To connect with a client program to a MySQL server that is listening to different network interfaces from those compiled into your client, you can use one of the following methods:
          Start the client with
          --host=
          host_name--port=
          to connect via TCP/IP to a remote server, with
          port_number--host=127.0.0.1
          --port=
          to connect via TCP/IP to a local server, or with
          port_number--host=localhost
          --socket=
          to connect to a local server via a Unix socket file or a
          Windows named pipe.
        file_name
          Start the client with
          --protocol=TCP to connect via
          TCP/IP, --protocol=SOCKET to
          connect via a Unix socket file,
          --protocol=PIPE to connect via
          a named pipe, or
          --protocol=MEMORY to connect
          via shared memory. For TCP/IP connections, you may also need
          to specify --host and
          --port options. For the other
          types of connections, you may need to specify a
          --socket option to specify a
          Unix socket file or Windows named-pipe name, or a
          --shared-memory-base-name
          option to specify the shared-memory name. Shared-memory
          connections are supported only on Windows.
        
          
          
          
          
          On Unix, set the MYSQL_UNIX_PORT and
          MYSQL_TCP_PORT environment variables to
          point to the Unix socket file and TCP/IP port number before
          you start your clients. If you normally use a specific socket
          file or port number, you can place commands to set these
          environment variables in your .login file
          so that they apply each time you log in. See
          Section 2.14, “Environment Variables”.
        
          
          
          Specify the default Unix socket file and TCP/IP port number in
          the [client] group of an option file. For
          example, you can use C:\my.cnf on
          Windows, or the .my.cnf file in your home
          directory on Unix. See Section 4.2.3.3, “Using Option Files”.
        
          In a C program, you can specify the socket file or port number
          arguments in the
          mysql_real_connect() call. You
          can also have the program read option files by calling
          mysql_options(). See
          Section 21.9.3, “C API Function Descriptions”.
        
          If you are using the Perl DBD::mysql
          module, you can read options from MySQL option files. For
          example:
        
$dsn = "DBI:mysql:test;mysql_read_default_group=client;"
        . "mysql_read_default_file=/usr/local/mysql/data/my.cnf";
$dbh = DBI->connect($dsn, $user, $password);
See Section 21.11, “MySQL Perl API”.
Other programming interfaces may provide similar capabilities for reading option files.

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