CHANGE MASTER TOmaster_def[,master_def] ...master_def: MASTER_HOST = 'host_name' | MASTER_USER = 'user_name' | MASTER_PASSWORD = 'password' | MASTER_PORT =port_num| MASTER_CONNECT_RETRY =count| MASTER_LOG_FILE = 'master_log_name' | MASTER_LOG_POS =master_log_pos| RELAY_LOG_FILE = 'relay_log_name' | RELAY_LOG_POS =relay_log_pos| MASTER_SSL = {0|1} | MASTER_SSL_CA = 'ca_file_name' | MASTER_SSL_CAPATH = 'ca_directory_name' | MASTER_SSL_CERT = 'cert_file_name' | MASTER_SSL_KEY = 'key_file_name' | MASTER_SSL_CIPHER = 'cipher_list' | MASTER_SSL_VERIFY_SERVER_CERT = {0|1}
CHANGE MASTER TO changes the parameters
that the slave server uses for connecting to and communicating
with the master server. It also updates the contents of the
master.info and
relay-log.info files.
MASTER_USER,
MASTER_PASSWORD,
MASTER_SSL,
MASTER_SSL_CA,
MASTER_SSL_CAPATH,
MASTER_SSL_CERT,
MASTER_SSL_KEY,
MASTER_SSL_CIPHER, and
MASTER_SSL_VERIFY_SERVER_CERT provide
information to the slave about how to connect to its master.
MASTER_SSL_VERIFY_SERVER_CERT was added in
MySQL 5.1.18. It is used as described for the
--ssl-verify-server-cert option in
Section 5.8.7.3, “SSL Command Options”.
The SSL options (MASTER_SSL,
MASTER_SSL_CA,
MASTER_SSL_CAPATH,
MASTER_SSL_CERT,
MASTER_SSL_KEY,
MASTER_SSL_CIPHER), and
MASTER_SSL_VERIFY_SERVER_CERT can be
changed even on slaves that are compiled without SSL support.
They are saved to the master.info file,
but are ignored unless you use a server that has SSL support
enabled.
If you don't specify a given parameter, it keeps its old value, except as indicated in the following discussion. For example, if the password to connect to your MySQL master has changed, you just need to issue these statements to tell the slave about the new password:
STOP SLAVE; -- if replication was running CHANGE MASTER TO MASTER_PASSWORD='new3cret'; START SLAVE; -- if you want to restart replication
There is no need to specify the parameters that do not change (host, port, user, and so forth).
MASTER_HOST and
MASTER_PORT are the hostname (or IP
address) of the master host and its TCP/IP port. Note that if
MASTER_HOST is equal to
localhost, then, like in other parts of
MySQL, the port number might be ignored (if Unix socket files
can be used, for example).
If you specify MASTER_HOST or
MASTER_PORT, the slave assumes that the
master server is different from before (even if you specify a
host or port value that is the same as the current value.) In
this case, the old values for the master binary log name and
position are considered no longer applicable, so if you do not
specify MASTER_LOG_FILE and
MASTER_LOG_POS in the statement,
MASTER_LOG_FILE='' and
MASTER_LOG_POS=4 are silently appended to
it.
MASTER_LOG_FILE and
MASTER_LOG_POS are the coordinates at which
the slave I/O thread should begin reading from the master the
next time the thread starts. If you specify either of them,
you cannot specify RELAY_LOG_FILE or
RELAY_LOG_POS. If neither of
MASTER_LOG_FILE or
MASTER_LOG_POS are specified, the slave
uses the last coordinates of the slave SQL
thread before CHANGE MASTER was
issued. This ensures that there is no discontinuity in
replication, even if the slave SQL thread was late compared to
the slave I/O thread, when you merely want to change, say, the
password to use.
CHANGE MASTER deletes all relay
log files and starts a new one, unless you specify
RELAY_LOG_FILE or
RELAY_LOG_POS. In that case, relay logs are
kept; the relay_log_purge global variable
is set silently to 0.
CHANGE MASTER is useful for setting up a
slave when you have the snapshot of the master and have
recorded the log and the offset corresponding to it. After
loading the snapshot into the slave, you can run
CHANGE MASTER TO
MASTER_LOG_FILE='
on the slave.
log_name_on_master',
MASTER_LOG_POS=log_offset_on_master
The following example changes the master and master's binary log coordinates. This is used when you want to set up the slave to replicate the master:
CHANGE MASTER TO MASTER_HOST='master2.mycompany.com', MASTER_USER='replication', MASTER_PASSWORD='bigs3cret', MASTER_PORT=3306, MASTER_LOG_FILE='master2-bin.001', MASTER_LOG_POS=4, MASTER_CONNECT_RETRY=10;
The next example shows an operation that is less frequently
employed. It is used when the slave has relay logs that you
want it to execute again for some reason. To do this, the
master need not be reachable. You need only use
CHANGE MASTER TO and start the SQL thread
(START SLAVE SQL_THREAD):
CHANGE MASTER TO RELAY_LOG_FILE='slave-relay-bin.006', RELAY_LOG_POS=4025;
You can even use the second operation in a non-replication
setup with a standalone, non-slave server for recovery
following a crash. Suppose that your server has crashed and
you have restored a backup. You want to replay the server's
own binary logs (not relay logs, but regular binary logs),
named (for example) myhost-bin.*. First,
make a backup copy of these binary logs in some safe place, in
case you don't exactly follow the procedure below and
accidentally have the server purge the binary logs. Use
SET GLOBAL relay_log_purge=0 for additional
safety. Then start the server without the
--log-bin option, Instead, use the
--replicate-same-server-id,
--relay-log=myhost-bin (to make the server
believe that these regular binary logs are relay logs) and
--skip-slave-start options. After the server
starts, issue these statements:
CHANGE MASTER TO RELAY_LOG_FILE='myhost-bin.153', RELAY_LOG_POS=410, MASTER_HOST='some_dummy_string'; START SLAVE SQL_THREAD;
The server reads and executes its own binary logs, thus
achieving crash recovery. Once the recovery is finished, run
STOP SLAVE, shut down the server, delete
the master.info and
relay-log.info files, and restart the
server with its original options.
Specifying the MASTER_HOST option (even
with a dummy value) is required to make the server think it is
a slave.

User Comments
NOTE as I did not the paragraph above which states:
CHANGE MASTER deletes all relay log files and starts a new one, unless you specify RELAY_LOG_FILE or RELAY_LOG_POS. In that case, relay logs are kept ...
I thought I would be smart and update the master log position while my slave was still processing a backlog of relay log statements ... bad idea as I specified only the new master info and it deleted all relay logs. RTFM...
I was confounded with this error when I restarted mySQL after our server IP changed:
... [ERROR] Failed to open the relay log 'servername1-bin.000002' (relay_log_pos 776151231)
... [ERROR] Could not find target log during relay log initialization
It turns out that the server's name had been changed from 'servername1' to 'servername2' and it created a new log index
--> servername2-relay-bin.index
without including the contents of the old
--> servername1-relay-bin.index.
I added the contents of the two index files and MySQL was finally able to find the logs and restart replication.
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