SHOW GRANTS [FOR user
]
This statement lists the GRANT
statement or statements that must be issued to duplicate the
privileges that are granted to a MySQL user account. The account
is named using the same format as for the
GRANT
statement; for example,
'jeffrey'@'localhost'
. If you specify only
the user name part of the account name, a host name part of
'%'
is used. For additional information about
specifying account names, see Section 12.4.1.3, “GRANT
Syntax”.
mysql> SHOW GRANTS FOR 'root'@'localhost';
+---------------------------------------------------------------------+
| Grants for root@localhost |
+---------------------------------------------------------------------+
| GRANT ALL PRIVILEGES ON *.* TO 'root'@'localhost' WITH GRANT OPTION |
+---------------------------------------------------------------------+
To list the privileges granted to the account that you are using to connect to the server, you can use any of the following statements:
SHOW GRANTS; SHOW GRANTS FOR CURRENT_USER; SHOW GRANTS FOR CURRENT_USER();
If SHOW GRANTS FOR CURRENT_USER
(or any of
the equivalent syntaxes) is used in DEFINER
context, such as within a stored procedure that is defined with
SQL SECURITY DEFINER
), the grants displayed
are those of the definer and not the invoker.
SHOW GRANTS
displays only the
privileges granted explicitly to the named account. Other
privileges might be available to the account, but they are not
displayed. For example, if an anonymous account exists, the
named account might be able to use its privileges, but
SHOW GRANTS
will not display
them.
SHOW GRANTS
requires the
SELECT
privilege for the
mysql
database.