Tag: Password
It can sometimes be hard to keep track of the many passwords that your server requires. In our password section, you'll find many tutorials designed to aid in your in your password search.
Best Practices for Security on Your New Ubuntu Server: Users, Console and Firewall
Thank you for taking the time to review this important information. You will find this guide broken down into six major sections that coincide with Ubuntu’s security policy guide. The major topics we talk on throughout these articles are as follows:
Reset Your WordPress Admin Password
Whether its a hacked site or a lost password, you may find that you are locked out of your WordPress Admin control panel. If you’ve forgotten your password or don’t have access to the email address that the “Lost your password?” link sends to, you still have one more option to access it. Through the database! WordPress’ database stores all WordPress username, encrypted passwords, and the user’s email address and thus can be edited through a database client like phpMyAdmin. In this tutorial, we’ll be showing you how to edit the email address and change your user’s password.
Windows User Account Management
Managing who has access to your server, and what type of access that person is an important part of server administration. This article will address multiple areas relating to user accounts on the Windows operating system. It assumes your Windows Server is on a “Workstation” and not a part of an Active Directory domain. The process for resetting an Active Directory user account is different and out of scope for this article.
How to Change a MySQL Database User’s Password in cPanel
II. How To Create a MySQL Database in cPanel
III. How To Delete a MySQL Database in cPanel
IV. How To Create a MySQL Database User in cPanel
V. How To Assign a User to a MySQL Database in cPanel
VI. How To Change a MySQL Database User's Password in cPanel
VII. How To Remove a User from a MySQL Database in cPanel
VIII. How To Delete a MySQL Database User in cPanel
IX. How To Check a MySQL Database for Errors in cPanel
X. How To Repair a MySQL Database in cPanel
XI. How To Manage a MySQL Database with phpMyAdmin in cPanel
Managing databases on your server is necessary for your website’s ongoing growth and development. Managing the users and their passwords is equally essential.
How To Password Protect a Directory in cPanel
Change a Password for MySQL on Linux via Command Line
MySQL via Command Line 102: Basic User Interaction
- These instructions are intended for setting the password for all MySQL users named root on Linux via the command line. However, they can also be followed to change the password for any MySQL user.
- I’ll be working from a Liquid Web Core Managed CentOS 6.5 server, and I'll be logged in as root.
First, we'll log in to the MySQL server from the command line with the following command:
In this article, we denote how to update your servers password in my.liquidweb.com. Liquid Web’s around-the-clock monitoring of your server works best when we also can log in to your server and proactively fix issues as they arise. If you change your server’s root or admin password without updating your account information through manage, then we only will be able to notify you of problems rather than attempting to fix them automatically.
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