:: DEVELOPER ZONE
When you start the mysqld server, you can specify program options using any of the methods described in Section 4.3, “Specifying Program Options”. The most common methods are to provide options in an option file or on the command line. However, in most cases it is desirable to make sure that the server uses the same options each time it runs. The best way to ensure this is to list them in an option file. See Section 4.3.2, “Using Option Files”.
mysqld reads options from the
[mysqld] and [server] groups.
mysqld_safe reads options from the
[mysqld], [server],
[mysqld_safe], and
[safe_mysqld] groups.
mysql.server reads options from the
[mysqld] and [mysql.server]
groups. An embedded MySQL server usually reads options from the
[server], [embedded], and
[ groups,
where xxxxx_SERVER]xxxxx is the name of the
application into which the server is embedded.
mysqld accepts many command-line options. For a
list, execute mysqld --help. Before MySQL 4.1.1,
--help prints the full help message. As of 4.1.1,
it prints a brief message; to see the full list, use mysqld
--verbose --help.
The following list shows some of the most common server options. Additional options are described elsewhere:
Options that affect security: See Section 5.5.3, “Startup Options for mysqld Concerning Security”.
SSL-related options: See Section 5.7.7.5, “SSL Command-Line Options”.
Binary log control options: See Section 5.10.4, “The Binary Log”.
Replication-related options: See Section 6.8, “Replication Startup Options”.
Options specific to particular storage engines: See
Section 14.1.1, “MyISAM Startup Options”, Section 14.4.3, “BDB Startup Options”,
Section 15.5, “InnoDB Startup Options”.
You can also set the value of a server system variable by using the variable name as an option, as described later in this section.
--help, -?
Display a short help message and exit. Before MySQL 4.1.1,
--help displays the full help message. As of
4.1.1, it displays an abbreviated message only. Use both the
--verbose and --help options
to see the full message.
--allow-suspicious-udfs
This option controls whether user-defined functions that have only
an xxx symbol for the main function can be
loaded. By default, the option is off and only UDFs that have at
least one auxiliary symbol can be loaded. This prevents attempts at
loading functions from shared object files other than those
containing legitimate UDFs. This option was added in MySQL 4.0.24,
4.1.10a, and 5.0.3. See Section 27.2.3.6, “User-defined Function Security Precautions”.
--ansi
Use standard SQL syntax instead of MySQL syntax. See
Section 1.7.3, “Running MySQL in ANSI Mode”. For more precise control over the
server SQL mode, use the --sql-mode option
instead.
--basedir=
path, -b
path
The path to the MySQL installation directory. All paths are usually resolved relative to this.
--big-tables
Allow large result sets by saving all temporary sets in files. This option prevents most ``table full'' errors, but also slows down queries for which in-memory tables would suffice. Since MySQL 3.23.2, the server is able to handle large result sets automatically by using memory for small temporary tables and switching to disk tables where necessary.
--bind-address=
IP
The IP address to bind to.
--console
Write the error log messages to stderr/stdout even if
--log-error is specified. On Windows,
mysqld does not close the console screen if this
option is used.
--character-sets-dir=
path
The directory where character sets are installed. See Section 5.9.1, “The Character Set Used for Data and Sorting”.
--chroot=
path
Put the mysqld server in a closed environment
during startup by using the chroot() system
call. This is a recommended security measure as of MySQL 4.0.
(MySQL 3.23 is not able to provide a chroot()
jail that is 100% closed.) Note that use of this option somewhat
limits LOAD DATA INFILE and SELECT ...
INTO OUTFILE.
--character-set-server=
charset
Use charset as the default server
character set. This option is available as of MySQL 4.1.3. See
Section 5.9.1, “The Character Set Used for Data and Sorting”.
--core-file
Write a core file if mysqld dies. For some
systems, you must also specify the
--core-file-size option to
mysqld_safe. See Section 5.1.3, “The mysqld_safe Server Startup Script”.
Note that on some systems, such as Solaris, you do not get a core
file if you are also using the --user option.
--collation-server=
collation
Use collation as the default server
collation. This option is available as of MySQL 4.1.3. See
Section 5.9.1, “The Character Set Used for Data and Sorting”.
--datadir=
path, -h
path
The path to the data directory.
--debug[=
debug_options], -#
[debug_options]
If MySQL is configured with --with-debug, you
can use this option to get a trace file of what
mysqld is doing. The
debug_options string often is
'd:t:o,.
See Section E.1.2, “Creating Trace Files”.
file_name'
--default-character-set=
charset
Use charset as the default character
set. This option is deprecated in favor of
--character-set-server as of MySQL 4.1.3. See
Section 5.9.1, “The Character Set Used for Data and Sorting”.
--default-collation=
collation
Use collation as the default collation.
This option is deprecated in favor of
--collation-server as of MySQL 4.1.3. See
Section 5.9.1, “The Character Set Used for Data and Sorting”.
--default-storage-engine=
type
This option is a synonym for
--default-table-type. It is available as of
MySQL 4.1.2.
--default-table-type=
type
Set the default table type for tables. See Chapter 14, MySQL Storage Engines and Table Types.
--default-time-zone=
type
Set the default server time zone. This option sets the global
time_zone system variable. If this option is not
given, the default time zone is the same as the system time zone
(given by the value of the system_time_zone
system variable. This option is available as of MySQL 4.1.3.
--delay-key-write[= OFF | ON | ALL]
How the DELAYED KEYS option should be used.
Delayed key writing causes key buffers not to be flushed between
writes for MyISAM tables. OFF
disables delayed key writes. ON enables delayed
key writes for those tables that were created with the
DELAYED KEYS option. ALL
delays key writes for all MyISAM tables.
Available as of MySQL 4.0.3. See
Section 7.5.2, “Tuning Server Parameters”. See
Section 14.1.1, “MyISAM Startup Options”.
Note: If you set this variable to
ALL, you should not use
MyISAM tables from within another program (such
as from another MySQL server or with myisamchk)
when the table is in use. Doing so leads to index corruption.
--delay-key-write-for-all-tables
Old form of --delay-key-write=ALL for use prior
to MySQL 4.0.3. As of 4.0.3, use
--delay-key-write instead.
--des-key-file=
file_name
Read the default keys used by DES_ENCRYPT() and
DES_DECRYPT() from this file.
--enable-named-pipe
Enable support for named pipes. This option applies only on Windows NT, 2000, XP, and 2003 systems, and can be used only with the mysqld-nt and mysqld-max-nt servers that support named pipe connections.
--exit-info[=
flags], -T
[flags]
This is a bit mask of different flags you can use for debugging the mysqld server. Do not use this option unless you know exactly what it does!
--external-locking
Enable system locking. Note that if you use this option on a system
on which lockd does not fully work (as on
Linux), it is easy for mysqld to deadlock. This
option previously was named --enable-locking.
Note: If you use this option to
enable updates to MyISAM tables from many MySQL
processes, you have to ensure that these conditions are satisfied:
You should not use the query cache for queries that use tables that are updated by another process.
You should not use --delay-key-write=ALL or
DELAY_KEY_WRITE=1 on any shared tables.
The easiest way to ensure this is to always use
--external-locking together with
--delay-key-write=OFF --query-cache-size=0.
(This is not done by default because in many setups it's useful to have a mixture of the above options.)
--flush
Flush all changes to disk after each SQL statement. Normally MySQL does a write of all changes to disk only after each SQL statement and lets the operating system handle the synching to disk. See Section A.4.2, “What to Do If MySQL Keeps Crashing”.
--init-file=
file
Read SQL statements from this file at startup. Each statement must be on a single line and should not include comments.
--innodb-safe-binlog
Adds consistency guarantees between the content of
InnoDB tables and the binary log. See
Section 5.10.4, “The Binary Log”.
--language=
lang_name, -L
lang_name
Client error messages in given language.
lang_name can be given as the language
name or as the full pathname to the directory where the language
files are installed. See Section 5.9.2, “Setting the Error Message Language”.
--large-pages
Some hardware/operating system architectures support memory pages greater than the default (usually 4 KB). The actual implementation of this support depends on the underlying hardware and OS. Applications that perform a lot of memory access may obtain performance improvements by using large pages due to reduced Translation Lookaside Buffer (TLB) misses.
Currently, MySQL supports only the Linux implementation of large pages support (which is called HugeTLB in Linux). We have plans to extend this support to FreeBSD, Solaris and possibly other platforms.
Before large pages can be used on Linux, it is necessary to
configure the HugeTLB memory pool. For reference, consult the
hugetlbpage.txt file in the Linux kernel
source.
This option is disabled by default. It was added in MySQL 5.0.3.
--log[=
file], -l
[file]
Log connections and queries to this file. See
Section 5.10.2, “The General Query Log”. If you don't specify a filename, MySQL
uses
as the filename.
host_name.log
--log-bin=[
file]
The binary log file. Log all queries that change data to this file.
Used for backup and replication. See Section 5.10.4, “The Binary Log”.
It is recommended to specify a filename (see
Section A.8.4, “Open Issues in MySQL” for the reason) otherwise MySQL uses
as
the log file basename.
host_name-bin
--log-bin-index[=
file]
The index file for binary log filenames. See
Section 5.10.4, “The Binary Log”. If you don't specify a filename, and
if you didn't specify one in --log-bin, MySQL
uses
as the filename.
host_name-bin.index
--log-bin-trust-routine-creators[={0|1}]
With no argument or an argument of 1, this option sets the
log_bin_trust_routine_creators system variable
to 1. With an argument of 0, this option sets the system variable
to 0. log_bin_trust_routine_creators affects how
MySQL enforces restrictions on stored routine creation. See
Section 19.3, “Binary Logging of Stored Routines and Triggers”.
This option was added in MySQL 5.0.6.
--log-error[=
file]
Log errors and startup messages to this file. See
Section 5.10.1, “The Error Log”. If you don't specify a filename, MySQL
uses
as the filename. If the filename has no extension, an extension of
host_name.err.err is added to the name.
--log-isam[=
file]
Log all ISAM/MyISAM changes
to this file (used only when debugging
ISAM/MyISAM).
--log-long-format
Log some extra information to the log files (update log, binary
update log, and slow queries log, whatever log has been activated).
For example, username and timestamp are logged for queries. Before
MySQL 4.1, if you are using --log-slow-queries
and --log-long-format, queries that are not
using indexes also are logged to the slow query log.
--log-long-format is deprecated as of MySQL
version 4.1, when --log-short-format was
introduced. (Long log format is the default setting since version
4.1.) Also note that starting with MySQL 4.1, the
--log-queries-not-using-indexes option is
available for the purpose of logging queries that do not use
indexes to the slow query log.
--log-queries-not-using-indexes
If you are using this option with
--log-slow-queries, then queries that are not
using indexes also are logged to the slow query log. This option is
available as of MySQL 4.1. See Section 5.10.5, “The Slow Query Log”.
--log-short-format
Log less information to the log files (update log, binary update log, and slow queries log, whatever log has been activated). For example, username and timestamp are not logged for queries. This option was introduced in MySQL 4.1.
--log-slow-admin-statements
Log slow administrative statements such as OPTIMIZE
TABLE, ANALYZE TABLE, and
ALTER TABLE to the slow query log.
This option was added in MySQL 4.1.13. (It is unnecessary in MySQL 4.0 because slow administrative statements are logged by default.)
--log-slow-queries[=
file]
Log all queries that have taken more than
long_query_time seconds to execute to this file.
See Section 5.10.5, “The Slow Query Log”. Note that the default for the
amount of information logged has changed in MySQL 4.1. See the
--log-long-format and
--log-short-format options for details.
--log-update[=
file]
Log updates to file# where
# is a unique number if not given. See
Section 5.10.3, “The Update Log”. The update log is deprecated and is
removed in MySQL 5.0.0; you should use the binary log instead
(--log-bin). See Section 5.10.4, “The Binary Log”.
Starting from version 5.0.0, using --log-update
turns on the binary log instead (see Section D.1.11, “Changes in release 5.0.0 (22 Dec 2003: Alpha)”).
--log-warnings, -W
Print out warnings such as Aborted connection...
to the error log. Enabling this option is recommended, for example,
if you use replication (you get more information about what is
happening, such as messages about network failures and
reconnections). This option is enabled by default as of MySQL
4.0.19 and 4.1.2; to disable it, use
--skip-log-warnings. As of MySQL 4.0.21 and
4.1.3, aborted connections are not logged to the error log unless
the value is greater than 1. See
Section A.2.10, “Communication Errors and Aborted Connections”.
This option was named --warnings before MySQL
4.0.
--low-priority-updates
Table-modifying operations (INSERT,
REPLACE, DELETE,
UPDATE) have lower priority than selects. This
can also be done via {INSERT | REPLACE | DELETE | UPDATE}
LOW_PRIORITY ... to lower the priority of only one query,
or by SET LOW_PRIORITY_UPDATES=1 to change the
priority in one thread. See Section 7.3.2, “Table Locking Issues”.
--memlock
Lock the mysqld process in memory. This works on
systems such as Solaris that support the
mlockall() system call. This might help if you
have a problem where the operating system is causing
mysqld to swap on disk. Note that use of this
option requires that you run the server as root,
which is normally not a good idea for security reasons.
--myisam-recover
[=
option[,option...]]]
Set the MyISAM storage engine recovery mode. The
option value is any combination of the values of
DEFAULT, BACKUP,
FORCE, or QUICK. If you
specify multiple values, separate them by commas. You can also use
a value of "" to disable this option. If this
option is used, mysqld, when it opens a
MyISAM table, checks whether the table is marked
as crashed or wasn't closed properly. (The last option works only
if you are running with
--skip-external-locking.) If this is the case,
mysqld runs a check on the table. If the table
was corrupted, mysqld attempts to repair it.
The following options affect how the repair works:
| Option | Description |
DEFAULT
|
The same as not giving any option to
--myisam-recover.
|
BACKUP
|
If the data file was changed during recovery, save a backup
of the
file as
.
|
FORCE
|
Run recovery even if we would lose more than one row from
the .MYD file.
|
QUICK
|
Don't check the rows in the table if there aren't any delete blocks. |
Before a table is automatically repaired, MySQL adds a note about
this in the error log. If you want to be able to recover from most
problems without user intervention, you should use the options
BACKUP,FORCE. This forces a repair of a table
even if some rows would be deleted, but it keeps the old data file
as a backup so that you can later examine what happened.
This option is available as of MySQL 3.23.25.
--ndb-connectstring=
connect_string
When using the NDB storage engine, it is
possible to point out the management server that distributes the
cluster configuration by setting the connect string option. See
Section 16.4.4.2, “The MySQL Cluster connectstring” for syntax.
--ndbcluster
If the binary includes support for the NDB
Cluster storage engine (from version 4.1.3, the MySQL-Max
binaries are built with NDB Cluster enabled) the
default disabling of support for the NDB Cluster
storage engine can be overruled by using this option. Using the
NDB Cluster storage engine is necessary for
using MySQL Cluster. See Chapter 16, MySQL Cluster.
--new
The --new option can be used to make the server
behave as 4.1 in certain respects, easing a 4.0 to 4.1 upgrade:
Hexadecimal strings such as 0xFF are treated
as strings by default rather than as numbers. (Works in 4.0.12
and up.)
TIMESTAMP is returned as a string with the
format 'YYYY-MM-DD HH:MM:SS'. (Works in 4.0.13
and up.) See Chapter 11, Column Types.
This option can be used to help you see how your applications behave in MySQL 4.1, without actually upgrading to 4.1.
--old-passwords
Force the server to generate short (pre-4.1) password hashes for new passwords. This is useful for compatibility when the server must support older client programs. See Section 5.6.9, “Password Hashing in MySQL 4.1”.
--old-protocol, -o
Use the 3.20 protocol for compatibility with some very old clients. See Section 2.10.6, “Upgrading from Version 3.20 to 3.21”.
--one-thread
Only use one thread (for debugging under Linux). This option is available only if the server is built with debugging enabled. See Section E.1, “Debugging a MySQL Server”.
--open-files-limit=
count
To change the number of file descriptors available to
mysqld. If this is not set or set to 0, then
mysqld uses this value to reserve file
descriptors to use with setrlimit(). If this
value is 0 then mysqld reserves
max_connections*5 or max_connections +
table_cache*2 (whichever is larger) number of files. You
should try increasing this if mysqld gives you
the error "Too many open files."
--pid-file=
path
The path to the process ID file used by mysqld_safe.
--port=
port_num, -P
port_num
The port number to use when listening for TCP/IP connections.
--safe-mode
Skip some optimization stages.
--safe-show-database
With this option, the SHOW DATABASES statement
displays only the names of those databases for which the user has
some kind of privilege. As of MySQL 4.0.2, this option is
deprecated and doesn't do anything (it is enabled by default),
because there is a SHOW DATABASES privilege that
can be used to control access to database names on a per-account
basis. See Section 5.6.3, “Privileges Provided by MySQL”.
--safe-user-create
If this is enabled, a user can't create new users with the
GRANT statement, if the user doesn't have the
INSERT privilege for the
mysql.user table or any column in the table.
--secure-auth
Disallow authentication for accounts that have old (pre-4.1) passwords. This option is available as of MySQL 4.1.1.
--shared-memory
Enable shared-memory connections by local clients. This option is available only on Windows. It was added in MySQL 4.1.0.
--shared-memory-base-name=
name
The name to use for shared-memory connections. This option is available only on Windows. It was added in MySQL 4.1.0.
--skip-bdb
Disable the BDB storage engine. This saves
memory and might speed up some operations. Do not use this option
if you require BDB tables.
--skip-concurrent-insert
Turn off the ability to select and insert at the same time on
MyISAM tables. (This is to be used only if you
think you have found a bug in this feature.)
--skip-delay-key-write
Ignore the DELAY_KEY_WRITE option for all
tables. As of MySQL 4.0.3, you should use
--delay-key-write=OFF instead. See
Section 7.5.2, “Tuning Server Parameters”.
--skip-external-locking
Don't use system locking. To use isamchk or
myisamchk, you must shut down the server. See
Section 1.4.3, “MySQL Stability”. In MySQL 3.23, you can use
CHECK TABLE and REPAIR TABLE
to check and repair MyISAM tables. This option
previously was named --skip-locking.
--skip-grant-tables
This option causes the server not to use the privilege system at
all. This gives everyone full access to all
databases! (You can tell a running server to start using the grant
tables again by executing a mysqladmin
flush-privileges or mysqladmin reload
command, or by issuing a FLUSH PRIVILEGES
statement.)
--skip-host-cache
Do not use the internal hostname cache for faster name-to-IP resolution. Instead, query the DNS server every time a client connects. See Section 7.5.6, “How MySQL Uses DNS”.
--skip-innodb
Disable the InnoDB storage engine. This saves
memory and disk space and might speed up some operations. Do not
use this option if you require InnoDB tables.
--skip-isam
Disable the ISAM storage engine. As of MySQL
4.1, ISAM is disabled by default, so this option
applies only if the server was configured with support for
ISAM. This option was added in MySQL 4.1.1.
--skip-name-resolve
Do not resolve hostnames when checking client connections. Use only
IP numbers. If you use this option, all Host
column values in the grant tables must be IP numbers or
localhost. See Section 7.5.6, “How MySQL Uses DNS”.
--skip-ndbcluster
Disable the NDB Cluster storage engine. This is
the default for binaries that were built with NDB
Cluster storage engine support, this means that the
system only allocates memory and other resources for this storage
engine if it is explicitly enabled.
--skip-networking
Don't listen for TCP/IP connections at all. All interaction with mysqld must be made via named pipes or shared memory (on Windows) or Unix socket files (on Unix). This option is highly recommended for systems where only local clients are allowed. See Section 7.5.6, “How MySQL Uses DNS”.
--skip-new
Don't use new, possibly wrong routines.
--skip-symlink
This is the old form of --skip-symbolic-links,
for use before MySQL 4.0.13.
--standalone
Windows-NT based systems only, instructs MySQL server to not run as a service.
--symbolic-links, --skip-symbolic-links
Enable or disable symbolic link support. This option has different effects on Windows and Unix:
On Windows, enabling symbolic links allows you to establish a
symbolic link to a database directory by creating a
directory.sym file that contains the path to
the real directory. See Section 7.6.1.3, “Using Symbolic Links for Databases on Windows”.
On Unix, enabling symbolic links means that you can link a
MyISAM index file or data file to another
directory with the INDEX DIRECTORY or
DATA DIRECTORY options of the CREATE
TABLE statement. If you delete or rename the table, the
files that its symbolic links point to also are deleted or
renamed. See Section 13.1.5, “CREATE TABLE Syntax”.
This option was added in MySQL 4.0.13.
--skip-safemalloc
If MySQL is configured with --with-debug=full,
all MySQL programs check for memory overruns during each memory
allocation and memory freeing operation. This checking is very
slow, so for the server you can avoid it when you don't need it by
using the --skip-safemalloc option.
--skip-show-database
With this option, the SHOW DATABASES statement
is allowed only to users who have the SHOW
DATABASES privilege, and the statement displays all
database names. Without this option, SHOW
DATABASES is allowed to all users, but displays each
database name only if the user has the SHOW
DATABASES privilege or some privilege for the database.
--skip-stack-trace
Don't write stack traces. This option is useful when you are running mysqld under a debugger. On some systems, you also must use this option to get a core file. See Section E.1, “Debugging a MySQL Server”.
--skip-thread-priority
Disable using thread priorities for faster response time.
--socket=
path
On Unix, this option specifies the Unix socket file to use for
local connections. The default value is
/tmp/mysql.sock. On Windows, the option
specifies the pipe name to use for local connections that use a
named pipe. The default value is MySQL.
--sql-mode=
value[,value[,value...]]
Set the SQL mode for MySQL. See Section 5.3.2, “The Server SQL Mode”. This option was added in 3.23.41.
--temp-pool
This option causes most temporary files created by the server to use a small set of names, rather than a unique name for each new file. This works around a problem in the Linux kernel dealing with creating many new files with different names. With the old behavior, Linux seems to ``leak'' memory, because it's being allocated to the directory entry cache rather than to the disk cache.
--transaction-isolation=
level
Sets the default transaction isolation level, which can be
READ-UNCOMMITTED,
READ-COMMITTED,
REPEATABLE-READ, or
SERIALIZABLE. See
Section 13.4.6, “SET TRANSACTION Syntax”.
--tmpdir=
path, -t
path
The path of the directory to use for creating temporary files. It
might be useful if your default /tmp directory
resides on a partition that is too small to hold temporary tables.
Starting from MySQL 4.1, this option accepts several paths that are
used in round-robin fashion. Paths should be separated by colon
characters (':') on Unix and semicolon
characters (';') on Windows, NetWare, and OS/2.
If the MySQL server is acting as a replication slave, you should
not set --tmpdir to point to a directory on a
memory-based filesystem or to a directory that is cleared when the
server host restarts. A replication slave needs some of its
temporary files to survive a machine restart so that it can
replicate temporary tables or LOAD DATA INFILE
operations. If files in the temporary file directory are lost when
the server restarts, replication fails.
--user={
user_name |
user_id}, -u
{user_name |
user_id}
Run the mysqld server as the user having the
name user_name or the numeric user ID
user_id. (``User'' in this context
refers to a system login account, not a MySQL user listed in the
grant tables.)
This option is mandatory when starting
mysqld as root. The server
changes its user ID during its startup sequence, causing it to run
as that particular user rather than as root. See
Section 5.5.1, “General Security Guidelines”.
Starting from MySQL 3.23.56 and 4.0.12: To avoid a possible
security hole where a user adds a --user=root
option to some my.cnf file (thus causing the
server to run as root),
mysqld uses only the first
--user option specified and produces a warning
if there are multiple --user options. Options in
/etc/my.cnf and
$MYSQL_HOME/my.cnf are processed before
command-line options, so it is recommended that you put a
--user option in
/etc/my.cnf and specify a value other than
root. The option in
/etc/my.cnf is found before any other
--user options, which ensures that the server
runs as a user other than root, and that a
warning results if any other --user option is
found.
--version, -V
Display version information and exit.
As of MySQL 4.0, you can assign a value to a server system variable
by using an option of the form
--.
For example, var_name=value--key_buffer_size=32M sets the
key_buffer_size variable to a value of 32MB.
Note that when setting a variable to a value, MySQL might automatically correct it to stay within a given range, or adjust the value to the closest allowable value if only certain values are allowed.
It is also possible to set variables by using
--set-variable=
or var_name=value-O
syntax. However, this syntax is deprecated as of MySQL 4.0.
var_name=value
You can find a full description for all variables in Section 5.3.3, “Server System Variables”. The section on tuning server parameters includes information on how to optimize them. See Section 7.5.2, “Tuning Server Parameters”.
You can change the values of most system variables for a running
server with the SET statement. See
Section 13.5.3, “SET Syntax”.
If you want to restrict the maximum value that a startup option can
be set to with SET, you can define this by using
the --maximum-
command-line option.
var_name
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