"Connection for controluser as defined in your configuration failed" with phpMyAdmin in XAMPP
- Open phpMyAdmin in a browser and log in as root.
- Create a database called
phpmyadmin
- Create a user called
pma
and set the "host" to the hostname or IP address of your web server (if the web server and MySQL are on the same box uselocalhost
), make a note of the password, and grant the new user full control over thephpmyadmin
database. It is recommended that this user does not have access to anything other than this database. - Go to the phpMyAdmin installation directory, where you should find a sub-directory called
sql
. - In
sql
you will find a file calledcreate_tables.sql
. Open it in a text editor. - In phpMyAdmin, select the
phpmyadmin
database and click on the "SQL" tab. - Copy/paste the entire text from
create_tables.sql
into the text box, and run the query. Open the
config.inc.php
file in the phpMyAdmin install directory, and add the following lines (or change the existing settings if they are already there):$cfg['Servers'][1]['pmadb'] = 'phpmyadmin'; $cfg['Servers'][1]['controluser'] = 'pma'; $cfg['Servers'][1]['controlpass'] = '<your password>'; // Note: The list below may grow as PMA evolves and more control tables are added // Use your common sense! Don't just blindly copypasta, look at what it means! $cfg['Servers'][1]['bookmarktable'] = 'pma_bookmark'; $cfg['Servers'][1]['relation'] = 'pma_relation'; $cfg['Servers'][1]['userconfig'] = 'pma_userconfig'; $cfg['Servers'][1]['table_info'] = 'pma_table_info'; $cfg['Servers'][1]['column_info'] = 'pma_column_info'; $cfg['Servers'][1]['history'] = 'pma_history'; $cfg['Servers'][1]['recent'] = 'pma_recent'; $cfg['Servers'][1]['table_uiprefs'] = 'pma_table_uiprefs'; $cfg['Servers'][1]['tracking'] = 'pma_tracking'; $cfg['Servers'][1]['table_coords'] = 'pma_table_coords'; $cfg['Servers'][1]['pdf_pages'] = 'pma_pdf_pages'; $cfg['Servers'][1]['designer_coords'] = 'pma_designer_coords';
Save and close the file.
IMPORTANT - PMA loads the config on login, evaluates it and stores it into the session data so the message will not disappear until you do this:
- Log out of phpMyAdmin and log in again
Problem solved.
If you got here and you are using Debian/Ubuntu (or any other dpkg based distro), execute the following command:
sudo dpkg-reconfigure phpmyadmin
The phpmyadmin package contains the script to perform this operation for you, all it needs is a user with permissions. sudo is not required if you're logged in as root, of course.
EDIT: It might be worth trying to drop the current phpmyadmin user.
Just comment out the whole "User for advanced features" and "Advanced phpMyAdmin features" code blocks in config.inc.php
.