', 'DETECTING');
This function was added in MySQL 8.0.23.
These functions perform management operations on firewall account profiles:
read_firewall_users(
user
, mode
)
This aggregate function updates the firewall account profile cache through a SELECT
statement on the mysql.firewall_users
table. It requires the FIREWALL_ADMIN
privilege or the deprecated SUPER
privilege.
Example:
SELECT read_firewall_users('fwuser@localhost', 'RECORDING') FROM mysql.firewall_users;
As of MySQL 8.0.26, this function is deprecated and subject to removal in a future MySQL version. See Migrating Account Profiles to Group Profiles.
read_firewall_whitelist(
user
, rule
)
This aggregate function updates the recorded-statement cache for the named account profile through a SELECT
statement on the mysql.firewall_whitelist
table. It requires the FIREWALL_ADMIN
privilege or the deprecated SUPER
privilege.
Example:
SELECT read_firewall_whitelist('fwuser@localhost', fw.rule) FROM mysql.firewall_whitelist AS fw WHERE USERHOST = 'fwuser@localhost';
As of MySQL 8.0.26, this function is deprecated and subject to removal in a future MySQL version. See Migrating Account Profiles to Group Profiles.
This function manages the account profile cache and establishes the profile operational mode. It requires the FIREWALL_ADMIN
privilege or the deprecated SUPER
privilege.
Example:
SELECT set_firewall_mode('fwuser@localhost', 'RECORDING');
As of MySQL 8.0.26, this function is deprecated and subject to removal in a future MySQL version. See Migrating Account Profiles to Group Profiles.
These functions perform miscellaneous firewall operations:
This function resets several firewall status variables to 0:
This function requires the FIREWALL_ADMIN
privilege or the deprecated SUPER
privilege.
Example:
SELECT mysql_firewall_flush_status();
This function normalizes an SQL statement into the digest form used for allowlist rules. It requires the FIREWALL_ADMIN
privilege or the deprecated SUPER
privilege.
Example:
SELECT normalize_statement('SELECT * FROM t1 WHERE c1 > 2');
The same digest functionality is available outside firewall context using the STATEMENT_DIGEST_TEXT()
SQL function.
MySQL Enterprise Firewall supports the following system variables. Use them to configure firewall operation. These variables are unavailable unless the firewall is installed (see Section 6.4.7.2, “Installing or Uninstalling MySQL Enterprise Firewall”).
Command-Line Format | --mysql-firewall-mode[={OFF|ON}] |
---|---|
System Variable | mysql_firewall_mode |
Scope | Global |
Dynamic | Yes |
SET_VAR Hint Applies | No |
Type | Boolean |
Default Value | ON |
Whether MySQL Enterprise Firewall is enabled (the default) or disabled.
Command-Line Format | --mysql-firewall-trace[={OFF|ON}] |
---|---|
System Variable | mysql_firewall_trace |
Scope | Global |
Dynamic | Yes |
SET_VAR Hint Applies | No |
Type | Boolean |
Default Value | OFF |
Whether the MySQL Enterprise Firewall trace is enabled or disabled (the default). When mysql_firewall_trace
is enabled, for PROTECTING
mode, the firewall writes rejected statements to the error log.
MySQL Enterprise Firewall supports the following status variables. Use them to obtain information about firewall operational status. These variables are unavailable unless the firewall is installed (see Section 6.4.7.2, “Installing or Uninstalling MySQL Enterprise Firewall”). Firewall status variables are set to 0 whenever the MYSQL_FIREWALL
plugin is installed or the server is started. Many of them are reset to zero by the mysql_firewall_flush_status()
function (see MySQL Enterprise Firewall Administrative Functions).
The number of statements rejected by MySQL Enterprise Firewall.
The number of statements accepted by MySQL Enterprise Firewall.
The number of statements logged by MySQL Enterprise Firewall as suspicious for users who are in DETECTING
mode.
The number of statements recorded by MySQL Enterprise Firewall, including duplicates.