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The MySQL Proxy is an application that communicates over the network using the MySQL Network Protocol and provides communication between one or more MySQL servers and one or more MySQL clients. In the most basic configuration, MySQL Proxy simply passes on queries from the client to the MySQL Server and returns the responses from the MySQL Server to the client.
Because MySQL Proxy uses the MySQL network protocol, any MySQL compatible client (include the command line client, any clients using the MySQL client libraries, and any connector that supports the MySQL network protocol) can connect to the proxy without modification.
In addition to the basic pass-through configuration, the MySQL Proxy is also capable of monitoring and altering the communication between the client and the server. This interception of the queries enables you to add profiling, and the interception of the exchanges is scriptable using the Lua scripting language.
By intercepting the queries from the client, the proxy can insert additional queries into the list of queries sent to the server, and remove the additional results when they are returned by the server. Using this functionality you can add informational statements to each query, for example to monitor their execution time or progress, and separately log the results, while still returning the results from the original query to the client.
The proxy allows you to perform additional monitoring, filtering or manipulation on queries without you having to make any modifications to the client and without the client even being aware that it is communicating with anything but a genuine MySQL server.
This documentation covers MySQL Proxy 0.8.0.
MySQL Proxy is currently an Alpha release and should not be used within production environments.
MySQL Proxy is compatible with MySQL 5.0.x or later. Testing has not been performed with Version 4.1. Please provide feedback on your experiences via the MySQL Proxy Forum.
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