This is a read-only copy of the MariaDB Knowledgebase generated on 2024-12-24. For the latest, interactive version please visit https://mariadb.com/kb/.

Authentication Plugin - Unix Socket

MariaDB starting with 10.4.3

In MariaDB 10.4.3 and later, the unix_socket authentication plugin is installed by default, and it is used by the 'root'@'localhost' user account by default. See Authentication from MariaDB 10.4 for more information.

The unix_socket authentication plugin allows the user to use operating system credentials when connecting to MariaDB via the local Unix socket file. This Unix socket file is defined by the socket system variable.

The unix_socket authentication plugin works by calling the getsockopt system call with the SO_PEERCRED socket option, which allows it to retrieve the uid of the process that is connected to the socket. It is then able to get the user name associated with that uid. Once it has the user name, it will authenticate the connecting user as the MariaDB account that has the same user name.

The unix_socket authentication plugin is not suited to multiple Unix users accessing a single MariaDB user account.

Security

A unix_socket authentication plugin is a passwordless security mechanism. Its security is in the strength of the access to the Unix user rather than the complexity and the secrecy of the password. As the security is different from passwords, the strengths and weaknesses need to be considered, and these aren't the same in every installation.

Strengths

  • Access is limited to the Unix user so, for example, a www-data user cannot access root with the unix_socket authentication plugin.
  • There is no password to brute force.
  • There is no password that can be accidentally exposed by user accident, poor security on backups, or poor security on passwords in configuration files.
  • Default Unix user security is usually strong on preventing remote access and password brute force attempts.

Weaknesses

The strength of a unix_socket authentication plugin is effectively the strength of the security of the Unix users on the system. The Unix user default installation in most cases is sufficiently secure, however, business requirements or unskilled management may expose risks. The following is a non-exhaustive list of potential Unix user security issues that may arise.

  • Common access areas without screen locks, where an unauthorized user accesses the logged in Unix user of an authorized user.
  • Extensive sudo access grants that provide users with access to execute commands of a different Unix user.
  • Scripts writable by Unix users other than the Unix user that are executed (cron or directly) by the unix user.
  • Web pages that are susceptible to command injection, where the Unix user running the web page has elevated privileges in the database that weren't intended to be used.
  • Poor Unix user password practices including weak user passwords, password exposure and password reuse accompanied by an access vulnerability/mechanism of an unauthorized user to exploit this weakness.
  • Weak remote access mechanisms and network file system privileges.
  • Poor user security behavior including running untrusted scripts and software.

In some of these scenarios a database password may prevent these security exploits, however it will remove all the strengths of the unix_socket authentication plugin previously mentioned.

Disabling the Plugin

MariaDB starting with 10.4.3

In MariaDB 10.4.3 and later, the unix_socket authentication plugin is installed by default, so if you do not want it to be available by default on those versions, then you will need to disable it.

The unix_socket authentication plugin is also installed by default in new installations that use the .deb packages provided by Debian's default repositories in Debian 9 and later and Ubuntu's default repositories in Ubuntu 15.10 and later, so if you do not want it to be available by default on those systems when those packages are used, then you will need to disable it. See Differences in MariaDB in Debian (and Ubuntu) for more information.

The unix_socket authentication plugin can be disabled by starting the server with the unix_socket option set to OFF. This can be specified as a command-line argument to mysqld or it can be specified in a relevant server option group in an option file. For example:

[mariadb]
...
unix_socket=OFF

As an alternative, the unix_socket option can also be set to OFF by pairing the option with the disable option prefix. For example:

[mariadb]
...
disable_unix_socket

Installing the Plugin

MariaDB starting with 10.4.3

In MariaDB 10.4.3 and later, the unix_socket authentication plugin is installed by default, so this step can be skipped on those versions.

The unix_socket authentication plugin is also installed by default in new installations that use the .deb packages provided by Debian's default repositories in Debian 9 and later and Ubuntu's default repositories in Ubuntu 15.10 and later, so this step can be skipped on those systems when those packages are used. See Differences in MariaDB in Debian (and Ubuntu) for more information.

In other systems, although the plugin's shared library is distributed with MariaDB by default as auth_socket.so, the plugin is not actually installed by MariaDB by default. There are two methods that can be used to install the plugin with MariaDB.

The first method can be used to install the plugin without restarting the server. You can install the plugin dynamically by executing INSTALL SONAME or INSTALL PLUGIN. For example:

INSTALL SONAME 'auth_socket';

The second method can be used to tell the server to load the plugin when it starts up. The plugin can be installed this way by providing the --plugin-load or the --plugin-load-add options. This can be specified as a command-line argument to mysqld or it can be specified in a relevant server option group in an option file. For example:

[mariadb]
...
plugin_load_add = auth_socket

Uninstalling the Plugin

You can uninstall the plugin dynamically by executing UNINSTALL SONAME or UNINSTALL PLUGIN. For example:

UNINSTALL SONAME 'auth_socket';

If you installed the plugin by providing the --plugin-load or the --plugin-load-add options in a relevant server option group in an option file, then those options should be removed to prevent the plugin from being loaded the next time the server is restarted.

Creating Users

To create a user account via CREATE USER, specify the name of the plugin in the IDENTIFIED VIA clause. For example:

CREATE USER username@hostname IDENTIFIED VIA unix_socket;

If SQL_MODE does not have NO_AUTO_CREATE_USER set, then you can also create the user account via GRANT. For example:

GRANT SELECT ON db.* TO username@hostname IDENTIFIED VIA unix_socket;

Switching to Password-based Authentication

Sometimes Unix socket authentication does not meet your needs, so it can be desirable to switch a user account back to password-based authentication. This can easily be done by telling MariaDB to use another authentication plugin for the account by executing the ALTER USER statement. The specific authentication plugin is specified with the IDENTIFIED VIA clause. For example, if you wanted to switch to the mysql_native_password authentication plugin, then you could execute:

ALTER USER root@localhost IDENTIFIED VIA mysql_native_password;
SET PASSWORD = PASSWORD('foo');

Note that if your operating system has scripts that require password-less access to MariaDB, then this may break those scripts. You may be able to fix that by setting a password in the [client] option group in your /root/.my.cnf option file. For example:

[client]
password=foo

Client Authentication Plugins

The unix_socket authentication plugin does not require any specific client authentication plugins. It should work with all clients.

Support in Client Libraries

The unix_socket authentication plugin does not require any special support in client libraries. It should work with all client libraries.

Example

$ mysql -uroot
MariaDB []> CREATE USER serg IDENTIFIED VIA unix_socket;
MariaDB []> CREATE USER monty IDENTIFIED VIA unix_socket;
MariaDB []> quit
Bye
$ whoami
serg
$ mysql --user=serg
Welcome to the MariaDB monitor.  Commands end with ; or \g.
Your MariaDB connection id is 2
Server version: 5.2.0-MariaDB-alpha-debug Source distribution
MariaDB []> quit
Bye
$ mysql --user=monty
ERROR 1045 (28000): Access denied for user 'monty'@'localhost' (using password: NO)

In this example, a user serg is already logged into the operating system and has full shell access. He has already authenticated with the operating system and his MariaDB account is configured to use the unix_socket authentication plugin, so he does not need to authenticate again for the database. MariaDB accepts his operating system credentials and allows him to connect. However, any attempt to connect to the database as another operating system user will be denied.

Versions

VersionStatusIntroduced
1.0StableMariaDB 10.0.11
1.0BetaMariaDB 5.2.0

Options

unix_socket

  • Description: Controls how the server should treat the plugin when the server starts up.
    • Valid values are:
      • OFF - Disables the plugin without removing it from the mysql.plugin table.
      • ON - Enables the plugin. If the plugin cannot be initialized, then the server will still continue starting up, but the plugin will be disabled.
      • FORCE - Enables the plugin. If the plugin cannot be initialized, then the server will fail to start with an error.
      • FORCE_PLUS_PERMANENT - Enables the plugin. If the plugin cannot be initialized, then the server will fail to start with an error. In addition, the plugin cannot be uninstalled with UNINSTALL SONAME or UNINSTALL PLUGIN while the server is running.
    • See Plugin Overview: Configuring Plugin Activation at Server Startup for more information.
  • Commandline: --unix-socket=value
  • Data Type: enumerated
  • Default Value: ON
  • Valid Values: OFF, ON, FORCE, FORCE_PLUS_PERMANENT

See Also

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