Sequel Pro and MySQL connection failed

This is because Sequel Pro is not ready yet for a new kind of user login, as the error states: there is no driver.

mysql + homebrew

Basically you will have to perform some actions manually, however- your database data won't be deleted like in solution below

  • Go to my.cnf file and in section [mysqld] add line:

    default-authentication-plugin=mysql_native_password

  • Login to mysql server from terminal: run mysql -u root -p, then inside shell execute this command (replacing [password] with your actual password):

    ALTER USER 'root'@'localhost' IDENTIFIED WITH mysql_native_password BY '[password]';

  • exit from mysql shell with exit and run brew services restart mysql.

Should work.

Quick fix (destructive method)

Quick fix for non-homebrew installs:

Apple Logo > System Preferences > MySQL > Initialize Database, then type your new password and select 'Use legacy password'

After restart you should be able to connect. Do it only on fresh installs, because you may lost your db tables otherwise.


my.cnf

The my.cnf file is located in /etc/my.cnf on Unix/Linux


Alternatives

For those who is still struggling with Sequel Pro problems: Sequel Pro was a great product, but with tons of unresolved issues and last release being dated to 2016 perhaps it's a good idea to look for some alternatives. There is a fork of SequelPro called SequelAce that seems to be pretty stable and up-to-date, it keeps similar functionality, similar look and feel, yet at the same time it is devoid of old Sequel Pro problems

TL;DR: Sequel Pro is dead since 2016. Don't downgrade your DB because of a tool. Move on to an alternative tool.

Update 2020: Sequel Pro is officially dead but unofficially alive! You can find the "nightly" builds that don't have this issue (i.e. support Mysql 8 auth) in here: https://sequelpro.com/test-builds

Update 2021: Sequel Ace is a good similar alive alternative: https://github.com/Sequel-Ace/Sequel-Ace#installation (Credits to Maciej Kwas's answer)


All the other solutions here are recommending changing your DB settings (making it less secure, as advertised by MySQL) for the tool you are using. That's not acceptable to me.

I have always been a huge fan of Sequel Pro, even donated to it. But, with all my passion and love, I am sorry if the tool doesn't have any release since 2016. YOLO, and I need to move on!

The alternative I found (from https://stackoverflow.com/a/55235533/2321594, thanks to @arcseldon) is DBeaver which supports MySQL 8's new authentication (non-legacy) method.

PS. The only trick in the tool side, not the DB side is when you are creating a MySQL 8 connection you might need to go to "Driver Properties" (later can be found in Edit Connection) and turn the value of allowPublicKeyRetrieval to true.

I needed this to connect to my MySQL container created using Docker. To have the IP of MySQL be visible to the outside, for any other application in your ecosystem (not just this tool), you should either create a new user in MySQL, or pass -e MYSQL_ROOT_HOST=% in the run-time or as an ENV.


  1. Assuming you don't have a mysql configuration, echo the following to ~/.my.conf
[mysqld]
default-authentication-plugin=mysql_native_password
  1. Sign into mysql with mysql -u root -p
  2. Set the root user password with ALTER USER 'root'@'localhost' IDENTIFIED WITH mysql_native_password BY '[PASSWORD]'; where [PASSWORD] is a password of your choosing.
  3. Restart mysql with e.g. brew services restart mysql