Options for MariaDB database engine - Amazon Relational Database Service
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Options for MariaDB database engine

Following, you can find descriptions for options, or additional features, that are available for Amazon RDS instances running the MariaDB DB engine. To turn on these options, you add them to a custom option group, and then associate the option group with your DB instance. For more information about working with option groups, see Working with option groups.

Amazon RDS supports the following options for MariaDB:

Option ID Engine versions

MARIADB_AUDIT_PLUGIN

MariaDB 10.3 and higher

MariaDB Audit Plugin support

Amazon RDS supports using the MariaDB Audit Plugin on MariaDB database instances. The MariaDB Audit Plugin records database activity such as users logging on to the database, queries run against the database, and more. The record of database activity is stored in a log file.

Audit Plugin option settings

Amazon RDS supports the following settings for the MariaDB Audit Plugin option.

Note

If you don't configure an option setting in the RDS console, RDS uses the default setting.

Option setting Valid values Default value Description

SERVER_AUDIT_FILE_PATH

/rdsdbdata/log/audit/

/rdsdbdata/log/audit/

The location of the log file. The log file contains the record of the activity specified in SERVER_AUDIT_EVENTS. For more information, see Viewing and listing database log files and MariaDB database log files.

SERVER_AUDIT_FILE_ROTATE_SIZE

1–1000000000

1000000

The size in bytes that when reached, causes the file to rotate. For more information, see Log file size.

SERVER_AUDIT_FILE_ROTATIONS

0–100

9

The number of log rotations to save when server_audit_output_type=file. If set to 0, then the log file never rotates. For more information, see Log file size and Downloading a database log file.

SERVER_AUDIT_EVENTS

CONNECT, QUERY, TABLE, QUERY_DDL, QUERY_DML, QUERY_DML_NO_SELECT, QUERY_DCL

CONNECT, QUERY

The types of activity to record in the log. Installing the MariaDB Audit Plugin is itself logged.

  • CONNECT: Log successful and unsuccessful connections to the database, and disconnections from the database.

  • QUERY: Log the text of all queries run against the database.

  • TABLE: Log tables affected by queries when the queries are run against the database.

  • QUERY_DDL: Similar to the QUERY event, but returns only data definition language (DDL) queries (CREATE, ALTER, and so on).

  • QUERY_DML: Similar to the QUERY event, but returns only data manipulation language (DML) queries (INSERT, UPDATE, and so on, and also SELECT).

  • QUERY_DML_NO_SELECT: Similar to the QUERY_DML event, but doesn't log SELECT queries.

  • QUERY_DCL: Similar to the QUERY event, but returns only data control language (DCL) queries (GRANT, REVOKE, and so on).

SERVER_AUDIT_INCL_USERS

Multiple comma-separated values

None

Include only activity from the specified users. By default, activity is recorded for all users. SERVER_AUDIT_INCL_USERS and SERVER_AUDIT_EXCL_USERS are mutually exclusive. If you add values to SERVER_AUDIT_INCL_USERS, make sure no values are added to SERVER_AUDIT_EXCL_USERS.

SERVER_AUDIT_EXCL_USERS

Multiple comma-separated values

None

Exclude activity from the specified users. By default, activity is recorded for all users. SERVER_AUDIT_INCL_USERS and SERVER_AUDIT_EXCL_USERS are mutually exclusive. If you add values to SERVER_AUDIT_EXCL_USERS, make sure no values are added to SERVER_AUDIT_INCL_USERS.

The rdsadmin user queries the database every second to check the health of the database. Depending on your other settings, this activity can possibly cause the size of your log file to grow very large, very quickly. If you don't need to record this activity, add the rdsadmin user to the SERVER_AUDIT_EXCL_USERS list.

Note

CONNECT activity is always recorded for all users, even if the user is specified for this option setting.

SERVER_AUDIT_LOGGING

ON

ON

Logging is active. The only valid value is ON. Amazon RDS does not support deactivating logging. If you want to deactivate logging, remove the MariaDB Audit Plugin. For more information, see Removing the MariaDB Audit Plugin.

SERVER_AUDIT_QUERY_LOG_LIMIT

0–2147483647

1024

The limit on the length of the query string in a record.

Adding the MariaDB Audit Plugin

The general process for adding the MariaDB Audit Plugin to a DB instance is the following:

  1. Create a new option group, or copy or modify an existing option group.

  2. Add the option to the option group.

  3. Associate the option group with the DB instance.

After you add the MariaDB Audit Plugin, you don't need to restart your DB instance. As soon as the option group is active, auditing begins immediately.

To add the MariaDB Audit Plugin
  1. Determine the option group you want to use. You can create a new option group or use an existing option group. If you want to use an existing option group, skip to the next step. Otherwise, create a custom DB option group. Choose mariadb for Engine, and choose 10.3 or higher for Major engine version. For more information, see Creating an option group.

  2. Add the MARIADB_AUDIT_PLUGIN option to the option group, and configure the option settings. For more information about adding options, see Adding an option to an option group. For more information about each setting, see Audit Plugin option settings.

  3. Apply the option group to a new or existing DB instance.

Viewing and downloading the MariaDB Audit Plugin log

After you enable the MariaDB Audit Plugin, you access the results in the log files the same way you access any other text-based log files. The audit log files are located at /rdsdbdata/log/audit/. For information about viewing the log file in the console, see Viewing and listing database log files. For information about downloading the log file, see Downloading a database log file.

Modifying MariaDB Audit Plugin settings

After you enable the MariaDB Audit Plugin, you can modify settings for the plugin. For more information about how to modify option settings, see Modifying an option setting. For more information about each setting, see Audit Plugin option settings.

Removing the MariaDB Audit Plugin

Amazon RDS doesn't support turning off logging in the MariaDB Audit Plugin. However, you can remove the plugin from a DB instance. When you remove the MariaDB Audit Plugin, the DB instance is restarted automatically to stop auditing.

To remove the MariaDB Audit Plugin from a DB instance, do one of the following:

  • Remove the MariaDB Audit Plugin option from the option group it belongs to. This change affects all DB instances that use the option group. For more information, see Removing an option from an option group

  • Modify the DB instance and specify a different option group that doesn't include the plugin. This change affects a single DB instance. You can specify the default (empty) option group, or a different custom option group. For more information, see Modifying an Amazon RDS DB instance.