If you have set a MySQL root password and have installed Zenoss via RPM you can update the file /etc/init.d/zenoss and set the MySQL root password there. It defaults to blank (the default MySQL root password), but you can safely override it.

It'd also be a good idea to examine /opt/zenoss/bin/zenoss_(init| upgrade)_(pre|post)


-c


On Jun 12, 2007, at 4:33 AM, KPCasting wrote:

Hello,

I am saying this for people that found the same problem...


RHEL4/CentOS 4

When you runs mysqld for first time it shows:


PLEASE REMEMBER TO SET A PASSWORD FOR THE MySQL root USER !
To do so, start the server, then issue the following commands:
/usr/bin/mysqladmin -u root password 'new-password'
/usr/bin/mysqladmin -u root -h zenoss.globalred.local password 'new-password'
See the manual for more instructions.


I was setting the password anytime and after I couldn't run zenoss because a mysql user/password problem.


Chao,
KPCasting

------------------------
 KPCasting




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