/etc/asterisk/res_config_mysql.conf is in asterisk-config 1:11.13.1~dfsg-2+deb8u5.
This file is owned by root:root, with mode 0o640.
The actual contents of the file can be viewed below.
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; Sample configuration for res_config_mysql.c
;
; The value of dbhost may be either a hostname or an IP address.
; If dbhost is commented out or the string "localhost", a connection
; to the local host is assumed and dbsock is used instead of TCP/IP
; to connect to the server. If no dbcharset is specified, the connection
; is made with no extra charset configurations sent to MySQL, leaving all
; configured MySQL charset options and defaults untouched.
;
; Multiple database contexts may be configured, with the caveat that
; all context names should be unique and must not contain the slash ('/')
; character. If you wish to separate reads from writes in your database
; configuration, you specify the database (NOT HERE, in other files)
; separated by a slash, read database first. If your database
; specification does not contain a slash, the implication is that reads
; and writes should be performed to the same database.
;
; For example, in extconfig.conf, you could specify a line like:
; sippeers => mysql,readhost.asterisk/writehost.asterisk,sippeers
; and then define the contexts [readhost.asterisk] and [writehost.asterisk]
; below.
;
; The requirements parameter is available only in Asterisk 1.6.1 and
; later and must be present in all contexts. It specifies the behavior
; when a column name is required by the system. The default behavior is
; "warn" and simply sends a warning to the logger that the column does
; not exist (or is of the wrong type or precision). The other two
; possibilities are "createclose", which adds the column with the right
; type and length, and "createchar", which adds the column as a char
; type, with the appropriate length to accept the data. Note that with
; the MySQL driver, both "createclose" and "createchar" will, on occasion,
; widen a table column width to meet the requirements specified.
;
[general]
;dbhost = 127.0.0.1
;dbname = asterisk
;dbuser = myuser
;dbpass = mypass
;dbport = 3306
;dbsock = /tmp/mysql.sock
;dbcharset = latin1
;requirements=warn ; or createclose or createchar
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