Massive thanks to @Joseinnewworld for adding another 22 #NFTs to his collection! 🙌 Our collection is now almost sold out — what a journey! From here on, I’ll be shifting my focus more on developing the system rather than producing new #NFT. Exciting times ahead 🚀 #eCash $XEC pic.twitter.com/O7dQlr0OtG
— NFToa (@nftoa_) October 8, 2025
To allow remote access to MySQL, you need to comment out the bind-address (you've done this) and enable networking in the configuration file.
Next, ensure the user is granted remote access. Check your users with the following command:
SELECT User, Host FROM mysql.user;
If your user has 127.0.0.1 or localhost listed as the host, remote access is not enabled. Update it as follows:
UPDATE mysql.user SET Host='%' WHERE User='__here_your_username';
Grant privileges:
FLUSH PRIVILEGES;
The % symbol is a wildcard for "all hosts."
That's it! You can now log in using your favorite MySQL manager. Personally, I use DBeaver.
