Table of Contents
This chapter describes the syntax for the SQL statements supported by MySQL.
ALTER {DATABASE | SCHEMA} [db_name
]alter_specification
... ALTER {DATABASE | SCHEMA}db_name
UPGRADE DATA DIRECTORY NAMEalter_specification
: [DEFAULT] CHARACTER SET [=]charset_name
| [DEFAULT] COLLATE [=]collation_name
ALTER DATABASE
enables you to
change the overall characteristics of a database. These
characteristics are stored in the db.opt
file
in the database directory. To use ALTER
DATABASE
, you need the
ALTER
privilege on the database.
ALTER
SCHEMA
is a synonym for ALTER
DATABASE
.
The database name can be omitted from the first syntax, in which case the statement applies to the default database.
The CHARACTER SET
clause changes the default
database character set. The COLLATE
clause
changes the default database collation. Chapter 10, Character Sets, Collations, Unicode,
discusses character set and collation names.
You can see what character sets and collations are available
using, respectively, the SHOW CHARACTER
SET
and SHOW COLLATION
statements. See Section 13.7.5.3, “SHOW CHARACTER SET Statement”, and
Section 13.7.5.4, “SHOW COLLATION Statement”, for more information.
If you change the default character set or collation for a database, stored routines that use the database defaults must be dropped and recreated so that they use the new defaults. (In a stored routine, variables with character data types use the database defaults if the character set or collation are not specified explicitly. See Section 13.1.16, “CREATE PROCEDURE and CREATE FUNCTION Statements”.)
The syntax that includes the UPGRADE DATA DIRECTORY
NAME
clause updates the name of the directory associated
with the database to use the encoding implemented in MySQL 5.1 for
mapping database names to database directory names (see
Section 9.2.4, “Mapping of Identifiers to File Names”). This clause is for use
under these conditions:
It is intended when upgrading MySQL to 5.1 or later from older versions.
It is intended to update a database directory name to the current encoding format if the name contains special characters that need encoding.
The statement is used by mysqlcheck (as invoked by mysql_upgrade).
For example, if a database in MySQL 5.0 has the name
a-b-c
, the name contains instances of the
-
(dash) character. In MySQL 5.0, the database
directory is also named a-b-c
, which is not
necessarily safe for all file systems. In MySQL 5.1 and later, the
same database name is encoded as a@002db@002dc
to produce a file system-neutral directory name.
When a MySQL installation is upgraded to MySQL 5.1 or later from
an older version,the server displays a name such as
a-b-c
(which is in the old format) as
#mysql50#a-b-c
, and you must refer to the name
using the #mysql50#
prefix. Use
UPGRADE DATA DIRECTORY NAME
in this case to
explicitly tell the server to re-encode the database directory
name to the current encoding format:
ALTER DATABASE `#mysql50#a-b-c` UPGRADE DATA DIRECTORY NAME;
After executing this statement, you can refer to the database as
a-b-c
without the special
#mysql50#
prefix.
The UPGRADE DATA DIRECTORY NAME
clause is
deprecated in MySQL 5.7.6 and will be removed in a future
version of MySQL. If it is necessary to convert MySQL 5.0
database or table names, a workaround is to upgrade a MySQL 5.0
installation to MySQL 5.1 before upgrading to a more recent
release.
ALTER [DEFINER =user
] EVENTevent_name
[ON SCHEDULEschedule
] [ON COMPLETION [NOT] PRESERVE] [RENAME TOnew_event_name
] [ENABLE | DISABLE | DISABLE ON SLAVE] [COMMENT 'string
'] [DOevent_body
]
The ALTER EVENT
statement changes
one or more of the characteristics of an existing event without
the need to drop and recreate it. The syntax for each of the
DEFINER
, ON SCHEDULE
,
ON COMPLETION
, COMMENT
,
ENABLE
/ DISABLE
, and
DO
clauses is exactly the same as
when used with CREATE EVENT
. (See
Section 13.1.12, “CREATE EVENT Statement”.)
Any user can alter an event defined on a database for which that
user has the EVENT
privilege. When
a user executes a successful ALTER
EVENT
statement, that user becomes the definer for the
affected event.
ALTER EVENT
works only with an
existing event:
mysql>ALTER EVENT no_such_event
>ON SCHEDULE
>EVERY '2:3' DAY_HOUR;
ERROR 1517 (HY000): Unknown event 'no_such_event'
In each of the following examples, assume that the event named
myevent
is defined as shown here:
CREATE EVENT myevent ON SCHEDULE EVERY 6 HOUR COMMENT 'A sample comment.' DO UPDATE myschema.mytable SET mycol = mycol + 1;
The following statement changes the schedule for
myevent
from once every six hours starting
immediately to once every twelve hours, starting four hours from
the time the statement is run:
ALTER EVENT myevent ON SCHEDULE EVERY 12 HOUR STARTS CURRENT_TIMESTAMP + INTERVAL 4 HOUR;
It is possible to change multiple characteristics of an event in a
single statement. This example changes the SQL statement executed
by myevent
to one that deletes all records from
mytable
; it also changes the schedule for the
event such that it executes once, one day after this
ALTER EVENT
statement is run.
ALTER EVENT myevent ON SCHEDULE AT CURRENT_TIMESTAMP + INTERVAL 1 DAY DO TRUNCATE TABLE myschema.mytable;
Specify the options in an ALTER
EVENT
statement only for those characteristics that you
want to change; omitted options keep their existing values. This
includes any default values for CREATE
EVENT
such as ENABLE
.
To disable myevent
, use this
ALTER EVENT
statement:
ALTER EVENT myevent DISABLE;
The ON SCHEDULE
clause may use expressions
involving built-in MySQL functions and user variables to obtain
any of the timestamp
or
interval
values which it contains. You
cannot use stored routines or user-defined functions in such
expressions, and you cannot use any table references; however, you
can use SELECT FROM DUAL
. This is true for both
ALTER EVENT
and
CREATE EVENT
statements. References
to stored routines, user-defined functions, and tables in such
cases are specifically not permitted, and fail with an error (see
Bug #22830).
Although an ALTER EVENT
statement
that contains another ALTER EVENT
statement in its DO
clause appears
to succeed, when the server attempts to execute the resulting
scheduled event, the execution fails with an error.
To rename an event, use the ALTER
EVENT
statement's RENAME TO
clause.
This statement renames the event myevent
to
yourevent
:
ALTER EVENT myevent RENAME TO yourevent;
You can also move an event to a different database using
ALTER EVENT ... RENAME TO ...
and
notation, as shown here:
db_name.event_name
ALTER EVENT olddb.myevent RENAME TO newdb.myevent;
To execute the previous statement, the user executing it must have
the EVENT
privilege on both the
olddb
and newdb
databases.
There is no RENAME EVENT
statement.
The value DISABLE ON SLAVE
is used on a
replication slave instead of ENABLE
or
DISABLE
to indicate an event that was created
on the master and replicated to the slave, but that is not
executed on the slave. Normally, DISABLE ON
SLAVE
is set automatically as required; however, there
are some circumstances under which you may want or need to change
it manually. See Section 16.4.1.16, “Replication of Invoked Features”,
for more information.
ALTER FUNCTIONfunc_name
[characteristic
...]characteristic
: COMMENT 'string
' | LANGUAGE SQL | { CONTAINS SQL | NO SQL | READS SQL DATA | MODIFIES SQL DATA } | SQL SECURITY { DEFINER | INVOKER }
This statement can be used to change the characteristics of a
stored function. More than one change may be specified in an
ALTER FUNCTION
statement. However,
you cannot change the parameters or body of a stored function
using this statement; to make such changes, you must drop and
re-create the function using DROP
FUNCTION
and CREATE
FUNCTION
.
You must have the ALTER ROUTINE
privilege for the function. (That privilege is granted
automatically to the function creator.) If binary logging is
enabled, the ALTER FUNCTION
statement might also require the
SUPER
privilege, as described in
Section 23.7, “Stored Program Binary Logging”.
ALTER INSTANCE ROTATE INNODB MASTER KEY
ALTER INSTANCE
, introduced in MySQL 5.7.11,
defines actions applicable to a MySQL server instance.
The ALTER INSTANCE ROTATE INNODB MASTER KEY
statement is used to rotate the master encryption key used for
InnoDB
tablespace encryption. A keyring plugin
must be installed and configured to use this statement. For
information about keyring plugins, see Section 6.4.4, “The MySQL Keyring”.
Key rotation requires the SUPER
privilege.
ALTER INSTANCE ROTATE INNODB MASTER KEY
supports concurrent DML. However, it cannot be run concurrently
with CREATE TABLE
... ENCRYPTION
or
ALTER TABLE ...
ENCRYPTION
operations, and locks are taken to prevent
conflicts that could arise from concurrent execution of these
statements. If one of the conflicting statements is running, it
must complete before another can proceed.
ALTER INSTANCE
actions are written to the
binary log so that they can be executed on replicated servers.
For additional ALTER INSTANCE ROTATE INNODB MASTER
KEY
usage information, see
Section 14.14, “InnoDB Data-at-Rest Encryption”. For information about
keyring plugins, see Section 6.4.4, “The MySQL Keyring”.
ALTER LOGFILE GROUPlogfile_group
ADD UNDOFILE 'file_name
' [INITIAL_SIZE [=]size
] [WAIT] ENGINE [=]engine_name
This statement adds an UNDO
file named
'file_name
' to an existing log file
group logfile_group
. An
ALTER LOGFILE GROUP
statement has
one and only one ADD UNDOFILE
clause. No
DROP UNDOFILE
clause is currently supported.
All NDB Cluster Disk Data objects share the same namespace. This means that each Disk Data object must be uniquely named (and not merely each Disk Data object of a given type). For example, you cannot have a tablespace and an undo log file with the same name, or an undo log file and a data file with the same name.
The optional INITIAL_SIZE
parameter sets the
UNDO
file's initial size in bytes; if not
specified, the initial size defaults to 134217728 (128 MB). You
may optionally follow size
with a
one-letter abbreviation for an order of magnitude, similar to
those used in my.cnf
. Generally, this is one
of the letters M
(megabytes) or
G
(gigabytes). (Bug #13116514, Bug #16104705,
Bug #62858)
On 32-bit systems, the maximum supported value for
INITIAL_SIZE
is 4294967296 (4 GB). (Bug #29186)
The minimum allowed value for INITIAL_SIZE
is
1048576 (1 MB). (Bug #29574)
WAIT
is parsed but otherwise ignored. This
keyword currently has no effect, and is intended for future
expansion.
The ENGINE
parameter (required) determines the
storage engine which is used by this log file group, with
engine_name
being the name of the
storage engine. Currently, the only accepted values for
engine_name
are
“NDBCLUSTER
” and
“NDB
”. The two values
are equivalent.
Here is an example, which assumes that the log file group
lg_3
has already been created using
CREATE LOGFILE GROUP
(see
Section 13.1.15, “CREATE LOGFILE GROUP Statement”):
ALTER LOGFILE GROUP lg_3 ADD UNDOFILE 'undo_10.dat' INITIAL_SIZE=32M ENGINE=NDBCLUSTER;
When ALTER LOGFILE GROUP
is used
with ENGINE = NDBCLUSTER
(alternatively,
ENGINE = NDB
), an UNDO
log
file is created on each NDB Cluster data node. You can verify that
the UNDO
files were created and obtain
information about them by querying the
INFORMATION_SCHEMA.FILES
table. For
example:
mysql>SELECT FILE_NAME, LOGFILE_GROUP_NUMBER, EXTRA
->FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.FILES
->WHERE LOGFILE_GROUP_NAME = 'lg_3';
+-------------+----------------------+----------------+ | FILE_NAME | LOGFILE_GROUP_NUMBER | EXTRA | +-------------+----------------------+----------------+ | newdata.dat | 0 | CLUSTER_NODE=3 | | newdata.dat | 0 | CLUSTER_NODE=4 | | undo_10.dat | 11 | CLUSTER_NODE=3 | | undo_10.dat | 11 | CLUSTER_NODE=4 | +-------------+----------------------+----------------+ 4 rows in set (0.01 sec)
(See Section 24.9, “The INFORMATION_SCHEMA FILES Table”.)
Memory used for UNDO_BUFFER_SIZE
comes from the
global pool whose size is determined by the value of the
SharedGlobalMemory
data
node configuration parameter. This includes any default value
implied for this option by the setting of the
InitialLogFileGroup
data
node configuration parameter.
ALTER LOGFILE GROUP
is useful only
with Disk Data storage for NDB Cluster. For more information, see
Section 21.5.13, “NDB Cluster Disk Data Tables”.
ALTER PROCEDUREproc_name
[characteristic
...]characteristic
: COMMENT 'string
' | LANGUAGE SQL | { CONTAINS SQL | NO SQL | READS SQL DATA | MODIFIES SQL DATA } | SQL SECURITY { DEFINER | INVOKER }
This statement can be used to change the characteristics of a
stored procedure. More than one change may be specified in an
ALTER PROCEDURE
statement. However,
you cannot change the parameters or body of a stored procedure
using this statement; to make such changes, you must drop and
re-create the procedure using DROP
PROCEDURE
and CREATE
PROCEDURE
.
You must have the ALTER ROUTINE
privilege for the procedure. By default, that privilege is granted
automatically to the procedure creator. This behavior can be
changed by disabling the
automatic_sp_privileges
system
variable. See Section 23.2.2, “Stored Routines and MySQL Privileges”.
ALTER SERVERserver_name
OPTIONS (option
[,option
] ...)
Alters the server information for
,
adjusting any of the options permitted in the
server_name
CREATE SERVER
statement. The
corresponding fields in the mysql.servers
table
are updated accordingly. This statement requires the
SUPER
privilege.
For example, to update the USER
option:
ALTER SERVER s OPTIONS (USER 'sally');
ALTER SERVER
causes an implicit commit. See
Section 13.3.3, “Statements That Cause an Implicit Commit”.
ALTER SERVER
is not written to the binary log,
regardless of the logging format that is in use.
ALTER TABLEtbl_name
[alter_specification
[,alter_specification
] ...] [partition_options
]alter_specification
:table_options
| ADD [COLUMN]col_name
column_definition
[FIRST | AFTERcol_name
] | ADD [COLUMN] (col_name
column_definition
,...) | ADD {INDEX|KEY} [index_name
] [index_type
] (key_part
,...) [index_option
] ... | ADD {FULLTEXT|SPATIAL} [INDEX|KEY] [index_name
] (key_part
,...) [index_option
] ... | ADD [CONSTRAINT [symbol
]] PRIMARY KEY [index_type
] (key_part
,...) [index_option
] ... | ADD [CONSTRAINT [symbol
]] UNIQUE [INDEX|KEY] [index_name
] [index_type
] (key_part
,...) [index_option
] ... | ADD [CONSTRAINT [symbol
]] FOREIGN KEY [index_name
] (col_name
,...)reference_definition
| ADD CHECK (expr
) | ALGORITHM [=] {DEFAULT|INPLACE|COPY} | ALTER [COLUMN]col_name
{SET DEFAULTliteral
| DROP DEFAULT} | CHANGE [COLUMN]old_col_name
new_col_name
column_definition
[FIRST|AFTERcol_name
] | [DEFAULT] CHARACTER SET [=]charset_name
[COLLATE [=]collation_name
] | CONVERT TO CHARACTER SETcharset_name
[COLLATEcollation_name
] | {DISABLE|ENABLE} KEYS | {DISCARD|IMPORT} TABLESPACE | DROP [COLUMN]col_name
| DROP {INDEX|KEY}index_name
| DROP PRIMARY KEY | DROP FOREIGN KEYfk_symbol
| FORCE | LOCK [=] {DEFAULT|NONE|SHARED|EXCLUSIVE} | MODIFY [COLUMN]col_name
column_definition
[FIRST | AFTERcol_name
] | ORDER BYcol_name
[,col_name
] ... | RENAME {INDEX|KEY}old_index_name
TOnew_index_name
| RENAME [TO|AS]new_tbl_name
| {WITHOUT|WITH} VALIDATIONpartition_options
:partition_option
[partition_option
] ...partition_option
: ADD PARTITION (partition_definition
) | DROP PARTITIONpartition_names
| DISCARD PARTITION {partition_names
| ALL} TABLESPACE | IMPORT PARTITION {partition_names
| ALL} TABLESPACE | TRUNCATE PARTITION {partition_names
| ALL} | COALESCE PARTITIONnumber
| REORGANIZE PARTITIONpartition_names
INTO (partition_definitions
) | EXCHANGE PARTITIONpartition_name
WITH TABLEtbl_name
[{WITH|WITHOUT} VALIDATION] | ANALYZE PARTITION {partition_names
| ALL} | CHECK PARTITION {partition_names
| ALL} | OPTIMIZE PARTITION {partition_names
| ALL} | REBUILD PARTITION {partition_names
| ALL} | REPAIR PARTITION {partition_names
| ALL} | REMOVE PARTITIONING | UPGRADE PARTITIONINGkey_part
:col_name
[(length
)] [ASC | DESC]index_type
: USING {BTREE | HASH}index_option
: KEY_BLOCK_SIZE [=]value
|index_type
| WITH PARSERparser_name
| COMMENT 'string
'table_options
:table_option
[[,]table_option
] ...table_option
: AUTO_INCREMENT [=]value
| AVG_ROW_LENGTH [=]value
| [DEFAULT] CHARACTER SET [=]charset_name
| CHECKSUM [=] {0 | 1} | [DEFAULT] COLLATE [=]collation_name
| COMMENT [=] 'string
' | COMPRESSION [=] {'ZLIB'|'LZ4'|'NONE'} | CONNECTION [=] 'connect_string
' | {DATA|INDEX} DIRECTORY [=] 'absolute path to directory
' | DELAY_KEY_WRITE [=] {0 | 1} | ENCRYPTION [=] {'Y' | 'N'} | ENGINE [=]engine_name
| INSERT_METHOD [=] { NO | FIRST | LAST } | KEY_BLOCK_SIZE [=]value
| MAX_ROWS [=]value
| MIN_ROWS [=]value
| PACK_KEYS [=] {0 | 1 | DEFAULT} | PASSWORD [=] 'string
' | ROW_FORMAT [=] {DEFAULT|DYNAMIC|FIXED|COMPRESSED|REDUNDANT|COMPACT} | STATS_AUTO_RECALC [=] {DEFAULT|0|1} | STATS_PERSISTENT [=] {DEFAULT|0|1} | STATS_SAMPLE_PAGES [=]value
| TABLESPACEtablespace_name
[STORAGE {DISK|MEMORY}] | UNION [=] (tbl_name
[,tbl_name
]...)partition_options
: (seeCREATE TABLE
options)
ALTER TABLE
changes the structure
of a table. For example, you can add or delete columns, create or
destroy indexes, change the type of existing columns, or rename
columns or the table itself. You can also change characteristics
such as the storage engine used for the table or the table
comment.
To use ALTER TABLE
, you need
ALTER
,
CREATE
, and
INSERT
privileges for the
table. Renaming a table requires
ALTER
and
DROP
on the old table,
ALTER
,
CREATE
, and
INSERT
on the new table.
Following the table name, specify the alterations to be made.
If none are given, ALTER TABLE
does nothing.
The syntax for many of the permissible alterations is similar
to clauses of the CREATE TABLE
statement. column_definition
clauses use the same syntax for ADD
and
CHANGE
as for CREATE
TABLE
. For more information, see
Section 13.1.18, “CREATE TABLE Statement”.
The word COLUMN
is optional and can be
omitted.
Multiple ADD
, ALTER
,
DROP
, and CHANGE
clauses
are permitted in a single ALTER
TABLE
statement, separated by commas. This is a
MySQL extension to standard SQL, which permits only one of
each clause per ALTER TABLE
statement. For example, to drop multiple columns in a single
statement, do this:
ALTER TABLE t2 DROP COLUMN c, DROP COLUMN d;
If a storage engine does not support an attempted
ALTER TABLE
operation, a
warning may result. Such warnings can be displayed with
SHOW WARNINGS
. See
Section 13.7.5.40, “SHOW WARNINGS Statement”. For information on
troubleshooting ALTER TABLE
,
see Section B.4.6.1, “Problems with ALTER TABLE”.
For information about generated columns, see Section 13.1.8.2, “ALTER TABLE and Generated Columns”.
For usage examples, see Section 13.1.8.3, “ALTER TABLE Examples”.
With the mysql_info()
C API
function, you can find out how many rows were copied by
ALTER TABLE
. See
Section 27.7.6.36, “mysql_info()”.
There are several additional aspects to the ALTER
TABLE
statement, described under the following topics in
this section:
table_options
signifies table options
of the kind that can be used in the CREATE
TABLE
statement, such as ENGINE
,
AUTO_INCREMENT
,
AVG_ROW_LENGTH
, MAX_ROWS
,
ROW_FORMAT
, or TABLESPACE
.
For descriptions of all table options, see
Section 13.1.18, “CREATE TABLE Statement”. However,
ALTER TABLE
ignores DATA
DIRECTORY
and INDEX DIRECTORY
when
given as table options. ALTER TABLE
permits them only as partitioning options, and, as of MySQL
5.7.17, requires that you have the FILE
privilege.
Use of table options with ALTER
TABLE
provides a convenient way of altering single table
characteristics. For example:
If t1
is currently not an
InnoDB
table, this statement changes its
storage engine to InnoDB
:
ALTER TABLE t1 ENGINE = InnoDB;
See Section 14.6.1.5, “Converting Tables from MyISAM to InnoDB” for
considerations when switching tables to the
InnoDB
storage engine.
When you specify an ENGINE
clause,
ALTER TABLE
rebuilds the
table. This is true even if the table already has the
specified storage engine.
Running ALTER
TABLE
on an existing
tbl_name
ENGINE=INNODBInnoDB
table performs a
“null” ALTER
TABLE
operation, which can be used to defragment
an InnoDB
table, as described in
Section 14.12.4, “Defragmenting a Table”. Running
ALTER TABLE
on an
tbl_name
FORCEInnoDB
table performs the same
function.
ALTER TABLE
and
tbl_name
ENGINE=INNODBALTER TABLE
use
online DDL. For
more information, see Section 14.13, “InnoDB and Online DDL”.
tbl_name
FORCE
The outcome of attempting to change the storage engine of
a table is affected by whether the desired storage engine
is available and the setting of the
NO_ENGINE_SUBSTITUTION
SQL mode, as described in Section 5.1.10, “Server SQL Modes”.
To prevent inadvertent loss of data,
ALTER TABLE
cannot be used
to change the storage engine of a table to
MERGE
or BLACKHOLE
.
To change the InnoDB
table to use
compressed row-storage format:
ALTER TABLE t1 ROW_FORMAT = COMPRESSED;
To enable or disable encryption for an
InnoDB
table in a file-per-table
tablespace:
ALTER TABLE t1 ENCRYPTION='Y'; ALTER TABLE t1 ENCRYPTION='N';
A keyring plugin must be installed and configured to use the
ENCRYPTION
option. For more information,
see Section 14.14, “InnoDB Data-at-Rest Encryption”.
To reset the current auto-increment value:
ALTER TABLE t1 AUTO_INCREMENT = 13;
You cannot reset the counter to a value less than or equal to
the value that is currently in use. For both
InnoDB
and MyISAM
, if
the value is less than or equal to the maximum value currently
in the AUTO_INCREMENT
column, the value is
reset to the current maximum AUTO_INCREMENT
column value plus one.
To change the default table character set:
ALTER TABLE t1 CHARACTER SET = utf8;
See also Changing the Character Set.
To add (or change) a table comment:
ALTER TABLE t1 COMMENT = 'New table comment';
Use ALTER TABLE
with the
TABLESPACE
option to move
InnoDB
tables between existing
general
tablespaces,
file-per-table
tablespaces, and the
system
tablespace. See
Moving Tables Between Tablespaces Using ALTER TABLE.
ALTER TABLE ... TABLESPACE
operations
always cause a full table rebuild, even if the
TABLESPACE
attribute has not changed
from its previous value.
ALTER TABLE ... TABLESPACE
syntax does
not support moving a table from a temporary tablespace to
a persistent tablespace.
The DATA DIRECTORY
clause, which is
supported with
CREATE TABLE
... TABLESPACE
, is not supported with
ALTER TABLE ... TABLESPACE
, and is
ignored if specified.
For more information about the capabilities and
limitations of the TABLESPACE
option,
see CREATE TABLE
.
MySQL NDB Cluster 7.5.2 and later supports setting
NDB_TABLE
options for controlling a
table's partition balance (fragment count type),
read-from-any-replica capability, full replication, or any
combination of these, as part of the table comment for an
ALTER TABLE
statement in the same manner as
for CREATE TABLE
, as shown in
this example:
ALTER TABLE t1 COMMENT = "NDB_TABLE=READ_BACKUP=0,PARTITION_BALANCE=FOR_RA_BY_NODE";
Bear in mind that ALTER TABLE ... COMMENT
...
discards any existing comment for the table. See
Setting NDB_TABLE options, for
additional information and examples.
To verify that the table options were changed as intended, use
SHOW CREATE TABLE
, or query the
INFORMATION_SCHEMA.TABLES
table.
ALTER TABLE
operations are
processed using one of the following algorithms:
COPY
: Operations are performed on a copy of
the original table, and table data is copied from the original
table to the new table row by row. Concurrent DML is not
permitted.
INPLACE
: Operations avoid copying table
data but may rebuild the table in place. An exclusive metadata
lock on the table may be taken briefly during preparation and
execution phases of the operation. Typically, concurrent DML
is supported.
The ALGORITHM
clause is optional. If the
ALGORITHM
clause is omitted, MySQL uses
ALGORITHM=INPLACE
for storage engines and
ALTER TABLE
clauses that support
it. Otherwise, ALGORITHM=COPY
is used.
Specifying an ALGORITHM
clause requires the
operation to use the specified algorithm for clauses and storage
engines that support it, or fail with an error otherwise.
Specifying ALGORITHM=DEFAULT
is the same as
omitting the ALGORITHM
clause.
ALTER TABLE
operations that use the
COPY
algorithm wait for other operations that
are modifying the table to complete. After alterations are applied
to the table copy, data is copied over, the original table is
deleted, and the table copy is renamed to the name of the original
table. While the ALTER TABLE
operation executes, the original table is readable by other
sessions (with the exception noted shortly). Updates and writes to
the table started after the ALTER
TABLE
operation begins are stalled until the new table
is ready, then are automatically redirected to the new table. The
temporary copy of the table is created in the database directory
of the original table unless it is a RENAME TO
operation that moves the table to a database that resides in a
different directory.
The exception referred to earlier is that
ALTER TABLE
blocks reads (not just
writes) at the point where it is ready to install a new version of
the table .frm
file, discard the old file,
and clear outdated table structures from the table and table
definition caches. At this point, it must acquire an exclusive
lock. To do so, it waits for current readers to finish, and blocks
new reads and writes.
An ALTER TABLE
operation that uses
the COPY
algorithm prevents concurrent DML
operations. Concurrent queries are still allowed. That is, a
table-copying operation always includes at least the concurrency
restrictions of LOCK=SHARED
(allow queries but
not DML). You can further restrict concurrency for operations that
support the LOCK
clause by specifying
LOCK=EXCLUSIVE
, which prevents DML and queries.
For more information, see
Concurrency Control.
To force use of the COPY
algorithm for an
ALTER TABLE
operation that would
otherwise not use it, enable the
old_alter_table
system variable
or specify ALGORITHM=COPY
. If there is a
conflict between the old_alter_table
setting
and an ALGORITHM
clause with a value other than
DEFAULT
, the ALGORITHM
clause takes precedence.
For InnoDB
tables, an
ALTER TABLE
operation that uses the
COPY
algorithm on a table that resides in a
shared tablespace
can increase the amount of space used by the tablespace. Such
operations require as much additional space as the data in the
table plus indexes. For a table residing in a shared tablespace,
the additional space used during the operation is not released
back to the operating system as it is for a table that resides in
a file-per-table
tablespace.
For information about space requirements for online DDL operations, see Section 14.13.3, “Online DDL Space Requirements”.
ALTER TABLE
operations that use the
INPLACE
algorithm include:
ALTER TABLE
operations supported by the
InnoDB
online DDL feature. See
Section 14.13.1, “Online DDL Operations”.
Renaming a table. MySQL renames files that correspond to the
table tbl_name
without making a
copy. (You can also use the RENAME
TABLE
statement to rename tables. See
Section 13.1.33, “RENAME TABLE Statement”.) Privileges granted
specifically for the renamed table are not migrated to the new
name. They must be changed manually.
Operations that only modify table metadata. These operations
are immediate because the server only alters the table
.frm
file, not touch table contents.
Metadata-only operations include:
Renaming a column.
Changing the default value of a column (except for
NDB
tables).
Modifying the definition of an
ENUM
or
SET
column by adding new
enumeration or set members to the end
of the list of valid member values, as long as the storage
size of the data type does not change. For example, adding
a member to a SET
column
that has 8 members changes the required storage per value
from 1 byte to 2 bytes; this requires a table copy. Adding
members in the middle of the list causes renumbering of
existing members, which requires a table copy.
Renaming an index.
Adding or dropping a secondary index, for
InnoDB
and
NDB
tables. See
Section 14.13, “InnoDB and Online DDL”.
For NDB
tables, operations that
add and drop indexes on variable-width columns. These
operations occur online, without table copying and without
blocking concurrent DML actions for most of their duration.
See Section 21.5.14, “Online Operations with ALTER TABLE in NDB Cluster”.
ALTER TABLE
upgrades MySQL 5.5
temporal columns to 5.6 format for ADD COLUMN
,
CHANGE COLUMN
, MODIFY
COLUMN
, ADD INDEX
, and
FORCE
operations. This conversion cannot be
done using the INPLACE
algorithm because the
table must be rebuilt, so specifying
ALGORITHM=INPLACE
in these cases results in an
error. Specify ALGORITHM=COPY
if necessary.
If an ALTER TABLE
operation on a multicolumn
index used to partition a table by KEY
changes
the order of the columns, it can only be performed using
ALGORITHM=COPY
.
The WITHOUT VALIDATION
and WITH
VALIDATION
clauses affect whether
ALTER TABLE
performs an in-place
operation for
virtual generated
column modifications. See
Section 13.1.8.2, “ALTER TABLE and Generated Columns”.
NDB Cluster formerly supported online ALTER
TABLE
operations using the ONLINE
and
OFFLINE
keywords. These keywords are no longer
supported; their use causes a syntax error. MySQL NDB Cluster 7.5
(and later) supports online operations using the same
ALGORITHM=INPLACE
syntax used with the standard
MySQL Server. See
Section 21.5.14, “Online Operations with ALTER TABLE in NDB Cluster”, for more
information.
ALTER TABLE
with DISCARD ... PARTITION
... TABLESPACE
or IMPORT ... PARTITION ...
TABLESPACE
does not create any temporary tables or
temporary partition files.
ALTER TABLE
with ADD
PARTITION
, DROP PARTITION
,
COALESCE PARTITION
, REBUILD
PARTITION
, or REORGANIZE PARTITION
does not create temporary tables (except when used with
NDB
tables); however, these
operations can and do create temporary partition files.
ADD
or DROP
operations for
RANGE
or LIST
partitions are
immediate operations or nearly so. ADD
or
COALESCE
operations for HASH
or KEY
partitions copy data between all
partitions, unless LINEAR HASH
or
LINEAR KEY
was used; this is effectively the
same as creating a new table, although the ADD
or COALESCE
operation is performed partition by
partition. REORGANIZE
operations copy only
changed partitions and do not touch unchanged ones.
For MyISAM
tables, you can speed up index
re-creation (the slowest part of the alteration process) by
setting the
myisam_sort_buffer_size
system
variable to a high value.
For ALTER TABLE
operations that
support it, you can use the LOCK
clause to
control the level of concurrent reads and writes on a table while
it is being altered. Specifying a non-default value for this
clause enables you to require a certain amount of concurrent
access or exclusivity during the alter operation, and halts the
operation if the requested degree of locking is not available. The
parameters for the LOCK
clause are:
LOCK = DEFAULT
Maximum level of concurrency for the given
ALGORITHM
clause (if any) and
ALTER TABLE
operation: Permit concurrent
reads and writes if supported. If not, permit concurrent reads
if supported. If not, enforce exclusive access.
LOCK = NONE
If supported, permit concurrent reads and writes. Otherwise, an error occurs.
LOCK = SHARED
If supported, permit concurrent reads but block writes. Writes
are blocked even if concurrent writes are supported by the
storage engine for the given ALGORITHM
clause (if any) and ALTER TABLE
operation.
If concurrent reads are not supported, an error occurs.
LOCK = EXCLUSIVE
Enforce exclusive access. This is done even if concurrent
reads/writes are supported by the storage engine for the given
ALGORITHM
clause (if any) and
ALTER TABLE
operation.
Use ADD
to add new columns to a table, and
DROP
to remove existing columns. DROP
is a MySQL extension
to standard SQL.
col_name
To add a column at a specific position within a table row, use
FIRST
or AFTER
. The default is to
add the column last.
col_name
If a table contains only one column, the column cannot be dropped.
If what you intend is to remove the table, use the
DROP TABLE
statement instead.
If columns are dropped from a table, the columns are also removed from any index of which they are a part. If all columns that make up an index are dropped, the index is dropped as well.
The CHANGE
, MODIFY
, and
ALTER
clauses enable the names and definitions
of existing columns to be altered. They have these comparative
characteristics:
CHANGE
:
Can rename a column and change its definition, or both.
Has more capability than MODIFY
, but at
the expense of convenience for some operations.
CHANGE
requires naming the column twice
if not renaming it.
With FIRST
or AFTER
,
can reorder columns.
MODIFY
:
Can change a column definition but not its name.
More convenient than CHANGE
to change a
column definition without renaming it.
With FIRST
or AFTER
,
can reorder columns.
ALTER
: Used only to change a column default
value.
CHANGE
is a MySQL extension to standard SQL.
MODIFY
is a MySQL extension for Oracle
compatibility.
To alter a column to change both its name and definition, use
CHANGE
, specifying the old and new names and
the new definition. For example, to rename an INT NOT
NULL
column from a
to
b
and change its definition to use the
BIGINT
data type while retaining the
NOT NULL
attribute, do this:
ALTER TABLE t1 CHANGE a b BIGINT NOT NULL;
To change a column definition but not its name, use
CHANGE
or MODIFY
. With
CHANGE
, the syntax requires two column names,
so you must specify the same name twice to leave the name
unchanged. For example, to change the definition of column
b
, do this:
ALTER TABLE t1 CHANGE b b INT NOT NULL;
MODIFY
is more convenient to change the
definition without changing the name because it requires the
column name only once:
ALTER TABLE t1 MODIFY b INT NOT NULL;
To change a column name but not its definition, use
CHANGE
. The syntax requires a column
definition, so to leave the definition unchanged, you must
respecify the definition the column currently has. For example, to
rename an INT NOT NULL
column from
b
to a
, do this:
ALTER TABLE t1 CHANGE b a INT NOT NULL;
For column definition changes using CHANGE
or
MODIFY
, the definition must include the data
type and all attributes that should apply to the new column, other
than index attributes such as PRIMARY KEY
or
UNIQUE
. Attributes present in the original
definition but not specified for the new definition are not
carried forward. Suppose that a column col1
is
defined as INT UNSIGNED DEFAULT 1 COMMENT 'my
column'
and you modify the column as follows, intending
to change only INT
to
BIGINT
:
ALTER TABLE t1 MODIFY col1 BIGINT;
That statement changes the data type from INT
to BIGINT
, but it also drops the
UNSIGNED
, DEFAULT
, and
COMMENT
attributes. To retain them, the
statement must include them explicitly:
ALTER TABLE t1 MODIFY col1 BIGINT UNSIGNED DEFAULT 1 COMMENT 'my column';
For data type changes using CHANGE
or
MODIFY
, MySQL tries to convert existing column
values to the new type as well as possible.
This conversion may result in alteration of data. For example,
if you shorten a string column, values may be truncated. To
prevent the operation from succeeding if conversions to the new
data type would result in loss of data, enable strict SQL mode
before using ALTER TABLE
(see
Section 5.1.10, “Server SQL Modes”).
If you use CHANGE
or MODIFY
to shorten a column for which an index exists on the column, and
the resulting column length is less than the index length, MySQL
shortens the index automatically.
For columns renamed by CHANGE
, MySQL
automatically renames these references to the renamed column:
Indexes that refer to the old column, including indexes and
disabled MyISAM
indexes.
Foreign keys that refer to the old column.
For columns renamed by CHANGE
, MySQL does not
automatically rename these references to the renamed column:
Generated column and partition expressions that refer to the
renamed column. You must use CHANGE
to
redefine such expressions in the same
ALTER TABLE
statement as the
one that renames the column.
Views and stored programs that refer to the renamed column. You must manually alter the definition of these objects to refer to the new column name.
To reorder columns within a table, use FIRST
and AFTER
in CHANGE
or
MODIFY
operations.
ALTER ... SET DEFAULT
or ALTER ...
DROP DEFAULT
specify a new default value for a column or
remove the old default value, respectively. If the old default is
removed and the column can be NULL
, the new
default is NULL
. If the column cannot be
NULL
, MySQL assigns a default value as
described in Section 11.6, “Data Type Default Values”.
DROP PRIMARY KEY
drops the
primary key. If there is
no primary key, an error occurs. For information about the
performance characteristics of primary keys, especially for
InnoDB
tables, see
Section 8.3.2, “Primary Key Optimization”.
If you add a UNIQUE INDEX
or PRIMARY
KEY
to a table, MySQL stores it before any nonunique
index to permit detection of duplicate keys as early as possible.
DROP INDEX
removes an index. This
is a MySQL extension to standard SQL. See
Section 13.1.25, “DROP INDEX Statement”. To determine index names, use
SHOW INDEX FROM
.
tbl_name
Some storage engines permit you to specify an index type when
creating an index. The syntax for the
index_type
specifier is USING
. For details about
type_name
USING
, see Section 13.1.14, “CREATE INDEX Statement”. The
preferred position is after the column list. Support for use of
the option before the column list will be removed in a future
MySQL release.
index_option
values specify additional
options for an index. For details about permissible
index_option
values, see
Section 13.1.14, “CREATE INDEX Statement”.
RENAME INDEX
renames an
index. This is a MySQL extension to standard SQL. The content of
the table remains unchanged.
old_index_name
TO
new_index_name
old_index_name
must be the name of an
existing index in the table that is not dropped by the same
ALTER TABLE
statement.
new_index_name
is the new index name,
which cannot duplicate the name of an index in the resulting table
after changes have been applied. Neither index name can be
PRIMARY
.
If you use ALTER TABLE
on a
MyISAM
table, all nonunique indexes are created
in a separate batch (as for REPAIR
TABLE
). This should make ALTER
TABLE
much faster when you have many indexes.
For MyISAM
tables, key updating can be
controlled explicitly. Use ALTER TABLE ... DISABLE
KEYS
to tell MySQL to stop updating nonunique indexes.
Then use ALTER TABLE ... ENABLE KEYS
to
re-create missing indexes. MyISAM
does this
with a special algorithm that is much faster than inserting keys
one by one, so disabling keys before performing bulk insert
operations should give a considerable speedup. Using
ALTER TABLE ... DISABLE KEYS
requires the
INDEX
privilege in addition to the
privileges mentioned earlier.
While the nonunique indexes are disabled, they are ignored for
statements such as SELECT
and
EXPLAIN
that otherwise would use
them.
After an ALTER TABLE
statement, it
may be necessary to run ANALYZE
TABLE
to update index cardinality information. See
Section 13.7.5.22, “SHOW INDEX Statement”.
The FOREIGN KEY
and
REFERENCES
clauses are supported by the
InnoDB
and NDB
storage
engines, which implement ADD [CONSTRAINT
[
. See Section 1.8.3.2, “FOREIGN KEY Constraints”. For
other storage engines, the clauses are parsed but ignored.
symbol
]] FOREIGN KEY
[index_name
] (...) REFERENCES ...
(...)
The CHECK
constraint clause is parsed but
ignored by all storage engines. See
Section 13.1.18, “CREATE TABLE Statement”. The reason for accepting but
ignoring syntax clauses is for compatibility, to make it easier to
port code from other SQL servers, and to run applications that
create tables with references. See
Section 1.8.2, “MySQL Differences from Standard SQL”.
For ALTER TABLE
, unlike
CREATE TABLE
, ADD FOREIGN
KEY
ignores index_name
if
given and uses an automatically generated foreign key name. As a
workaround, include the CONSTRAINT
clause to
specify the foreign key name:
ADD CONSTRAINT name
FOREIGN KEY (....) ...
MySQL silently ignores inline REFERENCES
specifications, where the references are defined as part of the
column specification. MySQL accepts only
REFERENCES
clauses defined as part of a
separate FOREIGN KEY
specification.
Partitioned InnoDB
tables do not support
foreign keys. This restriction does not apply to
NDB
tables, including those explicitly
partitioned by [LINEAR] KEY
. For more
information, see
Section 22.6.2, “Partitioning Limitations Relating to Storage Engines”.
MySQL Server and NDB Cluster both support the use of
ALTER TABLE
to drop foreign keys:
ALTER TABLEtbl_name
DROP FOREIGN KEYfk_symbol
;
Adding and dropping a foreign key in the same
ALTER TABLE
statement is supported
for ALTER TABLE ...
ALGORITHM=INPLACE
but not for
ALTER TABLE ...
ALGORITHM=COPY
.
The server prohibits changes to foreign key columns that have the
potential to cause loss of referential integrity. A workaround is
to use ALTER TABLE
... DROP FOREIGN KEY
before changing the column
definition and ALTER
TABLE ... ADD FOREIGN KEY
afterward. Examples of
prohibited changes include:
Changes to the data type of foreign key columns that may be
unsafe. For example, changing
VARCHAR(20)
to
VARCHAR(30)
is permitted, but
changing it to VARCHAR(1024)
is
not because that alters the number of length bytes required to
store individual values.
Changing a NULL
column to NOT
NULL
in non-strict mode is prohibited to prevent
converting NULL
values to default
non-NULL
values, for which there are no
corresponding values in the referenced table. The operation is
permitted in strict mode, but an error is returned if any such
conversion is required.
ALTER TABLE
changes
internally generated foreign key constraint names and user-defined
foreign key constraint names that begin with the string
“tbl_name
RENAME
new_tbl_name
tbl_name
_ibfk_” to
reflect the new table name. InnoDB
interprets
foreign key constraint names that begin with the string
“tbl_name
_ibfk_” as
internally generated names.
To change the table default character set and all character
columns (CHAR
,
VARCHAR
,
TEXT
) to a new character set, use a
statement like this:
ALTER TABLEtbl_name
CONVERT TO CHARACTER SETcharset_name
;
The statement also changes the collation of all character columns.
If you specify no COLLATE
clause to indicate
which collation to use, the statement uses default collation for
the character set. If this collation is inappropriate for the
intended table use (for example, if it would change from a
case-sensitive collation to a case-insensitive collation), specify
a collation explicitly.
For a column that has a data type of
VARCHAR
or one of the
TEXT
types, CONVERT TO
CHARACTER SET
changes the data type as necessary to
ensure that the new column is long enough to store as many
characters as the original column. For example, a
TEXT
column has two length bytes,
which store the byte-length of values in the column, up to a
maximum of 65,535. For a latin1
TEXT
column, each character
requires a single byte, so the column can store up to 65,535
characters. If the column is converted to utf8
,
each character might require up to three bytes, for a maximum
possible length of 3 × 65,535 = 196,605 bytes. That length
does not fit in a TEXT
column's
length bytes, so MySQL converts the data type to
MEDIUMTEXT
, which is the smallest
string type for which the length bytes can record a value of
196,605. Similarly, a VARCHAR
column might be converted to
MEDIUMTEXT
.
To avoid data type changes of the type just described, do not use
CONVERT TO CHARACTER SET
. Instead, use
MODIFY
to change individual columns. For
example:
ALTER TABLE t MODIFY latin1_text_col TEXT CHARACTER SET utf8;
ALTER TABLE t MODIFY latin1_varchar_col VARCHAR(M
) CHARACTER SET utf8;
If you specify CONVERT TO CHARACTER SET binary
,
the CHAR
,
VARCHAR
, and
TEXT
columns are converted to their
corresponding binary string types
(BINARY
,
VARBINARY
,
BLOB
). This means that the columns
no longer will have a character set and a subsequent
CONVERT TO
operation will not apply to them.
If charset_name
is
DEFAULT
in a CONVERT TO CHARACTER
SET
operation, the character set named by the
character_set_database
system
variable is used.
The CONVERT TO
operation converts column
values between the original and named character sets. This is
not what you want if you have a column in
one character set (like latin1
) but the
stored values actually use some other, incompatible character
set (like utf8
). In this case, you have to do
the following for each such column:
ALTER TABLE t1 CHANGE c1 c1 BLOB; ALTER TABLE t1 CHANGE c1 c1 TEXT CHARACTER SET utf8;
The reason this works is that there is no conversion when you
convert to or from BLOB
columns.
To change only the default character set for a table, use this statement:
ALTER TABLEtbl_name
DEFAULT CHARACTER SETcharset_name
;
The word DEFAULT
is optional. The default
character set is the character set that is used if you do not
specify the character set for columns that you add to a table
later (for example, with ALTER TABLE ... ADD
column
).
When the foreign_key_checks
system variable is enabled, which is the default setting,
character set conversion is not permitted on tables that include a
character string column used in a foreign key constraint. The
workaround is to disable
foreign_key_checks
before
performing the character set conversion. You must perform the
conversion on both tables involved in the foreign key constraint
before re-enabling
foreign_key_checks
. If you
re-enable foreign_key_checks
after converting only one of the tables, an ON DELETE
CASCADE
or ON UPDATE CASCADE
operation could corrupt data in the referencing table due to
implicit conversion that occurs during these operations (Bug
#45290, Bug #74816).
An InnoDB
table created in its own
file-per-table
tablespace can be imported from a backup or from another MySQL
server instance using DISCARD TABLEPACE
and
IMPORT TABLESPACE
clauses. See
Section 14.6.1.3, “Importing InnoDB Tables”.
ORDER BY
enables you to create the new table
with the rows in a specific order. This option is useful primarily
when you know that you query the rows in a certain order most of
the time. By using this option after major changes to the table,
you might be able to get higher performance. In some cases, it
might make sorting easier for MySQL if the table is in order by
the column that you want to order it by later.
The table does not remain in the specified order after inserts and deletes.
ORDER BY
syntax permits one or more column
names to be specified for sorting, each of which optionally can be
followed by ASC
or DESC
to
indicate ascending or descending sort order, respectively. The
default is ascending order. Only column names are permitted as
sort criteria; arbitrary expressions are not permitted. This
clause should be given last after any other clauses.
ORDER BY
does not make sense for
InnoDB
tables because InnoDB
always orders table rows according to the
clustered index.
When used on a partitioned table, ALTER TABLE ... ORDER
BY
orders rows within each partition only.
partition_options
signifies options
that can be used with partitioned tables for repartitioning, to
add, drop, discard, import, merge, and split partitions, and to
perform partitioning maintenance.
It is possible for an ALTER TABLE
statement to contain a PARTITION BY
or
REMOVE PARTITIONING
clause in an addition to
other alter specifications, but the PARTITION
BY
or REMOVE PARTITIONING
clause must
be specified last after any other specifications. The ADD
PARTITION
, DROP PARTITION
,
DISCARD PARTITION
, IMPORT
PARTITION
, COALESCE PARTITION
,
REORGANIZE PARTITION
, EXCHANGE
PARTITION
, ANALYZE PARTITION
,
CHECK PARTITION
, and REPAIR
PARTITION
options cannot be combined with other alter
specifications in a single ALTER TABLE
, since
the options just listed act on individual partitions.
For more information about partition options, see
Section 13.1.18, “CREATE TABLE Statement”, and
Section 13.1.8.1, “ALTER TABLE Partition Operations”. For
information about and examples of ALTER TABLE ...
EXCHANGE PARTITION
statements, see
Section 22.3.3, “Exchanging Partitions and Subpartitions with Tables”.
Prior to MySQL 5.7.6, partitioned InnoDB
tables
used the generic ha_partition
partitioning
handler employed by MyISAM
and other storage
engines not supplying their own partitioning handlers; in MySQL
5.7.6 and later, such tables are created using the
InnoDB
storage engine's own (or
“native”) partitioning handler. Beginning with MySQL
5.7.9, you can upgrade an InnoDB
table that was
created in MySQL 5.7.6 or earlier (that is, created using
ha_partition
) to the InnoDB
native partition handler using ALTER TABLE ... UPGRADE
PARTITIONING
. (Bug #76734, Bug #20727344) This
ALTER TABLE
syntax does not accept any other
options and can be used only on a single table at a time. You can
also use mysql_upgrade in MySQL 5.7.9 or later
to upgrade older partitioned InnoDB tables to
the native partitioning handler.
Partitioning-related clauses for ALTER
TABLE
can be used with partitioned tables for
repartitioning, to add, drop, discard, import, merge, and split
partitions, and to perform partitioning maintenance.
Simply using a partition_options
clause with ALTER TABLE
on a
partitioned table repartitions the table according to the
partitioning scheme defined by the
partition_options
. This clause
always begins with PARTITION BY
, and
follows the same syntax and other rules as apply to the
partition_options
clause for
CREATE TABLE
(for more
detailed information, see Section 13.1.18, “CREATE TABLE Statement”),
and can also be used to partition an existing table that is
not already partitioned. For example, consider a
(nonpartitioned) table defined as shown here:
CREATE TABLE t1 ( id INT, year_col INT );
This table can be partitioned by HASH
,
using the id
column as the partitioning
key, into 8 partitions by means of this statement:
ALTER TABLE t1 PARTITION BY HASH(id) PARTITIONS 8;
MySQL supports an ALGORITHM
option with
[SUB]PARTITION BY [LINEAR] KEY
.
ALGORITHM=1
causes the server to use the
same key-hashing functions as MySQL 5.1 when computing the
placement of rows in partitions;
ALGORITHM=2
means that the server employs
the key-hashing functions implemented and used by default
for new KEY
partitioned tables in MySQL
5.5 and later. (Partitioned tables created with the
key-hashing functions employed in MySQL 5.5 and later cannot
be used by a MySQL 5.1 server.) Not specifying the option
has the same effect as using ALGORITHM=2
.
This option is intended for use chiefly when upgrading or
downgrading [LINEAR] KEY
partitioned
tables between MySQL 5.1 and later MySQL versions, or for
creating tables partitioned by KEY
or
LINEAR KEY
on a MySQL 5.5 or later server
which can be used on a MySQL 5.1 server.
To upgrade a KEY
partitioned table that
was created in MySQL 5.1, first execute
SHOW CREATE TABLE
and note
the exact columns and number of partitions shown. Now
execute an ALTER TABLE
statement using
exactly the same column list and number of partitions as in
the CREATE TABLE
statement, while adding
ALGORITHM=2
immediately following the
PARTITION BY
keywords. (You should also
include the LINEAR
keyword if it was used
for the original table definition.) An example from a
session in the mysql client is shown
here:
mysql>SHOW CREATE TABLE p\G
*************************** 1. row *************************** Table: p Create Table: CREATE TABLE `p` ( `id` int(11) NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT, `cd` datetime NOT NULL, PRIMARY KEY (`id`) ) ENGINE=InnoDB DEFAULT CHARSET=latin1 /*!50100 PARTITION BY LINEAR KEY (id) PARTITIONS 32 */ 1 row in set (0.00 sec) mysql>ALTER TABLE p
PARTITION BY LINEAR KEY ALGORITHM=2 (id) PARTITIONS 32;
Query OK, 0 rows affected (5.34 sec) Records: 0 Duplicates: 0 Warnings: 0 mysql>SHOW CREATE TABLE p\G
*************************** 1. row *************************** Table: p Create Table: CREATE TABLE `p` ( `id` int(11) NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT, `cd` datetime NOT NULL, PRIMARY KEY (`id`) ) ENGINE=InnoDB DEFAULT CHARSET=latin1 /*!50100 PARTITION BY LINEAR KEY (id) PARTITIONS 32 */ 1 row in set (0.00 sec)
Downgrading a table created using the default key-hashing
used in MySQL 5.5 and later to enable its use by a MySQL 5.1
server is similar, except in this case you should use
ALGORITHM=1
to force the table's
partitions to be rebuilt using the MySQL 5.1 key-hashing
functions. It is recommended that you not do this except
when necessary for compatibility with a MySQL 5.1 server, as
the improved KEY
hashing functions used
by default in MySQL 5.5 and later provide fixes for a number
of issues found in the older implementation.
A table upgraded by means of ALTER TABLE ...
PARTITION BY ALGORITHM=2 [LINEAR] KEY ...
can no
longer be used by a MySQL 5.1 server. (Such a table would
need to be downgraded with ALTER TABLE ...
PARTITION BY ALGORITHM=1 [LINEAR] KEY ...
before
it could be used again by a MySQL 5.1 server.)
The table that results from using an ALTER TABLE
... PARTITION BY
statement must follow the same
rules as one created using CREATE TABLE ...
PARTITION BY
. This includes the rules governing
the relationship between any unique keys (including any
primary key) that the table might have, and the column or
columns used in the partitioning expression, as discussed in
Section 22.6.1, “Partitioning Keys, Primary Keys, and Unique Keys”.
The CREATE TABLE ... PARTITION BY
rules
for specifying the number of partitions also apply to
ALTER TABLE ... PARTITION BY
.
The partition_definition
clause
for ALTER TABLE ADD PARTITION
supports
the same options as the clause of the same name for the
CREATE TABLE
statement. (See
Section 13.1.18, “CREATE TABLE Statement”, for the syntax and
description.) Suppose that you have the partitioned table
created as shown here:
CREATE TABLE t1 ( id INT, year_col INT ) PARTITION BY RANGE (year_col) ( PARTITION p0 VALUES LESS THAN (1991), PARTITION p1 VALUES LESS THAN (1995), PARTITION p2 VALUES LESS THAN (1999) );
You can add a new partition p3
to this
table for storing values less than 2002
as follows:
ALTER TABLE t1 ADD PARTITION (PARTITION p3 VALUES LESS THAN (2002));
DROP PARTITION
can be used to drop one or
more RANGE
or LIST
partitions. This statement cannot be used with
HASH
or KEY
partitions; instead, use COALESCE
PARTITION
(see below). Any data that was stored in
the dropped partitions named in the
partition_names
list is
discarded. For example, given the table
t1
defined previously, you can drop the
partitions named p0
and
p1
as shown here:
ALTER TABLE t1 DROP PARTITION p0, p1;
DROP PARTITION
does not work with
tables that use the NDB
storage engine. See
Section 22.3.1, “Management of RANGE and LIST Partitions”, and
Section 21.1.7, “Known Limitations of NDB Cluster”.
ADD PARTITION
and DROP
PARTITION
do not currently support IF
[NOT] EXISTS
.
DISCARD
PARTITION ... TABLESPACE
and
IMPORT
PARTITION ... TABLESPACE
options extend the
Transportable
Tablespace feature to individual
InnoDB
table partitions. Each
InnoDB
table partition has its own
tablespace file (.ibd
file). The
Transportable
Tablespace feature makes it easy to copy the
tablespaces from a running MySQL server instance to another
running instance, or to perform a restore on the same
instance. Both options take a list of one or more
comma-separated partition names. For example:
ALTER TABLE t1 DISCARD PARTITION p2, p3 TABLESPACE;
ALTER TABLE t1 IMPORT PARTITION p2, p3 TABLESPACE;
When running
DISCARD
PARTITION ... TABLESPACE
and
IMPORT
PARTITION ... TABLESPACE
on subpartitioned tables,
both partition and subpartition names are allowed. When a
partition name is specified, subpartitions of that partition
are included.
The
Transportable
Tablespace feature also supports copying or restoring
partitioned InnoDB
tables. For more
information, see Section 14.6.1.3, “Importing InnoDB Tables”.
Renames of partitioned tables are supported. You can rename
individual partitions indirectly using ALTER TABLE
... REORGANIZE PARTITION
; however, this operation
copies the partition's data.
To delete rows from selected partitions, use the
TRUNCATE PARTITION
option. This option
takes a comma-separated list of one or more partition names.
For example, consider the table t1
as
defined here:
CREATE TABLE t1 ( id INT, year_col INT ) PARTITION BY RANGE (year_col) ( PARTITION p0 VALUES LESS THAN (1991), PARTITION p1 VALUES LESS THAN (1995), PARTITION p2 VALUES LESS THAN (1999), PARTITION p3 VALUES LESS THAN (2003), PARTITION p4 VALUES LESS THAN (2007) );
To delete all rows from partition p0
, use
the following statement:
ALTER TABLE t1 TRUNCATE PARTITION p0;
The statement just shown has the same effect as the
following DELETE
statement:
DELETE FROM t1 WHERE year_col < 1991;
When truncating multiple partitions, the partitions do not
have to be contiguous: This can greatly simplify delete
operations on partitioned tables that would otherwise
require very complex WHERE
conditions if
done with DELETE
statements.
For example, this statement deletes all rows from partitions
p1
and p3
:
ALTER TABLE t1 TRUNCATE PARTITION p1, p3;
An equivalent DELETE
statement is shown here:
DELETE FROM t1 WHERE (year_col >= 1991 AND year_col < 1995) OR (year_col >= 2003 AND year_col < 2007);
If you use the ALL
keyword in place of
the list of partition names, the statement acts on all table
partitions.
TRUNCATE PARTITION
merely deletes rows;
it does not alter the definition of the table itself, or of
any of its partitions.
To verify that the rows were dropped, check the
INFORMATION_SCHEMA.PARTITIONS
table,
using a query such as this one:
SELECT PARTITION_NAME, TABLE_ROWS FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.PARTITIONS WHERE TABLE_NAME = 't1';
TRUNCATE PARTITION
is supported only for
partitioned tables that use the
MyISAM
,
InnoDB
, or
MEMORY
storage engine. It also
works on BLACKHOLE
tables (but
has no effect). It is not supported for
ARCHIVE
tables.
COALESCE PARTITION
can be used with a
table that is partitioned by HASH
or
KEY
to reduce the number of partitions by
number
. Suppose that you have
created table t2
as follows:
CREATE TABLE t2 ( name VARCHAR (30), started DATE ) PARTITION BY HASH( YEAR(started) ) PARTITIONS 6;
To reduce the number of partitions used by
t2
from 6 to 4, use the following
statement:
ALTER TABLE t2 COALESCE PARTITION 2;
The data contained in the last
number
partitions will be merged
into the remaining partitions. In this case, partitions 4
and 5 will be merged into the first 4 partitions (the
partitions numbered 0, 1, 2, and 3).
To change some but not all the partitions used by a
partitioned table, you can use REORGANIZE
PARTITION
. This statement can be used in several
ways:
To merge a set of partitions into a single partition.
This is done by naming several partitions in the
partition_names
list and
supplying a single definition for
partition_definition
.
To split an existing partition into several partitions.
Accomplish this by naming a single partition for
partition_names
and providing
multiple
partition_definitions
.
To change the ranges for a subset of partitions defined
using VALUES LESS THAN
or the value
lists for a subset of partitions defined using
VALUES IN
.
This statement may also be used without the
option on tables that are automatically partitioned
using partition_names
INTO
(partition_definitions
)HASH
partitioning to force
redistribution of data. (Currently, only
NDB
tables are
automatically partitioned in this way.) This is useful
in NDB Cluster where, after you have added new NDB
Cluster data nodes online to an existing NDB Cluster,
you wish to redistribute existing NDB Cluster table data
to the new data nodes. In such cases, you should invoke
the statement with the
ALGORITHM=INPLACE
option; in other
words, as shown here:
ALTER TABLE table
ALGORITHM=INPLACE, REORGANIZE PARTITION;
You cannot perform other DDL concurrently with online
table reorganization—that is, no other DDL
statements can be issued while an ALTER TABLE
... ALGORITHM=INPLACE, REORGANIZE PARTITION
statement is executing. For more information about
adding NDB Cluster data nodes online, see
Section 21.5.15, “Adding NDB Cluster Data Nodes Online”.
ALTER TABLE ... ALGORITHM=INPLACE, REORGANIZE
PARTITION
does not work with tables which
were created using the MAX_ROWS
option, because it uses the constant
MAX_ROWS
value specified in the
original CREATE TABLE
statement to determine the number of partitions
required, so no new partitions are created. Instead,
you can use ALTER TABLE ...
ALGORITHM=INPLACE,
MAX_ROWS=
to
increase the maximum number of rows for such a table;
in this case, rows
ALTER TABLE ...
ALGORITHM=INPLACE, REORGANIZE PARTITION
is
not needed (and causes an error if executed). The
value of rows
must be
greater than the value specified for
MAX_ROWS
in the original
CREATE TABLE
statement for this to
work.
Employing MAX_ROWS
to force the
number of table partitions is deprecated in NDB 7.5.4
and later; use PARTITION_BALANCE
instead (see
Setting NDB_TABLE options).
Attempting to use REORGANIZE
PARTITION
without the
option on explicitly partitioned tables results in the
error REORGANIZE PARTITION without parameters
can only be used on auto-partitioned tables using HASH
partitioning.
partition_names
INTO
(partition_definitions
)
For partitions that have not been explicitly named, MySQL
automatically provides the default names
p0
, p1
,
p2
, and so on. The same is true with
regard to subpartitions.
For more detailed information about and examples of
ALTER TABLE ... REORGANIZE PARTITION
statements, see
Section 22.3.1, “Management of RANGE and LIST Partitions”.
To exchange a table partition or subpartition with a table,
use the ALTER
TABLE ... EXCHANGE PARTITION
statement—that
is, to move any existing rows in the partition or
subpartition to the nonpartitioned table, and any existing
rows in the nonpartitioned table to the table partition or
subpartition.
For usage information and examples, see Section 22.3.3, “Exchanging Partitions and Subpartitions with Tables”.
Several options provide partition maintenance and repair
functionality analogous to that implemented for
nonpartitioned tables by statements such as
CHECK TABLE
and
REPAIR TABLE
(which are also
supported for partitioned tables; for more information, see
Section 13.7.2, “Table Maintenance Statements”). These
include ANALYZE PARTITION
, CHECK
PARTITION
, OPTIMIZE PARTITION
,
REBUILD PARTITION
, and REPAIR
PARTITION
. Each of these options takes a
partition_names
clause consisting
of one or more names of partitions, separated by commas. The
partitions must already exist in the table to be altered.
You can also use the ALL
keyword in place
of partition_names
, in which case
the statement acts on all table partitions. For more
information and examples, see
Section 22.3.4, “Maintenance of Partitions”.
Some MySQL storage engines, such as
InnoDB
, do not support
per-partition optimization. For a partitioned table using
such a storage engine, ALTER TABLE ... OPTIMIZE
PARTITION
causes the entire table to rebuilt and
analyzed, and an appropriate warning to be issued. (Bug
#11751825, Bug #42822)
To work around this problem, use the statements
ALTER TABLE ... REBUILD PARTITION
and
ALTER TABLE ... ANALYZE PARTITION
instead.
The ANALYZE PARTITION
, CHECK
PARTITION
, OPTIMIZE PARTITION
,
and REPAIR PARTITION
options are not
permitted for tables which are not partitioned.
In MySQL 5.7.9 and later, you can use ALTER TABLE
... UPGRADE PARTITIONING
to upgrade a partitioned
InnoDB
table that was created
with the old generic partitioning handler to the
InnoDB
native partitioning employed in
MySQL 5.7.6 and later. Also beginning with MySQL 5.7.9, the
mysql_upgrade utility checks for such
partitioned InnoDB
tables and attempts to
upgrade them to native partitioning as part of its normal
operations.
Partitioned InnoDB
tables that do not
use the InnoDB
native partitioning
handler cannot be used in MySQL 8.0 or later.
ALTER TABLE ... UPGRADE PARTITIONING
is
not supported in MySQL 8.0 or later; therefore, any
partitioned InnoDB
tables that employ
the generic handler must be upgraded
to the InnoDB native handler before
upgrading your MySQL installation to MySQL 8.0 or later.
REMOVE PARTITIONING
enables you to remove
a table's partitioning without otherwise affecting the table
or its data. This option can be combined with other
ALTER TABLE
options such as
those used to add, drop, or rename columns or indexes.
Using the ENGINE
option with
ALTER TABLE
changes the
storage engine used by the table without affecting the
partitioning.
When ALTER TABLE ... EXCHANGE PARTITION
or
ALTER TABLE ... TRUNCATE PARTITION
is run
against a partitioned table that uses
MyISAM
(or another storage engine
that makes use of table-level locking), only those partitions
that are actually read from are locked. (This does not apply to
partitioned tables using a storage enginethat employs row-level
locking, such as InnoDB
.) See
Section 22.6.4, “Partitioning and Locking”.
It is possible for an ALTER TABLE
statement to contain a PARTITION BY
or
REMOVE PARTITIONING
clause in an addition to
other alter specifications, but the PARTITION
BY
or REMOVE PARTITIONING
clause
must be specified last after any other specifications.
The ADD PARTITION
, DROP
PARTITION
, COALESCE PARTITION
,
REORGANIZE PARTITION
, ANALYZE
PARTITION
, CHECK PARTITION
, and
REPAIR PARTITION
options cannot be combined
with other alter specifications in a single ALTER
TABLE
, since the options just listed act on individual
partitions. For more information, see
Section 13.1.8.1, “ALTER TABLE Partition Operations”.
Only a single instance of any one of the following options can
be used in a given ALTER TABLE
statement: PARTITION BY
, ADD
PARTITION
, DROP PARTITION
,
TRUNCATE PARTITION
, EXCHANGE
PARTITION
, REORGANIZE PARTITION
, or
COALESCE PARTITION
, ANALYZE
PARTITION
, CHECK PARTITION
,
OPTIMIZE PARTITION
, REBUILD
PARTITION
, REMOVE PARTITIONING
.
For example, the following two statements are invalid:
ALTER TABLE t1 ANALYZE PARTITION p1, ANALYZE PARTITION p2; ALTER TABLE t1 ANALYZE PARTITION p1, CHECK PARTITION p2;
In the first case, you can analyze partitions
p1
and p2
of table
t1
concurrently using a single statement with
a single ANALYZE PARTITION
option that lists
both of the partitions to be analyzed, like this:
ALTER TABLE t1 ANALYZE PARTITION p1, p2;
In the second case, it is not possible to perform
ANALYZE
and CHECK
operations on different partitions of the same table
concurrently. Instead, you must issue two separate statements,
like this:
ALTER TABLE t1 ANALYZE PARTITION p1; ALTER TABLE t1 CHECK PARTITION p2;
REBUILD
operations are currently unsupported
for subpartitions. The REBUILD
keyword is
expressly disallowed with subpartitions, and causes
ALTER TABLE
to fail with an error if so used.
CHECK PARTITION
and REPAIR
PARTITION
operations fail when the partition to be
checked or repaired contains any duplicate key errors.
For more information about these statements, see Section 22.3.4, “Maintenance of Partitions”.
ALTER TABLE
operations permitted for
generated columns are ADD
,
MODIFY
, and CHANGE
.
Generated columns can be added.
CREATE TABLE t1 (c1 INT); ALTER TABLE t1 ADD COLUMN c2 INT GENERATED ALWAYS AS (c1 + 1) STORED;
The data type and expression of generated columns can be modified.
CREATE TABLE t1 (c1 INT, c2 INT GENERATED ALWAYS AS (c1 + 1) STORED); ALTER TABLE t1 MODIFY COLUMN c2 TINYINT GENERATED ALWAYS AS (c1 + 5) STORED;
Generated columns can be renamed or dropped, if no other column refers to them.
CREATE TABLE t1 (c1 INT, c2 INT GENERATED ALWAYS AS (c1 + 1) STORED); ALTER TABLE t1 CHANGE c2 c3 INT GENERATED ALWAYS AS (c1 + 1) STORED; ALTER TABLE t1 DROP COLUMN c3;
Virtual generated columns cannot be altered to stored generated columns, or vice versa. To work around this, drop the column, then add it with the new definition.
CREATE TABLE t1 (c1 INT, c2 INT GENERATED ALWAYS AS (c1 + 1) VIRTUAL); ALTER TABLE t1 DROP COLUMN c2; ALTER TABLE t1 ADD COLUMN c2 INT GENERATED ALWAYS AS (c1 + 1) STORED;
Nongenerated columns can be altered to stored but not virtual generated columns.
CREATE TABLE t1 (c1 INT, c2 INT); ALTER TABLE t1 MODIFY COLUMN c2 INT GENERATED ALWAYS AS (c1 + 1) STORED;
Stored but not virtual generated columns can be altered to nongenerated columns. The stored generated values become the values of the nongenerated column.
CREATE TABLE t1 (c1 INT, c2 INT GENERATED ALWAYS AS (c1 + 1) STORED); ALTER TABLE t1 MODIFY COLUMN c2 INT;
ADD COLUMN
is not an in-place operation
for stored columns (done without using a temporary table)
because the expression must be evaluated by the server. For
stored columns, indexing changes are done in place, and
expression changes are not done in place. Changes to column
comments are done in place.
For non-partitioned tables, ADD COLUMN
and DROP COLUMN
are in-place operations
for virtual columns. However, adding or dropping a virtual
column cannot be performed in place in combination with
other ALTER TABLE
operations.
For partitioned tables, ADD COLUMN
and
DROP COLUMN
are not in-place operations
for virtual columns.
InnoDB
supports secondary indexes on
virtual generated columns. Adding or dropping a secondary
index on a virtual generated column is an in-place
operation. For more information, see
Section 13.1.18.9, “Secondary Indexes and Generated Columns”.
When a VIRTUAL
generated column is added
to a table or modified, it is not ensured that data being
calculated by the generated column expression will not be
out of range for the column. This can lead to inconsistent
data being returned and unexpectedly failed statements. To
permit control over whether validation occurs for such
columns, ALTER TABLE
supports
WITHOUT VALIDATION
and WITH
VALIDATION
clauses:
With WITHOUT VALIDATION
(the default
if neither clause is specified), an in-place operation
is performed (if possible), data integrity is not
checked, and the statement finishes more quickly.
However, later reads from the table might report
warnings or errors for the column if values are out of
range.
With WITH VALIDATION
, ALTER
TABLE
copies the table. If an out-of-range or
any other error occurs, the statement fails. Because a
table copy is performed, the statement takes longer.
WITHOUT VALIDATION
and WITH
VALIDATION
are permitted only with ADD
COLUMN
, CHANGE COLUMN
, and
MODIFY COLUMN
operations. Otherwise, an
ER_WRONG_USAGE
error occurs.
As of MySQL 5.7.10, if expression evaluation causes
truncation or provides incorrect input to a function, the
ALTER TABLE
statement
terminates with an error and the DDL operation is rejected.
An ALTER TABLE
statement that
changes the default value of a column
col_name
may also change the
value of a generated column expression that refers to the
column using
DEFAULT(
.
For this reason, as of MySQL 5.7.13,
col_name
)ALTER TABLE
operations that
change the definition of a column cause a table rebuild if
any generated column expression uses
DEFAULT()
.
Begin with a table t1
created as shown here:
CREATE TABLE t1 (a INTEGER, b CHAR(10));
To rename the table from t1
to
t2
:
ALTER TABLE t1 RENAME t2;
To change column a
from
INTEGER
to TINYINT NOT
NULL
(leaving the name the same), and to change column
b
from CHAR(10)
to
CHAR(20)
as well as renaming it from
b
to c
:
ALTER TABLE t2 MODIFY a TINYINT NOT NULL, CHANGE b c CHAR(20);
To add a new TIMESTAMP
column
named d
:
ALTER TABLE t2 ADD d TIMESTAMP;
To add an index on column d
and a
UNIQUE
index on column a
:
ALTER TABLE t2 ADD INDEX (d), ADD UNIQUE (a);
To remove column c
:
ALTER TABLE t2 DROP COLUMN c;
To add a new AUTO_INCREMENT
integer column
named c
:
ALTER TABLE t2 ADD c INT UNSIGNED NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT, ADD PRIMARY KEY (c);
We indexed c
(as a PRIMARY
KEY
) because AUTO_INCREMENT
columns
must be indexed, and we declare c
as
NOT NULL
because primary key columns cannot
be NULL
.
For NDB
tables, it is also possible
to change the storage type used for a table or column. For
example, consider an NDB
table
created as shown here:
mysql> CREATE TABLE t1 (c1 INT) TABLESPACE ts_1 ENGINE NDB;
Query OK, 0 rows affected (1.27 sec)
To convert this table to disk-based storage, you can use the
following ALTER TABLE
statement:
mysql>ALTER TABLE t1 TABLESPACE ts_1 STORAGE DISK;
Query OK, 0 rows affected (2.99 sec) Records: 0 Duplicates: 0 Warnings: 0 mysql>SHOW CREATE TABLE t1\G
*************************** 1. row *************************** Table: t1 Create Table: CREATE TABLE `t1` ( `c1` int(11) DEFAULT NULL ) /*!50100 TABLESPACE ts_1 STORAGE DISK */ ENGINE=ndbcluster DEFAULT CHARSET=latin1 1 row in set (0.01 sec)
It is not necessary that the tablespace was referenced when the
table was originally created; however, the tablespace must be
referenced by the ALTER TABLE
:
mysql>CREATE TABLE t2 (c1 INT) ts_1 ENGINE NDB;
Query OK, 0 rows affected (1.00 sec) mysql>ALTER TABLE t2 STORAGE DISK;
ERROR 1005 (HY000): Can't create table 'c.#sql-1750_3' (errno: 140) mysql>ALTER TABLE t2 TABLESPACE ts_1 STORAGE DISK;
Query OK, 0 rows affected (3.42 sec) Records: 0 Duplicates: 0 Warnings: 0 mysql>SHOW CREATE TABLE t2\G
*************************** 1. row *************************** Table: t1 Create Table: CREATE TABLE `t2` ( `c1` int(11) DEFAULT NULL ) /*!50100 TABLESPACE ts_1 STORAGE DISK */ ENGINE=ndbcluster DEFAULT CHARSET=latin1 1 row in set (0.01 sec)
To change the storage type of an individual column, you can use
ALTER TABLE ... MODIFY [COLUMN]
. For example,
suppose you create an NDB Cluster Disk Data table with two
columns, using this CREATE TABLE
statement:
mysql>CREATE TABLE t3 (c1 INT, c2 INT)
->TABLESPACE ts_1 STORAGE DISK ENGINE NDB;
Query OK, 0 rows affected (1.34 sec)
To change column c2
from disk-based to
in-memory storage, include a STORAGE MEMORY clause in the column
definition used by the ALTER TABLE statement, as shown here:
mysql> ALTER TABLE t3 MODIFY c2 INT STORAGE MEMORY;
Query OK, 0 rows affected (3.14 sec)
Records: 0 Duplicates: 0 Warnings: 0
You can make an in-memory column into a disk-based column by
using STORAGE DISK
in a similar fashion.
Column c1
uses disk-based storage, since this
is the default for the table (determined by the table-level
STORAGE DISK
clause in the
CREATE TABLE
statement). However,
column c2
uses in-memory storage, as can be
seen here in the output of SHOW CREATE
TABLE
:
mysql> SHOW CREATE TABLE t3\G
*************************** 1. row ***************************
Table: t3
Create Table: CREATE TABLE `t3` (
`c1` int(11) DEFAULT NULL,
`c2` int(11) /*!50120 STORAGE MEMORY */ DEFAULT NULL
) /*!50100 TABLESPACE ts_1 STORAGE DISK */ ENGINE=ndbcluster DEFAULT CHARSET=latin1
1 row in set (0.02 sec)
When you add an AUTO_INCREMENT
column, column
values are filled in with sequence numbers automatically. For
MyISAM
tables, you can set the first sequence
number by executing SET
INSERT_ID=
before
value
ALTER TABLE
or by using the
AUTO_INCREMENT=
table option.
value
With MyISAM
tables, if you do not change the
AUTO_INCREMENT
column, the sequence number is
not affected. If you drop an AUTO_INCREMENT
column and then add another AUTO_INCREMENT
column, the numbers are resequenced beginning with 1.
When replication is used, adding an
AUTO_INCREMENT
column to a table might not
produce the same ordering of the rows on the slave and the
master. This occurs because the order in which the rows are
numbered depends on the specific storage engine used for the
table and the order in which the rows were inserted. If it is
important to have the same order on the master and slave, the
rows must be ordered before assigning an
AUTO_INCREMENT
number. Assuming that you want
to add an AUTO_INCREMENT
column to the table
t1
, the following statements produce a new
table t2
identical to t1
but with an AUTO_INCREMENT
column:
CREATE TABLE t2 (id INT AUTO_INCREMENT PRIMARY KEY) SELECT * FROM t1 ORDER BY col1, col2;
This assumes that the table t1
has columns
col1
and col2
.
This set of statements will also produce a new table
t2
identical to t1
, with
the addition of an AUTO_INCREMENT
column:
CREATE TABLE t2 LIKE t1; ALTER TABLE t2 ADD id INT AUTO_INCREMENT PRIMARY KEY; INSERT INTO t2 SELECT * FROM t1 ORDER BY col1, col2;
To guarantee the same ordering on both master and slave,
all columns of t1
must
be referenced in the ORDER BY
clause.
Regardless of the method used to create and populate the copy
having the AUTO_INCREMENT
column, the final
step is to drop the original table and then rename the copy:
DROP TABLE t1; ALTER TABLE t2 RENAME t1;
ALTER TABLESPACEtablespace_name
{ADD|DROP} DATAFILE 'file_name
' [INITIAL_SIZE [=]size
] [WAIT] ENGINE [=]engine_name
This statement is used either to add a new data file, or to drop a data file from a tablespace.
The ADD DATAFILE
variant enables you to specify
an initial size using an INITIAL_SIZE
clause,
where size
is measured in bytes; the
default value is 134217728 (128 MB). You may optionally follow
size
with a one-letter abbreviation for
an order of magnitude, similar to those used in
my.cnf
. Generally, this is one of the letters
M
(megabytes) or G
(gigabytes).
All NDB Cluster Disk Data objects share the same namespace. This means that each Disk Data object must be uniquely named (and not merely each Disk Data object of a given type). For example, you cannot have a tablespace and a data file with the same name, or an undo log file and a tablespace with the same name.
On 32-bit systems, the maximum supported value for
INITIAL_SIZE
is 4294967296 (4 GB). (Bug #29186)
INITIAL_SIZE
is rounded, explicitly, as for
CREATE TABLESPACE
.
Once a data file has been created, its size cannot be changed;
however, you can add more data files to the tablespace using
additional ALTER TABLESPACE ... ADD DATAFILE
statements.
Using DROP DATAFILE
with
ALTER TABLESPACE
drops the data
file 'file_name
' from the tablespace.
You cannot drop a data file from a tablespace which is in use by
any table; in other words, the data file must be empty (no extents
used). See Section 21.5.13.1, “NDB Cluster Disk Data Objects”. In
addition, any data file to be dropped must previously have been
added to the tablespace with CREATE
TABLESPACE
or ALTER
TABLESPACE
.
Both ALTER TABLESPACE ... ADD DATAFILE
and
ALTER TABLESPACE ... DROP DATAFILE
require an
ENGINE
clause which specifies the storage
engine used by the tablespace. Currently, the only accepted values
for engine_name
are
NDB
and
NDBCLUSTER
.
WAIT
is parsed but otherwise ignored, and so
has no effect in MySQL 5.7. It is intended for future
expansion.
When ALTER TABLESPACE ... ADD DATAFILE
is used
with ENGINE = NDB
, a data file is created on
each Cluster data node. You can verify that the data files were
created and obtain information about them by querying the
INFORMATION_SCHEMA.FILES
table. For
example, the following query shows all data files belonging to the
tablespace named newts
:
mysql>SELECT LOGFILE_GROUP_NAME, FILE_NAME, EXTRA
->FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.FILES
->WHERE TABLESPACE_NAME = 'newts' AND FILE_TYPE = 'DATAFILE';
+--------------------+--------------+----------------+ | LOGFILE_GROUP_NAME | FILE_NAME | EXTRA | +--------------------+--------------+----------------+ | lg_3 | newdata.dat | CLUSTER_NODE=3 | | lg_3 | newdata.dat | CLUSTER_NODE=4 | | lg_3 | newdata2.dat | CLUSTER_NODE=3 | | lg_3 | newdata2.dat | CLUSTER_NODE=4 | +--------------------+--------------+----------------+ 2 rows in set (0.03 sec)
See Section 24.9, “The INFORMATION_SCHEMA FILES Table”.
ALTER TABLESPACE
is useful only
with Disk Data storage for NDB Cluster. See
Section 21.5.13, “NDB Cluster Disk Data Tables”.
ALTER [ALGORITHM = {UNDEFINED | MERGE | TEMPTABLE}] [DEFINER =user
] [SQL SECURITY { DEFINER | INVOKER }] VIEWview_name
[(column_list
)] ASselect_statement
[WITH [CASCADED | LOCAL] CHECK OPTION]
This statement changes the definition of a view, which must exist.
The syntax is similar to that for CREATE
VIEW
see Section 13.1.21, “CREATE VIEW Statement”). This statement
requires the CREATE VIEW
and
DROP
privileges for the view, and
some privilege for each column referred to in the
SELECT
statement.
ALTER VIEW
is permitted only to the
definer or users with the SUPER
privilege.
CREATE {DATABASE | SCHEMA} [IF NOT EXISTS]db_name
[create_specification
] ...create_specification
: [DEFAULT] CHARACTER SET [=]charset_name
| [DEFAULT] COLLATE [=]collation_name
CREATE DATABASE
creates a database
with the given name. To use this statement, you need the
CREATE
privilege for the database.
CREATE
SCHEMA
is a synonym for CREATE
DATABASE
.
An error occurs if the database exists and you did not specify
IF NOT EXISTS
.
CREATE DATABASE
is not permitted
within a session that has an active LOCK
TABLES
statement.
create_specification
options specify
database characteristics. Database characteristics are stored in
the db.opt
file in the database directory.
The CHARACTER SET
clause specifies the default
database character set. The COLLATE
clause
specifies the default database collation.
Chapter 10, Character Sets, Collations, Unicode, discusses character set and collation
names.
A database in MySQL is implemented as a directory containing files
that correspond to tables in the database. Because there are no
tables in a database when it is initially created, the
CREATE DATABASE
statement creates
only a directory under the MySQL data directory and the
db.opt
file. Rules for permissible database
names are given in Section 9.2, “Schema Object Names”. If a database
name contains special characters, the name for the database
directory contains encoded versions of those characters as
described in Section 9.2.4, “Mapping of Identifiers to File Names”.
If you manually create a directory under the data directory (for
example, with mkdir), the server considers it a
database directory and it shows up in the output of
SHOW DATABASES
.
MySQL has no limit on the number of databases. The underlying file system may have a limit on the number of directories.
You can also use the mysqladmin program to create databases. See Section 4.5.2, “mysqladmin — Client for Administering a MySQL Server”.
CREATE [DEFINER =user
] EVENT [IF NOT EXISTS]event_name
ON SCHEDULEschedule
[ON COMPLETION [NOT] PRESERVE] [ENABLE | DISABLE | DISABLE ON SLAVE] [COMMENT 'string
'] DOevent_body
;schedule
: ATtimestamp
[+ INTERVALinterval
] ... | EVERYinterval
[STARTStimestamp
[+ INTERVALinterval
] ...] [ENDStimestamp
[+ INTERVALinterval
] ...]interval
:quantity
{YEAR | QUARTER | MONTH | DAY | HOUR | MINUTE | WEEK | SECOND | YEAR_MONTH | DAY_HOUR | DAY_MINUTE | DAY_SECOND | HOUR_MINUTE | HOUR_SECOND | MINUTE_SECOND}
This statement creates and schedules a new event. The event will not run unless the Event Scheduler is enabled. For information about checking Event Scheduler status and enabling it if necessary, see Section 23.4.2, “Event Scheduler Configuration”.
CREATE EVENT
requires the
EVENT
privilege for the schema in
which the event is to be created. If the
DEFINER
clause is present, the privileges
required depend on the user
value, as
discussed in Section 23.6, “Stored Object Access Control”.
The minimum requirements for a valid CREATE
EVENT
statement are as follows:
The keywords CREATE EVENT
plus
an event name, which uniquely identifies the event in a
database schema.
An ON SCHEDULE
clause, which determines
when and how often the event executes.
A DO
clause, which contains the
SQL statement to be executed by an event.
This is an example of a minimal CREATE
EVENT
statement:
CREATE EVENT myevent ON SCHEDULE AT CURRENT_TIMESTAMP + INTERVAL 1 HOUR DO UPDATE myschema.mytable SET mycol = mycol + 1;
The previous statement creates an event named
myevent
. This event executes once—one
hour following its creation—by running an SQL statement that
increments the value of the myschema.mytable
table's mycol
column by 1.
The event_name
must be a valid MySQL
identifier with a maximum length of 64 characters. Event names are
not case-sensitive, so you cannot have two events named
myevent
and MyEvent
in the
same schema. In general, the rules governing event names are the
same as those for names of stored routines. See
Section 9.2, “Schema Object Names”.
An event is associated with a schema. If no schema is indicated as
part of event_name
, the default
(current) schema is assumed. To create an event in a specific
schema, qualify the event name with a schema using
syntax.
schema_name
.event_name
The DEFINER
clause specifies the MySQL account
to be used when checking access privileges at event execution
time. If the DEFINER
clause is present, the
user
value should be a MySQL account
specified as
'
,
user_name
'@'host_name
'CURRENT_USER
, or
CURRENT_USER()
. The permitted
user
values depend on the privileges
you hold, as discussed in
Section 23.6, “Stored Object Access Control”. Also see that section
for additional information about event security.
If the DEFINER
clause is omitted, the default
definer is the user who executes the CREATE
EVENT
statement. This is the same as specifying
DEFINER = CURRENT_USER
explicitly.
Within an event body, the
CURRENT_USER
function returns the
account used to check privileges at event execution time, which is
the DEFINER
user. For information about user
auditing within events, see
Section 6.2.18, “SQL-Based Account Activity Auditing”.
IF NOT EXISTS
has the same meaning for
CREATE EVENT
as for
CREATE TABLE
: If an event named
event_name
already exists in the same
schema, no action is taken, and no error results. (However, a
warning is generated in such cases.)
The ON SCHEDULE
clause determines when, how
often, and for how long the event_body
defined for the event repeats. This clause takes one of two forms:
AT
is
used for a one-time event. It specifies that the event
executes one time only at the date and time given by
timestamp
timestamp
, which must include both
the date and time, or must be an expression that resolves to a
datetime value. You may use a value of either the
DATETIME
or
TIMESTAMP
type for this
purpose. If the date is in the past, a warning occurs, as
shown here:
mysql>SELECT NOW();
+---------------------+ | NOW() | +---------------------+ | 2006-02-10 23:59:01 | +---------------------+ 1 row in set (0.04 sec) mysql>CREATE EVENT e_totals
->ON SCHEDULE AT '2006-02-10 23:59:00'
->DO INSERT INTO test.totals VALUES (NOW());
Query OK, 0 rows affected, 1 warning (0.00 sec) mysql>SHOW WARNINGS\G
*************************** 1. row *************************** Level: Note Code: 1588 Message: Event execution time is in the past and ON COMPLETION NOT PRESERVE is set. The event was dropped immediately after creation.
CREATE EVENT
statements which
are themselves invalid—for whatever reason—fail
with an error.
You may use CURRENT_TIMESTAMP
to specify the current date and time. In such a case, the
event acts as soon as it is created.
To create an event which occurs at some point in the future
relative to the current date and time—such as that
expressed by the phrase “three weeks from
now”—you can use the optional clause +
INTERVAL
. The
interval
interval
portion consists of two
parts, a quantity and a unit of time, and follows the syntax
rules described in Temporal Intervals,
except that you cannot use any units keywords that involving
microseconds when defining an event. With some interval types,
complex time units may be used. For example, “two
minutes and ten seconds” can be expressed as +
INTERVAL '2:10' MINUTE_SECOND
.
You can also combine intervals. For example, AT
CURRENT_TIMESTAMP + INTERVAL 3 WEEK + INTERVAL 2 DAY
is equivalent to “three weeks and two days from
now”. Each portion of such a clause must begin with
+ INTERVAL
.
To repeat actions at a regular interval, use an
EVERY
clause. The EVERY
keyword is followed by an interval
as described in the previous discussion of the
AT
keyword. (+ INTERVAL
is not used with
EVERY
.) For example, EVERY 6
WEEK
means “every six weeks”.
Although + INTERVAL
clauses are not
permitted in an EVERY
clause, you can use
the same complex time units permitted in a +
INTERVAL
.
An EVERY
clause may contain an optional
STARTS
clause. STARTS
is
followed by a timestamp
value that
indicates when the action should begin repeating, and may also
use + INTERVAL
to specify an
amount of time “from now”. For example,
interval
EVERY 3 MONTH STARTS CURRENT_TIMESTAMP + INTERVAL 1
WEEK
means “every three months, beginning one
week from now”. Similarly, you can express “every
two weeks, beginning six hours and fifteen minutes from
now” as EVERY 2 WEEK STARTS CURRENT_TIMESTAMP
+ INTERVAL '6:15' HOUR_MINUTE
. Not specifying
STARTS
is the same as using STARTS
CURRENT_TIMESTAMP
—that is, the action
specified for the event begins repeating immediately upon
creation of the event.
An EVERY
clause may contain an optional
ENDS
clause. The ENDS
keyword is followed by a timestamp
value that tells MySQL when the event should stop repeating.
You may also use + INTERVAL
with
interval
ENDS
; for instance, EVERY 12 HOUR
STARTS CURRENT_TIMESTAMP + INTERVAL 30 MINUTE ENDS
CURRENT_TIMESTAMP + INTERVAL 4 WEEK
is equivalent to
“every twelve hours, beginning thirty minutes from now,
and ending four weeks from now”. Not using
ENDS
means that the event continues
executing indefinitely.
ENDS
supports the same syntax for complex
time units as STARTS
does.
You may use STARTS
,
ENDS
, both, or neither in an
EVERY
clause.
If a repeating event does not terminate within its scheduling
interval, the result may be multiple instances of the event
executing simultaneously. If this is undesirable, you should
institute a mechanism to prevent simultaneous instances. For
example, you could use the
GET_LOCK()
function, or row or
table locking.
The ON SCHEDULE
clause may use expressions
involving built-in MySQL functions and user variables to obtain
any of the timestamp
or
interval
values which it contains. You
may not use stored functions or user-defined functions in such
expressions, nor may you use any table references; however, you
may use SELECT FROM DUAL
. This is true for both
CREATE EVENT
and
ALTER EVENT
statements. References
to stored functions, user-defined functions, and tables in such
cases are specifically not permitted, and fail with an error (see
Bug #22830).
Times in the ON SCHEDULE
clause are interpreted
using the current session
time_zone
value. This becomes the
event time zone; that is, the time zone that is used for event
scheduling and is in effect within the event as it executes. These
times are converted to UTC and stored along with the event time
zone in the mysql.event
table. This enables
event execution to proceed as defined regardless of any subsequent
changes to the server time zone or daylight saving time effects.
For additional information about representation of event times,
see Section 23.4.4, “Event Metadata”. See also
Section 13.7.5.18, “SHOW EVENTS Statement”, and Section 24.8, “The INFORMATION_SCHEMA EVENTS Table”.
Normally, once an event has expired, it is immediately dropped.
You can override this behavior by specifying ON
COMPLETION PRESERVE
. Using ON COMPLETION NOT
PRESERVE
merely makes the default nonpersistent behavior
explicit.
You can create an event but prevent it from being active using the
DISABLE
keyword. Alternatively, you can use
ENABLE
to make explicit the default status,
which is active. This is most useful in conjunction with
ALTER EVENT
(see
Section 13.1.2, “ALTER EVENT Statement”).
A third value may also appear in place of
ENABLE
or DISABLE
;
DISABLE ON SLAVE
is set for the status of an
event on a replication slave to indicate that the event was
created on the master and replicated to the slave, but is not
executed on the slave. See
Section 16.4.1.16, “Replication of Invoked Features”.
You may supply a comment for an event using a
COMMENT
clause.
comment
may be any string of up to 64
characters that you wish to use for describing the event. The
comment text, being a string literal, must be surrounded by
quotation marks.
The DO
clause specifies an action
carried by the event, and consists of an SQL statement. Nearly any
valid MySQL statement that can be used in a stored routine can
also be used as the action statement for a scheduled event. (See
Section 23.8, “Restrictions on Stored Programs”.) For example, the
following event e_hourly
deletes all rows from
the sessions
table once per hour, where this
table is part of the site_activity
schema:
CREATE EVENT e_hourly ON SCHEDULE EVERY 1 HOUR COMMENT 'Clears out sessions table each hour.' DO DELETE FROM site_activity.sessions;
MySQL stores the sql_mode
system
variable setting in effect when an event is created or altered,
and always executes the event with this setting in force,
regardless of the current server SQL mode when the event
begins executing.
A CREATE EVENT
statement that
contains an ALTER EVENT
statement
in its DO
clause appears to
succeed; however, when the server attempts to execute the
resulting scheduled event, the execution fails with an error.
Statements such as SELECT
or
SHOW
that merely return a result
set have no effect when used in an event; the output from these
is not sent to the MySQL Monitor, nor is it stored anywhere.
However, you can use statements such as
SELECT ...
INTO
and
INSERT INTO ...
SELECT
that store a result. (See the next example in
this section for an instance of the latter.)
The schema to which an event belongs is the default schema for
table references in the DO
clause.
Any references to tables in other schemas must be qualified with
the proper schema name.
As with stored routines, you can use compound-statement syntax in
the DO
clause by using the
BEGIN
and END
keywords, as
shown here:
delimiter | CREATE EVENT e_daily ON SCHEDULE EVERY 1 DAY COMMENT 'Saves total number of sessions then clears the table each day' DO BEGIN INSERT INTO site_activity.totals (time, total) SELECT CURRENT_TIMESTAMP, COUNT(*) FROM site_activity.sessions; DELETE FROM site_activity.sessions; END | delimiter ;
This example uses the delimiter
command to
change the statement delimiter. See
Section 23.1, “Defining Stored Programs”.
More complex compound statements, such as those used in stored routines, are possible in an event. This example uses local variables, an error handler, and a flow control construct:
delimiter | CREATE EVENT e ON SCHEDULE EVERY 5 SECOND DO BEGIN DECLARE v INTEGER; DECLARE CONTINUE HANDLER FOR SQLEXCEPTION BEGIN END; SET v = 0; WHILE v < 5 DO INSERT INTO t1 VALUES (0); UPDATE t2 SET s1 = s1 + 1; SET v = v + 1; END WHILE; END | delimiter ;
There is no way to pass parameters directly to or from events; however, it is possible to invoke a stored routine with parameters within an event:
CREATE EVENT e_call_myproc ON SCHEDULE AT CURRENT_TIMESTAMP + INTERVAL 1 DAY DO CALL myproc(5, 27);
If an event's definer has privileges sufficient to set global system variables (see Section 5.1.8.1, “System Variable Privileges”), the event can read and write global variables. As granting such privileges entails a potential for abuse, extreme care must be taken in doing so.
Generally, any statements that are valid in stored routines may be used for action statements executed by events. For more information about statements permissible within stored routines, see Section 23.2.1, “Stored Routine Syntax”. You can create an event as part of a stored routine, but an event cannot be created by another event.
The CREATE FUNCTION
statement is
used to create stored functions and user-defined functions (UDFs):
For information about creating stored functions, see Section 13.1.16, “CREATE PROCEDURE and CREATE FUNCTION Statements”.
For information about creating user-defined functions, see Section 13.7.3.1, “CREATE FUNCTION Syntax for User-Defined Functions”.
CREATE [UNIQUE | FULLTEXT | SPATIAL] INDEXindex_name
[index_type
] ONtbl_name
(key_part
,...) [index_option
] [algorithm_option
|lock_option
] ...key_part
:col_name
[(length
)] [ASC | DESC]index_option
: KEY_BLOCK_SIZE [=]value
|index_type
| WITH PARSERparser_name
| COMMENT 'string
'index_type
: USING {BTREE | HASH}algorithm_option
: ALGORITHM [=] {DEFAULT | INPLACE | COPY}lock_option
: LOCK [=] {DEFAULT | NONE | SHARED | EXCLUSIVE}
Normally, you create all indexes on a table at the time the table
itself is created with CREATE
TABLE
. See Section 13.1.18, “CREATE TABLE Statement”. This
guideline is especially important for
InnoDB
tables, where the primary key
determines the physical layout of rows in the data file.
CREATE INDEX
enables you to add
indexes to existing tables.
CREATE INDEX
is mapped to an
ALTER TABLE
statement to create
indexes. See Section 13.1.8, “ALTER TABLE Statement”.
CREATE INDEX
cannot be used to
create a PRIMARY KEY
; use
ALTER TABLE
instead. For more
information about indexes, see Section 8.3.1, “How MySQL Uses Indexes”.
InnoDB
supports secondary indexes on
virtual columns. For more information, see
Section 13.1.18.9, “Secondary Indexes and Generated Columns”.
When the innodb_stats_persistent
setting is enabled, run the ANALYZE
TABLE
statement for an
InnoDB
table after creating an index
on that table.
An index specification of the form
(
creates an
index with multiple key parts. Index key values are formed by
concatenating the values of the given key parts. For example
key_part1
,
key_part2
, ...)(col1, col2, col3)
specifies a multiple-column
index with index keys consisting of values from
col1
, col2
, and
col3
.
A key_part
specification can end with
ASC
or DESC
. These keywords
are permitted for future extensions for specifying ascending or
descending index value storage. Currently, they are parsed but
ignored; index values are always stored in ascending order.
The following sections describe different aspects of the
CREATE INDEX
statement:
For string columns, indexes can be created that use only the
leading part of column values, using
syntax to specify an index prefix length:
col_name
(length
)
Prefixes can be specified for
CHAR
,
VARCHAR
,
BINARY
, and
VARBINARY
key parts.
Prefixes must be specified for
BLOB
and
TEXT
key parts. Additionally,
BLOB
and
TEXT
columns can be indexed
only for InnoDB
,
MyISAM
, and BLACKHOLE
tables.
Prefix limits are measured in bytes.
However, prefix lengths for index
specifications in CREATE
TABLE
, ALTER TABLE
,
and CREATE INDEX
statements
are interpreted as number of characters for nonbinary string
types (CHAR
,
VARCHAR
,
TEXT
) and number of bytes for
binary string types (BINARY
,
VARBINARY
,
BLOB
). Take this into account
when specifying a prefix length for a nonbinary string
column that uses a multibyte character set.
Prefix support and lengths of prefixes (where supported) are
storage engine dependent. For example, a prefix can be up to
767 bytes long for InnoDB
tables or 3072 bytes if the
innodb_large_prefix
option
is enabled. For MyISAM
tables,
the prefix length limit is 1000 bytes. The
NDB
storage engine does not
support prefixes (see
Section 21.1.7.6, “Unsupported or Missing Features in NDB Cluster”).
As of MySQL 5.7.17, if a specified index prefix exceeds the
maximum column data type size, CREATE
INDEX
handles the index as follows:
For a nonunique index, either an error occurs (if strict SQL mode is enabled), or the index length is reduced to lie within the maximum column data type size and a warning is produced (if strict SQL mode is not enabled).
For a unique index, an error occurs regardless of SQL mode because reducing the index length might enable insertion of nonunique entries that do not meet the specified uniqueness requirement.
The statement shown here creates an index using the first 10
characters of the name
column (assuming that
name
has a nonbinary string type):
CREATE INDEX part_of_name ON customer (name(10));
If names in the column usually differ in the first 10
characters, lookups performed using this index should not be
much slower than using an index created from the entire
name
column. Also, using column prefixes for
indexes can make the index file much smaller, which could save a
lot of disk space and might also speed up
INSERT
operations.
A UNIQUE
index creates a constraint such that
all values in the index must be distinct. An error occurs if you
try to add a new row with a key value that matches an existing
row. If you specify a prefix value for a column in a
UNIQUE
index, the column values must be
unique within the prefix length. A UNIQUE
index permits multiple NULL
values for
columns that can contain NULL
.
If a table has a PRIMARY KEY
or
UNIQUE NOT NULL
index that consists of a
single column that has an integer type, you can use
_rowid
to refer to the indexed column in
SELECT
statements, as follows:
_rowid
refers to the PRIMARY
KEY
column if there is a PRIMARY
KEY
consisting of a single integer column. If
there is a PRIMARY KEY
but it does not
consist of a single integer column,
_rowid
cannot be used.
Otherwise, _rowid
refers to the column in
the first UNIQUE NOT NULL
index if that
index consists of a single integer column. If the first
UNIQUE NOT NULL
index does not consist of
a single integer column, _rowid
cannot be
used.
FULLTEXT
indexes are supported only for
InnoDB
and
MyISAM
tables and can include only
CHAR
,
VARCHAR
, and
TEXT
columns. Indexing always
happens over the entire column; column prefix indexing is not
supported and any prefix length is ignored if specified. See
Section 12.9, “Full-Text Search Functions”, for details of operation.
The MyISAM
,
InnoDB
,
NDB
, and
ARCHIVE
storage engines support
spatial columns such as POINT
and
GEOMETRY
.
(Section 11.4, “Spatial Data Types”, describes the spatial data
types.) However, support for spatial column indexing varies
among engines. Spatial and nonspatial indexes on spatial columns
are available according to the following rules.
Spatial indexes on spatial columns (created using
SPATIAL INDEX
) have these characteristics:
Nonspatial indexes on spatial columns (created with
INDEX
, UNIQUE
, or
PRIMARY KEY
) have these characteristics:
Permitted for any storage engine that supports spatial
columns except ARCHIVE
.
Columns can be NULL
unless the index is a
primary key.
For each spatial column in a non-SPATIAL
index except POINT
columns, a
column prefix length must be specified. (This is the same
requirement as for indexed
BLOB
columns.) The prefix
length is given in bytes.
The index type for a non-SPATIAL
index
depends on the storage engine. Currently, B-tree is used.
Permitted for a column that can have NULL
values only for InnoDB
,
MyISAM
, and
MEMORY
tables.
Following the key part list, index options can be given. An
index_option
value can be any of the
following:
KEY_BLOCK_SIZE [=]
value
For MyISAM
tables,
KEY_BLOCK_SIZE
optionally specifies the
size in bytes to use for index key blocks. The value is
treated as a hint; a different size could be used if
necessary. A KEY_BLOCK_SIZE
value
specified for an individual index definition overrides a
table-level KEY_BLOCK_SIZE
value.
KEY_BLOCK_SIZE
is not supported at the
index level for InnoDB
tables.
See Section 13.1.18, “CREATE TABLE Statement”.
index_type
Some storage engines permit you to specify an index type when creating an index. For example:
CREATE TABLE lookup (id INT) ENGINE = MEMORY; CREATE INDEX id_index ON lookup (id) USING BTREE;
Table 13.1, “Index Types Per Storage Engine”
shows the permissible index type values supported by
different storage engines. Where multiple index types are
listed, the first one is the default when no index type
specifier is given. Storage engines not listed in the table
do not support an index_type
clause in index definitions.
The index_type
clause cannot be
used for FULLTEXT INDEX
or
SPATIAL INDEX
specifications. Full-text
index implementation is storage engine dependent. Spatial
indexes are implemented as R-tree indexes.
BTREE
indexes are implemented by the
NDB
storage engine as T-tree
indexes.
For indexes on NDB
table
columns, the USING
option can be
specified only for a unique index or primary key.
USING HASH
prevents the creation of an
ordered index; otherwise, creating a unique index or
primary key on an NDB
table
automatically results in the creation of both an ordered
index and a hash index, each of which indexes the same set
of columns.
For unique indexes that include one or more
NULL
columns of an
NDB
table, the hash index can
be used only to look up literal values, which means that
IS [NOT] NULL
conditions require a full
scan of the table. One workaround is to make sure that a
unique index using one or more NULL
columns on such a table is always created in such a way
that it includes the ordered index; that is, avoid
employing USING HASH
when creating the
index.
If you specify an index type that is not valid for a given
storage engine, but another index type is available that the
engine can use without affecting query results, the engine
uses the available type. The parser recognizes
RTREE
as a type name, but currently this
cannot be specified for any storage engine.
Use of the index_type
option
before the ON
clause is
deprecated; support for use of the option in this position
will be removed in a future MySQL release. If an
tbl_name
index_type
option is given in
both the earlier and later positions, the final option
applies.
TYPE
is recognized as a synonym for type_name
USING
. However,
type_name
USING
is the preferred form.
The following tables show index characteristics for the
storage engines that support the
index_type
option.
Table 13.2 InnoDB Storage Engine Index Characteristics
Index Class | Index Type | Stores NULL VALUES | Permits Multiple NULL Values | IS NULL Scan Type | IS NOT NULL Scan Type |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Primary key | BTREE |
No | No | N/A | N/A |
Unique | BTREE |
Yes | Yes | Index | Index |
Key | BTREE |
Yes | Yes | Index | Index |
FULLTEXT |
N/A | Yes | Yes | Table | Table |
SPATIAL |
N/A | No | No | N/A | N/A |
Table 13.3 MyISAM Storage Engine Index Characteristics
Index Class | Index Type | Stores NULL VALUES | Permits Multiple NULL Values | IS NULL Scan Type | IS NOT NULL Scan Type |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Primary key | BTREE |
No | No | N/A | N/A |
Unique | BTREE |
Yes | Yes | Index | Index |
Key | BTREE |
Yes | Yes | Index | Index |
FULLTEXT |
N/A | Yes | Yes | Table | Table |
SPATIAL |
N/A | No | No | N/A | N/A |
Table 13.4 MEMORY Storage Engine Index Characteristics
Index Class | Index Type | Stores NULL VALUES | Permits Multiple NULL Values | IS NULL Scan Type | IS NOT NULL Scan Type |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Primary key | BTREE |
No | No | N/A | N/A |
Unique | BTREE |
Yes | Yes | Index | Index |
Key | BTREE |
Yes | Yes | Index | Index |
Primary key | HASH |
No | No | N/A | N/A |
Unique | HASH |
Yes | Yes | Index | Index |
Key | HASH |
Yes | Yes | Index | Index |
Table 13.5 NDB Storage Engine Index Characteristics
Index Class | Index Type | Stores NULL VALUES | Permits Multiple NULL Values | IS NULL Scan Type | IS NOT NULL Scan Type |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Primary key | BTREE |
No | No | Index | Index |
Unique | BTREE |
Yes | Yes | Index | Index |
Key | BTREE |
Yes | Yes | Index | Index |
Primary key | HASH |
No | No | Table (see note 1) | Table (see note 1) |
Unique | HASH |
Yes | Yes | Table (see note 1) | Table (see note 1) |
Key | HASH |
Yes | Yes | Table (see note 1) | Table (see note 1) |
Table note:
1. If USING HASH
is specified that
prevents creation of an implicit ordered index.
WITH PARSER
parser_name
This option can be used only with
FULLTEXT
indexes. It associates a parser
plugin with the index if full-text indexing and searching
operations need special handling.
InnoDB
and
MyISAM
support full-text parser
plugins. See Full-Text Parser Plugins and
Section 28.2.4.4, “Writing Full-Text Parser Plugins” for more
information.
COMMENT
'
string
'
Index definitions can include an optional comment of up to 1024 characters.
The
MERGE_THRESHOLD
for index pages can be configured for individual indexes
using the index_option
COMMENT
clause of the
CREATE INDEX
statement. For
example:
CREATE TABLE t1 (id INT); CREATE INDEX id_index ON t1 (id) COMMENT 'MERGE_THRESHOLD=40';
If the page-full percentage for an index page falls below
the MERGE_THRESHOLD
value when a row is
deleted or when a row is shortened by an update operation,
InnoDB
attempts to merge the
index page with a neighboring index page. The default
MERGE_THRESHOLD
value is 50, which is the
previously hardcoded value.
MERGE_THRESHOLD
can also be defined at
the index level and table level using
CREATE TABLE
and
ALTER TABLE
statements. For
more information, see
Section 14.8.12, “Configuring the Merge Threshold for Index Pages”.
ALGORITHM
and LOCK
clauses
may be given to influence the table copying method and level of
concurrency for reading and writing the table while its indexes
are being modified. They have the same meaning as for the
ALTER TABLE
statement. For more
information, see Section 13.1.8, “ALTER TABLE Statement”
NDB Cluster formerly supported online CREATE
INDEX
operations using an alternative syntax that is
no longer supported. NDB Cluster now supports online operations
using the same ALGORITHM=INPLACE
syntax used
with the standard MySQL Server. See
Section 21.5.14, “Online Operations with ALTER TABLE in NDB Cluster”, for more
information.
CREATE LOGFILE GROUPlogfile_group
ADD UNDOFILE 'undo_file
' [INITIAL_SIZE [=]initial_size
] [UNDO_BUFFER_SIZE [=]undo_buffer_size
] [REDO_BUFFER_SIZE [=]redo_buffer_size
] [NODEGROUP [=]nodegroup_id
] [WAIT] [COMMENT [=] 'string
'] ENGINE [=]engine_name
This statement creates a new log file group named
logfile_group
having a single
UNDO
file named
'undo_file
'. A
CREATE LOGFILE GROUP
statement has
one and only one ADD UNDOFILE
clause. For rules
covering the naming of log file groups, see
Section 9.2, “Schema Object Names”.
All NDB Cluster Disk Data objects share the same namespace. This means that each Disk Data object must be uniquely named (and not merely each Disk Data object of a given type). For example, you cannot have a tablespace and a log file group with the same name, or a tablespace and a data file with the same name.
There can be only one log file group per NDB Cluster instance at any given time.
The optional INITIAL_SIZE
parameter sets the
UNDO
file's initial size; if not specified, it
defaults to 128M
(128 megabytes). The optional
UNDO_BUFFER_SIZE
parameter sets the size used
by the UNDO
buffer for the log file group; The
default value for UNDO_BUFFER_SIZE
is
8M
(eight megabytes); this value cannot exceed
the amount of system memory available. Both of these parameters
are specified in bytes. You may optionally follow either or both
of these with a one-letter abbreviation for an order of magnitude,
similar to those used in my.cnf
. Generally,
this is one of the letters M
(for megabytes)
or G
(for gigabytes).
Memory used for UNDO_BUFFER_SIZE
comes from the
global pool whose size is determined by the value of the
SharedGlobalMemory
data
node configuration parameter. This includes any default value
implied for this option by the setting of the
InitialLogFileGroup
data
node configuration parameter.
The maximum permitted for UNDO_BUFFER_SIZE
is
629145600 (600 MB).
On 32-bit systems, the maximum supported value for
INITIAL_SIZE
is 4294967296 (4 GB). (Bug #29186)
The minimum allowed value for INITIAL_SIZE
is
1048576 (1 MB).
The ENGINE
option determines the storage engine
to be used by this log file group, with
engine_name
being the name of the
storage engine. In MySQL 5.7, this must be
NDB
(or
NDBCLUSTER
). If
ENGINE
is not set, MySQL tries to use the
engine specified by the
default_storage_engine
server
system variable (formerly
storage_engine
). In any case, if
the engine is not specified as NDB
or
NDBCLUSTER
, the CREATE
LOGFILE GROUP
statement appears to succeed but actually
fails to create the log file group, as shown here:
mysql>CREATE LOGFILE GROUP lg1
->ADD UNDOFILE 'undo.dat' INITIAL_SIZE = 10M;
Query OK, 0 rows affected, 1 warning (0.00 sec) mysql>SHOW WARNINGS;
+-------+------+------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+ | Level | Code | Message | +-------+------+------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+ | Error | 1478 | Table storage engine 'InnoDB' does not support the create option 'TABLESPACE or LOGFILE GROUP' | +-------+------+------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+ 1 row in set (0.00 sec) mysql>DROP LOGFILE GROUP lg1 ENGINE = NDB;
ERROR 1529 (HY000): Failed to drop LOGFILE GROUP mysql>CREATE LOGFILE GROUP lg1
->ADD UNDOFILE 'undo.dat' INITIAL_SIZE = 10M
->ENGINE = NDB;
Query OK, 0 rows affected (2.97 sec)
The fact that the CREATE LOGFILE GROUP
statement does not actually return an error when a
non-NDB
storage engine is named, but rather
appears to succeed, is a known issue which we hope to address in a
future release of NDB Cluster.
REDO_BUFFER_SIZE
,
NODEGROUP
, WAIT
, and
COMMENT
are parsed but ignored, and so have no
effect in MySQL 5.7. These options are intended for
future expansion.
When used with ENGINE [=] NDB
, a log file group
and associated UNDO
log file are created on
each Cluster data node. You can verify that the
UNDO
files were created and obtain information
about them by querying the
INFORMATION_SCHEMA.FILES
table. For
example:
mysql>SELECT LOGFILE_GROUP_NAME, LOGFILE_GROUP_NUMBER, EXTRA
->FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.FILES
->WHERE FILE_NAME = 'undo_10.dat';
+--------------------+----------------------+----------------+ | LOGFILE_GROUP_NAME | LOGFILE_GROUP_NUMBER | EXTRA | +--------------------+----------------------+----------------+ | lg_3 | 11 | CLUSTER_NODE=3 | | lg_3 | 11 | CLUSTER_NODE=4 | +--------------------+----------------------+----------------+ 2 rows in set (0.06 sec)
CREATE LOGFILE GROUP
is useful only
with Disk Data storage for NDB Cluster. See
Section 21.5.13, “NDB Cluster Disk Data Tables”.
CREATE [DEFINER =user
] PROCEDUREsp_name
([proc_parameter
[,...]]) [characteristic
...]routine_body
CREATE [DEFINER =user
] FUNCTIONsp_name
([func_parameter
[,...]]) RETURNStype
[characteristic
...]routine_body
proc_parameter
: [ IN | OUT | INOUT ]param_name
type
func_parameter
:param_name
type
type
:Any valid MySQL data type
characteristic
: COMMENT 'string
' | LANGUAGE SQL | [NOT] DETERMINISTIC | { CONTAINS SQL | NO SQL | READS SQL DATA | MODIFIES SQL DATA } | SQL SECURITY { DEFINER | INVOKER }routine_body
:Valid SQL routine statement
These statements create stored routines. By default, a routine is
associated with the default database. To associate the routine
explicitly with a given database, specify the name as
db_name.sp_name
when you create it.
The CREATE FUNCTION
statement is
also used in MySQL to support UDFs (user-defined functions). See
Section 28.4, “Adding Functions to MySQL”. A UDF can be regarded as an
external stored function. Stored functions share their namespace
with UDFs. See Section 9.2.5, “Function Name Parsing and Resolution”, for the
rules describing how the server interprets references to different
kinds of functions.
To invoke a stored procedure, use the
CALL
statement (see
Section 13.2.1, “CALL Statement”). To invoke a stored function, refer to it
in an expression. The function returns a value during expression
evaluation.
CREATE PROCEDURE
and
CREATE FUNCTION
require the
CREATE ROUTINE
privilege. If the
DEFINER
clause is present, the privileges
required depend on the user
value, as
discussed in Section 23.6, “Stored Object Access Control”. If binary
logging is enabled, CREATE FUNCTION
might require the SUPER
privilege,
as discussed in Section 23.7, “Stored Program Binary Logging”.
By default, MySQL automatically grants the
ALTER ROUTINE
and
EXECUTE
privileges to the routine
creator. This behavior can be changed by disabling the
automatic_sp_privileges
system
variable. See Section 23.2.2, “Stored Routines and MySQL Privileges”.
The DEFINER
and SQL SECURITY
clauses specify the security context to be used when checking
access privileges at routine execution time, as described later in
this section.
If the routine name is the same as the name of a built-in SQL function, a syntax error occurs unless you use a space between the name and the following parenthesis when defining the routine or invoking it later. For this reason, avoid using the names of existing SQL functions for your own stored routines.
The IGNORE_SPACE
SQL mode
applies to built-in functions, not to stored routines. It is
always permissible to have spaces after a stored routine name,
regardless of whether
IGNORE_SPACE
is enabled.
The parameter list enclosed within parentheses must always be
present. If there are no parameters, an empty parameter list of
()
should be used. Parameter names are not
case-sensitive.
Each parameter is an IN
parameter by default.
To specify otherwise for a parameter, use the keyword
OUT
or INOUT
before the
parameter name.
Specifying a parameter as IN
,
OUT
, or INOUT
is valid
only for a PROCEDURE
. For a
FUNCTION
, parameters are always regarded as
IN
parameters.
An IN
parameter passes a value into a
procedure. The procedure might modify the value, but the
modification is not visible to the caller when the procedure
returns. An OUT
parameter passes a value from
the procedure back to the caller. Its initial value is
NULL
within the procedure, and its value is
visible to the caller when the procedure returns. An
INOUT
parameter is initialized by the caller,
can be modified by the procedure, and any change made by the
procedure is visible to the caller when the procedure returns.
For each OUT
or INOUT
parameter, pass a user-defined variable in the
CALL
statement that invokes the
procedure so that you can obtain its value when the procedure
returns. If you are calling the procedure from within another
stored procedure or function, you can also pass a routine
parameter or local routine variable as an OUT
or INOUT
parameter. If you are calling the
procedure from within a trigger, you can also pass
NEW.
as an
col_name
OUT
or INOUT
parameter.
For information about the effect of unhandled conditions on procedure parameters, see Section 13.6.7.8, “Condition Handling and OUT or INOUT Parameters”.
Routine parameters cannot be referenced in statements prepared within the routine; see Section 23.8, “Restrictions on Stored Programs”.
The following example shows a simple stored procedure that uses an
OUT
parameter:
mysql>delimiter //
mysql>CREATE PROCEDURE simpleproc (OUT param1 INT)
->BEGIN
->SELECT COUNT(*) INTO param1 FROM t;
->END//
Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.00 sec) mysql>delimiter ;
mysql>CALL simpleproc(@a);
Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.00 sec) mysql>SELECT @a;
+------+ | @a | +------+ | 3 | +------+ 1 row in set (0.00 sec)
The example uses the mysql client
delimiter
command to change the statement
delimiter from ;
to //
while
the procedure is being defined. This enables the
;
delimiter used in the procedure body to be
passed through to the server rather than being interpreted by
mysql itself. See
Section 23.1, “Defining Stored Programs”.
The RETURNS
clause may be specified only for a
FUNCTION
, for which it is mandatory. It
indicates the return type of the function, and the function body
must contain a RETURN
statement. If the
value
RETURN
statement returns a value of
a different type, the value is coerced to the proper type. For
example, if a function specifies an
ENUM
or
SET
value in the
RETURNS
clause, but the
RETURN
statement returns an
integer, the value returned from the function is the string for
the corresponding ENUM
member of
set of SET
members.
The following example function takes a parameter, performs an
operation using an SQL function, and returns the result. In this
case, it is unnecessary to use delimiter
because the function definition contains no internal
;
statement delimiters:
mysql>CREATE FUNCTION hello (s CHAR(20))
mysql>RETURNS CHAR(50) DETERMINISTIC
->RETURN CONCAT('Hello, ',s,'!');
Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.00 sec) mysql>SELECT hello('world');
+----------------+ | hello('world') | +----------------+ | Hello, world! | +----------------+ 1 row in set (0.00 sec)
Parameter types and function return types can be declared to use
any valid data type. The COLLATE
attribute can
be used if preceded by a CHARACTER SET
specification.
The routine_body
consists of a valid
SQL routine statement. This can be a simple statement such as
SELECT
or
INSERT
, or a compound statement
written using BEGIN
and END
.
Compound statements can contain declarations, loops, and other
control structure statements. The syntax for these statements is
described in Section 13.6, “Compound Statements”. In
practice, stored functions tend to use compound statements, unless
the body consists of a single
RETURN
statement.
MySQL permits routines to contain DDL statements, such as
CREATE
and DROP
. MySQL also
permits stored procedures (but not stored functions) to contain
SQL transaction statements such as
COMMIT
. Stored functions may not
contain statements that perform explicit or implicit commit or
rollback. Support for these statements is not required by the SQL
standard, which states that each DBMS vendor may decide whether to
permit them.
Statements that return a result set can be used within a stored
procedure but not within a stored function. This prohibition
includes SELECT
statements that do
not have an INTO
clause and other
statements such as var_list
SHOW
,
EXPLAIN
, and
CHECK TABLE
. For statements that
can be determined at function definition time to return a result
set, a Not allowed to return a result set from a
function
error occurs
(ER_SP_NO_RETSET
). For statements
that can be determined only at runtime to return a result set, a
PROCEDURE %s can't return a result set in the given
context
error occurs
(ER_SP_BADSELECT
).
USE
statements within stored
routines are not permitted. When a routine is invoked, an implicit
USE
is
performed (and undone when the routine terminates). The causes the
routine to have the given default database while it executes.
References to objects in databases other than the routine default
database should be qualified with the appropriate database name.
db_name
For additional information about statements that are not permitted in stored routines, see Section 23.8, “Restrictions on Stored Programs”.
For information about invoking stored procedures from within programs written in a language that has a MySQL interface, see Section 13.2.1, “CALL Statement”.
MySQL stores the sql_mode
system
variable setting in effect when a routine is created or altered,
and always executes the routine with this setting in force,
regardless of the current server SQL mode when the
routine begins executing.
The switch from the SQL mode of the invoker to that of the routine occurs after evaluation of arguments and assignment of the resulting values to routine parameters. If you define a routine in strict SQL mode but invoke it in nonstrict mode, assignment of arguments to routine parameters does not take place in strict mode. If you require that expressions passed to a routine be assigned in strict SQL mode, you should invoke the routine with strict mode in effect.
The COMMENT
characteristic is a MySQL
extension, and may be used to describe the stored routine. This
information is displayed by the SHOW CREATE
PROCEDURE
and SHOW CREATE
FUNCTION
statements.
The LANGUAGE
characteristic indicates the
language in which the routine is written. The server ignores this
characteristic; only SQL routines are supported.
A routine is considered “deterministic” if it always
produces the same result for the same input parameters, and
“not deterministic” otherwise. If neither
DETERMINISTIC
nor NOT
DETERMINISTIC
is given in the routine definition, the
default is NOT DETERMINISTIC
. To declare that a
function is deterministic, you must specify
DETERMINISTIC
explicitly.
Assessment of the nature of a routine is based on the
“honesty” of the creator: MySQL does not check that a
routine declared DETERMINISTIC
is free of
statements that produce nondeterministic results. However,
misdeclaring a routine might affect results or affect performance.
Declaring a nondeterministic routine as
DETERMINISTIC
might lead to unexpected results
by causing the optimizer to make incorrect execution plan choices.
Declaring a deterministic routine as
NONDETERMINISTIC
might diminish performance by
causing available optimizations not to be used.
If binary logging is enabled, the DETERMINISTIC
characteristic affects which routine definitions MySQL accepts.
See Section 23.7, “Stored Program Binary Logging”.
A routine that contains the NOW()
function (or its synonyms) or
RAND()
is nondeterministic, but it
might still be replication-safe. For
NOW()
, the binary log includes the
timestamp and replicates correctly.
RAND()
also replicates correctly as
long as it is called only a single time during the execution of a
routine. (You can consider the routine execution timestamp and
random number seed as implicit inputs that are identical on the
master and slave.)
Several characteristics provide information about the nature of data use by the routine. In MySQL, these characteristics are advisory only. The server does not use them to constrain what kinds of statements a routine will be permitted to execute.
CONTAINS SQL
indicates that the routine
does not contain statements that read or write data. This is
the default if none of these characteristics is given
explicitly. Examples of such statements are SET @x =
1
or DO RELEASE_LOCK('abc')
,
which execute but neither read nor write data.
NO SQL
indicates that the routine contains
no SQL statements.
READS SQL DATA
indicates that the routine
contains statements that read data (for example,
SELECT
), but not statements
that write data.
MODIFIES SQL DATA
indicates that the
routine contains statements that may write data (for example,
INSERT
or
DELETE
).
The SQL SECURITY
characteristic can be
DEFINER
or INVOKER
to
specify the security context; that is, whether the routine
executes using the privileges of the account named in the routine
DEFINER
clause or the user who invokes it. This
account must have permission to access the database with which the
routine is associated. The default value is
DEFINER
. The user who invokes the routine must
have the EXECUTE
privilege for it,
as must the DEFINER
account if the routine
executes in definer security context.
The DEFINER
clause specifies the MySQL account
to be used when checking access privileges at routine execution
time for routines that have the SQL SECURITY
DEFINER
characteristic.
If the DEFINER
clause is present, the
user
value should be a MySQL account
specified as
'
,
user_name
'@'host_name
'CURRENT_USER
, or
CURRENT_USER()
. The permitted
user
values depend on the privileges
you hold, as discussed in
Section 23.6, “Stored Object Access Control”. Also see that section
for additional information about stored routine security.
If the DEFINER
clause is omitted, the default
definer is the user who executes the CREATE
PROCEDURE
or CREATE
FUNCTION
statement. This is the same as specifying
DEFINER = CURRENT_USER
explicitly.
Within the body of a stored routine that is defined with the
SQL SECURITY DEFINER
characteristic, the
CURRENT_USER
function returns the
routine's DEFINER
value. For information about
user auditing within stored routines, see
Section 6.2.18, “SQL-Based Account Activity Auditing”.
Consider the following procedure, which displays a count of the
number of MySQL accounts listed in the
mysql.user
system table:
CREATE DEFINER = 'admin'@'localhost' PROCEDURE account_count() BEGIN SELECT 'Number of accounts:', COUNT(*) FROM mysql.user; END;
The procedure is assigned a DEFINER
account of
'admin'@'localhost'
no matter which user
defines it. It executes with the privileges of that account no
matter which user invokes it (because the default security
characteristic is DEFINER
). The procedure
succeeds or fails depending on whether invoker has the
EXECUTE
privilege for it and
'admin'@'localhost'
has the
SELECT
privilege for the
mysql.user
table.
Now suppose that the procedure is defined with the SQL
SECURITY INVOKER
characteristic:
CREATE DEFINER = 'admin'@'localhost' PROCEDURE account_count() SQL SECURITY INVOKER BEGIN SELECT 'Number of accounts:', COUNT(*) FROM mysql.user; END;
The procedure still has a DEFINER
of
'admin'@'localhost'
, but in this case, it
executes with the privileges of the invoking user. Thus, the
procedure succeeds or fails depending on whether the invoker has
the EXECUTE
privilege for it and
the SELECT
privilege for the
mysql.user
table.
The server handles the data type of a routine parameter, local
routine variable created with
DECLARE
, or function return value
as follows:
Assignments are checked for data type mismatches and overflow. Conversion and overflow problems result in warnings, or errors in strict SQL mode.
Only scalar values can be assigned. For example, a statement
such as SET x = (SELECT 1, 2)
is invalid.
For character data types, if CHARACTER SET
is includedd in the declaration, the specified character set
and its default collation is used. If the
COLLATE
attribute is also present, that
collation is used rather than the default collation.
If CHARACTER SET
and
COLLATE
are not present, the database
character set and collation in effect at routine creation time
are used. To avoid having the server use the database
character set and collation, provide an explicit
CHARACTER SET
and a
COLLATE
attribute for character data
parameters.
If you change the database default character set or collation, stored routines that use the database defaults must be dropped and recreated so that they use the new defaults.
The database character set and collation are given by the
value of the
character_set_database
and
collation_database
system
variables. For more information, see
Section 10.3.3, “Database Character Set and Collation”.
CREATE SERVERserver_name
FOREIGN DATA WRAPPERwrapper_name
OPTIONS (option
[,option
] ...)option
: { HOSTcharacter-literal
| DATABASEcharacter-literal
| USERcharacter-literal
| PASSWORDcharacter-literal
| SOCKETcharacter-literal
| OWNERcharacter-literal
| PORTnumeric-literal
}
This statement creates the definition of a server for use with the
FEDERATED
storage engine. The CREATE
SERVER
statement creates a new row in the
servers
table in the mysql
database. This statement requires the
SUPER
privilege.
The
should be a unique reference to the server. Server definitions are
global within the scope of the server, it is not possible to
qualify the server definition to a specific database.
server_name
has a
maximum length of 64 characters (names longer than 64 characters
are silently truncated), and is case-insensitive. You may specify
the name as a quoted string.
server_name
The
is
an identifier and may be quoted with single quotation marks.
wrapper_name
For each
you
must specify either a character literal or numeric literal.
Character literals are UTF-8, support a maximum length of 64
characters and default to a blank (empty) string. String literals
are silently truncated to 64 characters. Numeric literals must be
a number between 0 and 9999, default value is 0.
option
The OWNER
option is currently not applied,
and has no effect on the ownership or operation of the server
connection that is created.
The CREATE SERVER
statement creates an entry in
the mysql.servers
table that can later be used
with the CREATE TABLE
statement
when creating a FEDERATED
table. The options
that you specify will be used to populate the columns in the
mysql.servers
table. The table columns are
Server_name
, Host
,
Db
, Username
,
Password
, Port
and
Socket
.
For example:
CREATE SERVER s FOREIGN DATA WRAPPER mysql OPTIONS (USER 'Remote', HOST '198.51.100.106', DATABASE 'test');
Be sure to specify all options necessary to establish a connection to the server. The user name, host name, and database name are mandatory. Other options might be required as well, such as password.
The data stored in the table can be used when creating a
connection to a FEDERATED
table:
CREATE TABLE t (s1 INT) ENGINE=FEDERATED CONNECTION='s';
For more information, see Section 15.8, “The FEDERATED Storage Engine”.
CREATE SERVER
causes an implicit commit. See
Section 13.3.3, “Statements That Cause an Implicit Commit”.
CREATE SERVER
is not written to the binary log,
regardless of the logging format that is in use.
CREATE [TEMPORARY] TABLE [IF NOT EXISTS]tbl_name
(create_definition
,...) [table_options
] [partition_options
] CREATE [TEMPORARY] TABLE [IF NOT EXISTS]tbl_name
[(create_definition
,...)] [table_options
] [partition_options
] [IGNORE | REPLACE] [AS]query_expression
CREATE [TEMPORARY] TABLE [IF NOT EXISTS]tbl_name
{ LIKEold_tbl_name
| (LIKEold_tbl_name
) }create_definition
:col_name
column_definition
| {INDEX|KEY} [index_name
] [index_type
] (key_part
,...) [index_option
] ... | {FULLTEXT|SPATIAL} [INDEX|KEY] [index_name
] (key_part
,...) [index_option
] ... | [CONSTRAINT [symbol
]] PRIMARY KEY [index_type
] (key_part
,...) [index_option
] ... | [CONSTRAINT [symbol
]] UNIQUE [INDEX|KEY] [index_name
] [index_type
] (key_part
,...) [index_option
] ... | [CONSTRAINT [symbol
]] FOREIGN KEY [index_name
] (col_name
,...)reference_definition
| CHECK (expr
)column_definition
:data_type
[NOT NULL | NULL] [DEFAULTdefault_value
] [AUTO_INCREMENT] [UNIQUE [KEY]] [[PRIMARY] KEY] [COMMENT 'string
'] [COLLATEcollation_name
] [COLUMN_FORMAT {FIXED|DYNAMIC|DEFAULT}] [STORAGE {DISK|MEMORY}] [reference_definition
] |data_type
[COLLATEcollation_name
] [GENERATED ALWAYS] AS (expr
) [VIRTUAL | STORED] [NOT NULL | NULL] [UNIQUE [KEY]] [[PRIMARY] KEY] [COMMENT 'string
'] [reference_definition
]data_type
: (see Chapter 11, Data Types)key_part
:col_name
[(length
)] [ASC | DESC]index_type
: USING {BTREE | HASH}index_option
: KEY_BLOCK_SIZE [=]value
|index_type
| WITH PARSERparser_name
| COMMENT 'string
'reference_definition
: REFERENCEStbl_name
(key_part
,...) [MATCH FULL | MATCH PARTIAL | MATCH SIMPLE] [ON DELETEreference_option
] [ON UPDATEreference_option
]reference_option
: RESTRICT | CASCADE | SET NULL | NO ACTION | SET DEFAULTtable_options
:table_option
[[,]table_option
] ...table_option
: AUTO_INCREMENT [=]value
| AVG_ROW_LENGTH [=]value
| [DEFAULT] CHARACTER SET [=]charset_name
| CHECKSUM [=] {0 | 1} | [DEFAULT] COLLATE [=]collation_name
| COMMENT [=] 'string
' | COMPRESSION [=] {'ZLIB'|'LZ4'|'NONE'} | CONNECTION [=] 'connect_string
' | {DATA|INDEX} DIRECTORY [=] 'absolute path to directory
' | DELAY_KEY_WRITE [=] {0 | 1} | ENCRYPTION [=] {'Y' | 'N'} | ENGINE [=]engine_name
| INSERT_METHOD [=] { NO | FIRST | LAST } | KEY_BLOCK_SIZE [=]value
| MAX_ROWS [=]value
| MIN_ROWS [=]value
| PACK_KEYS [=] {0 | 1 | DEFAULT} | PASSWORD [=] 'string
' | ROW_FORMAT [=] {DEFAULT|DYNAMIC|FIXED|COMPRESSED|REDUNDANT|COMPACT} | STATS_AUTO_RECALC [=] {DEFAULT|0|1} | STATS_PERSISTENT [=] {DEFAULT|0|1} | STATS_SAMPLE_PAGES [=]value
| TABLESPACEtablespace_name
[STORAGE {DISK|MEMORY}] | UNION [=] (tbl_name
[,tbl_name
]...)partition_options
: PARTITION BY { [LINEAR] HASH(expr
) | [LINEAR] KEY [ALGORITHM={1|2}] (column_list
) | RANGE{(expr
) | COLUMNS(column_list
)} | LIST{(expr
) | COLUMNS(column_list
)} } [PARTITIONSnum
] [SUBPARTITION BY { [LINEAR] HASH(expr
) | [LINEAR] KEY [ALGORITHM={1|2}] (column_list
) } [SUBPARTITIONSnum
] ] [(partition_definition
[,partition_definition
] ...)]partition_definition
: PARTITIONpartition_name
[VALUES {LESS THAN {(expr
|value_list
) | MAXVALUE} | IN (value_list
)}] [[STORAGE] ENGINE [=]engine_name
] [COMMENT [=] 'string
' ] [DATA DIRECTORY [=] ''] [INDEX DIRECTORY [=] '
data_dir
'] [MAX_ROWS [=]
index_dir
max_number_of_rows
] [MIN_ROWS [=]min_number_of_rows
] [TABLESPACE [=] tablespace_name] [(subpartition_definition
[,subpartition_definition
] ...)]subpartition_definition
: SUBPARTITIONlogical_name
[[STORAGE] ENGINE [=]engine_name
] [COMMENT [=] 'string
' ] [DATA DIRECTORY [=] ''] [INDEX DIRECTORY [=] '
data_dir
'] [MAX_ROWS [=]
index_dir
max_number_of_rows
] [MIN_ROWS [=]min_number_of_rows
] [TABLESPACE [=] tablespace_name]query_expression:
SELECT ... (Some valid select or union statement
)
CREATE TABLE
creates a table with
the given name. You must have the
CREATE
privilege for the table.
By default, tables are created in the default database, using the
InnoDB
storage engine. An error
occurs if the table exists, if there is no default database, or if
the database does not exist.
MySQL has no limit on the number of tables. The underlying file
system may have a limit on the number of files that represent
tables. Individual storage engines may impose engine-specific
constraints. InnoDB
permits up to 4 billion
tables.
For information about the physical representation of a table, see Section 13.1.18.2, “Files Created by CREATE TABLE”.
The original CREATE TABLE
statement, including all specifications and table options are
stored by MySQL when the table is created. For more information,
see Section 13.1.18.1, “CREATE TABLE Statement Retention”.
There are several aspects to the CREATE
TABLE
statement, described under the following topics in
this section:
tbl_name
The table name can be specified as
db_name.tbl_name
to create the
table in a specific database. This works regardless of whether
there is a default database, assuming that the database
exists. If you use quoted identifiers, quote the database and
table names separately. For example, write
`mydb`.`mytbl`
, not
`mydb.mytbl`
.
Rules for permissible table names are given in Section 9.2, “Schema Object Names”.
IF NOT EXISTS
Prevents an error from occurring if the table exists. However,
there is no verification that the existing table has a
structure identical to that indicated by the
CREATE TABLE
statement.
You can use the TEMPORARY
keyword when creating
a table. A TEMPORARY
table is visible only
within the current session, and is dropped automatically when the
session is closed. For more information, see
Section 13.1.18.3, “CREATE TEMPORARY TABLE Statement”.
LIKE
Use CREATE TABLE ... LIKE
to create an
empty table based on the definition of another table,
including any column attributes and indexes defined in the
original table:
CREATE TABLEnew_tbl
LIKEorig_tbl
;
For more information, see Section 13.1.18.4, “CREATE TABLE ... LIKE Statement”.
[AS]
query_expression
To create one table from another, add a
SELECT
statement at the end of
the CREATE TABLE
statement:
CREATE TABLEnew_tbl
AS SELECT * FROMorig_tbl
;
For more information, see Section 13.1.18.5, “CREATE TABLE ... SELECT Statement”.
IGNORE|REPLACE
The IGNORE
and REPLACE
options indicate how to handle rows that duplicate unique key
values when copying a table using a
SELECT
statement.
For more information, see Section 13.1.18.5, “CREATE TABLE ... SELECT Statement”.
There is a hard limit of 4096 columns per table, but the effective maximum may be less for a given table and depends on the factors discussed in Section 8.4.7, “Limits on Table Column Count and Row Size”.
data_type
data_type
represents the data type
in a column definition. For a full description of the syntax
available for specifying column data types, as well as
information about the properties of each type, see
Chapter 11, Data Types.
Some attributes do not apply to all data types.
AUTO_INCREMENT
applies only to integer
and floating-point types. DEFAULT
does
not apply to the BLOB
,
TEXT
,
GEOMETRY
, and
JSON
types.
Character data types (CHAR
,
VARCHAR
, the
TEXT
types,
ENUM
,
SET
, and any synonyms) can
include CHARACTER SET
to specify the
character set for the column. CHARSET
is a synonym for CHARACTER SET
. A
collation for the character set can be specified with the
COLLATE
attribute, along with any other
attributes. For details, see Chapter 10, Character Sets, Collations, Unicode.
Example:
CREATE TABLE t (c CHAR(20) CHARACTER SET utf8 COLLATE utf8_bin);
MySQL 5.7 interprets length specifications in
character column definitions in characters. Lengths for
BINARY
and
VARBINARY
are in bytes.
For CHAR
,
VARCHAR
,
BINARY
, and
VARBINARY
columns, indexes
can be created that use only the leading part of column
values, using
syntax to specify an index prefix length.
col_name
(length
)BLOB
and
TEXT
columns also can be
indexed, but a prefix length must be
given. Prefix lengths are given in characters for
nonbinary string types and in bytes for binary string
types. That is, index entries consist of the first
length
characters of each
column value for CHAR
,
VARCHAR
, and
TEXT
columns, and the first
length
bytes of each column
value for BINARY
,
VARBINARY
, and
BLOB
columns. Indexing only
a prefix of column values like this can make the index
file much smaller. For additional information about index
prefixes, see Section 13.1.14, “CREATE INDEX Statement”.
Only the InnoDB
and
MyISAM
storage engines support indexing
on BLOB
and
TEXT
columns. For example:
CREATE TABLE test (blob_col BLOB, INDEX(blob_col(10)));
As of MySQL 5.7.17, if a specified index prefix exceeds
the maximum column data type size,
CREATE TABLE
handles the
index as follows:
For a nonunique index, either an error occurs (if strict SQL mode is enabled), or the index length is reduced to lie within the maximum column data type size and a warning is produced (if strict SQL mode is not enabled).
For a unique index, an error occurs regardless of SQL mode because reducing the index length might enable insertion of nonunique entries that do not meet the specified uniqueness requirement.
JSON
columns cannot be
indexed. You can work around this restriction by creating
an index on a generated column that extracts a scalar
value from the JSON
column. See
Indexing a Generated Column to Provide a JSON Column Index, for a
detailed example.
NOT NULL | NULL
If neither NULL
nor NOT
NULL
is specified, the column is treated as though
NULL
had been specified.
In MySQL 5.7, only the InnoDB
,
MyISAM
, and MEMORY
storage engines support indexes on columns that can have
NULL
values. In other cases, you must
declare indexed columns as NOT NULL
or an
error results.
DEFAULT
Specifies a default value for a column. For more information
about default value handling, including the case that a column
definition includes no explicit DEFAULT
value, see Section 11.6, “Data Type Default Values”.
If the NO_ZERO_DATE
or
NO_ZERO_IN_DATE
SQL mode is
enabled and a date-valued default is not correct according to
that mode, CREATE TABLE
produces a warning if strict SQL mode is not enabled and an
error if strict mode is enabled. For example, with
NO_ZERO_IN_DATE
enabled,
c1 DATE DEFAULT '2010-00-00'
produces a
warning.
AUTO_INCREMENT
An integer or floating-point column can have the additional
attribute AUTO_INCREMENT
. When you insert a
value of NULL
(recommended) or
0
into an indexed
AUTO_INCREMENT
column, the column is set to
the next sequence value. Typically this is
, where
value
+1value
is the largest value for the
column currently in the table.
AUTO_INCREMENT
sequences begin with
1
.
To retrieve an AUTO_INCREMENT
value after
inserting a row, use the
LAST_INSERT_ID()
SQL function
or the mysql_insert_id()
C API
function. See Section 12.15, “Information Functions”, and
Section 27.7.6.38, “mysql_insert_id()”.
If the NO_AUTO_VALUE_ON_ZERO
SQL mode is enabled, you can store 0
in
AUTO_INCREMENT
columns as
0
without generating a new sequence value.
See Section 5.1.10, “Server SQL Modes”.
There can be only one AUTO_INCREMENT
column
per table, it must be indexed, and it cannot have a
DEFAULT
value. An
AUTO_INCREMENT
column works properly only
if it contains only positive values. Inserting a negative
number is regarded as inserting a very large positive number.
This is done to avoid precision problems when numbers
“wrap” over from positive to negative and also to
ensure that you do not accidentally get an
AUTO_INCREMENT
column that contains
0
.
For MyISAM
tables, you can specify an
AUTO_INCREMENT
secondary column in a
multiple-column key. See
Section 3.6.9, “Using AUTO_INCREMENT”.
To make MySQL compatible with some ODBC applications, you can
find the AUTO_INCREMENT
value for the last
inserted row with the following query:
SELECT * FROMtbl_name
WHEREauto_col
IS NULL
This method requires that
sql_auto_is_null
variable is
not set to 0. See Section 5.1.7, “Server System Variables”.
For information about InnoDB
and
AUTO_INCREMENT
, see
Section 14.6.1.6, “AUTO_INCREMENT Handling in InnoDB”. For
information about AUTO_INCREMENT
and MySQL
Replication, see
Section 16.4.1.1, “Replication and AUTO_INCREMENT”.
COMMENT
A comment for a column can be specified with the
COMMENT
option, up to 1024 characters long.
The comment is displayed by the SHOW
CREATE TABLE
and
SHOW FULL
COLUMNS
statements.
COLUMN_FORMAT
In NDB Cluster, it is also possible to specify a data storage
format for individual columns of
NDB
tables using
COLUMN_FORMAT
. Permissible column formats
are FIXED
, DYNAMIC
, and
DEFAULT
. FIXED
is used
to specify fixed-width storage, DYNAMIC
permits the column to be variable-width, and
DEFAULT
causes the column to use
fixed-width or variable-width storage as determined by the
column's data type (possibly overridden by a
ROW_FORMAT
specifier).
Beginning with MySQL NDB Cluster 7.5.4, for
NDB
tables, the default value for
COLUMN_FORMAT
is FIXED
.
(The default had been switched to DYNAMIC
in MySQL NDB Cluster 7.5.1, but this change was reverted to
maintain backwards compatibility with existing GA release
series.) (Bug #24487363)
In NDB Cluster, the maximum possible offset for a column
defined with COLUMN_FORMAT=FIXED
is 8188
bytes. For more information and possible workarounds, see
Section 21.1.7.5, “Limits Associated with Database Objects in NDB Cluster”.
COLUMN_FORMAT
currently has no effect on
columns of tables using storage engines other than
NDB
. In MySQL 5.7
and later, COLUMN_FORMAT
is silently
ignored.
STORAGE
For NDB
tables, it is possible to
specify whether the column is stored on disk or in memory by
using a STORAGE
clause. STORAGE
DISK
causes the column to be stored on disk, and
STORAGE MEMORY
causes in-memory storage to
be used. The CREATE TABLE
statement used must still include a
TABLESPACE
clause:
mysql>CREATE TABLE t1 (
->c1 INT STORAGE DISK,
->c2 INT STORAGE MEMORY
->) ENGINE NDB;
ERROR 1005 (HY000): Can't create table 'c.t1' (errno: 140) mysql>CREATE TABLE t1 (
->c1 INT STORAGE DISK,
->c2 INT STORAGE MEMORY
->) TABLESPACE ts_1 ENGINE NDB;
Query OK, 0 rows affected (1.06 sec)
For NDB
tables, STORAGE
DEFAULT
is equivalent to STORAGE
MEMORY
.
The STORAGE
clause has no effect on tables
using storage engines other than
NDB
. The
STORAGE
keyword is supported only in the
build of mysqld that is supplied with NDB
Cluster; it is not recognized in any other version of MySQL,
where any attempt to use the STORAGE
keyword causes a syntax error.
GENERATED ALWAYS
Used to specify a generated column expression. For information about generated columns, see Section 13.1.18.8, “CREATE TABLE and Generated Columns”.
Stored generated
columns can be indexed. InnoDB
supports secondary indexes on
virtual
generated columns. See
Section 13.1.18.9, “Secondary Indexes and Generated Columns”.
Several keywords apply to creation of indexes and foreign keys. For general background in addition to the following descriptions, see Section 13.1.14, “CREATE INDEX Statement”, and Section 13.1.18.6, “FOREIGN KEY Constraints”.
CONSTRAINT
symbol
The CONSTRAINT
clause may be
given to name a constraint. If the clause is not given, or a
symbol
symbol
is not included following
the CONSTRAINT
keyword, MySQL automatically
generates a constraint name, with the exception noted below.
The symbol
value, if used, must be
unique per schema (database), per constraint type. A duplicate
symbol
results in an error. See
also the discussion about length limits of generated
constraint identifiers at Section 9.2.1, “Identifier Length Limits”.
If the CONSTRAINT
clause is not
given in a foreign key definition, or a
symbol
symbol
is not included following
the CONSTRAINT
keyword,
NDB
uses the foreign key index
name.
The SQL standard specifies that all types of constraints (primary key, unique index, foreign key, check) belong to the same namespace. In MySQL, each constraint type has its own namespace per schema. Consequently, names for each type of constraint must be unique per schema.
PRIMARY KEY
A unique index where all key columns must be defined as
NOT NULL
. If they are not explicitly
declared as NOT NULL
, MySQL declares them
so implicitly (and silently). A table can have only one
PRIMARY KEY
. The name of a PRIMARY
KEY
is always PRIMARY
, which thus
cannot be used as the name for any other kind of index.
If you do not have a PRIMARY KEY
and an
application asks for the PRIMARY KEY
in
your tables, MySQL returns the first UNIQUE
index that has no NULL
columns as the
PRIMARY KEY
.
In InnoDB
tables, keep the PRIMARY
KEY
short to minimize storage overhead for secondary
indexes. Each secondary index entry contains a copy of the
primary key columns for the corresponding row. (See
Section 14.6.2.1, “Clustered and Secondary Indexes”.)
In the created table, a PRIMARY KEY
is
placed first, followed by all UNIQUE
indexes, and then the nonunique indexes. This helps the MySQL
optimizer to prioritize which index to use and also more
quickly to detect duplicated UNIQUE
keys.
A PRIMARY KEY
can be a multiple-column
index. However, you cannot create a multiple-column index
using the PRIMARY KEY
key attribute in a
column specification. Doing so only marks that single column
as primary. You must use a separate PRIMARY
KEY(
clause.
key_part
, ...)
If a table has a PRIMARY KEY
or
UNIQUE NOT NULL
index that consists of a
single column that has an integer type, you can use
_rowid
to refer to the indexed column in
SELECT
statements, as described
in Unique Indexes.
In MySQL, the name of a PRIMARY KEY
is
PRIMARY
. For other indexes, if you do not
assign a name, the index is assigned the same name as the
first indexed column, with an optional suffix
(_2
, _3
,
...
) to make it unique. You can see index
names for a table using SHOW INDEX FROM
. See
Section 13.7.5.22, “SHOW INDEX Statement”.
tbl_name
KEY | INDEX
KEY
is normally a synonym for
INDEX
. The key attribute PRIMARY
KEY
can also be specified as just
KEY
when given in a column definition. This
was implemented for compatibility with other database systems.
UNIQUE
A UNIQUE
index creates a constraint such
that all values in the index must be distinct. An error occurs
if you try to add a new row with a key value that matches an
existing row. For all engines, a UNIQUE
index permits multiple NULL
values for
columns that can contain NULL
. If you
specify a prefix value for a column in a
UNIQUE
index, the column values must be
unique within the prefix length.
If a table has a PRIMARY KEY
or
UNIQUE NOT NULL
index that consists of a
single column that has an integer type, you can use
_rowid
to refer to the indexed column in
SELECT
statements, as described
in Unique Indexes.
FULLTEXT
A FULLTEXT
index is a special type of index
used for full-text searches. Only the
InnoDB
and
MyISAM
storage engines support
FULLTEXT
indexes. They can be created only
from CHAR
,
VARCHAR
, and
TEXT
columns. Indexing always
happens over the entire column; column prefix indexing is not
supported and any prefix length is ignored if specified. See
Section 12.9, “Full-Text Search Functions”, for details of operation. A
WITH PARSER
clause can be specified as an
index_option
value to associate a
parser plugin with the index if full-text indexing and
searching operations need special handling. This clause is
valid only for FULLTEXT
indexes. Both
InnoDB
and
MyISAM
support full-text parser
plugins. See Full-Text Parser Plugins and
Section 28.2.4.4, “Writing Full-Text Parser Plugins” for more
information.
SPATIAL
You can create SPATIAL
indexes on spatial
data types. Spatial types are supported only for
MyISAM
and InnoDB
tables, and indexed columns must be declared as NOT
NULL
. See Section 11.4, “Spatial Data Types”.
FOREIGN KEY
MySQL supports foreign keys, which let you cross-reference
related data across tables, and foreign key constraints, which
help keep this spread-out data consistent. For definition and
option information, see
reference_definition
,
and
reference_option
.
Partitioned tables employing the
InnoDB
storage engine do not
support foreign keys. See
Section 22.6, “Restrictions and Limitations on Partitioning”, for more
information.
CHECK
The CHECK
clause is parsed but ignored by
all storage engines.
key_part
A key_part
specification can
end with ASC
or
DESC
. These keywords are permitted for
future extensions for specifying ascending or descending
index value storage. Currently, they are parsed but
ignored; index values are always stored in ascending
order.
Prefixes, defined by the length
attribute, can be up to 767 bytes long for
InnoDB
tables or 3072 bytes if the
innodb_large_prefix
option is enabled. For MyISAM
tables,
the prefix length limit is 1000 bytes.
Prefix limits are measured in bytes.
However, prefix lengths for index
specifications in CREATE
TABLE
, ALTER
TABLE
, and CREATE
INDEX
statements are interpreted as number of
characters for nonbinary string types
(CHAR
,
VARCHAR
,
TEXT
) and number of bytes
for binary string types
(BINARY
,
VARBINARY
,
BLOB
). Take this into
account when specifying a prefix length for a nonbinary
string column that uses a multibyte character set.
index_type
Some storage engines permit you to specify an index type when
creating an index. The syntax for the
index_type
specifier is
USING
.
type_name
Example:
CREATE TABLE lookup (id INT, INDEX USING BTREE (id)) ENGINE = MEMORY;
The preferred position for USING
is after
the index column list. It can be given before the column list,
but support for use of the option in that position is
deprecated and will be removed in a future MySQL release.
index_option
index_option
values specify
additional options for an index.
KEY_BLOCK_SIZE
For MyISAM
tables,
KEY_BLOCK_SIZE
optionally specifies the
size in bytes to use for index key blocks. The value is
treated as a hint; a different size could be used if
necessary. A KEY_BLOCK_SIZE
value
specified for an individual index definition overrides the
table-level KEY_BLOCK_SIZE
value.
For information about the table-level
KEY_BLOCK_SIZE
attribute, see
Table Options.
WITH PARSER
The WITH PARSER
option can only be used
with FULLTEXT
indexes. It associates a
parser plugin with the index if full-text indexing and
searching operations need special handling. Both
InnoDB
and
MyISAM
support full-text
parser plugins. If you have a
MyISAM
table with an
associated full-text parser plugin, you can convert the
table to InnoDB
using ALTER
TABLE
.
COMMENT
In MySQL 5.7, index definitions can include an optional comment of up to 1024 characters.
You can set the InnoDB
MERGE_THRESHOLD
value for an individual
index using the
index_option
COMMENT
clause. See
Section 14.8.12, “Configuring the Merge Threshold for Index Pages”.
For more information about permissible
index_option
values, see
Section 13.1.14, “CREATE INDEX Statement”. For more information about
indexes, see Section 8.3.1, “How MySQL Uses Indexes”.
For reference_definition
syntax
details and examples, see
Section 13.1.18.6, “FOREIGN KEY Constraints”.
InnoDB
and
NDB
tables support checking of
foreign key constraints. The columns of the referenced table
must always be explicitly named. Both ON
DELETE
and ON UPDATE
actions on
foreign keys are supported. For more detailed information and
examples, see Section 13.1.18.6, “FOREIGN KEY Constraints”.
For other storage engines, MySQL Server parses and ignores the
FOREIGN KEY
and
REFERENCES
syntax in
CREATE TABLE
statements. See
Section 1.8.2.3, “FOREIGN KEY Constraint Differences”.
For users familiar with the ANSI/ISO SQL Standard, please
note that no storage engine, including
InnoDB
, recognizes or enforces the
MATCH
clause used in referential
integrity constraint definitions. Use of an explicit
MATCH
clause will not have the specified
effect, and also causes ON DELETE
and
ON UPDATE
clauses to be ignored. For
these reasons, specifying MATCH
should be
avoided.
The MATCH
clause in the SQL standard
controls how NULL
values in a composite
(multiple-column) foreign key are handled when comparing to
a primary key. InnoDB
essentially
implements the semantics defined by MATCH
SIMPLE
, which permit a foreign key to be all or
partially NULL
. In that case, the (child
table) row containing such a foreign key is permitted to be
inserted, and does not match any row in the referenced
(parent) table. It is possible to implement other semantics
using triggers.
Additionally, MySQL requires that the referenced columns be
indexed for performance. However, InnoDB
does not enforce any requirement that the referenced columns
be declared UNIQUE
or NOT
NULL
. The handling of foreign key references to
nonunique keys or keys that contain NULL
values is not well defined for operations such as
UPDATE
or DELETE
CASCADE
. You are advised to use foreign keys that
reference only keys that are both UNIQUE
(or PRIMARY
) and NOT
NULL
.
MySQL parses but ignores “inline
REFERENCES
specifications” (as
defined in the SQL standard) where the references are
defined as part of the column specification. MySQL accepts
REFERENCES
clauses only when specified as
part of a separate FOREIGN KEY
specification.
For information about the RESTRICT
,
CASCADE
, SET NULL
,
NO ACTION
, and SET
DEFAULT
options, see
Section 13.1.18.6, “FOREIGN KEY Constraints”.
Table options are used to optimize the behavior of the table. In
most cases, you do not have to specify any of them. These options
apply to all storage engines unless otherwise indicated. Options
that do not apply to a given storage engine may be accepted and
remembered as part of the table definition. Such options then
apply if you later use ALTER TABLE
to convert the table to use a different storage engine.
ENGINE
Specifies the storage engine for the table, using one of the
names shown in the following table. The engine name can be
unquoted or quoted. The quoted name
'DEFAULT'
is recognized but ignored.
Storage Engine | Description |
---|---|
InnoDB |
Transaction-safe tables with row locking and foreign keys. The default
storage engine for new tables. See
Chapter 14, The InnoDB Storage Engine, and in
particular Section 14.1, “Introduction to InnoDB” if you
have MySQL experience but are new to
InnoDB . |
MyISAM |
The binary portable storage engine that is primarily used for read-only or read-mostly workloads. See Section 15.2, “The MyISAM Storage Engine”. |
MEMORY |
The data for this storage engine is stored only in memory. See Section 15.3, “The MEMORY Storage Engine”. |
CSV |
Tables that store rows in comma-separated values format. See Section 15.4, “The CSV Storage Engine”. |
ARCHIVE |
The archiving storage engine. See Section 15.5, “The ARCHIVE Storage Engine”. |
EXAMPLE |
An example engine. See Section 15.9, “The EXAMPLE Storage Engine”. |
FEDERATED |
Storage engine that accesses remote tables. See Section 15.8, “The FEDERATED Storage Engine”. |
HEAP |
This is a synonym for MEMORY . |
MERGE |
A collection of MyISAM tables used as one table. Also
known as MRG_MyISAM . See
Section 15.7, “The MERGE Storage Engine”. |
NDB |
Clustered, fault-tolerant, memory-based tables, supporting transactions
and foreign keys. Also known as
NDBCLUSTER . See
Chapter 21, MySQL NDB Cluster 7.5 and NDB Cluster 7.6. |
By default, if a storage engine is specified that is not
available, the statement fails with an error. You can override
this behavior by removing
NO_ENGINE_SUBSTITUTION
from
the server SQL mode (see Section 5.1.10, “Server SQL Modes”) so that
MySQL allows substitution of the specified engine with the
default storage engine instead. Normally in such cases, this
is InnoDB
, which is the default value for
the default_storage_engine
system variable. When
NO_ENGINE_SUBSTITUTION
is disabled, a
warning occurs if the storage engine specification is not
honored.
AUTO_INCREMENT
The initial AUTO_INCREMENT
value for the
table. In MySQL 5.7, this works for
MyISAM
, MEMORY
,
InnoDB
, and ARCHIVE
tables. To set the first auto-increment value for engines that
do not support the AUTO_INCREMENT
table
option, insert a “dummy” row with a value one
less than the desired value after creating the table, and then
delete the dummy row.
For engines that support the AUTO_INCREMENT
table option in CREATE TABLE
statements, you can also use ALTER TABLE
to reset the
tbl_name
AUTO_INCREMENT =
N
AUTO_INCREMENT
value. The value cannot be
set lower than the maximum value currently in the column.
AVG_ROW_LENGTH
An approximation of the average row length for your table. You need to set this only for large tables with variable-size rows.
When you create a MyISAM
table, MySQL uses
the product of the MAX_ROWS
and
AVG_ROW_LENGTH
options to decide how big
the resulting table is. If you don't specify either option,
the maximum size for MyISAM
data and index
files is 256TB by default. (If your operating system does not
support files that large, table sizes are constrained by the
file size limit.) If you want to keep down the pointer sizes
to make the index smaller and faster and you don't really need
big files, you can decrease the default pointer size by
setting the
myisam_data_pointer_size
system variable. (See
Section 5.1.7, “Server System Variables”.) If you want all
your tables to be able to grow above the default limit and are
willing to have your tables slightly slower and larger than
necessary, you can increase the default pointer size by
setting this variable. Setting the value to 7 permits table
sizes up to 65,536TB.
[DEFAULT] CHARACTER SET
Specifies a default character set for the table.
CHARSET
is a synonym for CHARACTER
SET
. If the character set name is
DEFAULT
, the database character set is
used.
CHECKSUM
Set this to 1 if you want MySQL to maintain a live checksum
for all rows (that is, a checksum that MySQL updates
automatically as the table changes). This makes the table a
little slower to update, but also makes it easier to find
corrupted tables. The CHECKSUM
TABLE
statement reports the checksum.
(MyISAM
only.)
[DEFAULT] COLLATE
Specifies a default collation for the table.
COMMENT
A comment for the table, up to 2048 characters long.
You can set the InnoDB
MERGE_THRESHOLD
value for a table using the
table_option
COMMENT
clause. See
Section 14.8.12, “Configuring the Merge Threshold for Index Pages”.
Setting NDB_TABLE options.
In MySQL NDB Cluster 7.5.2 and later, the table comment in a
CREATE TABLE
or
ALTER TABLE
statement can
also be used to specify one to four of the
NDB_TABLE
options
NOLOGGING
,
READ_BACKUP
,
PARTITION_BALANCE
, or
FULLY_REPLICATED
as a set of name-value
pairs, separated by commas if need be, immediately following
the string NDB_TABLE=
that begins the
quoted comment text. An example statement using this syntax
is shown here (emphasized text):
CREATE TABLE t1 (
c1 INT NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT PRIMARY KEY,
c2 VARCHAR(100),
c3 VARCHAR(100) )
ENGINE=NDBCOMMENT="NDB_TABLE=READ_BACKUP=0,PARTITION_BALANCE=FOR_RP_BY_NODE";
Spaces are not permitted within the quoted string. The string is case-insensitive.
The comment is displayed as part of the ouput of
SHOW CREATE TABLE
. The text of
the comment is also available as the TABLE_COMMENT column of
the MySQL Information Schema
TABLES
table.
This comment syntax is also supported with
ALTER TABLE
statements for
NDB
tables. Keep in mind that a table
comment used with ALTER TABLE
replaces any
existing comment which the table might have had perviously.
Setting the MERGE_THRESHOLD
option in table
comments is not supported for NDB
tables (it is ignored).
For complete syntax information and examples, see Section 13.1.18.10, “Setting NDB_TABLE Options”.
COMPRESSION
The compression algorithm used for page level compression for
InnoDB
tables. Supported values include
Zlib
, LZ4
, and
None
. The COMPRESSION
attribute was introduced with the transparent page compression
feature. Page compression is only supported with
InnoDB
tables that reside in
file-per-table
tablespaces, and is only available on Linux and Windows
platforms that support sparse files and hole punching. For
more information, see
Section 14.9.2, “InnoDB Page Compression”.
CONNECTION
The connection string for a FEDERATED
table.
Older versions of MySQL used a COMMENT
option for the connection string.
DATA DIRECTORY
, INDEX
DIRECTORY
For InnoDB
, the DATA
DIRECTORY='
clause permits creating a table outside of the data directory.
The directory
'innodb_file_per_table
variable must be enabled to use the DATA
DIRECTORY
clause. The full directory path must be
specified. For more information, see
Section 14.6.1.2, “Creating Tables Externally”.
When creating MyISAM
tables, you can use
the DATA
DIRECTORY='
clause, the directory
'INDEX
DIRECTORY='
clause, or both. They specify where to put a
directory
'MyISAM
table's data file and index file,
respectively. Unlike InnoDB
tables, MySQL
does not create subdirectories that correspond to the database
name when creating a MyISAM
table with a
DATA DIRECTORY
or INDEX
DIRECTORY
option. Files are created in the directory
that is specified.
As of MySQL 5.7.17, you must have the
FILE
privilege to use the
DATA DIRECTORY
or INDEX
DIRECTORY
table option.
Table-level DATA DIRECTORY
and
INDEX DIRECTORY
options are ignored for
partitioned tables. (Bug #32091)
These options work only when you are not using the
--skip-symbolic-links
option. Your operating system must also have a working,
thread-safe realpath()
call. See
Section 8.12.3.2, “Using Symbolic Links for MyISAM Tables on Unix”, for more complete
information.
If a MyISAM
table is created with no
DATA DIRECTORY
option, the
.MYD
file is created in the database
directory. By default, if MyISAM
finds an
existing .MYD
file in this case, it
overwrites it. The same applies to .MYI
files for tables created with no INDEX
DIRECTORY
option. To suppress this behavior, start
the server with the
--keep_files_on_create
option,
in which case MyISAM
will not overwrite
existing files and returns an error instead.
If a MyISAM
table is created with a
DATA DIRECTORY
or INDEX
DIRECTORY
option and an existing
.MYD
or .MYI
file is
found, MyISAM always returns an error. It will not overwrite a
file in the specified directory.
You cannot use path names that contain the MySQL data
directory with DATA DIRECTORY
or
INDEX DIRECTORY
. This includes
partitioned tables and individual table partitions. (See Bug
#32167.)
DELAY_KEY_WRITE
Set this to 1 if you want to delay key updates for the table
until the table is closed. See the description of the
delay_key_write
system
variable in Section 5.1.7, “Server System Variables”.
(MyISAM
only.)
ENCRYPTION
Set the ENCRYPTION
option to
'Y'
to enable page-level data encryption
for an InnoDB
table created in a
file-per-table
tablespace. Option values are not case-sensitive. The
ENCRYPTION
option was introduced with the
InnoDB
tablespace encryption feature; see
Section 14.14, “InnoDB Data-at-Rest Encryption”. A
keyring
plugin must be installed and
configured before encryption can be enabled.
INSERT_METHOD
If you want to insert data into a MERGE
table, you must specify with INSERT_METHOD
the table into which the row should be inserted.
INSERT_METHOD
is an option useful for
MERGE
tables only. Use a value of
FIRST
or LAST
to have
inserts go to the first or last table, or a value of
NO
to prevent inserts. See
Section 15.7, “The MERGE Storage Engine”.
KEY_BLOCK_SIZE
For MyISAM
tables,
KEY_BLOCK_SIZE
optionally specifies the
size in bytes to use for index key blocks. The value is
treated as a hint; a different size could be used if
necessary. A KEY_BLOCK_SIZE
value specified
for an individual index definition overrides the table-level
KEY_BLOCK_SIZE
value.
For InnoDB
tables,
KEY_BLOCK_SIZE
specifies the
page size in kilobytes to use
for compressed
InnoDB
tables. The
KEY_BLOCK_SIZE
value is treated as a hint;
a different size could be used by InnoDB
if
necessary. KEY_BLOCK_SIZE
can only be less
than or equal to the
innodb_page_size
value. A
value of 0 represents the default compressed page size, which
is half of the
innodb_page_size
value.
Depending on
innodb_page_size
, possible
KEY_BLOCK_SIZE
values include 0, 1, 2, 4,
8, and 16. See Section 14.9.1, “InnoDB Table Compression” for
more information.
Oracle recommends enabling
innodb_strict_mode
when
specifying KEY_BLOCK_SIZE
for
InnoDB
tables. When
innodb_strict_mode
is
enabled, specifying an invalid
KEY_BLOCK_SIZE
value returns an error. If
innodb_strict_mode
is
disabled, an invalid KEY_BLOCK_SIZE
value
results in a warning, and the
KEY_BLOCK_SIZE
option is ignored.
The Create_options
column in response to
SHOW TABLE STATUS
reports the
originally specified KEY_BLOCK_SIZE
option,
as does SHOW CREATE TABLE
.
InnoDB
only supports
KEY_BLOCK_SIZE
at the table level.
KEY_BLOCK_SIZE
is not supported with 32KB
and 64KB innodb_page_size
values. InnoDB
table compression does not
support these pages sizes.
MAX_ROWS
The maximum number of rows you plan to store in the table. This is not a hard limit, but rather a hint to the storage engine that the table must be able to store at least this many rows.
The use of MAX_ROWS
with
NDB
tables to control the number of table
partitions is deprecated as of NDB Cluster 7.5.4. It remains
supported in later versions for backward compatibility, but
is subject to removal in a future release. Use
PARTITION_BALANCE instead; see
Setting NDB_TABLE options.
The NDB
storage engine treats
this value as a maximum. If you plan to create very large NDB
Cluster tables (containing millions of rows), you should use
this option to insure that NDB
allocates sufficient number of index slots in the hash table
used for storing hashes of the table's primary keys by
setting MAX_ROWS = 2 *
, where
rows
rows
is the number of rows that you
expect to insert into the table.
The maximum MAX_ROWS
value is 4294967295;
larger values are truncated to this limit.
MIN_ROWS
The minimum number of rows you plan to store in the table. The
MEMORY
storage engine uses this
option as a hint about memory use.
PACK_KEYS
Takes effect only with MyISAM
tables. Set
this option to 1 if you want to have smaller indexes. This
usually makes updates slower and reads faster. Setting the
option to 0 disables all packing of keys. Setting it to
DEFAULT
tells the storage engine to pack
only long CHAR
,
VARCHAR
,
BINARY
, or
VARBINARY
columns.
If you do not use PACK_KEYS
, the default is
to pack strings, but not numbers. If you use
PACK_KEYS=1
, numbers are packed as well.
When packing binary number keys, MySQL uses prefix compression:
Every key needs one extra byte to indicate how many bytes of the previous key are the same for the next key.
The pointer to the row is stored in high-byte-first order directly after the key, to improve compression.
This means that if you have many equal keys on two consecutive
rows, all following “same” keys usually only take
two bytes (including the pointer to the row). Compare this to
the ordinary case where the following keys takes
storage_size_for_key + pointer_size
(where
the pointer size is usually 4). Conversely, you get a
significant benefit from prefix compression only if you have
many numbers that are the same. If all keys are totally
different, you use one byte more per key, if the key is not a
key that can have NULL
values. (In this
case, the packed key length is stored in the same byte that is
used to mark if a key is NULL
.)
PASSWORD
This option is unused. If you have a need to scramble your
.frm
files and make them unusable to any
other MySQL server, please contact our sales department.
ROW_FORMAT
Defines the physical format in which the rows are stored.
When executing a CREATE TABLE
statement with strict
mode disabled, if you specify a row format that is not
supported by the storage engine that is used for the table,
the table is created using that storage engine's default
row format. The information reported in the
Row_format
column in response to
SHOW TABLE STATUS
is the actual
row format used. This may differ from the value in the
Create_options
column because the original
CREATE TABLE
definition is
retained during creation. SHOW CREATE
TABLE
also reports the row format used in the
original CREATE TABLE
statement.
Row format choices differ depending on the storage engine used for the table.
For InnoDB
tables:
The default row format is defined by
innodb_default_row_format
,
which has a default setting of DYNAMIC
.
The default row format is used when the
ROW_FORMAT
option is not defined or
when ROW_FORMAT=DEFAULT
is used.
If the ROW_FORMAT
option is not
defined, or if ROW_FORMAT=DEFAULT
is
used, operations that rebuild a table also silently change
the row format of the table to the default defined by
innodb_default_row_format
.
For more information, see
Defining the Row Format of a Table.
For more efficient InnoDB
storage of
data types, especially BLOB
types, use the DYNAMIC
. See
DYNAMIC Row Format for
requirements associated with the
DYNAMIC
row format.
To enable compression for InnoDB
tables, specify ROW_FORMAT=COMPRESSED
.
See Section 14.9, “InnoDB Table and Page Compression” for requirements
associated with the COMPRESSED
row
format.
The row format used in older versions of MySQL can still
be requested by specifying the
REDUNDANT
row format.
When you specify a non-default
ROW_FORMAT
clause, consider also
enabling the
innodb_strict_mode
configuration option.
ROW_FORMAT=FIXED
is not supported. If
ROW_FORMAT=FIXED
is specified while
innodb_strict_mode
is
disabled, InnoDB
issues a warning and
assumes ROW_FORMAT=DYNAMIC
. If
ROW_FORMAT=FIXED
is specified while
innodb_strict_mode
is
enabled, which is the default, InnoDB
returns an error.
For additional information about InnoDB
row formats, see Section 14.11, “InnoDB Row Formats”.
For MyISAM
tables, the option value can be
FIXED
or DYNAMIC
for
static or variable-length row format.
myisampack sets the type to
COMPRESSED
. See
Section 15.2.3, “MyISAM Table Storage Formats”.
For NDB
tables, the default
ROW_FORMAT
in MySQL NDB Cluster 7.5.1 and
later is DYNAMIC
. (Previously, it was
FIXED
.)
STATS_AUTO_RECALC
Specifies whether to automatically recalculate
persistent
statistics for an InnoDB
table. The
value DEFAULT
causes the persistent
statistics setting for the table to be determined by the
innodb_stats_auto_recalc
configuration option. The value 1
causes
statistics to be recalculated when 10% of the data in the
table has changed. The value 0
prevents
automatic recalculation for this table; with this setting,
issue an ANALYZE TABLE
statement to recalculate the statistics after making
substantial changes to the table. For more information about
the persistent statistics feature, see
Section 14.8.11.1, “Configuring Persistent Optimizer Statistics Parameters”.
STATS_PERSISTENT
Specifies whether to enable
persistent
statistics for an InnoDB
table. The
value DEFAULT
causes the persistent
statistics setting for the table to be determined by the
innodb_stats_persistent
configuration option. The value 1
enables
persistent statistics for the table, while the value
0
turns off this feature. After enabling
persistent statistics through a CREATE
TABLE
or ALTER TABLE
statement,
issue an ANALYZE TABLE
statement to calculate the statistics, after loading
representative data into the table. For more information about
the persistent statistics feature, see
Section 14.8.11.1, “Configuring Persistent Optimizer Statistics Parameters”.
STATS_SAMPLE_PAGES
The number of index pages to sample when estimating
cardinality and other statistics for an indexed column, such
as those calculated by ANALYZE
TABLE
. For more information, see
Section 14.8.11.1, “Configuring Persistent Optimizer Statistics Parameters”.
TABLESPACE
The TABLESPACE
clause can be used to create
a table in an existing general tablespace, a file-per-table
tablespace, or the system tablespace.
CREATE TABLEtbl_name
... TABLESPACE [=]tablespace_name
The general tablespace that you specify must exist prior to
using the TABLESPACE
clause. For
information about general tablespaces, see
Section 14.6.3.3, “General Tablespaces”.
The
is a case-sensitive identifier. It may be quoted or unquoted.
The forward slash character (“/”) is not
permitted. Names beginning with “innodb_” are
reserved for special use.
tablespace_name
To create a table in the system tablespace, specify
innodb_system
as the tablespace name.
CREATE TABLE tbl_name
... TABLESPACE [=] innodb_system
Using TABLESPACE [=] innodb_system
, you can
place a table of any uncompressed row format in the system
tablespace regardless of the
innodb_file_per_table
setting. For example, you can add a table with
ROW_FORMAT=DYNAMIC
to the system tablespace
using TABLESPACE [=] innodb_system
.
To create a table in a file-per-table tablespace, specify
innodb_file_per_table
as the tablespace
name.
CREATE TABLE tbl_name
... TABLESPACE [=] innodb_file_per_table
If innodb_file_per_table
is
enabled, you need not specify
TABLESPACE=innodb_file_per_table
to
create an InnoDB
file-per-table
tablespace. InnoDB
tables are created in
file-per-table tablespaces by default when
innodb_file_per_table
is
enabled.
Support for creating table partitions in shared
InnoDB
tablespaces is deprecated in MySQL
5.7.24 and will be removed in a future version of MySQL.
Shared tablespaces include the InnoDB
system tablespace and general tablespaces.
The DATA DIRECTORY
clause is permitted with
CREATE TABLE ...
TABLESPACE=innodb_file_per_table
but is otherwise
not supported for use in combination with the
TABLESPACE
option.
Support for TABLESPACE =
innodb_file_per_table
and TABLESPACE =
innodb_temporary
clauses with
CREATE
TEMPORARY TABLE
is deprecated as of MySQL 5.7.24
and will be removed in a future version of MySQL.
The STORAGE
table option is employed only
with NDB
tables.
STORAGE
determines the type of storage used
(disk or memory), and can be either DISK
or
MEMORY
.
TABLESPACE ... STORAGE DISK
assigns a table
to an NDB Cluster Disk Data tablespace. The tablespace must
already have been created using CREATE
TABLESPACE
. See
Section 21.5.13, “NDB Cluster Disk Data Tables”, for more
information.
A STORAGE
clause cannot be used in a
CREATE TABLE
statement
without a TABLESPACE
clause.
Used to access a collection of identical
MyISAM
tables as one. This works only with
MERGE
tables. See
Section 15.7, “The MERGE Storage Engine”.
You must have SELECT
,
UPDATE
, and
DELETE
privileges for the
tables you map to a MERGE
table.
Formerly, all tables used had to be in the same database as
the MERGE
table itself. This restriction
no longer applies.
partition_options
can be used to
control partitioning of the table created with
CREATE TABLE
.
Not all options shown in the syntax for
partition_options
at the beginning of
this section are available for all partitioning types. Please see
the listings for the following individual types for information
specific to each type, and see Chapter 22, Partitioning, for
more complete information about the workings of and uses for
partitioning in MySQL, as well as additional examples of table
creation and other statements relating to MySQL partitioning.
Partitions can be modified, merged, added to tables, and dropped from tables. For basic information about the MySQL statements to accomplish these tasks, see Section 13.1.8, “ALTER TABLE Statement”. For more detailed descriptions and examples, see Section 22.3, “Partition Management”.
PARTITION BY
If used, a partition_options
clause
begins with PARTITION BY
. This clause
contains the function that is used to determine the partition;
the function returns an integer value ranging from 1 to
num
, where
num
is the number of partitions.
(The maximum number of user-defined partitions which a table
may contain is 1024; the number of
subpartitions—discussed later in this section—is
included in this maximum.)
The expression (expr
) used in a
PARTITION BY
clause cannot refer to any
columns not in the table being created; such references are
specifically not permitted and cause the statement to fail
with an error. (Bug #29444)
HASH(
expr
)
Hashes one or more columns to create a key for placing and
locating rows. expr
is an
expression using one or more table columns. This can be any
valid MySQL expression (including MySQL functions) that yields
a single integer value. For example, these are both valid
CREATE TABLE
statements using
PARTITION BY HASH
:
CREATE TABLE t1 (col1 INT, col2 CHAR(5)) PARTITION BY HASH(col1); CREATE TABLE t1 (col1 INT, col2 CHAR(5), col3 DATETIME) PARTITION BY HASH ( YEAR(col3) );
You may not use either VALUES LESS THAN
or
VALUES IN
clauses with PARTITION
BY HASH
.
PARTITION BY HASH
uses the remainder of
expr
divided by the number of
partitions (that is, the modulus). For examples and additional
information, see Section 22.2.4, “HASH Partitioning”.
The LINEAR
keyword entails a somewhat
different algorithm. In this case, the number of the partition
in which a row is stored is calculated as the result of one or
more logical AND
operations. For
discussion and examples of linear hashing, see
Section 22.2.4.1, “LINEAR HASH Partitioning”.
KEY(
column_list
)
This is similar to HASH
, except that MySQL
supplies the hashing function so as to guarantee an even data
distribution. The column_list
argument is simply a list of 1 or more table columns (maximum:
16). This example shows a simple table partitioned by key,
with 4 partitions:
CREATE TABLE tk (col1 INT, col2 CHAR(5), col3 DATE) PARTITION BY KEY(col3) PARTITIONS 4;
For tables that are partitioned by key, you can employ linear
partitioning by using the LINEAR
keyword.
This has the same effect as with tables that are partitioned
by HASH
. That is, the partition number is
found using the
&
operator rather than the modulus (see
Section 22.2.4.1, “LINEAR HASH Partitioning”, and
Section 22.2.5, “KEY Partitioning”, for details). This example
uses linear partitioning by key to distribute data between 5
partitions:
CREATE TABLE tk (col1 INT, col2 CHAR(5), col3 DATE) PARTITION BY LINEAR KEY(col3) PARTITIONS 5;
The ALGORITHM={1|2}
option is supported
with [SUB]PARTITION BY [LINEAR] KEY
.
ALGORITHM=1
causes the server to use the
same key-hashing functions as MySQL 5.1;
ALGORITHM=2
means that the server employs
the key-hashing functions implemented and used by default for
new KEY
partitioned tables in MySQL 5.5 and
later. (Partitioned tables created with the key-hashing
functions employed in MySQL 5.5 and later cannot be used by a
MySQL 5.1 server.) Not specifying the option has the same
effect as using ALGORITHM=2
. This option is
intended for use chiefly when upgrading or downgrading
[LINEAR] KEY
partitioned tables between
MySQL 5.1 and later MySQL versions, or for creating tables
partitioned by KEY
or LINEAR
KEY
on a MySQL 5.5 or later server which can be used
on a MySQL 5.1 server. For more information, see
Section 13.1.8.1, “ALTER TABLE Partition Operations”.
mysqldump in MySQL 5.7 (and later) writes this option encased in versioned comments, like this:
CREATE TABLE t1 (a INT)
/*!50100 PARTITION BY KEY */ /*!50611 ALGORITHM = 1 */ /*!50100 ()
PARTITIONS 3 */
This causes MySQL 5.6.10 and earlier servers to ignore the
option, which would otherwise cause a syntax error in those
versions. If you plan to load a dump made on a MySQL 5.7
server where you use tables that are partitioned or
subpartitioned by KEY
into a MySQL 5.6
server previous to version 5.6.11, be sure to consult
Changes in MySQL 5.6,
before proceeding. (The information found there also applies
if you are loading a dump containing KEY
partitioned or subpartitioned tables made from a MySQL
5.7—actually 5.6.11 or later—server into a MySQL
5.5.30 or earlier server.)
Also in MySQL 5.6.11 and later, ALGORITHM=1
is shown when necessary in the output of
SHOW CREATE TABLE
using
versioned comments in the same manner as
mysqldump. ALGORITHM=2
is always omitted from SHOW CREATE TABLE
output, even if this option was specified when creating the
original table.
You may not use either VALUES LESS THAN
or
VALUES IN
clauses with PARTITION
BY KEY
.
RANGE(
expr
)
In this case, expr
shows a range of
values using a set of VALUES LESS THAN
operators. When using range partitioning, you must define at
least one partition using VALUES LESS THAN
.
You cannot use VALUES IN
with range
partitioning.
For tables partitioned by RANGE
,
VALUES LESS THAN
must be used with either
an integer literal value or an expression that evaluates to
a single integer value. In MySQL 5.7, you can
overcome this limitation in a table that is defined using
PARTITION BY RANGE COLUMNS
, as described
later in this section.
Suppose that you have a table that you wish to partition on a column containing year values, according to the following scheme.
Partition Number: | Years Range: |
---|---|
0 | 1990 and earlier |
1 | 1991 to 1994 |
2 | 1995 to 1998 |
3 | 1999 to 2002 |
4 | 2003 to 2005 |
5 | 2006 and later |
A table implementing such a partitioning scheme can be
realized by the CREATE TABLE
statement shown here:
CREATE TABLE t1 ( year_col INT, some_data INT ) PARTITION BY RANGE (year_col) ( PARTITION p0 VALUES LESS THAN (1991), PARTITION p1 VALUES LESS THAN (1995), PARTITION p2 VALUES LESS THAN (1999), PARTITION p3 VALUES LESS THAN (2002), PARTITION p4 VALUES LESS THAN (2006), PARTITION p5 VALUES LESS THAN MAXVALUE );
PARTITION ... VALUES LESS THAN ...
statements work in a consecutive fashion. VALUES LESS
THAN MAXVALUE
works to specify
“leftover” values that are greater than the
maximum value otherwise specified.
VALUES LESS THAN
clauses work sequentially
in a manner similar to that of the case
portions of a switch ... case
block (as
found in many programming languages such as C, Java, and PHP).
That is, the clauses must be arranged in such a way that the
upper limit specified in each successive VALUES LESS
THAN
is greater than that of the previous one, with
the one referencing MAXVALUE
coming last of
all in the list.
RANGE
COLUMNS(
column_list
)
This variant on RANGE
facilitates partition
pruning for queries using range conditions on multiple columns
(that is, having conditions such as WHERE a = 1 AND b
< 10
or WHERE a = 1 AND b = 10 AND c
< 10
). It enables you to specify value ranges in
multiple columns by using a list of columns in the
COLUMNS
clause and a set of column values
in each PARTITION ... VALUES LESS THAN
(
partition
definition clause. (In the simplest case, this set consists of
a single column.) The maximum number of columns that can be
referenced in the value_list
)column_list
and
value_list
is 16.
The column_list
used in the
COLUMNS
clause may contain only names of
columns; each column in the list must be one of the following
MySQL data types: the integer types; the string types; and
time or date column types. Columns using
BLOB
, TEXT
,
SET
, ENUM
,
BIT
, or spatial data types are not
permitted; columns that use floating-point number types are
also not permitted. You also may not use functions or
arithmetic expressions in the COLUMNS
clause.
The VALUES LESS THAN
clause used in a
partition definition must specify a literal value for each
column that appears in the COLUMNS()
clause; that is, the list of values used for each
VALUES LESS THAN
clause must contain the
same number of values as there are columns listed in the
COLUMNS
clause. An attempt to use more or
fewer values in a VALUES LESS THAN
clause
than there are in the COLUMNS
clause causes
the statement to fail with the error Inconsistency
in usage of column lists for partitioning.... You
cannot use NULL
for any value appearing in
VALUES LESS THAN
. It is possible to use
MAXVALUE
more than once for a given column
other than the first, as shown in this example:
CREATE TABLE rc ( a INT NOT NULL, b INT NOT NULL ) PARTITION BY RANGE COLUMNS(a,b) ( PARTITION p0 VALUES LESS THAN (10,5), PARTITION p1 VALUES LESS THAN (20,10), PARTITION p2 VALUES LESS THAN (50,MAXVALUE), PARTITION p3 VALUES LESS THAN (65,MAXVALUE), PARTITION p4 VALUES LESS THAN (MAXVALUE,MAXVALUE) );
Each value used in a VALUES LESS THAN
value
list must match the type of the corresponding column exactly;
no conversion is made. For example, you cannot use the string
'1'
for a value that matches a column that
uses an integer type (you must use the numeral
1
instead), nor can you use the numeral
1
for a value that matches a column that
uses a string type (in such a case, you must use a quoted
string: '1'
).
For more information, see Section 22.2.1, “RANGE Partitioning”, and Section 22.4, “Partition Pruning”.
LIST(
expr
)
This is useful when assigning partitions based on a table
column with a restricted set of possible values, such as a
state or country code. In such a case, all rows pertaining to
a certain state or country can be assigned to a single
partition, or a partition can be reserved for a certain set of
states or countries. It is similar to
RANGE
, except that only VALUES
IN
may be used to specify permissible values for
each partition.
VALUES IN
is used with a list of values to
be matched. For instance, you could create a partitioning
scheme such as the following:
CREATE TABLE client_firms ( id INT, name VARCHAR(35) ) PARTITION BY LIST (id) ( PARTITION r0 VALUES IN (1, 5, 9, 13, 17, 21), PARTITION r1 VALUES IN (2, 6, 10, 14, 18, 22), PARTITION r2 VALUES IN (3, 7, 11, 15, 19, 23), PARTITION r3 VALUES IN (4, 8, 12, 16, 20, 24) );
When using list partitioning, you must define at least one
partition using VALUES IN
. You cannot use
VALUES LESS THAN
with PARTITION BY
LIST
.
For tables partitioned by LIST
, the value
list used with VALUES IN
must consist of
integer values only. In MySQL 5.7, you can
overcome this limitation using partitioning by LIST
COLUMNS
, which is described later in this section.
LIST
COLUMNS(
column_list
)
This variant on LIST
facilitates partition
pruning for queries using comparison conditions on multiple
columns (that is, having conditions such as WHERE a =
5 AND b = 5
or WHERE a = 1 AND b = 10 AND c
= 5
). It enables you to specify values in multiple
columns by using a list of columns in the
COLUMNS
clause and a set of column values
in each PARTITION ... VALUES IN
(
partition
definition clause.
value_list
)
The rules governing regarding data types for the column list
used in LIST
COLUMNS(
and
the value list used in column_list
)VALUES
IN(
are the
same as those for the column list used in value_list
)RANGE
COLUMNS(
and
the value list used in column_list
)VALUES LESS
THAN(
,
respectively, except that in the value_list
)VALUES IN
clause, MAXVALUE
is not permitted, and you
may use NULL
.
There is one important difference between the list of values
used for VALUES IN
with PARTITION
BY LIST COLUMNS
as opposed to when it is used with
PARTITION BY LIST
. When used with
PARTITION BY LIST COLUMNS
, each element in
the VALUES IN
clause must be a
set of column values; the number of
values in each set must be the same as the number of columns
used in the COLUMNS
clause, and the data
types of these values must match those of the columns (and
occur in the same order). In the simplest case, the set
consists of a single column. The maximum number of columns
that can be used in the column_list
and in the elements making up the
value_list
is 16.
The table defined by the following CREATE
TABLE
statement provides an example of a table using
LIST COLUMNS
partitioning:
CREATE TABLE lc ( a INT NULL, b INT NULL ) PARTITION BY LIST COLUMNS(a,b) ( PARTITION p0 VALUES IN( (0,0), (NULL,NULL) ), PARTITION p1 VALUES IN( (0,1), (0,2), (0,3), (1,1), (1,2) ), PARTITION p2 VALUES IN( (1,0), (2,0), (2,1), (3,0), (3,1) ), PARTITION p3 VALUES IN( (1,3), (2,2), (2,3), (3,2), (3,3) ) );
PARTITIONS
num
The number of partitions may optionally be specified with a
PARTITIONS
clause, where num
num
is the number of
partitions. If both this clause and any
PARTITION
clauses are used,
num
must be equal to the total
number of any partitions that are declared using
PARTITION
clauses.
Whether or not you use a PARTITIONS
clause in creating a table that is partitioned by
RANGE
or LIST
, you
must still include at least one PARTITION
VALUES
clause in the table definition (see below).
SUBPARTITION BY
A partition may optionally be divided into a number of
subpartitions. This can be indicated by using the optional
SUBPARTITION BY
clause. Subpartitioning may
be done by HASH
or KEY
.
Either of these may be LINEAR
. These work
in the same way as previously described for the equivalent
partitioning types. (It is not possible to subpartition by
LIST
or RANGE
.)
The number of subpartitions can be indicated using the
SUBPARTITIONS
keyword followed by an
integer value.
Rigorous checking of the value used in
PARTITIONS
or
SUBPARTITIONS
clauses is applied and this
value must adhere to the following rules:
The value must be a positive, nonzero integer.
No leading zeros are permitted.
The value must be an integer literal, and cannot not be an
expression. For example, PARTITIONS
0.2E+01
is not permitted, even though
0.2E+01
evaluates to
2
. (Bug #15890)
partition_definition
Each partition may be individually defined using a
partition_definition
clause. The
individual parts making up this clause are as follows:
PARTITION
partition_name
Specifies a logical name for the partition.
VALUES
For range partitioning, each partition must include a
VALUES LESS THAN
clause; for list
partitioning, you must specify a VALUES
IN
clause for each partition. This is used to
determine which rows are to be stored in this partition.
See the discussions of partitioning types in
Chapter 22, Partitioning, for syntax examples.
[STORAGE] ENGINE
The partitioning handler accepts a [STORAGE]
ENGINE
option for both
PARTITION
and
SUBPARTITION
. Currently, the only way
in which this can be used is to set all partitions or all
subpartitions to the same storage engine, and an attempt
to set different storage engines for partitions or
subpartitions in the same table will give rise to the
error ERROR 1469 (HY000): The mix of handlers
in the partitions is not permitted in this version of
MySQL. We expect to lift this restriction on
partitioning in a future MySQL release.
COMMENT
An optional COMMENT
clause may be used
to specify a string that describes the partition. Example:
COMMENT = 'Data for the years previous to 1999'
The maximum length for a partition comment is 1024 characters.
DATA DIRECTORY
and INDEX
DIRECTORY
DATA DIRECTORY
and INDEX
DIRECTORY
may be used to indicate the directory
where, respectively, the data and indexes for this
partition are to be stored. Both the
and the
data_dir
must be absolute system path names.
index_dir
As of MySQL 5.7.17, you must have the
FILE
privilege to use the
DATA DIRECTORY
or INDEX
DIRECTORY
partition option.
Example:
CREATE TABLE th (id INT, name VARCHAR(30), adate DATE) PARTITION BY LIST(YEAR(adate)) ( PARTITION p1999 VALUES IN (1995, 1999, 2003) DATA DIRECTORY = '/var/appdata/95/data
' INDEX DIRECTORY = '/var/appdata/95/idx
', PARTITION p2000 VALUES IN (1996, 2000, 2004) DATA DIRECTORY = '/var/appdata/96/data
' INDEX DIRECTORY = '/var/appdata/96/idx
', PARTITION p2001 VALUES IN (1997, 2001, 2005) DATA DIRECTORY = '/var/appdata/97/data
' INDEX DIRECTORY = '/var/appdata/97/idx
', PARTITION p2002 VALUES IN (1998, 2002, 2006) DATA DIRECTORY = '/var/appdata/98/data
' INDEX DIRECTORY = '/var/appdata/98/idx
' );
DATA DIRECTORY
and INDEX
DIRECTORY
behave in the same way as in the
CREATE TABLE
statement's
table_option
clause as used for
MyISAM
tables.
One data directory and one index directory may be specified per partition. If left unspecified, the data and indexes are stored by default in the table's database directory.
On Windows, the DATA DIRECTORY
and
INDEX DIRECTORY
options are not
supported for individual partitions or subpartitions of
MyISAM
tables, and the
INDEX DIRECTORY
option is not supported
for individual partitions or subpartitions of
InnoDB
tables. These options
are ignored on Windows, except that a warning is
generated. (Bug #30459)
The DATA DIRECTORY
and INDEX
DIRECTORY
options are ignored for creating
partitioned tables if
NO_DIR_IN_CREATE
is in
effect. (Bug #24633)
MAX_ROWS
and
MIN_ROWS
May be used to specify, respectively, the maximum and
minimum number of rows to be stored in the partition. The
values for max_number_of_rows
and min_number_of_rows
must be
positive integers. As with the table-level options with
the same names, these act only as
“suggestions” to the server and are not hard
limits.
TABLESPACE
May be used to designate a tablespace for the partition.
Supported by NDB Cluster. For InnoDB
tables, it may be used to designate a file-per-table
tablespace for the partition by specifying
TABLESPACE `innodb_file_per_table`
. All
partitions must belong to the same storage engine.
Support for placing InnoDB
table
partitions in shared InnoDB
tablespaces is deprecated in MySQL 5.7.24 and will be
removed in a future MySQL version. Shared tablespaces
include the InnoDB
system tablespace
and general tablespaces.
subpartition_definition
The partition definition may optionally contain one or more
subpartition_definition
clauses.
Each of these consists at a minimum of the
SUBPARTITION
, where
name
name
is an identifier for the
subpartition. Except for the replacement of the
PARTITION
keyword with
SUBPARTITION
, the syntax for a subpartition
definition is identical to that for a partition definition.
Subpartitioning must be done by HASH
or
KEY
, and can be done only on
RANGE
or LIST
partitions. See Section 22.2.6, “Subpartitioning”.
Partitioning by Generated Columns
Partitioning by generated columns is permitted. For example:
CREATE TABLE t1 ( s1 INT, s2 INT AS (EXP(s1)) STORED ) PARTITION BY LIST (s2) ( PARTITION p1 VALUES IN (1) );
Partitioning sees a generated column as a regular column, which
enables workarounds for limitations on functions that are not
permitted for partitioning (see
Section 22.6.3, “Partitioning Limitations Relating to Functions”). The
preceding example demonstrates this technique:
EXP()
cannot be used directly in
the PARTITION BY
clause, but a generated column
defined using EXP()
is permitted.
The original CREATE TABLE
statement, including all specifications and table options are
stored by MySQL when the table is created. The information is
retained so that if you change storage engines, collations or
other settings using an ALTER
TABLE
statement, the original table options specified
are retained. This enables you to change between
InnoDB
and
MyISAM
table types even though the
row formats supported by the two engines are different.
Because the text of the original statement is retained, but due
to the way that certain values and options may be silently
reconfigured (such as the ROW_FORMAT
), the
active table definition (accessible through
DESCRIBE
or with
SHOW TABLE STATUS
) and the table
creation string (accessible through SHOW
CREATE TABLE
) will report different values.
MySQL represents each table by an .frm
table format (definition) file in the database directory. The
storage engine for the table might create other files as well.
For an InnoDB
table created in a
file-per-table tablespace or general tablespace, table data and
associated indexes are stored in a
.ibd file in the database
directory. When an InnoDB
table is created in
the system tablespace, table data and indexes are stored in the
ibdata* files that
represent the system tablespace. The
innodb_file_per_table
option
controls whether tables are created in file-per-table
tablespaces or the system tablespace, by default. The
TABLESPACE
option can be used to place a
table in a file-per-table tablespace, general tablespace, or the
system tablespace, regardless of the
innodb_file_per_table
setting.
For MyISAM
tables, the storage engine creates
data and index files. Thus, for each MyISAM
table tbl_name
, there are three disk
files.
File | Purpose |
---|---|
|
Table format (definition) file |
|
Data file |
|
Index file |
Chapter 15, Alternative Storage Engines, describes what files each storage engine creates to represent tables. If a table name contains special characters, the names for the table files contain encoded versions of those characters as described in Section 9.2.4, “Mapping of Identifiers to File Names”.
As described previously, each table has an
.frm
file that contains the table
definition. The server uses the following expression to check
some of the table information stored in the file against an
upper limit of 64KB:
if (info_length+(ulong) create_fields.elements*FCOMP+288+ n_length+int_length+com_length > 65535L || int_count > 255)
The portion of the information stored in the
.frm
file that is checked against the
expression cannot grow beyond the 64KB limit, so if the table
definition reaches this size, no more columns can be added.
The relevant factors in the expression are:
info_length
is space needed for
“screens.” This is related to MySQL's Unireg
heritage.
create_fields.elements
is the number of
columns.
FCOMP
is 17.
n_length
is the total length of all
column names, including one byte per name as a separator.
int_length
is related to the list of
values for ENUM
and
SET
columns. In this
context, “int” does not mean
“integer.” It means “interval,”
a term that refers collectively to
ENUM
and
SET
columns.
com_length
is the total length of
column comments.
The expression just described has several implications for permitted table definitions:
Using long column names can reduce the maximum number of
columns, as can the inclusion of
ENUM
or
SET
columns, or use of
column comments.
A table can have no more than 255 unique
ENUM
and
SET
definitions. Columns
with identical element lists are considered the same
against this limt. For example, if a table contains these
two columns, they count as one (not two) toward this limit
because the definitions are identical:
e1 ENUM('a','b','c') e2 ENUM('a','b','c')
The sum of the length of element names in the unique
ENUM
and
SET
definitions counts
toward the 64KB limit, so although the theoretical limit
on number of elements in a given
ENUM
column is 65,535, the
practical limit is less than 3000.
You can use the TEMPORARY
keyword when
creating a table. A TEMPORARY
table is
visible only within the current session, and is dropped
automatically when the session is closed. This means that two
different sessions can use the same temporary table name without
conflicting with each other or with an existing
non-TEMPORARY
table of the same name. (The
existing table is hidden until the temporary table is dropped.)
CREATE TABLE
causes an implicit
commit, except when used with the TEMPORARY
keyword. See Section 13.3.3, “Statements That Cause an Implicit Commit”.
TEMPORARY
tables have a very loose
relationship with databases (schemas). Dropping a database does
not automatically drop any TEMPORARY
tables
created within that database. Also, you can create a
TEMPORARY
table in a nonexistent database if
you qualify the table name with the database name in the
CREATE TABLE
statement. In this case, all
subsequent references to the table must be qualified with the
database name.
To create a temporary table, you must have the
CREATE TEMPORARY TABLES
privilege. After a session has created a temporary table, the
server performs no further privilege checks on the table. The
creating session can perform any operation on the table, such as
DROP TABLE
,
INSERT
,
UPDATE
, or
SELECT
.
One implication of this behavior is that a session can
manipulate its temporary tables even if the current user has no
privilege to create them. Suppose that the current user does not
have the CREATE TEMPORARY TABLES
privilege but is able to execute a definer-context stored
procedure that executes with the privileges of a user who does
have CREATE TEMPORARY TABLES
and
that creates a temporary table. While the procedure executes,
the session uses the privileges of the defining user. After the
procedure returns, the effective privileges revert to those of
the current user, which can still see the temporary table and
perform any operation on it.
Support for TABLESPACE =
innodb_file_per_table
and TABLESPACE =
innodb_temporary
clauses with
CREATE TEMPORARY
TABLE
is deprecated as of MySQL 5.7.24 and will be
removed in a future version of MySQL.
Use CREATE TABLE ... LIKE
to create an empty
table based on the definition of another table, including any
column attributes and indexes defined in the original table:
CREATE TABLEnew_tbl
LIKEorig_tbl
;
The copy is created using the same version of the table storage
format as the original table. The
SELECT
privilege is required on
the original table.
LIKE
works only for base tables, not for
views.
You cannot execute CREATE TABLE
or
CREATE TABLE ... LIKE
while a
LOCK TABLES
statement is in
effect.
CREATE TABLE ...
LIKE
makes the same checks as
CREATE TABLE
and does not just
copy the .frm
file. This means that if
the current SQL mode is different from the mode in effect when
the original table was created, the table definition might be
considered invalid for the new mode and the statement will
fail.
For CREATE TABLE ... LIKE
, the destination
table preserves generated column information from the original
table.
CREATE TABLE ... LIKE
does not preserve any
DATA DIRECTORY
or INDEX
DIRECTORY
table options that were specified for the
original table, or any foreign key definitions.
If the original table is a TEMPORARY
table,
CREATE TABLE ... LIKE
does not preserve
TEMPORARY
. To create a
TEMPORARY
destination table, use
CREATE TEMPORARY TABLE ... LIKE
.
You can create one table from another by adding a
SELECT
statement at the end of
the CREATE TABLE
statement:
CREATE TABLEnew_tbl
[AS] SELECT * FROMorig_tbl
;
MySQL creates new columns for all elements in the
SELECT
. For example:
mysql>CREATE TABLE test (a INT NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT,
->PRIMARY KEY (a), KEY(b))
->ENGINE=MyISAM SELECT b,c FROM test2;
This creates a MyISAM
table with
three columns, a
, b
, and
c
. The ENGINE
option is
part of the CREATE TABLE
statement, and should not be used following the
SELECT
; this would result in a
syntax error. The same is true for other
CREATE TABLE
options such as
CHARSET
.
Notice that the columns from the
SELECT
statement are appended to
the right side of the table, not overlapped onto it. Take the
following example:
mysql>SELECT * FROM foo;
+---+ | n | +---+ | 1 | +---+ mysql>CREATE TABLE bar (m INT) SELECT n FROM foo;
Query OK, 1 row affected (0.02 sec) Records: 1 Duplicates: 0 Warnings: 0 mysql>SELECT * FROM bar;
+------+---+ | m | n | +------+---+ | NULL | 1 | +------+---+ 1 row in set (0.00 sec)
For each row in table foo
, a row is inserted
in bar
with the values from
foo
and default values for the new columns.
In a table resulting from
CREATE TABLE ...
SELECT
, columns named only in the
CREATE TABLE
part come first.
Columns named in both parts or only in the
SELECT
part come after that. The
data type of SELECT
columns can
be overridden by also specifying the column in the
CREATE TABLE
part.
If any errors occur while copying the data to the table, it is automatically dropped and not created.
You can precede the SELECT
by
IGNORE
or REPLACE
to
indicate how to handle rows that duplicate unique key values.
With IGNORE
, rows that duplicate an existing
row on a unique key value are discarded. With
REPLACE
, new rows replace rows that have the
same unique key value. If neither IGNORE
nor
REPLACE
is specified, duplicate unique key
values result in an error. For more information, see
Comparison of the IGNORE Keyword and Strict SQL Mode.
Because the ordering of the rows in the underlying
SELECT
statements cannot always
be determined, CREATE TABLE ... IGNORE SELECT
and CREATE TABLE ... REPLACE SELECT
statements are flagged as unsafe for statement-based
replication. Such statements produce a warning in the error log
when using statement-based mode and are written to the binary
log using the row-based format when using
MIXED
mode. See also
Section 16.2.1.1, “Advantages and Disadvantages of Statement-Based and Row-Based
Replication”.
CREATE TABLE ...
SELECT
does not automatically create any indexes for
you. This is done intentionally to make the statement as
flexible as possible. If you want to have indexes in the created
table, you should specify these before the
SELECT
statement:
mysql> CREATE TABLE bar (UNIQUE (n)) SELECT n FROM foo;
For CREATE TABLE ... SELECT
, the destination
table does not preserve information about whether columns in the
selected-from table are generated columns. The
SELECT
part of the statement
cannot assign values to generated columns in the destination
table.
Some conversion of data types might occur. For example, the
AUTO_INCREMENT
attribute is not preserved,
and VARCHAR
columns can become
CHAR
columns. Retrained
attributes are NULL
(or NOT
NULL
) and, for those columns that have them,
CHARACTER SET
, COLLATION
,
COMMENT
, and the DEFAULT
clause.
When creating a table with
CREATE
TABLE ... SELECT
, make sure to alias any function
calls or expressions in the query. If you do not, the
CREATE
statement might fail or result in
undesirable column names.
CREATE TABLE artists_and_works SELECT artist.name, COUNT(work.artist_id) AS number_of_works FROM artist LEFT JOIN work ON artist.id = work.artist_id GROUP BY artist.id;
You can also explicitly specify the data type for a column in the created table:
CREATE TABLE foo (a TINYINT NOT NULL) SELECT b+1 AS a FROM bar;
For CREATE TABLE
... SELECT
, if IF NOT EXISTS
is
given and the target table exists, nothing is inserted into the
destination table, and the statement is not logged.
To ensure that the binary log can be used to re-create the
original tables, MySQL does not permit concurrent inserts during
CREATE TABLE ...
SELECT
.
You cannot use FOR UPDATE
as part of the
SELECT
in a statement such as
CREATE
TABLE
. If you
attempt to do so, the statement fails.
new_table
SELECT ... FROM
old_table
...
MySQL supports foreign keys, which permit cross-referencing related data across tables, and foreign key constraints, which help keep the related data consistent.
A foreign key relationship involves a parent table that holds the initial column values, and a child table with column values that reference the parent column values. A foreign key constraint is defined on the child table.
The essential syntax for a defining a foreign key constraint in
a CREATE TABLE
or
ALTER TABLE
statement includes
the following:
[CONSTRAINT [symbol
]] FOREIGN KEY [index_name
] (col_name
, ...) REFERENCEStbl_name
(col_name
,...) [ON DELETEreference_option
] [ON UPDATEreference_option
]reference_option
: RESTRICT | CASCADE | SET NULL | NO ACTION | SET DEFAULT
Foreign key constraint usage is described under the following topics in this section:
Foreign key constraint naming is governed by the following rules:
The CONSTRAINT
symbol
value is used, if
defined.
If the CONSTRAINT
symbol
clause is not defined,
or a symbol is not included following the
CONSTRAINT
keyword:
For InnoDB
tables, a constraint
name is generated automatically.
For NDB
tables, the
FOREIGN KEY
index_name
value is used,
if defined. Otherwise, a constraint name is generated
automatically.
The CONSTRAINT
value, if
defined, must be unique in the database. A duplicate
symbol
symbol
results in an error
similar to: ERROR 1005 (HY000): Can't create
table 'test.fk1' (errno: 121).
Table and column identifiers in a FOREIGN KEY ...
REFERENCES
clause can be quoted within backticks
(`
). Alternatively, double quotation marks
("
) can be used if the
ANSI_QUOTES
SQL mode is
enabled. The
lower_case_table_names
system
variable setting is also taken into account.
Foreign key constraints are subject to the following conditions and restrictions:
Parent and child tables must use the same storage engine, and they cannot be defined as temporary tables.
Creating a foreign key constraint requires the
REFERENCES
privilege on the
parent table.
Corresponding columns in the foreign key and the referenced key must have similar data types. The size and sign of integer types must be the same. The length of string types need not be the same. For nonbinary (character) string columns, the character set and collation must be the same.
MySQL supports foreign key references between one column and another within a table. (A column cannot have a foreign key reference to itself.) In these cases, a “child table record” refers to a dependent record within the same table.
MySQL requires indexes on foreign keys and referenced keys
so that foreign key checks can be fast and not require a
table scan. In the referencing table, there must be an
index where the foreign key columns are listed as the
first columns in the same order. Such
an index is created on the referencing table automatically
if it does not exist. This index might be silently dropped
later if you create another index that can be used to
enforce the foreign key constraint.
index_name
, if given, is used
as described previously.
InnoDB
permits a foreign key to
reference any index column or group of columns. However,
in the referenced table, there must be an index where the
referenced columns are the first
columns in the same order. Hidden columns that
InnoDB
adds to an index are also
considered (see Section 14.6.2.1, “Clustered and Secondary Indexes”).
NDB
requires an explicit unique key (or
primary key) on any column referenced as a foreign key.
InnoDB
does not, which is an extension
of standard SQL.
Index prefixes on foreign key columns are not supported.
Consequently, BLOB
and
TEXT
columns cannot be
included in a foreign key because indexes on those columns
must always include a prefix length.
InnoDB
does not currently
support foreign keys for tables with user-defined
partitioning. This includes both parent and child tables.
This restriction does not apply for
NDB
tables that are
partitioned by KEY
or LINEAR
KEY
(the only user partitioning types supported
by the NDB
storage engine); these may
have foreign key references or be the targets of such
references.
A table in a foreign key relationship cannot be altered to use another storage engine. To change the storage engine, you must drop any foreign key constraints first.
A foreign key constraint cannot reference a virtual generated column.
Prior to 5.7.16, a foreign key constraint cannot reference a secondary index defined on a virtual generated column.
For information about how the MySQL implementation of foreign key constraints differs from the SQL standard, see Section 1.8.2.3, “FOREIGN KEY Constraint Differences”.
When an UPDATE
or
DELETE
operation affects a key
value in the parent table that has matching rows in the child
table, the result depends on the referential
action specified by ON UPDATE
and ON DELETE
subclauses of the
FOREIGN KEY
clause. Referential actions
include:
CASCADE
: Delete or update the row from
the parent table and automatically delete or update the
matching rows in the child table. Both ON DELETE
CASCADE
and ON UPDATE CASCADE
are supported. Between two tables, do not define several
ON UPDATE CASCADE
clauses that act on
the same column in the parent table or in the child table.
If a FOREIGN KEY
clause is defined on
both tables in a foreign key relationship, making both
tables a parent and child, an ON UPDATE
CASCADE
or ON DELETE CASCADE
subclause defined for one FOREIGN KEY
clause must be defined for the other in order for
cascading operations to succeed. If an ON UPDATE
CASCADE
or ON DELETE CASCADE
subclause is only defined for one FOREIGN
KEY
clause, cascading operations fail with an
error.
Cascaded foreign key actions do not activate triggers.
SET NULL
: Delete or update the row from
the parent table and set the foreign key column or columns
in the child table to NULL
. Both
ON DELETE SET NULL
and ON
UPDATE SET NULL
clauses are supported.
If you specify a SET NULL
action,
make sure that you have not declared the columns
in the child table as NOT
NULL
.
RESTRICT
: Rejects the delete or update
operation for the parent table. Specifying
RESTRICT
(or NO
ACTION
) is the same as omitting the ON
DELETE
or ON UPDATE
clause.
NO ACTION
: A keyword from standard SQL.
In MySQL, equivalent to RESTRICT
. The
MySQL Server rejects the delete or update operation for
the parent table if there is a related foreign key value
in the referenced table. Some database systems have
deferred checks, and NO ACTION
is a
deferred check. In MySQL, foreign key constraints are
checked immediately, so NO ACTION
is
the same as RESTRICT
.
SET DEFAULT
: This action is recognized
by the MySQL parser, but both
InnoDB
and
NDB
reject table definitions
containing ON DELETE SET DEFAULT
or
ON UPDATE SET DEFAULT
clauses.
For storage engines that support foreign keys, MySQL rejects
any INSERT
or
UPDATE
operation that attempts
to create a foreign key value in a child table if there is no
matching candidate key value in the parent table.
For an ON DELETE
or ON
UPDATE
that is not specified, the default action is
always RESTRICT
.
For NDB
tables, ON
UPDATE CASCADE
is not supported where the reference
is to the parent table's primary key.
As of NDB 7.5.14 and NDB 7.6.10: For
NDB
tables, ON DELETE
CASCADE
is not supported where the child table
contains one or more columns of any of the
TEXT
or
BLOB
types. (Bug #89511, Bug
#27484882)
InnoDB
performs cascading operations using
a depth-first search algorithm on the records of the index
that corresponds to the foreign key constraint.
A foreign key constraint on a stored generated column cannot
use CASCADE
, SET NULL
,
or SET DEFAULT
as ON
UPDATE
referential actions, nor can it use
SET NULL
or SET DEFAULT
as ON DELETE
referential actions.
A foreign key constraint on the base column of a stored
generated column cannot use CASCADE
,
SET NULL
, or SET DEFAULT
as ON UPDATE
or ON
DELETE
referential actions.
In MySQL 5.7.13 and earlier, InnoDB
does
not permit defining a foreign key constraint with a cascading
referential action on the
base column of an
indexed virtual generated column. This restriction is lifted
in MySQL 5.7.14.
In MySQL 5.7.13 and earlier, InnoDB
does
not permit defining cascading referential actions on
non-virtual foreign key columns that are explicitly included
in a virtual index.
This restriction is lifted in MySQL 5.7.14.
This simple example relates parent
and
child
tables through a single-column
foreign key:
CREATE TABLE parent ( id INT NOT NULL, PRIMARY KEY (id) ) ENGINE=INNODB; CREATE TABLE child ( id INT, parent_id INT, INDEX par_ind (parent_id), FOREIGN KEY (parent_id) REFERENCES parent(id) ON DELETE CASCADE ) ENGINE=INNODB;
This is a more complex example in which a
product_order
table has foreign keys for
two other tables. One foreign key references a two-column
index in the product
table. The other
references a single-column index in the
customer
table:
CREATE TABLE product ( category INT NOT NULL, id INT NOT NULL, price DECIMAL, PRIMARY KEY(category, id) ) ENGINE=INNODB; CREATE TABLE customer ( id INT NOT NULL, PRIMARY KEY (id) ) ENGINE=INNODB; CREATE TABLE product_order ( no INT NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT, product_category INT NOT NULL, product_id INT NOT NULL, customer_id INT NOT NULL, PRIMARY KEY(no), INDEX (product_category, product_id), INDEX (customer_id), FOREIGN KEY (product_category, product_id) REFERENCES product(category, id) ON UPDATE CASCADE ON DELETE RESTRICT, FOREIGN KEY (customer_id) REFERENCES customer(id) ) ENGINE=INNODB;
You can add a foreign key constraint to an existing table
using the following ALTER TABLE
syntax:
ALTER TABLEtbl_name
ADD [CONSTRAINT [symbol
]] FOREIGN KEY [index_name
] (col_name
, ...) REFERENCEStbl_name
(col_name
,...) [ON DELETEreference_option
] [ON UPDATEreference_option
]
The foreign key can be self referential (referring to the same
table). When you add a foreign key constraint to a table using
ALTER TABLE
, remember
to first create an index on the column(s) referenced by the
foreign key.
You can drop a foreign key constraint using the following
ALTER TABLE
syntax:
ALTER TABLEtbl_name
DROP FOREIGN KEYfk_symbol
;
If the FOREIGN KEY
clause defined a
CONSTRAINT
name when you created the
constraint, you can refer to that name to drop the foreign key
constraint. Otherwise, a constraint name was generated
internally, and you must use that value. To determine the
foreign key constraint name, use SHOW
CREATE TABLE
:
mysql>SHOW CREATE TABLE child\G
*************************** 1. row *************************** Table: child Create Table: CREATE TABLE `child` ( `id` int(11) DEFAULT NULL, `parent_id` int(11) DEFAULT NULL, KEY `par_ind` (`parent_id`), CONSTRAINT `child_ibfk_1` FOREIGN KEY (`parent_id`) REFERENCES `parent` (`id`) ON DELETE CASCADE ) ENGINE=InnoDB DEFAULT CHARSET=latin1 mysql>ALTER TABLE child DROP FOREIGN KEY `child_ibfk_1`;
Adding and dropping a foreign key in the same
ALTER TABLE
statement is
supported for
ALTER TABLE ...
ALGORITHM=INPLACE
. It is not supported for
ALTER TABLE ...
ALGORITHM=COPY
.
Foreign key checking is controlled by the
foreign_key_checks
variable,
which is enabled by default. Typically, you leave this
variable enabled during normal operation to enforce
referential integrity. The
foreign_key_checks
variable
has the same effect on NDB
tables
as it does for InnoDB
tables.
The foreign_key_checks
variable is dynamic and supports both global and session
scopes. For information about using system variables, see
Section 5.1.8, “Using System Variables”.
Disabling foreign key checking is useful when:
Dropping a table that is referenced by a foreign key
constraint. A referenced table can only be dropped after
foreign_key_checks
is
disabled. When you drop a table, constraints defined on
the table are also dropped.
Reloading tables in different order than required by their
foreign key relationships. For example,
mysqldump produces correct definitions
of tables in the dump file, including foreign key
constraints for child tables. To make it easier to reload
dump files for tables with foreign key relationships,
mysqldump automatically includes a
statement in the dump output that disables
foreign_key_checks
. This
enables you to import the tables in any order in case the
dump file contains tables that are not correctly ordered
for foreign keys. Disabling
foreign_key_checks
also
speeds up the import operation by avoiding foreign key
checks.
Executing LOAD DATA
operations, to avoid foreign key checking.
Performing an ALTER TABLE
operation on a table that has a foreign key relationship.
When foreign_key_checks
is
disabled, foreign key constraints are ignored, with the
following exceptions:
Recreating a table that was previously dropped returns an error if the table definition does not conform to the foreign key constraints that reference the table. The table must have the correct column names and types. It must also have indexes on the referenced keys. If these requirements are not satisfied, MySQL returns Error 1005 that refers to errno: 150 in the error message, which means that a foreign key constraint was not correctly formed.
Altering a table returns an error (errno: 150) if a foreign key definition is incorrectly formed for the altered table.
Dropping an index required by a foreign key constraint. The foreign key constraint must be removed before dropping the index.
Creating a foreign key constraint where a column references a nonmatching column type.
Disabling foreign_key_checks
has these additional implications:
It is permitted to drop a database that contains tables with foreign keys that are referenced by tables outside the database.
It is permitted to drop a table with foreign keys referenced by other tables.
Enabling
foreign_key_checks
does
not trigger a scan of table data, which means that rows
added to a table while
foreign_key_checks
is
disabled are not checked for consistency when
foreign_key_checks
is
re-enabled.
To view a foreign key definition, use
SHOW CREATE TABLE
:
mysql> SHOW CREATE TABLE child\G
*************************** 1. row ***************************
Table: child
Create Table: CREATE TABLE `child` (
`id` int(11) DEFAULT NULL,
`parent_id` int(11) DEFAULT NULL,
KEY `par_ind` (`parent_id`),
CONSTRAINT `child_ibfk_1` FOREIGN KEY (`parent_id`)
REFERENCES `parent` (`id`) ON DELETE CASCADE
) ENGINE=InnoDB DEFAULT CHARSET=latin1
You can obtain information about foreign keys from the
INFORMATION_SCHEMA.KEY_COLUMN_USAGE
table. An example of a query against this table is shown here:
mysql>SELECT TABLE_SCHEMA, TABLE_NAME, COLUMN_NAME, CONSTRAINT_NAME
FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.KEY_COLUMN_USAGE
WHERE REFERENCED_TABLE_SCHEMA IS NOT NULL;
+--------------+------------+-------------+-----------------+ | TABLE_SCHEMA | TABLE_NAME | COLUMN_NAME | CONSTRAINT_NAME | +--------------+------------+-------------+-----------------+ | test | child | parent_id | child_ibfk_1 | +--------------+------------+-------------+-----------------+
You can obtain information specific to
InnoDB
foreign keys from the
INNODB_SYS_FOREIGN
and
INNODB_SYS_FOREIGN_COLS
tables.
Example queries are show here:
mysql>SELECT * FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.INNODB_SYS_FOREIGN \G
*************************** 1. row *************************** ID: test/child_ibfk_1 FOR_NAME: test/child REF_NAME: test/parent N_COLS: 1 TYPE: 1 mysql>SELECT * FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.INNODB_SYS_FOREIGN_COLS \G
*************************** 1. row *************************** ID: test/child_ibfk_1 FOR_COL_NAME: parent_id REF_COL_NAME: id POS: 0
In the event of a foreign key error involving
InnoDB
tables (usually Error 150 in the
MySQL Server), information about the latest foreign key error
can be obtained by checking
SHOW ENGINE
INNODB STATUS
output.
mysql> SHOW ENGINE INNODB STATUS\G ... ------------------------ LATEST FOREIGN KEY ERROR ------------------------ 2014-10-16 18:35:18 0x7fc2a95c1700 Transaction: TRANSACTION 1814, ACTIVE 0 sec inserting mysql tables in use 1, locked 1 4 lock struct(s), heap size 1136, 3 row lock(s), undo log entries 3 MySQL thread id 2, OS thread handle 140474041767680, query id 74 localhost root update INSERT INTO child VALUES (NULL, 1) , (NULL, 2) , (NULL, 3) , (NULL, 4) , (NULL, 5) , (NULL, 6) Foreign key constraint fails for table `mysql`.`child`: , CONSTRAINT `child_ibfk_1` FOREIGN KEY (`parent_id`) REFERENCES `parent` (`id`) ON DELETE CASCADE ON UPDATE CASCADE Trying to add in child table, in index par_ind tuple: DATA TUPLE: 2 fields; 0: len 4; hex 80000003; asc ;; 1: len 4; hex 80000003; asc ;; But in parent table `mysql`.`parent`, in index PRIMARY, the closest match we can find is record: PHYSICAL RECORD: n_fields 3; compact format; info bits 0 0: len 4; hex 80000004; asc ;; 1: len 6; hex 00000000070a; asc ;; 2: len 7; hex aa0000011d0134; asc 4;; ...
ER_NO_REFERENCED_ROW_2
and
ER_ROW_IS_REFERENCED_2
error
messages for foreign key operations expose information about
parent tables, even if the user has no parent table access
privileges. To hide information about parent tables, include
the appropriate condition handlers in application code and
stored programs.
In some cases, MySQL silently changes column specifications from
those given in a CREATE TABLE
or
ALTER TABLE
statement. These
might be changes to a data type, to attributes associated with a
data type, or to an index specification.
All changes are subject to the internal row-size limit of 65,535 bytes, which may cause some attempts at data type changes to fail. See Section 8.4.7, “Limits on Table Column Count and Row Size”.
Columns that are part of a PRIMARY KEY
are made NOT NULL
even if not declared
that way.
Trailing spaces are automatically deleted from
ENUM
and
SET
member values when the
table is created.
MySQL maps certain data types used by other SQL database vendors to MySQL types. See Section 11.9, “Using Data Types from Other Database Engines”.
If you include a USING
clause to specify
an index type that is not permitted for a given storage
engine, but there is another index type available that the
engine can use without affecting query results, the engine
uses the available type.
If strict SQL mode is not enabled, a
VARCHAR
column with a length
specification greater than 65535 is converted to
TEXT
, and a
VARBINARY
column with a
length specification greater than 65535 is converted to
BLOB
. Otherwise, an error
occurs in either of these cases.
Specifying the CHARACTER SET binary
attribute for a character data type causes the column to be
created as the corresponding binary data type:
CHAR
becomes
BINARY
,
VARCHAR
becomes
VARBINARY
, and
TEXT
becomes
BLOB
. For the
ENUM
and
SET
data types, this does not
occur; they are created as declared. Suppose that you
specify a table using this definition:
CREATE TABLE t ( c1 VARCHAR(10) CHARACTER SET binary, c2 TEXT CHARACTER SET binary, c3 ENUM('a','b','c') CHARACTER SET binary );
The resulting table has this definition:
CREATE TABLE t ( c1 VARBINARY(10), c2 BLOB, c3 ENUM('a','b','c') CHARACTER SET binary );
To see whether MySQL used a data type other than the one you
specified, issue a DESCRIBE
or
SHOW CREATE TABLE
statement after
creating or altering the table.
Certain other data type changes can occur if you compress a table using myisampack. See Section 15.2.3.3, “Compressed Table Characteristics”.
CREATE TABLE
supports the
specification of generated columns. Values of a generated column
are computed from an expression included in the column
definition.
Generated columns are supported by the
NDB
storage engine beginning with
MySQL NDB Cluster 7.5.3.
The following simple example shows a table that stores the
lengths of the sides of right triangles in the
sidea
and sideb
columns,
and computes the length of the hypotenuse in
sidec
(the square root of the sums of the
squares of the other sides):
CREATE TABLE triangle ( sidea DOUBLE, sideb DOUBLE, sidec DOUBLE AS (SQRT(sidea * sidea + sideb * sideb)) ); INSERT INTO triangle (sidea, sideb) VALUES(1,1),(3,4),(6,8);
Selecting from the table yields this result:
mysql> SELECT * FROM triangle;
+-------+-------+--------------------+
| sidea | sideb | sidec |
+-------+-------+--------------------+
| 1 | 1 | 1.4142135623730951 |
| 3 | 4 | 5 |
| 6 | 8 | 10 |
+-------+-------+--------------------+
Any application that uses the triangle
table
has access to the hypotenuse values without having to specify
the expression that calculates them.
Generated column definitions have this syntax:
col_name
data_type
[GENERATED ALWAYS] AS (expr
) [VIRTUAL | STORED] [NOT NULL | NULL] [UNIQUE [KEY]] [[PRIMARY] KEY] [COMMENT 'string
']
AS (
indicates that the column is generated and defines the
expression used to compute column values. expr
)AS
may be preceded by GENERATED ALWAYS
to make
the generated nature of the column more explicit. Constructs
that are permitted or prohibited in the expression are discussed
later.
The VIRTUAL
or STORED
keyword indicates how column values are stored, which has
implications for column use:
VIRTUAL
: Column values are not stored,
but are evaluated when rows are read, immediately after any
BEFORE
triggers. A virtual column takes
no storage.
InnoDB
supports secondary indexes on
virtual columns. See
Section 13.1.18.9, “Secondary Indexes and Generated Columns”.
STORED
: Column values are evaluated and
stored when rows are inserted or updated. A stored column
does require storage space and can be indexed.
The default is VIRTUAL
if neither keyword is
specified.
It is permitted to mix VIRTUAL
and
STORED
columns within a table.
Other attributes may be given to indicate whether the column is
indexed or can be NULL
, or provide a comment.
Generated column expressions must adhere to the following rules. An error occurs if an expression contains disallowed constructs.
Literals, deterministic built-in functions, and operators
are permitted. A function is deterministic if, given the
same data in tables, multiple invocations produce the same
result, independently of the connected user. Examples of
functions that are nondeterministic and fail this
definition: CONNECTION_ID()
,
CURRENT_USER()
,
NOW()
.
Stored functions and user-defined functions are not permitted.
Stored procedure and function parameters are not permitted.
Variables (system variables, user-defined variables, and stored program local variables) are not permitted.
Subqueries are not permitted.
A generated column definition can refer to other generated columns, but only those occurring earlier in the table definition. A generated column definition can refer to any base (nongenerated) column in the table whether its definition occurs earlier or later.
The AUTO_INCREMENT
attribute cannot be
used in a generated column definition.
An AUTO_INCREMENT
column cannot be used
as a base column in a generated column definition.
As of MySQL 5.7.10, if expression evaluation causes
truncation or provides incorrect input to a function, the
CREATE TABLE
statement
terminates with an error and the DDL operation is rejected.
If the expression evaluates to a data type that differs from the declared column type, implicit coercion to the declared type occurs according to the usual MySQL type-conversion rules. See Section 12.2, “Type Conversion in Expression Evaluation”.
If any component of the expression depends on the SQL mode, different results may occur for different uses of the table unless the SQL mode is the same during all uses.
For CREATE
TABLE ... LIKE
, the destination table preserves
generated column information from the original table.
For CREATE
TABLE ... SELECT
, the destination table does not
preserve information about whether columns in the selected-from
table are generated columns. The
SELECT
part of the statement
cannot assign values to generated columns in the destination
table.
Partitioning by generated columns is permitted. See Table Partitioning.
A foreign key constraint on a stored generated column cannot use
CASCADE
, SET NULL
, or
SET DEFAULT
as ON UPDATE
referential actions, nor can it use SET NULL
or SET DEFAULT
as ON
DELETE
referential actions.
A foreign key constraint on the base column of a stored
generated column cannot use CASCADE
,
SET NULL
, or SET DEFAULT
as ON UPDATE
or ON DELETE
referential actions.
A foreign key constraint cannot reference a virtual generated column.
Triggers cannot use
NEW.
or
use col_name
OLD.
to refer to generated columns.
col_name
For INSERT
,
REPLACE
, and
UPDATE
, if a generated column is
inserted into, replaced, or updated explicitly, the only
permitted value is DEFAULT
.
A generated column in a view is considered updatable because it
is possible to assign to it. However, if such a column is
updated explicitly, the only permitted value is
DEFAULT
.
Generated columns have several use cases, such as these:
Virtual generated columns can be used as a way to simplify and unify queries. A complicated condition can be defined as a generated column and referred to from multiple queries on the table to ensure that all of them use exactly the same condition.
Stored generated columns can be used as a materialized cache for complicated conditions that are costly to calculate on the fly.
Generated columns can simulate functional indexes: Use a
generated column to define a functional expression and index
it. This can be useful for working with columns of types
that cannot be indexed directly, such as
JSON
columns; see
Indexing a Generated Column to Provide a JSON Column Index, for a detailed
example.
For stored generated columns, the disadvantage of this approach is that values are stored twice; once as the value of the generated column and once in the index.
If a generated column is indexed, the optimizer recognizes query expressions that match the column definition and uses indexes from the column as appropriate during query execution, even if a query does not refer to the column directly by name. For details, see Section 8.3.10, “Optimizer Use of Generated Column Indexes”.
Example:
Suppose that a table t1
contains
first_name
and last_name
columns and that applications frequently construct the full name
using an expression like this:
SELECT CONCAT(first_name,' ',last_name) AS full_name FROM t1;
One way to avoid writing out the expression is to create a view
v1
on t1
, which simplifies
applications by enabling them to select
full_name
directly without using an
expression:
CREATE VIEW v1 AS SELECT *, CONCAT(first_name,' ',last_name) AS full_name FROM t1; SELECT full_name FROM v1;
A generated column also enables applications to select
full_name
directly without the need to define
a view:
CREATE TABLE t1 ( first_name VARCHAR(10), last_name VARCHAR(10), full_name VARCHAR(255) AS (CONCAT(first_name,' ',last_name)) ); SELECT full_name FROM t1;
InnoDB
supports secondary indexes on virtual
generated columns. Other index types are not supported. A
secondary index defined on a virtual column is sometimes
referred to as a “virtual index”.
A secondary index may be created on one or more virtual columns
or on a combination of virtual columns and regular columns or
stored generated columns. Secondary indexes that include virtual
columns may be defined as UNIQUE
.
When a secondary index is created on a virtual generated column, generated column values are materialized in the records of the index. If the index is a covering index (one that includes all the columns retrieved by a query), generated column values are retrieved from materialized values in the index structure instead of computed “on the fly”.
There are additional write costs to consider when using a
secondary index on a virtual column due to computation performed
when materializing virtual column values in secondary index
records during INSERT
and
UPDATE
operations. Even with
additional write costs, secondary indexes on virtual columns may
be preferable to generated stored columns,
which are materialized in the clustered index, resulting in
larger tables that require more disk space and memory. If a
secondary index is not defined on a virtual column, there are
additional costs for reads, as virtual column values must be
computed each time the column's row is examined.
Values of an indexed virtual column are MVCC-logged to avoid
unnecessary recomputation of generated column values during
rollback or during a purge operation. The data length of logged
values is limited by the index key limit of 767 bytes for
COMPACT
and REDUNDANT
row
formats, and 3072 bytes for DYNAMIC
and
COMPRESSED
row formats.
Adding or dropping a secondary index on a virtual column is an in-place operation.
Prior to 5.7.16, a foreign key constraint cannot reference a secondary index defined on a virtual generated column.
In MySQL 5.7.13 and earlier, InnoDB
does not
permit defining a foreign key constraint with a cascading
referential action on the base column of an indexed generated
virtual column. This restriction is lifted in MySQL 5.7.14.
As noted elsewhere, JSON
columns cannot be indexed directly. To create an index that
references such a column indirectly, you can define a
generated column that extracts the information that should be
indexed, then create an index on the generated column, as
shown in this example:
mysql>CREATE TABLE jemp (
->c JSON,
->g INT GENERATED ALWAYS AS (c->"$.id"),
->INDEX i (g)
->);
Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.28 sec) mysql>INSERT INTO jemp (c) VALUES
>('{"id": "1", "name": "Fred"}'), ('{"id": "2", "name": "Wilma"}'),
>('{"id": "3", "name": "Barney"}'), ('{"id": "4", "name": "Betty"}');
Query OK, 4 rows affected (0.04 sec) Records: 4 Duplicates: 0 Warnings: 0 mysql>SELECT c->>"$.name" AS name
>FROM jemp WHERE g > 2;
+--------+ | name | +--------+ | Barney | | Betty | +--------+ 2 rows in set (0.00 sec) mysql>EXPLAIN SELECT c->>"$.name" AS name
>FROM jemp WHERE g > 2\G
*************************** 1. row *************************** id: 1 select_type: SIMPLE table: jemp partitions: NULL type: range possible_keys: i key: i key_len: 5 ref: NULL rows: 2 filtered: 100.00 Extra: Using where 1 row in set, 1 warning (0.00 sec) mysql>SHOW WARNINGS\G
*************************** 1. row *************************** Level: Note Code: 1003 Message: /* select#1 */ select json_unquote(json_extract(`test`.`jemp`.`c`,'$.name')) AS `name` from `test`.`jemp` where (`test`.`jemp`.`g` > 2) 1 row in set (0.00 sec)
(We have wrapped the output from the last statement in this example to fit the viewing area.)
The
->
operator is supported in MySQL 5.7.9 and later. The
->>
operator is supported beginning with MySQL 5.7.13.
When you use EXPLAIN
on a
SELECT
or other SQL statement
containing one or more expressions that use the
->
or ->>
operator, these expressions are translated into their
equivalents using JSON_EXTRACT()
and (if
needed) JSON_UNQUOTE()
instead, as shown
here in the output from SHOW
WARNINGS
immediately following this
EXPLAIN
statement:
mysql>EXPLAIN SELECT c->>"$.name"
>FROM jemp WHERE g > 2 ORDER BY c->"$.name"\G
*************************** 1. row *************************** id: 1 select_type: SIMPLE table: jemp partitions: NULL type: range possible_keys: i key: i key_len: 5 ref: NULL rows: 2 filtered: 100.00 Extra: Using where; Using filesort 1 row in set, 1 warning (0.00 sec) mysql>SHOW WARNINGS\G
*************************** 1. row *************************** Level: Note Code: 1003 Message: /* select#1 */ select json_unquote(json_extract(`test`.`jemp`.`c`,'$.name')) AS `c->>"$.name"` from `test`.`jemp` where (`test`.`jemp`.`g` > 2) order by json_extract(`test`.`jemp`.`c`,'$.name') 1 row in set (0.00 sec)
See the descriptions of the
->
and
->>
operators, as well as those of the
JSON_EXTRACT()
and
JSON_UNQUOTE()
functions, for
additional information and examples.
This technique also can be used to provide indexes that
indirectly reference columns of other types that cannot be
indexed directly, such as GEOMETRY
columns.
It is also possible to use indirect indexing of JSON columns in MySQL NDB Cluster 7.5.3 and later, subject to the following conditions:
NDB
handles a
JSON
column value
internally as a BLOB
. This
means that any NDB
table having one or
more JSON columns must have a primary key, else it cannot
be recorded in the binary log.
The NDB
storage engine does
not support indexing of virtual columns. Since the default
for generated columns is VIRTUAL
, you
must specify explicitly the generated column to which to
apply the indirect index as STORED
.
The CREATE TABLE
statement
used to create the table jempn
shown here
is a version of the jemp
table shown
previously, with modifications making it compatible with
NDB
:
CREATE TABLE jempn ( a BIGINT(20) NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT PRIMARY KEY, c JSON DEFAULT NULL, g INT GENERATED ALWAYS AS (c->"$.name") STORED, INDEX i (g) ) ENGINE=NDB;
We can populate this table using the following
INSERT
statement:
INSERT INTO jempn (a, c) VALUES (NULL, '{"id": "1", "name": "Fred"}'), (NULL, '{"id": "2", "name": "Wilma"}'), (NULL, '{"id": "3", "name": "Barney"}'), (NULL, '{"id": "4", "name": "Betty"}');
Now NDB
can use index i
,
as shown here:
mysql>EXPLAIN SELECT c->>"$.name" AS name FROM jempn WHERE g > 2\G
*************************** 1. row *************************** id: 1 select_type: SIMPLE table: jempn partitions: p0,p1 type: range possible_keys: i key: i key_len: 5 ref: NULL rows: 3 filtered: 100.00 Extra: Using where with pushed condition (`test`.`jempn`.`g` > 2) 1 row in set, 1 warning (0.00 sec) mysql>SHOW WARNINGS\G
*************************** 1. row *************************** Level: Note Code: 1003 Message: /* select#1 */ select json_unquote(json_extract(`test`.`jempn`.`c`,'$.name')) AS `name` from `test`.`jempn` where (`test`.`jempn`.`g` > 2) 1 row in set (0.00 sec)
You should keep in mind that a stored generated column uses
DataMemory
, and that
an index on such a column uses
IndexMemory
.
In MySQL NDB Cluster 7.5.2 and later, the table comment in a
CREATE TABLE
or ALTER
TABLE
statement can also be used to specify an
NDB_TABLE
option, which consists of one or
more name-value pairs, separated by commas if need be, following
the string NDB_TABLE=
. Complete syntax for
names and values syntax is shown here:
COMMENT="NDB_TABLE=ndb_table_option
[,ndb_table_option
[,...]]"ndb_table_option
: NOLOGGING={1|0} | READ_BACKUP={1|0} | PARTITION_BALANCE={FOR_RP_BY_NODE|FOR_RA_BY_NODE|FOR_RP_BY_LDM |FOR_RA_BY_LDM|FOR_RA_BY_LDM_X_2 |FOR_RA_BY_LDM_X_3|FOR_RA_BY_LDM_X_4} | FULLY_REPLICATED={1|0}
Spaces are not permitted within the quoted string. The string is case-insensitive.
The four NDB
table options that can be set as
part of a comment in this way are described in more detail in
the next few paragraphs.
NOLOGGING
: Using 1 corresponds to having
ndb_table_no_logging
enabled,
but has no actual effect. Provided as a placeholder, mostly for
completeness of ALTER TABLE
statements.
READ_BACKUP
: Setting this option to 1 has the
same effect as though
ndb_read_backup
were enabled;
enables reading from any replica. Doing so greatly improves the
performance of reads from the table at a relatively small cost
to write performance.
Starting with MySQL NDB Cluster 7.5.3, you can set
READ_BACKUP
for an existing table online (Bug
#80858, Bug #23001617), using an ALTER TABLE
statement similar to one of those shown here:
ALTER TABLE ... ALGORITHM=INPLACE, COMMENT="NDB_TABLE=READ_BACKUP=1"; ALTER TABLE ... ALGORITHM=INPLACE, COMMENT="NDB_TABLE=READ_BACKUP=0";
Prior to MySQL NDB Cluster 7.5.4, setting
READ_BACKUP
to 1 also caused
FRAGMENT_COUNT_TYPE
to be set to
ONE_PER_LDM_PER_NODE_GROUP
.
For more information about the ALGORITHM
option for ALTER TABLE
, see
Section 21.5.14, “Online Operations with ALTER TABLE in NDB Cluster”.
PARTITION_BALANCE
: Provides additional
control over assignment and placement of partitions. The
following four schemes are supported:
FOR_RP_BY_NODE
: One partition per node.
Only one LDM on each node stores a primary partition. Each partition is stored in the same LDM (same ID) on all nodes.
FOR_RA_BY_NODE
: One partition per node
group.
Each node stores a single partition, which can be either a primary replica or a backup replica. Each partition is stored in the same LDM on all nodes.
FOR_RP_BY_LDM
: One partition for each LDM
on each node; the default.
This is the same behavior as prior to MySQL NDB Cluster 7.5.2, except for a slightly different mapping of partitions to LDMs, starting with LDM 0 and placing one partition per node group, then moving on to the next LDM.
In MySQL NDB Cluster 7.5.4 and later, this is the setting
used if READ_BACKUP
is set to 1. (Bug
#82634, Bug #24482114)
FOR_RA_BY_LDM
: One partition per LDM in
each node group.
These partitions can be primary or backup partitions.
Prior to MySQL NDB Cluster 7.5.4, this was the setting used
if READ_BACKUP
was set to 1.
FOR_RA_BY_LDM_X_2
: Two partitions per LDM
in each node group.
These partitions can be primary or backup partitions.
This setting was added in NDB 7.5.4.
FOR_RA_BY_LDM_X_3
: Three partitions per
LDM in each node group.
These partitions can be primary or backup partitions.
This setting was added in NDB 7.5.4.
FOR_RA_BY_LDM_X_4
: Four partitions per
LDM in each node group.
These partitions can be primary or backup partitions.
This setting was added in NDB 7.5.4.
Beginning with NDB 7.5.4, PARTITION_BALANCE
is the preferred interface for setting the number of partitions
per table. Using MAX_ROWS
to force the number
of partitions is deprecated as of NDB 7.5.4, continues to be
supported in NDB 7.6 for backward compatibility, but is subject
to removal in a future release of MySQL NDB Cluster. (Bug
#81759, Bug #23544301)
Prior to MySQL NDB Cluster 7.5.4,
PARTITION_BALANCE
was named
FRAGMENT_COUNT_TYPE
, and accepted as its
value one of (in the same order as that of the listing just
shown) ONE_PER_NODE
,
ONE_PER_NODE_GROUP
,
ONE_PER_LDM_PER_NODE
, or
ONE_PER_LDM_PER_NODE_GROUP
. (Bug #81761, Bug
#23547525)
FULLY_REPLICATED
controls whether the table
is fully replicated, that is, whether each data node has a
complete copy of the table. To enable full replication of the
table, use FULLY_REPLICATED=1
.
This setting can also be controlled using the
ndb_fully_replicated
system variable. Setting
it to ON
enables the option by default for
all new NDB
tables; the default is
OFF
, which maintains the previous behavior
(as in MySQL NDB Cluster 7.5.1 and earlier, before support for
fully replicated tables was introduced). The
ndb_data_node_neighbour
system
variable is also used for fully replicated tables, to ensure
that when a fully replicated table is accessed, we access the
data node which is local to this MySQL Server.
An example of a CREATE TABLE
statement using
such a comment when creating an NDB
table is
shown here:
mysql>CREATE TABLE t1 (
>c1 INT NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT PRIMARY KEY,
>c2 VARCHAR(100),
>c3 VARCHAR(100) )
>ENGINE=NDB
>COMMENT="NDB_TABLE=READ_BACKUP=0,PARTITION_BALANCE=FOR_RP_BY_NODE";
The comment is displayed as part of the ouput of
SHOW CREATE TABLE
. The text of
the comment is also available from querying the MySQL
Information Schema TABLES
table, as
in this example:
mysql>SELECT TABLE_NAME, TABLE_SCHEMA, TABLE_COMMENT
>FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.TABLES WHERE TABLE_NAME="t1";
+------------+--------------+----------------------------------------------------------+ | TABLE_NAME | TABLE_SCHEMA | TABLE_COMMENT | +------------+--------------+----------------------------------------------------------+ | t1 | c | NDB_TABLE=READ_BACKUP=0,PARTITION_BALANCE=FOR_RP_BY_NODE | | t1 | d | | +------------+--------------+----------------------------------------------------------+ 2 rows in set (0.00 sec)
This comment syntax is also supported with
ALTER TABLE
statements for
NDB
tables. Keep in mind that a table comment
used with ALTER TABLE
replaces any existing
comment which the table might have.
mysql>ALTER TABLE t1 COMMENT="NDB_TABLE=PARTITION_BALANCE=FOR_RA_BY_NODE";
Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.40 sec) Records: 0 Duplicates: 0 Warnings: 0 mysql>SELECT TABLE_NAME, TABLE_SCHEMA, TABLE_COMMENT
>FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.TABLES WHERE TABLE_NAME="t1";
+------------+--------------+--------------------------------------------------+ | TABLE_NAME | TABLE_SCHEMA | TABLE_COMMENT | +------------+--------------+--------------------------------------------------+ | t1 | c | NDB_TABLE=PARTITION_BALANCE=FOR_RA_BY_NODE | | t1 | d | | +------------+--------------+--------------------------------------------------+ 2 rows in set (0.01 sec)
You can also see the value of the
PARTITION_BALANCE
option in the output of
ndb_desc. ndb_desc also
shows whether the READ_BACKUP
and
FULLY_REPLICATED
options are set for the
table. See the description of this program for more information.
Because the READ_BACKUP
value was not carried
over to the new comment set by the ALTER
TABLE
statement, there is no longer a way using SQL to
retrieve the value previously set for it. To keep this from
happening, it is suggested that you preserve any such values
from the existing comment string, like this:
mysql>SELECT TABLE_NAME, TABLE_SCHEMA, TABLE_COMMENT
>FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.TABLES WHERE TABLE_NAME="t1";
+------------+--------------+----------------------------------------------------------+ | TABLE_NAME | TABLE_SCHEMA | TABLE_COMMENT | +------------+--------------+----------------------------------------------------------+ | t1 | c | NDB_TABLE=READ_BACKUP=0,PARTITION_BALANCE=FOR_RP_BY_NODE | | t1 | d | | +------------+--------------+----------------------------------------------------------+ 2 rows in set (0.00 sec) mysql>ALTER TABLE t1 COMMENT="NDB_TABLE=READ_BACKUP=0,PARTITION_BALANCE=FOR_RA_BY_NODE";
Query OK, 0 rows affected (1.56 sec) Records: 0 Duplicates: 0 Warnings: 0 mysql>SELECT TABLE_NAME, TABLE_SCHEMA, TABLE_COMMENT
>FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.TABLES WHERE TABLE_NAME="t1";
+------------+--------------+----------------------------------------------------------------+ | TABLE_NAME | TABLE_SCHEMA | TABLE_COMMENT | +------------+--------------+----------------------------------------------------------------+ | t1 | c | NDB_TABLE=READ_BACKUP=0,PARTITION_BALANCE=FOR_RA_BY_NODE | | t1 | d | | +------------+--------------+----------------------------------------------------------------+ 2 rows in set (0.01 sec)
CREATE TABLESPACEtablespace_name
InnoDB and NDB: ADD DATAFILE 'file_name
' InnoDB only: [FILE_BLOCK_SIZE = value] NDB only: USE LOGFILE GROUPlogfile_group
[EXTENT_SIZE [=]extent_size
] [INITIAL_SIZE [=]initial_size
] [AUTOEXTEND_SIZE [=]autoextend_size
] [MAX_SIZE [=]max_size
] [NODEGROUP [=]nodegroup_id
] [WAIT] [COMMENT [=] 'string
'] InnoDB and NDB: [ENGINE [=]engine_name
]
This statement is used to create a tablespace. The precise syntax
and semantics depend on the storage engine used. In standard MySQL
5.7 releases, this is always an
InnoDB
tablespace. MySQL NDB Cluster
7.5 also supports tablespaces using the
NDB
storage engine in addition to
those using InnoDB
.
CREATE TABLESPACE
syntax is used to
create general tablespaces. A general tablespace is a shared
tablespace. It can hold multiple tables, and supports all table
row formats. General tablespaces can be created in a location
relative to or independent of the data directory.
After creating an InnoDB
general tablespace,
you can use CREATE
TABLE
or
tbl_name
... TABLESPACE [=]
tablespace_name
ALTER TABLE
to add tables
to the tablespace. For more information, see
Section 14.6.3.3, “General Tablespaces”.
tbl_name
TABLESPACE [=]
tablespace_name
This statement is used to create a tablespace, which can contain
one or more data files, providing storage space for NDB Cluster
Disk Data tables (see Section 21.5.13, “NDB Cluster Disk Data Tables”).
One data file is created and added to the tablespace using this
statement. Additional data files may be added to the tablespace by
using the ALTER TABLESPACE
statement (see Section 13.1.9, “ALTER TABLESPACE Statement”).
All NDB Cluster Disk Data objects share the same namespace. This means that each Disk Data object must be uniquely named (and not merely each Disk Data object of a given type). For example, you cannot have a tablespace and a log file group with the same name, or a tablespace and a data file with the same name.
A log file group of one or more UNDO
log files
must be assigned to the tablespace to be created with the
USE LOGFILE GROUP
clause.
logfile_group
must be an existing log
file group created with CREATE LOGFILE
GROUP
(see Section 13.1.15, “CREATE LOGFILE GROUP Statement”).
Multiple tablespaces may use the same log file group for
UNDO
logging.
When setting EXTENT_SIZE
or
INITIAL_SIZE
, you may optionally follow the
number with a one-letter abbreviation for an order of magnitude,
similar to those used in my.cnf
. Generally,
this is one of the letters M
(for megabytes) or
G
(for gigabytes).
INITIAL_SIZE
and EXTENT_SIZE
are subject to rounding as follows:
EXTENT_SIZE
is rounded up to the nearest
whole multiple of 32K.
INITIAL_SIZE
is rounded
down to the nearest whole multiple of
32K; this result is rounded up to the nearest whole multiple
of EXTENT_SIZE
(after any rounding).
The rounding just described is done explicitly, and a warning is
issued by the MySQL Server when any such rounding is performed.
The rounded values are also used by the NDB kernel for calculating
INFORMATION_SCHEMA.FILES
column
values and other purposes. However, to avoid an unexpected result,
we suggest that you always use whole multiples of 32K in
specifying these options.
When CREATE TABLESPACE
is used with
ENGINE [=] NDB
, a tablespace and associated
data file are created on each Cluster data node. You can verify
that the data files were created and obtain information about them
by querying the
INFORMATION_SCHEMA.FILES
table. (See
the example later in this section.)
(See Section 24.9, “The INFORMATION_SCHEMA FILES Table”.)
ADD DATAFILE
: Defines the name of a
tablespace data file; this option is always required. An
InnoDB
tablespace supports only a single
data file, whose name must include a .ibd
extension. An NDB Cluster tablespace supports multiple data
files which can have any legal file names; more data files can
be added to an NDB Cluster tablespace following its creation
by using an ALTER TABLESPACE
statement.
ALTER TABLESPACE
is not supported by
InnoDB
.
To place the data file in a location outside of the data
directory (datadir
), include
an absolute directory path or a path relative to the data
directory. If you do not specify a path, the tablespace is
created in the data directory. An
isl file is created in
the data directory when an InnoDB
tablespace is created outside of the data directory.
To avoid conflicts with implicitly created file-per-table tablespaces, creating a general tablespace in a subdirectory under the data directory is not supported. When creating a general tablespace outside of the data directory, the directory must exist prior to creating the tablespace.
The
,
including any specified path, must be quoted with single or
double quotations marks. File names (not counting the file
extension) and directory names must be at least one byte in
length. Zero length file names and directory names are not
supported.
file_name
FILE_BLOCK_SIZE
: This option—which is
specific to InnoDB
, and is ignored by
NDB
—defines the block size for the
tablespace data file. Values can be specified in bytes or
kilobytes. For example, an 8 kilobyte file block size can be
specified as 8192 or 8K. If you do not specify this option,
FILE_BLOCK_SIZE
defaults to the
innodb_page_size
value.
FILE_BLOCK_SIZE
is required when you intend
to use the tablespace for storing compressed
InnoDB
tables
(ROW_FORMAT=COMPRESSED
). In this case, you
must define the tablespace FILE_BLOCK_SIZE
when creating the tablespace.
If FILE_BLOCK_SIZE
is equal the
innodb_page_size
value, the
tablespace can contain only tables having an uncompressed row
format (COMPACT
,
REDUNDANT
, and DYNAMIC
).
Tables with a COMPRESSED
row format have a
different physical page size than uncompressed tables.
Therefore, compressed tables cannot coexist in the same
tablespace as uncompressed tables.
For a general tablespace to contain compressed tables,
FILE_BLOCK_SIZE
must be specified, and the
FILE_BLOCK_SIZE
value must be a valid
compressed page size in relation to the
innodb_page_size
value. Also,
the physical page size of the compressed table
(KEY_BLOCK_SIZE
) must be equal to
FILE_BLOCK_SIZE/1024
. For example, if
innodb_page_size=16K
, and
FILE_BLOCK_SIZE=8K
, the
KEY_BLOCK_SIZE
of the table must be 8. For
more information, see Section 14.6.3.3, “General Tablespaces”.
USE LOGFILE GROUP
: Required for
NDB
, this is the name of a log file group
previously created using CREATE LOGFILE
GROUP
. Not supported for InnoDB
,
where it fails with an error.
EXTENT_SIZE
: This option is specific to
NDB, and is not supported by InnoDB, where it fails with an
error. EXTENT_SIZE
sets the size, in bytes,
of the extents used by any files belonging to the tablespace.
The default value is 1M. The minimum size is 32K, and
theoretical maximum is 2G, although the practical maximum size
depends on a number of factors. In most cases, changing the
extent size does not have any measurable effect on
performance, and the default value is recommended for all but
the most unusual situations.
An extent is a unit of
disk space allocation. One extent is filled with as much data
as that extent can contain before another extent is used. In
theory, up to 65,535 (64K) extents may used per data file;
however, the recommended maximum is 32,768 (32K). The
recommended maximum size for a single data file is
32G—that is, 32K extents × 1 MB per extent. In
addition, once an extent is allocated to a given partition, it
cannot be used to store data from a different partition; an
extent cannot store data from more than one partition. This
means, for example that a tablespace having a single datafile
whose INITIAL_SIZE
(described in the
following item) is 256 MB and whose
EXTENT_SIZE
is 128M has just two extents,
and so can be used to store data from at most two different
disk data table partitions.
You can see how many extents remain free in a given data file
by querying the
INFORMATION_SCHEMA.FILES
table,
and so derive an estimate for how much space remains free in
the file. For further discussion and examples, see
Section 24.9, “The INFORMATION_SCHEMA FILES Table”.
INITIAL_SIZE
: This option is specific to
NDB
, and is not supported by
InnoDB
, where it fails with an error.
The INITIAL_SIZE
parameter sets the total
size in bytes of the data file that was specific using
ADD DATATFILE
. Once this file has been
created, its size cannot be changed; however, you can add more
data files to the tablespace using
ALTER
TABLESPACE ... ADD DATAFILE
.
INITIAL_SIZE
is optional; its default value
is 134217728 (128 MB).
On 32-bit systems, the maximum supported value for
INITIAL_SIZE
is 4294967296 (4 GB).
AUTOEXTEND_SIZE
: Currently ignored by
MySQL; reserved for possible future use. Has no effect in any
release of MySQL 5.7 or MySQL NDB Cluster 7.5, regardless of
the storage engine used.
MAX_SIZE
: Currently ignored by MySQL;
reserved for possible future use. Has no effect in any release
of MySQL 5.7 or MySQL NDB Cluster 7.5, regardless of the
storage engine used.
NODEGROUP
: Currently ignored by MySQL;
reserved for possible future use. Has no effect in any release
of MySQL 5.7 or MySQL NDB Cluster 7.5, regardless of the
storage engine used.
WAIT
: Currently ignored by MySQL; reserved
for possible future use. Has no effect in any release of MySQL
5.7 or MySQL NDB Cluster 7.5, regardless of the storage engine
used.
COMMENT
: Currently ignored by MySQL;
reserved for possible future use. Has no effect in any release
of MySQL 5.7 or MySQL NDB Cluster 7.5, regardless of the
storage engine used.
ENGINE
: Defines the storage engine which
uses the tablespace, where
engine_name
is the name of the
storage engine. Currently, only the InnoDB
storage engine is supported by standard MySQL 5.7
releases. MySQL NDB Cluster 7.5 supports both
NDB
and InnoDB
tablespaces. The value of the
default_storage_engine
system
variable is used for ENGINE
if the option
is not specified.
For the rules covering the naming of MySQL tablespaces, see
Section 9.2, “Schema Object Names”. In addition to these rules, the
slash character (“/”) is not permitted, nor can
you use names beginning with innodb_
, as
this prefix is reserved for system use.
Tablespaces do not support temporary tables.
innodb_file_per_table
,
innodb_file_format
, and
innodb_file_format_max
settings have no influence on CREATE
TABLESPACE
operations.
innodb_file_per_table
does
not need to be enabled. General tablespaces support all table
row formats regardless of file format settings. Likewise,
general tablespaces support the addition of tables of any row
format using
CREATE TABLE ...
TABLESPACE
, regardless of file format settings.
innodb_strict_mode
is not
applicable to general tablespaces. Tablespace management rules
are strictly enforced independently of
innodb_strict_mode
. If
CREATE TABLESPACE
parameters are incorrect
or incompatible, the operation fails regardless of the
innodb_strict_mode
setting.
When a table is added to a general tablespace using
CREATE TABLE ...
TABLESPACE
or
ALTER TABLE ...
TABLESPACE
,
innodb_strict_mode
is ignored
but the statement is evaluated as if
innodb_strict_mode
is
enabled.
Use DROP TABLESPACE
to remove a tablespace.
All tables must be dropped from a tablespace using
DROP TABLE
prior to dropping
the tablespace. Before dropping an NDB Cluster tablespace you
must also remove all its data files using one or more
ALTER
TABLESPACE ... DROP DATATFILE
statements. See
Section 21.5.13.1, “NDB Cluster Disk Data Objects”.
All parts of an InnoDB
table added to an
InnoDB
general tablespace reside in the
general tablespace, including indexes and
BLOB
pages.
For an NDB
table assigned to a tablespace,
only those columns which are not indexed are stored on disk,
and actually use the tablespace data files. Indexes and
indexed columns for all NDB
tables are
always kept in memory.
Similar to the system tablespace, truncating or dropping
tables stored in a general tablespace creates free space
internally in the general tablespace
.ibd data file which can
only be used for new InnoDB
data. Space is
not released back to the operating system as it is for
file-per-table tablespaces.
A general tablespace is not associated with any database or schema.
ALTER TABLE ...
DISCARD TABLESPACE
and
ALTER TABLE
...IMPORT TABLESPACE
are not supported for tables
that belong to a general tablespace.
The server uses tablespace-level metadata locking for DDL that references general tablespaces. By comparison, the server uses table-level metadata locking for DDL that references file-per-table tablespaces.
A generated or existing tablespace cannot be changed to a general tablespace.
Tables stored in a general tablespace can only be opened in MySQL 5.7.6 or later due to the addition of new table flags.
There is no conflict between general tablespace names and file-per-table tablespace names. The “/” character, which is present in file-per-table tablespace names, is not permitted in general tablespace names.
mysqldump and mysqlpump
do not dump InnoDB
CREATE TABLESPACE
statements.
This example demonstrates creating a general tablespace and adding three uncompressed tables of different row formats.
mysql>CREATE TABLESPACE `ts1` ADD DATAFILE 'ts1.ibd' ENGINE=INNODB;
mysql>CREATE TABLE t1 (c1 INT PRIMARY KEY) TABLESPACE ts1 ROW_FORMAT=REDUNDANT;
mysql>CREATE TABLE t2 (c1 INT PRIMARY KEY) TABLESPACE ts1 ROW_FORMAT=COMPACT;
mysql>CREATE TABLE t3 (c1 INT PRIMARY KEY) TABLESPACE ts1 ROW_FORMAT=DYNAMIC;
This example demonstrates creating a general tablespace and adding
a compressed table. The example assumes a default
innodb_page_size
value of 16K.
The FILE_BLOCK_SIZE
of 8192 requires that the
compressed table have a KEY_BLOCK_SIZE
of 8.
mysql>CREATE TABLESPACE `ts2` ADD DATAFILE 'ts2.ibd' FILE_BLOCK_SIZE = 8192 Engine=InnoDB;
mysql>CREATE TABLE t4 (c1 INT PRIMARY KEY) TABLESPACE ts2 ROW_FORMAT=COMPRESSED KEY_BLOCK_SIZE=8;
Suppose that you wish to create an NDB Cluster Disk Data
tablespace named myts
using a datafile named
mydata-1.dat
. An NDB
tablespace always requires the use of a log file group consisting
of one or more undo log files. For this example, we first create a
log file group named mylg
that contains one
undo long file named myundo-1.dat
, using the
CREATE LOGFILE GROUP
statement
shown here:
mysql>CREATE LOGFILE GROUP myg1
->ADD UNDOFILE 'myundo-1.dat'
->ENGINE=NDB;
Query OK, 0 rows affected (3.29 sec)
Now you can create the tablespace previously described using the following statement:
mysql>CREATE TABLESPACE myts
->ADD DATAFILE 'mydata-1.dat'
->USE LOGFILE GROUP mylg
->ENGINE=NDB;
Query OK, 0 rows affected (2.98 sec)
You can now create a Disk Data table using a
CREATE TABLE
statement with the
TABLESPACE
and STORAGE DISK
options, similar to what is shown here:
mysql>CREATE TABLE mytable (
->id INT UNSIGNED NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT PRIMARY KEY,
->lname VARCHAR(50) NOT NULL,
->fname VARCHAR(50) NOT NULL,
->dob DATE NOT NULL,
->joined DATE NOT NULL,
->INDEX(last_name, first_name)
->)
->TABLESPACE myts STORAGE DISK
->ENGINE=NDB;
Query OK, 0 rows affected (1.41 sec)
It is important to note that only the dob
and
joined
columns from mytable
are actually stored on disk, due to the fact that the
id
, lname
, and
fname
columns are all indexed.
As mentioned previously, when CREATE TABLESPACE
is used with ENGINE [=] NDB
, a tablespace and
associated data file are created on each NDB Cluster data node.
You can verify that the data files were created and obtain
information about them by querying the
INFORMATION_SCHEMA.FILES
table, as
shown here:
mysql>SELECT FILE_NAME, FILE_TYPE, LOGFILE_GROUP_NAME, STATUS, EXTRA
->FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.FILES
->WHERE TABLESPACE_NAME = 'myts';
+--------------+------------+--------------------+--------+----------------+ | file_name | file_type | logfile_group_name | status | extra | +--------------+------------+--------------------+--------+----------------+ | mydata-1.dat | DATAFILE | mylg | NORMAL | CLUSTER_NODE=5 | | mydata-1.dat | DATAFILE | mylg | NORMAL | CLUSTER_NODE=6 | | NULL | TABLESPACE | mylg | NORMAL | NULL | +--------------+------------+--------------------+--------+----------------+ 3 rows in set (0.01 sec)
For additional information and examples, see Section 21.5.13.1, “NDB Cluster Disk Data Objects”.
CREATE [DEFINER =user
] TRIGGERtrigger_name
trigger_time
trigger_event
ONtbl_name
FOR EACH ROW [trigger_order
]trigger_body
trigger_time
: { BEFORE | AFTER }trigger_event
: { INSERT | UPDATE | DELETE }trigger_order
: { FOLLOWS | PRECEDES }other_trigger_name
This statement creates a new trigger. A trigger is a named
database object that is associated with a table, and that
activates when a particular event occurs for the table. The
trigger becomes associated with the table named
tbl_name
, which must refer to a
permanent table. You cannot associate a trigger with a
TEMPORARY
table or a view.
Trigger names exist in the schema namespace, meaning that all triggers must have unique names within a schema. Triggers in different schemas can have the same name.
This section describes CREATE
TRIGGER
syntax. For additional discussion, see
Section 23.3.1, “Trigger Syntax and Examples”.
CREATE TRIGGER
requires the
TRIGGER
privilege for the table
associated with the trigger. If the DEFINER
clause is present, the privileges required depend on the
user
value, as discussed in
Section 23.6, “Stored Object Access Control”. If binary logging is
enabled, CREATE TRIGGER
might
require the SUPER
privilege, as
discussed in Section 23.7, “Stored Program Binary Logging”.
The DEFINER
clause determines the security
context to be used when checking access privileges at trigger
activation time, as described later in this section.
trigger_time
is the trigger action
time. It can be BEFORE
or
AFTER
to indicate that the trigger activates
before or after each row to be modified.
Basic column value checks occur prior to trigger activation, so
you cannot use BEFORE
triggers to convert
values inappropriate for the column type to valid values.
trigger_event
indicates the kind of
operation that activates the trigger. These
trigger_event
values are permitted:
INSERT
: The trigger activates
whenever a new row is inserted into the table (for example,
through INSERT
,
LOAD DATA
, and
REPLACE
statements).
UPDATE
: The trigger activates
whenever a row is modified (for example, through
UPDATE
statements).
DELETE
: The trigger activates
whenever a row is deleted from the table (for example, through
DELETE
and
REPLACE
statements).
DROP TABLE
and
TRUNCATE TABLE
statements on
the table do not activate this trigger,
because they do not use DELETE
.
Dropping a partition does not activate
DELETE
triggers, either.
The trigger_event
does not represent a
literal type of SQL statement that activates the trigger so much
as it represents a type of table operation. For example, an
INSERT
trigger activates not only
for INSERT
statements but also
LOAD DATA
statements because both
statements insert rows into a table.
A potentially confusing example of this is the INSERT
INTO ... ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE ...
syntax: a
BEFORE INSERT
trigger activates for every row,
followed by either an AFTER INSERT
trigger or
both the BEFORE UPDATE
and AFTER
UPDATE
triggers, depending on whether there was a
duplicate key for the row.
Cascaded foreign key actions do not activate triggers.
It is possible to define multiple triggers for a given table that
have the same trigger event and action time. For example, you can
have two BEFORE UPDATE
triggers for a table. By
default, triggers that have the same trigger event and action time
activate in the order they were created. To affect trigger order,
specify a trigger_order
clause that
indicates FOLLOWS
or
PRECEDES
and the name of an existing trigger
that also has the same trigger event and action time. With
FOLLOWS
, the new trigger activates after the
existing trigger. With PRECEDES
, the new
trigger activates before the existing trigger.
trigger_body
is the statement to
execute when the trigger activates. To execute multiple
statements, use the
BEGIN ... END
compound statement construct. This also enables you to use the
same statements that are permitted within stored routines. See
Section 13.6.1, “BEGIN ... END Compound Statement”. Some statements are not permitted in
triggers; see Section 23.8, “Restrictions on Stored Programs”.
Within the trigger body, you can refer to columns in the subject
table (the table associated with the trigger) by using the aliases
OLD
and NEW
.
OLD.
refers
to a column of an existing row before it is updated or deleted.
col_name
NEW.
refers
to the column of a new row to be inserted or an existing row after
it is updated.
col_name
Triggers cannot use
NEW.
or use
col_name
OLD.
to
refer to generated columns. For information about generated
columns, see Section 13.1.18.8, “CREATE TABLE and Generated Columns”.
col_name
MySQL stores the sql_mode
system
variable setting in effect when a trigger is created, and always
executes the trigger body with this setting in force,
regardless of the current server SQL mode when the
trigger begins executing.
The DEFINER
clause specifies the MySQL account
to be used when checking access privileges at trigger activation
time. If the DEFINER
clause is present, the
user
value should be a MySQL account
specified as
'
,
user_name
'@'host_name
'CURRENT_USER
, or
CURRENT_USER()
. The permitted
user
values depend on the privileges
you hold, as discussed in
Section 23.6, “Stored Object Access Control”. Also see that section
for additional information about trigger security.
If the DEFINER
clause is omitted, the default
definer is the user who executes the CREATE
TRIGGER
statement. This is the same as specifying
DEFINER = CURRENT_USER
explicitly.
MySQL takes the DEFINER
user into account when
checking trigger privileges as follows:
At CREATE TRIGGER
time, the
user who issues the statement must have the
TRIGGER
privilege.
At trigger activation time, privileges are checked against the
DEFINER
user. This user must have these
privileges:
The TRIGGER
privilege for
the subject table.
The SELECT
privilege for
the subject table if references to table columns occur
using
OLD.
or
col_name
NEW.
in the trigger body.
col_name
The UPDATE
privilege for
the subject table if table columns are targets of
SET NEW.
assignments in
the trigger body.
col_name
=
value
Whatever other privileges normally are required for the statements executed by the trigger.
Within a trigger body, the
CURRENT_USER
function returns the
account used to check privileges at trigger activation time. This
is the DEFINER
user, not the user whose actions
caused the trigger to be activated. For information about user
auditing within triggers, see
Section 6.2.18, “SQL-Based Account Activity Auditing”.
If you use LOCK TABLES
to lock a
table that has triggers, the tables used within the trigger are
also locked, as described in
LOCK TABLES and Triggers.
For additional discussion of trigger use, see Section 23.3.1, “Trigger Syntax and Examples”.
CREATE [OR REPLACE] [ALGORITHM = {UNDEFINED | MERGE | TEMPTABLE}] [DEFINER =user
] [SQL SECURITY { DEFINER | INVOKER }] VIEWview_name
[(column_list
)] ASselect_statement
[WITH [CASCADED | LOCAL] CHECK OPTION]
The CREATE VIEW
statement creates a
new view, or replaces an existing view if the OR
REPLACE
clause is given. If the view does not exist,
CREATE OR REPLACE
VIEW
is the same as CREATE
VIEW
. If the view does exist,
CREATE OR REPLACE
VIEW
replaces it.
For information about restrictions on view use, see Section 23.9, “Restrictions on Views”.
The select_statement
is a
SELECT
statement that provides the
definition of the view. (Selecting from the view selects, in
effect, using the SELECT
statement.) The select_statement
can
select from base tables or other views.
The view definition is “frozen” at creation time and
is not affected by subsequent changes to the definitions of the
underlying tables. For example, if a view is defined as
SELECT *
on a table, new columns added to the
table later do not become part of the view, and columns dropped
from the table will result in an error when selecting from the
view.
The ALGORITHM
clause affects how MySQL
processes the view. The DEFINER
and
SQL SECURITY
clauses specify the security
context to be used when checking access privileges at view
invocation time. The WITH CHECK OPTION
clause
can be given to constrain inserts or updates to rows in tables
referenced by the view. These clauses are described later in this
section.
The CREATE VIEW
statement requires
the CREATE VIEW
privilege for the
view, and some privilege for each column selected by the
SELECT
statement. For columns used
elsewhere in the SELECT
statement,
you must have the SELECT
privilege.
If the OR REPLACE
clause is present, you must
also have the DROP
privilege for
the view. If the DEFINER
clause is present, the
privileges required depend on the user
value, as discussed in Section 23.6, “Stored Object Access Control”.
When a view is referenced, privilege checking occurs as described later in this section.
A view belongs to a database. By default, a new view is created in
the default database. To create the view explicitly in a given
database, use db_name.view_name
syntax
to qualify the view name with the database name:
CREATE VIEW test.v AS SELECT * FROM t;
Unqualified table or view names in the
SELECT
statement are also
interpreted with respect to the default database. A view can refer
to tables or views in other databases by qualifying the table or
view name with the appropriate database name.
Within a database, base tables and views share the same namespace, so a base table and a view cannot have the same name.
Columns retrieved by the SELECT
statement can be simple references to table columns, or
expressions that use functions, constant values, operators, and so
forth.
A view must have unique column names with no duplicates, just like
a base table. By default, the names of the columns retrieved by
the SELECT
statement are used for
the view column names. To define explicit names for the view
columns, specify the optional
column_list
clause as a list of
comma-separated identifiers. The number of names in
column_list
must be the same as the
number of columns retrieved by the
SELECT
statement.
A view can be created from many kinds of
SELECT
statements. It can refer to
base tables or other views. It can use joins,
UNION
, and subqueries. The
SELECT
need not even refer to any
tables:
CREATE VIEW v_today (today) AS SELECT CURRENT_DATE;
The following example defines a view that selects two columns from another table as well as an expression calculated from those columns:
mysql>CREATE TABLE t (qty INT, price INT);
mysql>INSERT INTO t VALUES(3, 50);
mysql>CREATE VIEW v AS SELECT qty, price, qty*price AS value FROM t;
mysql>SELECT * FROM v;
+------+-------+-------+ | qty | price | value | +------+-------+-------+ | 3 | 50 | 150 | +------+-------+-------+
A view definition is subject to the following restrictions:
The SELECT
statement cannot
refer to system variables or user-defined variables.
Within a stored program, the
SELECT
statement cannot refer
to program parameters or local variables.
The SELECT
statement cannot
refer to prepared statement parameters.
Any table or view referred to in the definition must exist.
If, after the view has been created, a table or view that the
definition refers to is dropped, use of the view results in an
error. To check a view definition for problems of this kind,
use the CHECK TABLE
statement.
The definition cannot refer to a TEMPORARY
table, and you cannot create a TEMPORARY
view.
You cannot associate a trigger with a view.
Aliases for column names in the
SELECT
statement are checked
against the maximum column length of 64 characters (not the
maximum alias length of 256 characters).
ORDER BY
is permitted in a view definition, but
it is ignored if you select from a view using a statement that has
its own ORDER BY
.
For other options or clauses in the definition, they are added to
the options or clauses of the statement that references the view,
but the effect is undefined. For example, if a view definition
includes a LIMIT
clause, and you select from
the view using a statement that has its own
LIMIT
clause, it is undefined which limit
applies. This same principle applies to options such as
ALL
, DISTINCT
, or
SQL_SMALL_RESULT
that follow the
SELECT
keyword, and to clauses such
as INTO
, FOR UPDATE
,
LOCK IN SHARE MODE
, and
PROCEDURE
.
The results obtained from a view may be affected if you change the query processing environment by changing system variables:
mysql>CREATE VIEW v (mycol) AS SELECT 'abc';
Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.01 sec) mysql>SET sql_mode = '';
Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.00 sec) mysql>SELECT "mycol" FROM v;
+-------+ | mycol | +-------+ | mycol | +-------+ 1 row in set (0.01 sec) mysql>SET sql_mode = 'ANSI_QUOTES';
Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.00 sec) mysql>SELECT "mycol" FROM v;
+-------+ | mycol | +-------+ | abc | +-------+ 1 row in set (0.00 sec)
The DEFINER
and SQL SECURITY
clauses determine which MySQL account to use when checking access
privileges for the view when a statement is executed that
references the view. The valid SQL SECURITY
characteristic values are DEFINER
(the default)
and INVOKER
. These indicate that the required
privileges must be held by the user who defined or invoked the
view, respectively.
If the DEFINER
clause is present, the
user
value should be a MySQL account
specified as
'
,
user_name
'@'host_name
'CURRENT_USER
, or
CURRENT_USER()
. The permitted
user
values depend on the privileges
you hold, as discussed in
Section 23.6, “Stored Object Access Control”. Also see that section
for additional information about view security.
If the DEFINER
clause is omitted, the default
definer is the user who executes the CREATE
VIEW
statement. This is the same as specifying
DEFINER = CURRENT_USER
explicitly.
Within a view definition, the
CURRENT_USER
function returns the
view's DEFINER
value by default. For views
defined with the SQL SECURITY INVOKER
characteristic, CURRENT_USER
returns the account for the view's invoker. For information about
user auditing within views, see
Section 6.2.18, “SQL-Based Account Activity Auditing”.
Within a stored routine that is defined with the SQL
SECURITY DEFINER
characteristic,
CURRENT_USER
returns the routine's
DEFINER
value. This also affects a view defined
within such a routine, if the view definition contains a
DEFINER
value of
CURRENT_USER
.
MySQL checks view privileges like this:
At view definition time, the view creator must have the
privileges needed to use the top-level objects accessed by the
view. For example, if the view definition refers to table
columns, the creator must have some privilege for each column
in the select list of the definition, and the
SELECT
privilege for each
column used elsewhere in the definition. If the definition
refers to a stored function, only the privileges needed to
invoke the function can be checked. The privileges required at
function invocation time can be checked only as it executes:
For different invocations, different execution paths within
the function might be taken.
The user who references a view must have appropriate
privileges to access it (SELECT
to select from it, INSERT
to
insert into it, and so forth.)
When a view has been referenced, privileges for objects
accessed by the view are checked against the privileges held
by the view DEFINER
account or invoker,
depending on whether the SQL SECURITY
characteristic is DEFINER
or
INVOKER
, respectively.
If reference to a view causes execution of a stored function,
privilege checking for statements executed within the function
depend on whether the function SQL SECURITY
characteristic is DEFINER
or
INVOKER
. If the security characteristic is
DEFINER
, the function runs with the
privileges of the DEFINER
account. If the
characteristic is INVOKER
, the function
runs with the privileges determined by the view's SQL
SECURITY
characteristic.
Example: A view might depend on a stored function, and that
function might invoke other stored routines. For example, the
following view invokes a stored function f()
:
CREATE VIEW v AS SELECT * FROM t WHERE t.id = f(t.name);
Suppose that f()
contains a statement such as
this:
IF name IS NULL then CALL p1(); ELSE CALL p2(); END IF;
The privileges required for executing statements within
f()
need to be checked when
f()
executes. This might mean that privileges
are needed for p1()
or p2()
,
depending on the execution path within f()
.
Those privileges must be checked at runtime, and the user who must
possess the privileges is determined by the SQL
SECURITY
values of the view v
and the
function f()
.
The DEFINER
and SQL SECURITY
clauses for views are extensions to standard SQL. In standard SQL,
views are handled using the rules for SQL SECURITY
DEFINER
. The standard says that the definer of the view,
which is the same as the owner of the view's schema, gets
applicable privileges on the view (for example,
SELECT
) and may grant them. MySQL
has no concept of a schema “owner”, so MySQL adds a
clause to identify the definer. The DEFINER
clause is an extension where the intent is to have what the
standard has; that is, a permanent record of who defined the view.
This is why the default DEFINER
value is the
account of the view creator.
The optional ALGORITHM
clause is a MySQL
extension to standard SQL. It affects how MySQL processes the
view. ALGORITHM
takes three values:
MERGE
, TEMPTABLE
, or
UNDEFINED
. For more information, see
Section 23.5.2, “View Processing Algorithms”, as well as
Section 8.2.2.4, “Optimizing Derived Tables and View References with Merging or
Materialization”.
Some views are updatable. That is, you can use them in statements
such as UPDATE
,
DELETE
, or
INSERT
to update the contents of
the underlying table. For a view to be updatable, there must be a
one-to-one relationship between the rows in the view and the rows
in the underlying table. There are also certain other constructs
that make a view nonupdatable.
A generated column in a view is considered updatable because it is
possible to assign to it. However, if such a column is updated
explicitly, the only permitted value is
DEFAULT
. For information about generated
columns, see Section 13.1.18.8, “CREATE TABLE and Generated Columns”.
The WITH CHECK OPTION
clause can be given for
an updatable view to prevent inserts or updates to rows except
those for which the WHERE
clause in the
select_statement
is true.
In a WITH CHECK OPTION
clause for an updatable
view, the LOCAL
and CASCADED
keywords determine the scope of check testing when the view is
defined in terms of another view. The LOCAL
keyword restricts the CHECK OPTION
only to the
view being defined. CASCADED
causes the checks
for underlying views to be evaluated as well. When neither keyword
is given, the default is CASCADED
.
For more information about updatable views and the WITH
CHECK OPTION
clause, see
Section 23.5.3, “Updatable and Insertable Views”, and
Section 23.5.4, “The View WITH CHECK OPTION Clause”.
Views created before MySQL 5.7.3 containing ORDER BY
can result in errors
at view evaluation time. Consider these view definitions, which
use integer
ORDER BY
with an ordinal number:
CREATE VIEW v1 AS SELECT x, y, z FROM t ORDER BY 2; CREATE VIEW v2 AS SELECT x, 1, z FROM t ORDER BY 2;
In the first case, ORDER BY 2
refers to a named
column y
. In the second case, it refers to a
constant 1. For queries that select from either view fewer than 2
columns (the number named in the ORDER BY
clause), an error occurs if the server evaluates the view using
the MERGE algorithm. Examples:
mysql>SELECT x FROM v1;
ERROR 1054 (42S22): Unknown column '2' in 'order clause' mysql>SELECT x FROM v2;
ERROR 1054 (42S22): Unknown column '2' in 'order clause'
As of MySQL 5.7.3, to handle view definitions like this, the
server writes them differently into the .frm
file that stores the view definition. This difference is visible
with SHOW CREATE VIEW
. Previously,
the .frm
file contained this for the
ORDER BY 2
clause:
For v1: ORDER BY 2 For v2: ORDER BY 2
As of 5.7.3, the .frm
file contains this:
For v1: ORDER BY `t`.`y` For v2: ORDER BY ''
That is, for v1
, 2 is replaced by a reference
to the name of the column referred to. For v2
,
2 is replaced by a constant string expression (ordering by a
constant has no effect, so ordering by any constant will do).
If you experience view-evaluation errors such as just described,
drop and recreate the view so that the .frm
file contains the updated view representation. Alternatively, for
views like v2
that order by a constant value,
drop and recreate the view with no ORDER BY
clause.
DROP {DATABASE | SCHEMA} [IF EXISTS] db_name
DROP DATABASE
drops all tables in
the database and deletes the database. Be
very careful with this statement! To use
DROP DATABASE
, you need the
DROP
privilege on the database.
DROP
SCHEMA
is a synonym for DROP
DATABASE
.
When a database is dropped, privileges granted specifically for the database are not automatically dropped. They must be dropped manually. See Section 13.7.1.4, “GRANT Statement”.
IF EXISTS
is used to prevent an error from
occurring if the database does not exist.
If the default database is dropped, the default database is unset
(the DATABASE()
function returns
NULL
).
If you use DROP DATABASE
on a
symbolically linked database, both the link and the original
database are deleted.
DROP DATABASE
returns the number of
tables that were removed. This corresponds to the number of
.frm
files removed.
The DROP DATABASE
statement removes
from the given database directory those files and directories that
MySQL itself may create during normal operation:
All files with the following extensions:
.BAK
.DAT
.HSH
.MRG
.MYD
.MYI
.TRG
.TRN
.cfg
.db
.frm
.ibd
.ndb
.par
The db.opt
file, if it exists.
If other files or directories remain in the database directory
after MySQL removes those just listed, the database directory
cannot be removed. In this case, you must remove any remaining
files or directories manually and issue the
DROP DATABASE
statement again.
Dropping a database does not remove any
TEMPORARY
tables that were created in that
database. TEMPORARY
tables are automatically
removed when the session that created them ends. See
Section 13.1.18.3, “CREATE TEMPORARY TABLE Statement”.
You can also drop databases with mysqladmin. See Section 4.5.2, “mysqladmin — Client for Administering a MySQL Server”.
DROP EVENT [IF EXISTS] event_name
This statement drops the event named
event_name
. The event immediately
ceases being active, and is deleted completely from the server.
If the event does not exist, the error ERROR 1517
(HY000): Unknown event
'event_name
' results. You
can override this and cause the statement to generate a warning
for nonexistent events instead using IF EXISTS
.
This statement requires the EVENT
privilege for the schema to which the event to be dropped belongs.
The DROP FUNCTION
statement is used
to drop stored functions and user-defined functions (UDFs):
For information about dropping stored functions, see Section 13.1.27, “DROP PROCEDURE and DROP FUNCTION Statements”.
For information about dropping user-defined functions, see Section 13.7.3.2, “DROP FUNCTION Statement”.
DROP INDEXindex_name
ONtbl_name
[algorithm_option
|lock_option
] ...algorithm_option
: ALGORITHM [=] {DEFAULT|INPLACE|COPY}lock_option
: LOCK [=] {DEFAULT|NONE|SHARED|EXCLUSIVE}
DROP INDEX
drops the index named
index_name
from the table
tbl_name
. This statement is mapped to
an ALTER TABLE
statement to drop
the index. See Section 13.1.8, “ALTER TABLE Statement”.
To drop a primary key, the index name is always
PRIMARY
, which must be specified as a quoted
identifier because PRIMARY
is a reserved word:
DROP INDEX `PRIMARY` ON t;
Indexes on variable-width columns of
NDB
tables are dropped online; that
is, without any table copying. The table is not locked against
access from other NDB Cluster API nodes, although it is locked
against other operations on the same API node
for the duration of the operation. This is done automatically by
the server whenever it determines that it is possible to do so;
you do not have to use any special SQL syntax or server options to
cause it to happen.
ALGORITHM
and LOCK
clauses
may be given to influence the table copying method and level of
concurrency for reading and writing the table while its indexes
are being modified. They have the same meaning as for the
ALTER TABLE
statement. For more
information, see Section 13.1.8, “ALTER TABLE Statement”
NDB Cluster formerly supported online DROP
INDEX
operations using the ONLINE
and
OFFLINE
keywords. These keywords are no longer
supported in MySQL NDB Cluster 7.5 and later, and their use causes
a syntax error. Instead, MySQL NDB Cluster 7.5 and later support
online operations using the same
ALGORITHM=INPLACE
syntax used with the standard
MySQL Server. See
Section 21.5.14, “Online Operations with ALTER TABLE in NDB Cluster”, for more
information.
DROP LOGFILE GROUPlogfile_group
ENGINE [=]engine_name
This statement drops the log file group named
logfile_group
. The log file group must
already exist or an error results. (For information on creating
log file groups, see Section 13.1.15, “CREATE LOGFILE GROUP Statement”.)
Before dropping a log file group, you must drop all tablespaces
that use that log file group for UNDO
logging.
The required ENGINE
clause provides the name of
the storage engine used by the log file group to be dropped.
Currently, the only permitted values for
engine_name
are
NDB
and
NDBCLUSTER
.
DROP LOGFILE GROUP
is useful only
with Disk Data storage for NDB Cluster. See
Section 21.5.13, “NDB Cluster Disk Data Tables”.
DROP {PROCEDURE | FUNCTION} [IF EXISTS] sp_name
This statement is used to drop a stored procedure or function.
That is, the specified routine is removed from the server. You
must have the ALTER ROUTINE
privilege for the routine. (If the
automatic_sp_privileges
system variable is
enabled, that privilege and EXECUTE
are granted automatically to the routine creator when the routine
is created and dropped from the creator when the routine is
dropped. See Section 23.2.2, “Stored Routines and MySQL Privileges”.)
The IF EXISTS
clause is a MySQL extension. It
prevents an error from occurring if the procedure or function does
not exist. A warning is produced that can be viewed with
SHOW WARNINGS
.
DROP FUNCTION
is also used to drop
user-defined functions (see Section 13.7.3.2, “DROP FUNCTION Statement”).
DROP SERVER [ IF EXISTS ] server_name
Drops the server definition for the server named
. The
corresponding row in the server_name
mysql.servers
table is
deleted. This statement requires the
SUPER
privilege.
Dropping a server for a table does not affect any
FEDERATED
tables that used this connection
information when they were created. See
Section 13.1.17, “CREATE SERVER Statement”.
DROP SERVER
causes an implicit commit. See
Section 13.3.3, “Statements That Cause an Implicit Commit”.
DROP SERVER
is not written to the binary log,
regardless of the logging format that is in use.
DROP [TEMPORARY] TABLE [IF EXISTS]tbl_name
[,tbl_name
] ... [RESTRICT | CASCADE]
DROP TABLE
removes one or more
tables. You must have the DROP
privilege for each table.
Be careful with this statement! For each table, it removes the table definition and all table data. If the table is partitioned, the statement removes the table definition, all its partitions, all data stored in those partitions, and all partition definitions associated with the dropped table.
Dropping a table also drops any triggers for the table.
DROP TABLE
causes an implicit
commit, except when used with the TEMPORARY
keyword. See Section 13.3.3, “Statements That Cause an Implicit Commit”.
When a table is dropped, privileges granted specifically for the table are not automatically dropped. They must be dropped manually. See Section 13.7.1.4, “GRANT Statement”.
If any tables named in the argument list do not exist,
DROP TABLE
behavior depends on
whether the IF EXISTS
clause is given:
Without IF EXISTS
, the statement drops all
named tables that do exist, and returns an error indicating
which nonexisting tables it was unable to drop.
With IF EXISTS
, no error occurs for
nonexisting tables. The statement drops all named tables that
do exist, and generates a NOTE
diagnostic
for each nonexistent table. These notes can be displayed with
SHOW WARNINGS
. See
Section 13.7.5.40, “SHOW WARNINGS Statement”.
IF EXISTS
can also be useful for dropping
tables in unusual circumstances under which there is an
.frm
file but no table managed by the storage
engine. (For example, if an abnormal server exit occurs after
removal of the table from the storage engine but before
.frm
file removal.)
The TEMPORARY
keyword has the following
effects:
The statement drops only TEMPORARY
tables.
The statement does not cause an implicit commit.
No access rights are checked. A TEMPORARY
table is visible only with the session that created it, so no
check is necessary.
Including the TEMPORARY
keyword is a good way
to prevent accidentally dropping non-TEMPORARY
tables.
The RESTRICT
and CASCADE
keywords do nothing. They are permitted to make porting easier
from other database systems.
DROP TABLE
is not supported with
all innodb_force_recovery
settings. See Section 14.22.2, “Forcing InnoDB Recovery”.
DROP TABLESPACEtablespace_name
[ENGINE [=]engine_name
]
This statement drops a tablespace that was previously created
using CREATE TABLESPACE
. It is
supported with all MySQL NDB Cluster 7.5 releases, and with
InnoDB
in the standard MySQL Server as well.
ENGINE
sets the storage engine that uses the
tablespace, where engine_name
is the
name of the storage engine. Currently, the values
InnoDB
and NDB
are
supported. If not set, the value of
default_storage_engine
is used.
If it is not the same as the storage engine used to create the
tablespace, the DROP TABLESPACE
statement
fails.
For an InnoDB
tablespace, all tables must be
dropped from the tablespace prior to a DROP
TABLESPACE
operation. If the tablespace is not empty,
DROP TABLESPACE
returns an error.
As with the InnoDB
system tablespace,
truncating or dropping InnoDB
tables stored in
a general tablespace creates free space in the tablespace
.ibd data file, which can
only be used for new InnoDB
data. Space is not
released back to the operating system by such operations as it is
for file-per-table tablespaces.
An NDB
tablespace to be dropped must not
contain any data files; in other words, before you can drop an
NDB
tablespace, you must first drop each of its
data files using
ALTER TABLESPACE
... DROP DATAFILE
.
Tablespaces are not deleted automatically. A tablespace must
be dropped explicitly using DROP
TABLESPACE
. DROP
DATABASE
has no effect in this regard, even if the
operation drops all tables belonging to the tablespace.
A DROP DATABASE
operation can
drop tables that belong to a general tablespace but it cannot
drop the tablespace, even if the operation drops all tables
that belong to the tablespace. The tablespace must be dropped
explicitly using DROP TABLESPACE
.
tablespace_name
Similar to the system tablespace, truncating or dropping
tables stored in a general tablespace creates free space
internally in the general tablespace
.ibd data file which can
only be used for new InnoDB
data. Space is
not released back to the operating system as it is for
file-per-table tablespaces.
This example demonstrates how to drop an InnoDB
general tablespace. The general tablespace ts1
is created with a single table. Before dropping the tablespace,
the table must be dropped.
mysql>CREATE TABLESPACE `ts1` ADD DATAFILE 'ts1.ibd' Engine=InnoDB;
mysql>CREATE TABLE t1 (c1 INT PRIMARY KEY) TABLESPACE ts1 Engine=InnoDB;
mysql>DROP TABLE t1;
mysql>DROP TABLESPACE ts1;
This example shows how to drop an NDB
tablespace myts
having a data file named
mydata-1.dat
after first creating the
tablespace, and assumes the existence of a log file group named
mylg
(see
Section 13.1.15, “CREATE LOGFILE GROUP Statement”).
mysql>CREATE TABLESPACE myts
->ADD DATAFILE 'mydata-1.dat'
->USE LOGFILE GROUP mylg
->ENGINE=NDB;
You must remove all data files from the tablespace using
ALTER TABLESPACE
, as shown here,
before it can be dropped:
mysql>ALTER TABLESPACE myts
->DROP DATAFILE 'mydata-1.dat'
->ENGINE=NDB;
mysql>DROP TABLESPACE myts;
DROP TRIGGER [IF EXISTS] [schema_name
.]trigger_name
This statement drops a trigger. The schema (database) name is
optional. If the schema is omitted, the trigger is dropped from
the default schema. DROP TRIGGER
requires the TRIGGER
privilege for
the table associated with the trigger.
Use IF EXISTS
to prevent an error from
occurring for a trigger that does not exist. A
NOTE
is generated for a nonexistent trigger
when using IF EXISTS
. See
Section 13.7.5.40, “SHOW WARNINGS Statement”.
Triggers for a table are also dropped if you drop the table.
DROP VIEW [IF EXISTS]view_name
[,view_name
] ... [RESTRICT | CASCADE]
DROP VIEW
removes one or more
views. You must have the DROP
privilege for each view.
If any views named in the argument list do not exist, the statement returns an error indicating by name which nonexisting views it was unable to drop, but also drops all views in the list that do exist.
In MySQL 8.0, DROP VIEW
fails if any views named in the argument list do not exist. Due
to the change in behavior, a partially completed
DROP VIEW
operation on a MySQL
5.7 master fails when replicated to a MySQL
8.0 slave. To avoid this failure scenario, use
IF EXISTS
syntax in DROP
VIEW
statements to prevent an error from occurring for
views that do not exist. For more information, see
Atomic Data Definition Statement Support.
The IF EXISTS
clause prevents an error from
occurring for views that don't exist. When this clause is given, a
NOTE
is generated for each nonexistent view.
See Section 13.7.5.40, “SHOW WARNINGS Statement”.
RESTRICT
and CASCADE
, if
given, are parsed and ignored.
RENAME TABLEtbl_name
TOnew_tbl_name
[,tbl_name2
TOnew_tbl_name2
] ...
RENAME TABLE
renames one or more
tables. You must have ALTER
and
DROP
privileges for the original
table, and CREATE
and
INSERT
privileges for the new
table.
For example, to rename a table named old_table
to new_table
, use this statement:
RENAME TABLE old_table TO new_table;
That statement is equivalent to the following
ALTER TABLE
statement:
ALTER TABLE old_table RENAME new_table;
RENAME TABLE
, unlike ALTER
TABLE
, can rename multiple tables within a single
statement:
RENAME TABLE old_table1 TO new_table1, old_table2 TO new_table2, old_table3 TO new_table3;
Renaming operations are performed left to right. Thus, to swap two
table names, do this (assuming that a table with the intermediary
name tmp_table
does not already exist):
RENAME TABLE old_table TO tmp_table, new_table TO old_table, tmp_table TO new_table;
Metadata locks on tables are acquired in name order, which in some cases can make a difference in operation outcome when multiple transactions execute concurrently. See Section 8.11.4, “Metadata Locking”.
To execute RENAME TABLE
, there must be no
active transactions or tables locked with LOCK
TABLES
. With the transaction table locking conditions
satisfied, the rename operation is done atomically; no other
session can access any of the tables while the rename is in
progress.
If any errors occur during a RENAME TABLE
, the
statement fails and no changes are made.
You can use RENAME TABLE
to move a table from
one database to another:
RENAME TABLEcurrent_db.tbl_name
TOother_db.tbl_name;
Using this method to move all tables from one database to a different one in effect renames the database (an operation for which MySQL has no single statement), except that the original database continues to exist, albeit with no tables.
Like RENAME TABLE
, ALTER TABLE ...
RENAME
can also be used to move a table to a different
database. Regardless of the statement used, if the rename
operation would move the table to a database located on a
different file system, the success of the outcome is platform
specific and depends on the underlying operating system calls used
to move table files.
If a table has triggers, attempts to rename the table into a
different database fail with a Trigger in wrong
schema
(ER_TRG_IN_WRONG_SCHEMA
) error.
To rename TEMPORARY
tables, RENAME
TABLE
does not work. Use ALTER
TABLE
instead.
RENAME TABLE
works for views, except that views
cannot be renamed into a different database.
Any privileges granted specifically for a renamed table or view are not migrated to the new name. They must be changed manually.
RENAME TABLE
changes
internally generated foreign key constraint names and user-defined
foreign key constraint names that begin with the string
“tbl_name
TO
new_tbl_name
tbl_name
_ibfk_” to
reflect the new table name. InnoDB
interprets
foreign key constraint names that begin with the string
“tbl_name
_ibfk_” as
internally generated names.
Foreign key constraint names that point to the renamed table are automatically updated unless there is a conflict, in which case the statement fails with an error. A conflict occurs if the renamed constraint name already exists. In such cases, you must drop and re-create the foreign keys for them to function properly.
TRUNCATE [TABLE] tbl_name
TRUNCATE TABLE
empties a table
completely. It requires the DROP
privilege.
Logically, TRUNCATE TABLE
is
similar to a DELETE
statement that
deletes all rows, or a sequence of DROP
TABLE
and CREATE TABLE
statements. To achieve high performance, it bypasses the DML
method of deleting data. Thus, it cannot be rolled back, it does
not cause ON DELETE
triggers to fire, and it
cannot be performed for InnoDB
tables with
parent-child foreign key relationships.
Although TRUNCATE TABLE
is similar
to DELETE
, it is classified as a
DDL statement rather than a DML statement. It differs from
DELETE
in the following ways:
Truncate operations drop and re-create the table, which is much faster than deleting rows one by one, particularly for large tables.
Truncate operations cause an implicit commit, and so cannot be rolled back. See Section 13.3.3, “Statements That Cause an Implicit Commit”.
Truncation operations cannot be performed if the session holds an active table lock.
TRUNCATE TABLE
fails for an
InnoDB
table or
NDB
table if there are any
FOREIGN KEY
constraints from other tables
that reference the table. Foreign key constraints between
columns of the same table are permitted.
Truncation operations do not return a meaningful value for the number of deleted rows. The usual result is “0 rows affected,” which should be interpreted as “no information.”
As long as the table format file
is valid, the table can be re-created as an empty table with
tbl_name
.frmTRUNCATE TABLE
, even if the
data or index files have become corrupted.
Any AUTO_INCREMENT
value is reset to its
start value. This is true even for MyISAM
and InnoDB
, which normally do not reuse
sequence values.
When used with partitioned tables,
TRUNCATE TABLE
preserves the
partitioning; that is, the data and index files are dropped
and re-created, while the partition definitions
(.par
) file is unaffected.
The TRUNCATE TABLE
statement
does not invoke ON DELETE
triggers.
TRUNCATE TABLE
for a table closes
all handlers for the table that were opened with
HANDLER OPEN
.
TRUNCATE TABLE
is treated for
purposes of binary logging and replication as
DROP TABLE
followed by
CREATE TABLE
—that is, as DDL
rather than DML. This is due to the fact that, when using
InnoDB
and other transactional
storage engines where the transaction isolation level does not
permit statement-based logging (READ
COMMITTED
or READ
UNCOMMITTED
), the statement was not logged and
replicated when using STATEMENT
or
MIXED
logging mode. (Bug #36763) However, it is
still applied on replication slaves using
InnoDB
in the manner described
previously.
On a system with a large InnoDB
buffer pool and
innodb_adaptive_hash_index
enabled, TRUNCATE TABLE
operations may cause a
temporary drop in system performance due to an LRU scan that
occurs when removing an InnoDB
table's adaptive
hash index entries. The problem was addressed for
DROP TABLE
in MySQL 5.5.23 (Bug
#13704145, Bug #64284) but remains a known issue for
TRUNCATE TABLE
(Bug #68184).
TRUNCATE TABLE
can be used with
Performance Schema summary tables, but the effect is to reset the
summary columns to 0 or NULL
, not to remove
rows. See Section 25.12.15, “Performance Schema Summary Tables”.
CALLsp_name
([parameter
[,...]]) CALLsp_name
[()]
The CALL
statement invokes a stored
procedure that was defined previously with
CREATE PROCEDURE
.
Stored procedures that take no arguments can be invoked without
parentheses. That is, CALL p()
and
CALL p
are equivalent.
CALL
can pass back values to its
caller using parameters that are declared as
OUT
or INOUT
parameters.
When the procedure returns, a client program can also obtain the
number of rows affected for the final statement executed within
the routine: At the SQL level, call the
ROW_COUNT()
function; from the C
API, call the
mysql_affected_rows()
function.
For information about the effect of unhandled conditions on procedure parameters, see Section 13.6.7.8, “Condition Handling and OUT or INOUT Parameters”.
To get back a value from a procedure using an
OUT
or INOUT
parameter, pass
the parameter by means of a user variable, and then check the
value of the variable after the procedure returns. (If you are
calling the procedure from within another stored procedure or
function, you can also pass a routine parameter or local routine
variable as an IN
or INOUT
parameter.) For an INOUT
parameter, initialize
its value before passing it to the procedure. The following
procedure has an OUT
parameter that the
procedure sets to the current server version, and an
INOUT
value that the procedure increments by
one from its current value:
CREATE PROCEDURE p (OUT ver_param VARCHAR(25), INOUT incr_param INT) BEGIN # Set value of OUT parameter SELECT VERSION() INTO ver_param; # Increment value of INOUT parameter SET incr_param = incr_param + 1; END;
Before calling the procedure, initialize the variable to be passed
as the INOUT
parameter. After calling the
procedure, the values of the two variables will have been set or
modified:
mysql>SET @increment = 10;
mysql>CALL p(@version, @increment);
mysql>SELECT @version, @increment;
+------------------+------------+ | @version | @increment | +------------------+------------+ | 5.7.20-debug-log | 11 | +------------------+------------+
In prepared CALL
statements used
with PREPARE
and
EXECUTE
, placeholders can be used
for IN
parameters, OUT
, and
INOUT
parameters. These types of parameters can
be used as follows:
mysql>SET @increment = 10;
mysql>PREPARE s FROM 'CALL p(?, ?)';
mysql>EXECUTE s USING @version, @increment;
mysql>SELECT @version, @increment;
+------------------+------------+ | @version | @increment | +------------------+------------+ | 5.7.20-debug-log | 11 | +------------------+------------+
To write C programs that use the
CALL
SQL statement to execute
stored procedures that produce result sets, the
CLIENT_MULTI_RESULTS
flag must be enabled. This
is because each CALL
returns a
result to indicate the call status, in addition to any result sets
that might be returned by statements executed within the
procedure. CLIENT_MULTI_RESULTS
must also be
enabled if CALL
is used to execute
any stored procedure that contains prepared statements. It cannot
be determined when such a procedure is loaded whether those
statements will produce result sets, so it is necessary to assume
that they will.
CLIENT_MULTI_RESULTS
can be enabled when you
call mysql_real_connect()
, either
explicitly by passing the CLIENT_MULTI_RESULTS
flag itself, or implicitly by passing
CLIENT_MULTI_STATEMENTS
(which also enables
CLIENT_MULTI_RESULTS
).
CLIENT_MULTI_RESULTS
is enabled by default.
To process the result of a CALL
statement executed using
mysql_query()
or
mysql_real_query()
, use a loop
that calls mysql_next_result()
to
determine whether there are more results. For an example, see
Section 27.7.15, “C API Multiple Statement Execution Support”.
C programs can use the prepared-statement interface to execute
CALL
statements and access
OUT
and INOUT
parameters.
This is done by processing the result of a
CALL
statement using a loop that
calls mysql_stmt_next_result()
to
determine whether there are more results. For an example, see
Section 27.7.17, “C API Prepared CALL Statement Support”. Languages that
provide a MySQL interface can use prepared
CALL
statements to directly
retrieve OUT
and INOUT
procedure parameters.
Metadata changes to objects referred to by stored programs are detected and cause automatic reparsing of the affected statements when the program is next executed. For more information, see Section 8.10.4, “Caching of Prepared Statements and Stored Programs”.
DELETE
is a DML statement that
removes rows from a table.
DELETE [LOW_PRIORITY] [QUICK] [IGNORE] FROMtbl_name
[PARTITION (partition_name
[,partition_name
] ...)] [WHEREwhere_condition
] [ORDER BY ...] [LIMITrow_count
]
The DELETE
statement deletes rows from
tbl_name
and returns the number of
deleted rows. To check the number of deleted rows, call the
ROW_COUNT()
function described in
Section 12.15, “Information Functions”.
The conditions in the optional WHERE
clause
identify which rows to delete. With no WHERE
clause, all rows are deleted.
where_condition
is an expression that
evaluates to true for each row to be deleted. It is specified as
described in Section 13.2.9, “SELECT Statement”.
If the ORDER BY
clause is specified, the rows
are deleted in the order that is specified. The
LIMIT
clause places a limit on the number of
rows that can be deleted. These clauses apply to single-table
deletes, but not multi-table deletes.
DELETE [LOW_PRIORITY] [QUICK] [IGNORE]tbl_name
[.*] [,tbl_name
[.*]] ... FROMtable_references
[WHEREwhere_condition
] DELETE [LOW_PRIORITY] [QUICK] [IGNORE] FROMtbl_name
[.*] [,tbl_name
[.*]] ... USINGtable_references
[WHEREwhere_condition
]
You need the DELETE
privilege on a
table to delete rows from it. You need only the
SELECT
privilege for any columns
that are only read, such as those named in the
WHERE
clause.
When you do not need to know the number of deleted rows, the
TRUNCATE TABLE
statement is a
faster way to empty a table than a
DELETE
statement with no
WHERE
clause. Unlike
DELETE
,
TRUNCATE TABLE
cannot be used
within a transaction or if you have a lock on the table. See
Section 13.1.34, “TRUNCATE TABLE Statement” and
Section 13.3.5, “LOCK TABLES and UNLOCK TABLES Statements”.
The speed of delete operations may also be affected by factors discussed in Section 8.2.4.3, “Optimizing DELETE Statements”.
To ensure that a given DELETE
statement does not take too much time, the MySQL-specific
LIMIT
clause for row_count
DELETE
specifies the
maximum number of rows to be deleted. If the number of rows to
delete is larger than the limit, repeat the
DELETE
statement until the number of affected
rows is less than the LIMIT
value.
You cannot delete from a table and select from the same table in a subquery.
DELETE
supports explicit partition selection
using the PARTITION
option, which takes a list
of the comma-separated names of one or more partitions or
subpartitions (or both) from which to select rows to be dropped.
Partitions not included in the list are ignored. Given a
partitioned table t
with a partition named
p0
, executing the statement DELETE
FROM t PARTITION (p0)
has the same effect on the table
as executing ALTER
TABLE t TRUNCATE PARTITION (p0)
; in both cases, all rows
in partition p0
are dropped.
PARTITION
can be used along with a
WHERE
condition, in which case the condition is
tested only on rows in the listed partitions. For example,
DELETE FROM t PARTITION (p0) WHERE c < 5
deletes rows only from partition p0
for which
the condition c < 5
is true; rows in any
other partitions are not checked and thus not affected by the
DELETE
.
The PARTITION
option can also be used in
multiple-table DELETE
statements. You can use
up to one such option per table named in the
FROM
option.
For more information and examples, see Section 22.5, “Partition Selection”.
If you delete the row containing the maximum value for an
AUTO_INCREMENT
column, the value is not reused
for a MyISAM
or InnoDB
table. If you delete all rows in the table with DELETE
FROM
(without a
tbl_name
WHERE
clause) in
autocommit
mode, the sequence
starts over for all storage engines except
InnoDB
and MyISAM
. There are
some exceptions to this behavior for InnoDB
tables, as discussed in
Section 14.6.1.6, “AUTO_INCREMENT Handling in InnoDB”.
For MyISAM
tables, you can specify an
AUTO_INCREMENT
secondary column in a
multiple-column key. In this case, reuse of values deleted from
the top of the sequence occurs even for MyISAM
tables. See Section 3.6.9, “Using AUTO_INCREMENT”.
The DELETE
statement supports the
following modifiers:
If you specify the LOW_PRIORITY
modifier,
the server delays execution of the
DELETE
until no other clients
are reading from the table. This affects only storage engines
that use only table-level locking (such as
MyISAM
, MEMORY
, and
MERGE
).
For MyISAM
tables, if you use the
QUICK
modifier, the storage engine does not
merge index leaves during delete, which may speed up some
kinds of delete operations.
The IGNORE
modifier causes MySQL to ignore
errors during the process of deleting rows. (Errors
encountered during the parsing stage are processed in the
usual manner.) Errors that are ignored due to the use of
IGNORE
are returned as warnings. For more
information, see Comparison of the IGNORE Keyword and Strict SQL Mode.
If the DELETE
statement includes an
ORDER BY
clause, rows are deleted in the order
specified by the clause. This is useful primarily in conjunction
with LIMIT
. For example, the following
statement finds rows matching the WHERE
clause,
sorts them by timestamp_column
, and deletes the
first (oldest) one:
DELETE FROM somelog WHERE user = 'jcole' ORDER BY timestamp_column LIMIT 1;
ORDER BY
also helps to delete rows in an order
required to avoid referential integrity violations.
If you are deleting many rows from a large table, you may exceed
the lock table size for an InnoDB
table. To
avoid this problem, or simply to minimize the time that the table
remains locked, the following strategy (which does not use
DELETE
at all) might be helpful:
Select the rows not to be deleted into an empty table that has the same structure as the original table:
INSERT INTO t_copy SELECT * FROM t WHERE ... ;
Use RENAME TABLE
to atomically
move the original table out of the way and rename the copy to
the original name:
RENAME TABLE t TO t_old, t_copy TO t;
Drop the original table:
DROP TABLE t_old;
No other sessions can access the tables involved while
RENAME TABLE
executes, so the
rename operation is not subject to concurrency problems. See
Section 13.1.33, “RENAME TABLE Statement”.
In MyISAM
tables, deleted rows are maintained
in a linked list and subsequent
INSERT
operations reuse old row
positions. To reclaim unused space and reduce file sizes, use the
OPTIMIZE TABLE
statement or the
myisamchk utility to reorganize tables.
OPTIMIZE TABLE
is easier to use,
but myisamchk is faster. See
Section 13.7.2.4, “OPTIMIZE TABLE Statement”, and Section 4.6.3, “myisamchk — MyISAM Table-Maintenance Utility”.
The QUICK
modifier affects whether index leaves
are merged for delete operations. DELETE QUICK
is most useful for applications where index values for deleted
rows are replaced by similar index values from rows inserted
later. In this case, the holes left by deleted values are reused.
DELETE QUICK
is not useful when deleted values
lead to underfilled index blocks spanning a range of index values
for which new inserts occur again. In this case, use of
QUICK
can lead to wasted space in the index
that remains unreclaimed. Here is an example of such a scenario:
In this scenario, the index blocks associated with the deleted
index values become underfilled but are not merged with other
index blocks due to the use of QUICK
. They
remain underfilled when new inserts occur, because new rows do not
have index values in the deleted range. Furthermore, they remain
underfilled even if you later use
DELETE
without
QUICK
, unless some of the deleted index values
happen to lie in index blocks within or adjacent to the
underfilled blocks. To reclaim unused index space under these
circumstances, use OPTIMIZE TABLE
.
If you are going to delete many rows from a table, it might be
faster to use DELETE QUICK
followed by
OPTIMIZE TABLE
. This rebuilds the
index rather than performing many index block merge operations.
You can specify multiple tables in a
DELETE
statement to delete rows
from one or more tables depending on the condition in the
WHERE
clause. You cannot use ORDER
BY
or LIMIT
in a multiple-table
DELETE
. The
table_references
clause lists the
tables involved in the join, as described in
Section 13.2.9.2, “JOIN Clause”.
For the first multiple-table syntax, only matching rows from the
tables listed before the FROM
clause are
deleted. For the second multiple-table syntax, only matching rows
from the tables listed in the FROM
clause
(before the USING
clause) are deleted. The
effect is that you can delete rows from many tables at the same
time and have additional tables that are used only for searching:
DELETE t1, t2 FROM t1 INNER JOIN t2 INNER JOIN t3 WHERE t1.id=t2.id AND t2.id=t3.id;
Or:
DELETE FROM t1, t2 USING t1 INNER JOIN t2 INNER JOIN t3 WHERE t1.id=t2.id AND t2.id=t3.id;
These statements use all three tables when searching for rows to
delete, but delete matching rows only from tables
t1
and t2
.
The preceding examples use INNER JOIN
, but
multiple-table DELETE
statements
can use other types of join permitted in
SELECT
statements, such as
LEFT JOIN
. For example, to delete rows that
exist in t1
that have no match in
t2
, use a LEFT JOIN
:
DELETE t1 FROM t1 LEFT JOIN t2 ON t1.id=t2.id WHERE t2.id IS NULL;
The syntax permits .*
after each
tbl_name
for compatibility with
Access.
If you use a multiple-table DELETE
statement involving InnoDB
tables for which
there are foreign key constraints, the MySQL optimizer might
process tables in an order that differs from that of their
parent/child relationship. In this case, the statement fails and
rolls back. Instead, you should delete from a single table and
rely on the ON DELETE
capabilities that
InnoDB
provides to cause the other tables to be
modified accordingly.
If you declare an alias for a table, you must use the alias when referring to the table:
DELETE t1 FROM test AS t1, test2 WHERE ...
Table aliases in a multiple-table
DELETE
should be declared only in
the table_references
part of the
statement. Elsewhere, alias references are permitted but not alias
declarations.
Correct:
DELETE a1, a2 FROM t1 AS a1 INNER JOIN t2 AS a2 WHERE a1.id=a2.id; DELETE FROM a1, a2 USING t1 AS a1 INNER JOIN t2 AS a2 WHERE a1.id=a2.id;
Incorrect:
DELETE t1 AS a1, t2 AS a2 FROM t1 INNER JOIN t2 WHERE a1.id=a2.id; DELETE FROM t1 AS a1, t2 AS a2 USING t1 INNER JOIN t2 WHERE a1.id=a2.id;
DOexpr
[,expr
] ...
DO
executes the expressions but
does not return any results. In most respects,
DO
is shorthand for SELECT
, but has the
advantage that it is slightly faster when you do not care about
the result.
expr
, ...
DO
is useful primarily with
functions that have side effects, such as
RELEASE_LOCK()
.
Example: This SELECT
statement
pauses, but also produces a result set:
mysql> SELECT SLEEP(5);
+----------+
| SLEEP(5) |
+----------+
| 0 |
+----------+
1 row in set (5.02 sec)
DO
, on the other hand, pauses
without producing a result set.:
mysql> DO SLEEP(5);
Query OK, 0 rows affected (4.99 sec)
This could be useful, for example in a stored function or trigger, which prohibit statements that produce result sets.
DO
only executes expressions. It
cannot be used in all cases where SELECT
can be
used. For example, DO id FROM t1
is invalid
because it references a table.
HANDLERtbl_name
OPEN [ [AS]alias
] HANDLERtbl_name
READindex_name
{ = | <= | >= | < | > } (value1
,value2
,...) [ WHEREwhere_condition
] [LIMIT ... ] HANDLERtbl_name
READindex_name
{ FIRST | NEXT | PREV | LAST } [ WHEREwhere_condition
] [LIMIT ... ] HANDLERtbl_name
READ { FIRST | NEXT } [ WHEREwhere_condition
] [LIMIT ... ] HANDLERtbl_name
CLOSE
The HANDLER
statement provides direct access to
table storage engine interfaces. It is available for
InnoDB
and MyISAM
tables.
The HANDLER ... OPEN
statement opens a table,
making it accessible using subsequent HANDLER ...
READ
statements. This table object is not shared by
other sessions and is not closed until the session calls
HANDLER ... CLOSE
or the session terminates.
If you open the table using an alias, further references to the
open table with other HANDLER
statements must
use the alias rather than the table name. If you do not use an
alias, but open the table using a table name qualified by the
database name, further references must use the unqualified table
name. For example, for a table opened using
mydb.mytable
, further references must use
mytable
.
The first HANDLER ... READ
syntax fetches a row
where the index specified satisfies the given values and the
WHERE
condition is met. If you have a
multiple-column index, specify the index column values as a
comma-separated list. Either specify values for all the columns in
the index, or specify values for a leftmost prefix of the index
columns. Suppose that an index my_idx
includes
three columns named col_a
,
col_b
, and col_c
, in that
order. The HANDLER
statement can specify values
for all three columns in the index, or for the columns in a
leftmost prefix. For example:
HANDLER ... READ my_idx = (col_a_val,col_b_val,col_c_val) ... HANDLER ... READ my_idx = (col_a_val,col_b_val) ... HANDLER ... READ my_idx = (col_a_val) ...
To employ the HANDLER
interface to refer to a
table's PRIMARY KEY
, use the quoted identifier
`PRIMARY`
:
HANDLER tbl_name
READ `PRIMARY` ...
The second HANDLER ... READ
syntax fetches a
row from the table in index order that matches the
WHERE
condition.
The third HANDLER ... READ
syntax fetches a row
from the table in natural row order that matches the
WHERE
condition. It is faster than
HANDLER
when a full table
scan is desired. Natural row order is the order in which rows are
stored in a tbl_name
READ
index_name
MyISAM
table data file. This
statement works for InnoDB
tables as well, but
there is no such concept because there is no separate data file.
Without a LIMIT
clause, all forms of
HANDLER ... READ
fetch a single row if one is
available. To return a specific number of rows, include a
LIMIT
clause. It has the same syntax as for the
SELECT
statement. See
Section 13.2.9, “SELECT Statement”.
HANDLER ... CLOSE
closes a table that was
opened with HANDLER ... OPEN
.
There are several reasons to use the HANDLER
interface instead of normal SELECT
statements:
HANDLER
is faster than
SELECT
:
A designated storage engine handler object is allocated
for the HANDLER ... OPEN
. The object is
reused for subsequent HANDLER
statements for that table; it need not be reinitialized
for each one.
There is less parsing involved.
There is no optimizer or query-checking overhead.
The handler interface does not have to provide a
consistent look of the data (for example,
dirty reads are
permitted), so the storage engine can use optimizations
that SELECT
does not
normally permit.
HANDLER
makes it easier to port to MySQL
applications that use a low-level ISAM
-like
interface. (See Section 14.21, “InnoDB memcached Plugin” for an
alternative way to adapt applications that use the key-value
store paradigm.)
HANDLER
enables you to traverse a database
in a manner that is difficult (or even impossible) to
accomplish with SELECT
. The
HANDLER
interface is a more natural way to
look at data when working with applications that provide an
interactive user interface to the database.
HANDLER
is a somewhat low-level statement. For
example, it does not provide consistency. That is,
HANDLER ... OPEN
does not
take a snapshot of the table, and does not
lock the table. This means that after a HANDLER ...
OPEN
statement is issued, table data can be modified (by
the current session or other sessions) and these modifications
might be only partially visible to HANDLER ...
NEXT
or HANDLER ... PREV
scans.
An open handler can be closed and marked for reopen, in which case the handler loses its position in the table. This occurs when both of the following circumstances are true:
Any session executes FLUSH
TABLES
or DDL statements on the handler's table.
The session in which the handler is open executes
non-HANDLER
statements that use tables.
TRUNCATE TABLE
for a table closes
all handlers for the table that were opened with
HANDLER OPEN
.
If a table is flushed with
FLUSH
TABLES
was opened with tbl_name
WITH READ
LOCKHANDLER
, the
handler is implicitly flushed and loses its position.
INSERT [LOW_PRIORITY | DELAYED | HIGH_PRIORITY] [IGNORE] [INTO]tbl_name
[PARTITION (partition_name
[,partition_name
] ...)] [(col_name
[,col_name
] ...)] {VALUES | VALUE} (value_list
) [, (value_list
)] ... [ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATEassignment_list
] INSERT [LOW_PRIORITY | DELAYED | HIGH_PRIORITY] [IGNORE] [INTO]tbl_name
[PARTITION (partition_name
[,partition_name
] ...)] SETassignment_list
[ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATEassignment_list
] INSERT [LOW_PRIORITY | HIGH_PRIORITY] [IGNORE] [INTO]tbl_name
[PARTITION (partition_name
[,partition_name
] ...)] [(col_name
[,col_name
] ...)] SELECT ... [ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATEassignment_list
]value
: {expr
| DEFAULT}value_list
:value
[,value
] ...assignment
:col_name
=value
assignment_list
:assignment
[,assignment
] ...
INSERT
inserts new rows into an
existing table. The INSERT
... VALUES
and
INSERT ... SET
forms of the statement insert rows based on explicitly specified
values. The INSERT
... SELECT
form inserts rows selected from another table
or tables. INSERT
with an
ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE
clause enables existing
rows to be updated if a row to be inserted would cause a duplicate
value in a UNIQUE
index or PRIMARY
KEY
.
For additional information about
INSERT ...
SELECT
and
INSERT ... ON
DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE
, see
Section 13.2.5.1, “INSERT ... SELECT Statement”, and
Section 13.2.5.2, “INSERT ... ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE Statement”.
In MySQL 5.7, the DELAYED
keyword
is accepted but ignored by the server. For the reasons for this,
see Section 13.2.5.3, “INSERT DELAYED Statement”,
Inserting into a table requires the
INSERT
privilege for the table. If
the ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE
clause is used and
a duplicate key causes an UPDATE
to
be performed instead, the statement requires the
UPDATE
privilege for the columns to
be updated. For columns that are read but not modified you need
only the SELECT
privilege (such as
for a column referenced only on the right hand side of an
col_name
=expr
assignment in an ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE
clause).
When inserting into a partitioned table, you can control which
partitions and subpartitions accept new rows. The
PARTITION
option takes a list of the
comma-separated names of one or more partitions or subpartitions
(or both) of the table. If any of the rows to be inserted by a
given INSERT
statement do not match
one of the partitions listed, the
INSERT
statement fails with the
error Found a row not matching the given partition
set. For more information and examples, see
Section 22.5, “Partition Selection”.
You can use REPLACE
instead of
INSERT
to overwrite old rows.
REPLACE
is the counterpart to
INSERT IGNORE
in
the treatment of new rows that contain unique key values that
duplicate old rows: The new rows replace the old rows rather than
being discarded. See Section 13.2.8, “REPLACE Statement”.
tbl_name
is the table into which rows
should be inserted. Specify the columns for which the statement
provides values as follows:
Provide a parenthesized list of comma-separated column names
following the table name. In this case, a value for each named
column must be provided by the VALUES
list
or the SELECT
statement.
If you do not specify a list of column names for
INSERT ...
VALUES
or
INSERT ...
SELECT
, values for every column in the table must be
provided by the VALUES
list or the
SELECT
statement. If you do not
know the order of the columns in the table, use
DESCRIBE
to find out.
tbl_name
A SET
clause indicates columns explicitly
by name, together with the value to assign each one.
Column values can be given in several ways:
If strict SQL mode is not enabled, any column not explicitly given a value is set to its default (explicit or implicit) value. For example, if you specify a column list that does not name all the columns in the table, unnamed columns are set to their default values. Default value assignment is described in Section 11.6, “Data Type Default Values”. See also Section 1.8.3.3, “Constraints on Invalid Data”.
If strict SQL mode is enabled, an
INSERT
statement generates an
error if it does not specify an explicit value for every
column that has no default value. See
Section 5.1.10, “Server SQL Modes”.
If both the column list and the VALUES
list
are empty, INSERT
creates a row
with each column set to its default value:
INSERT INTO tbl_name
() VALUES();
If strict mode is not enabled, MySQL uses the implicit default value for any column that has no explicitly defined default. If strict mode is enabled, an error occurs if any column has no default value.
Use the keyword DEFAULT
to set a column
explicitly to its default value. This makes it easier to write
INSERT
statements that assign
values to all but a few columns, because it enables you to
avoid writing an incomplete VALUES
list
that does not include a value for each column in the table.
Otherwise, you must provide the list of column names
corresponding to each value in the VALUES
list.
If a generated column is inserted into explicitly, the only
permitted value is DEFAULT
. For information
about generated columns, see
Section 13.1.18.8, “CREATE TABLE and Generated Columns”.
In expressions, you can use
DEFAULT(
to produce the default value for column
col_name
)col_name
.
Type conversion of an expression
expr
that provides a column value
might occur if the expression data type does not match the
column data type. Conversion of a given value can result in
different inserted values depending on the column type. For
example, inserting the string '1999.0e-2'
into an INT
,
FLOAT
,
DECIMAL(10,6)
, or
YEAR
column inserts the value
1999
, 19.9921
,
19.992100
, or 1999
,
respectively. The value stored in the
INT
and
YEAR
columns is
1999
because the string-to-number
conversion looks only at as much of the initial part of the
string as may be considered a valid integer or year. For the
FLOAT
and
DECIMAL
columns, the
string-to-number conversion considers the entire string a
valid numeric value.
An expression expr
can refer to any
column that was set earlier in a value list. For example, you
can do this because the value for col2
refers to col1
, which has previously been
assigned:
INSERT INTO tbl_name
(col1,col2) VALUES(15,col1*2);
But the following is not legal, because the value for
col1
refers to col2
,
which is assigned after col1
:
INSERT INTO tbl_name
(col1,col2) VALUES(col2*2,15);
An exception occurs for columns that contain
AUTO_INCREMENT
values. Because
AUTO_INCREMENT
values are generated after
other value assignments, any reference to an
AUTO_INCREMENT
column in the assignment
returns a 0
.
INSERT
statements that use
VALUES
syntax can insert multiple rows. To do
this, include multiple lists of comma-separated column values,
with lists enclosed within parentheses and separated by commas.
Example:
INSERT INTO tbl_name
(a,b,c) VALUES(1,2,3),(4,5,6),(7,8,9);
Each values list must contain exactly as many values as are to be inserted per row. The following statement is invalid because it contains one list of nine values, rather than three lists of three values each:
INSERT INTO tbl_name
(a,b,c) VALUES(1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9);
VALUE
is a synonym for
VALUES
in this context. Neither implies
anything about the number of values lists, nor about the number of
values per list. Either may be used whether there is a single
values list or multiple lists, and regardless of the number of
values per list.
The affected-rows value for an
INSERT
can be obtained using the
ROW_COUNT()
SQL function or the
mysql_affected_rows()
C API
function. See Section 12.15, “Information Functions”, and
Section 27.7.6.1, “mysql_affected_rows()”.
If you use an INSERT ...
VALUES
statement with multiple value lists or
INSERT ...
SELECT
, the statement returns an information string in
this format:
Records:N1
Duplicates:N2
Warnings:N3
If you are using the C API, the information string can be obtained
by invoking the mysql_info()
function. See Section 27.7.6.36, “mysql_info()”.
Records
indicates the number of rows processed
by the statement. (This is not necessarily the number of rows
actually inserted because Duplicates
can be
nonzero.) Duplicates
indicates the number of
rows that could not be inserted because they would duplicate some
existing unique index value. Warnings
indicates
the number of attempts to insert column values that were
problematic in some way. Warnings can occur under any of the
following conditions:
Inserting NULL
into a column that has been
declared NOT NULL
. For multiple-row
INSERT
statements or
INSERT INTO ...
SELECT
statements, the column is set to the implicit
default value for the column data type. This is
0
for numeric types, the empty string
(''
) for string types, and the
“zero” value for date and time types.
INSERT INTO ...
SELECT
statements are handled the same way as
multiple-row inserts because the server does not examine the
result set from the SELECT
to
see whether it returns a single row. (For a single-row
INSERT
, no warning occurs when
NULL
is inserted into a NOT
NULL
column. Instead, the statement fails with an
error.)
Setting a numeric column to a value that lies outside the column's range. The value is clipped to the closest endpoint of the range.
Assigning a value such as '10.34 a'
to a
numeric column. The trailing nonnumeric text is stripped off
and the remaining numeric part is inserted. If the string
value has no leading numeric part, the column is set to
0
.
Inserting a string into a string column
(CHAR
,
VARCHAR
,
TEXT
, or
BLOB
) that exceeds the column's
maximum length. The value is truncated to the column's maximum
length.
Inserting a value into a date or time column that is illegal for the data type. The column is set to the appropriate zero value for the type.
For INSERT
examples involving
AUTO_INCREMET
column values, see
Section 3.6.9, “Using AUTO_INCREMENT”.
If INSERT
inserts a row into a
table that has an AUTO_INCREMENT
column,
you can find the value used for that column by using the
LAST_INSERT_ID()
SQL function
or the mysql_insert_id()
C API
function.
These two functions do not always behave identically. The
behavior of INSERT
statements
with respect to AUTO_INCREMENT
columns is
discussed further in
Section 12.15, “Information Functions”, and
Section 27.7.6.38, “mysql_insert_id()”.
The INSERT
statement supports the
following modifiers:
If you use the LOW_PRIORITY
modifier,
execution of the INSERT
is
delayed until no other clients are reading from the table.
This includes other clients that began reading while existing
clients are reading, and while the INSERT
LOW_PRIORITY
statement is waiting. It is possible,
therefore, for a client that issues an INSERT
LOW_PRIORITY
statement to wait for a very long time.
LOW_PRIORITY
affects only storage engines
that use only table-level locking (such as
MyISAM
, MEMORY
, and
MERGE
).
LOW_PRIORITY
should normally not be used
with MyISAM
tables because doing so
disables concurrent inserts. See
Section 8.11.3, “Concurrent Inserts”.
If you specify HIGH_PRIORITY
, it overrides
the effect of the
--low-priority-updates
option
if the server was started with that option. It also causes
concurrent inserts not to be used. See
Section 8.11.3, “Concurrent Inserts”.
HIGH_PRIORITY
affects only storage engines
that use only table-level locking (such as
MyISAM
, MEMORY
, and
MERGE
).
If you use the IGNORE
modifier, errors that
occur while executing the
INSERT
statement are ignored.
For example, without IGNORE
, a row that
duplicates an existing UNIQUE
index or
PRIMARY KEY
value in the table causes a
duplicate-key error and the statement is aborted. With
IGNORE
, the row is discarded and no error
occurs. Ignored errors generate warnings instead.
IGNORE
has a similar effect on inserts into
partitioned tables where no partition matching a given value
is found. Without IGNORE
, such
INSERT
statements are aborted
with an error. When
INSERT
IGNORE
is used, the insert operation fails silently
for rows containing the unmatched value, but inserts rows that
are matched. For an example, see
Section 22.2.2, “LIST Partitioning”.
Data conversions that would trigger errors abort the statement
if IGNORE
is not specified. With
IGNORE
, invalid values are adjusted to the
closest values and inserted; warnings are produced but the
statement does not abort. You can determine with the
mysql_info()
C API function
how many rows were actually inserted into the table.
For more information, see Comparison of the IGNORE Keyword and Strict SQL Mode.
If you specify ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE
, and
a row is inserted that would cause a duplicate value in a
UNIQUE
index or PRIMARY
KEY
, an UPDATE
of the
old row occurs. The affected-rows value per row is 1 if the
row is inserted as a new row, 2 if an existing row is updated,
and 0 if an existing row is set to its current values. If you
specify the CLIENT_FOUND_ROWS
flag to the
mysql_real_connect()
C API
function when connecting to mysqld, the
affected-rows value is 1 (not 0) if an existing row is set to
its current values. See Section 13.2.5.2, “INSERT ... ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE Statement”.
INSERT DELAYED
was deprecated
in MySQL 5.6, and is scheduled for eventual removal. In MySQL
5.7, the DELAYED
modifier is
accepted but ignored. Use INSERT
(without
DELAYED
) instead. See
Section 13.2.5.3, “INSERT DELAYED Statement”.
An INSERT
statement affecting a partitioned
table using a storage engine such as
MyISAM
that employs table-level locks
locks only those partitions into which rows are actually inserted.
(For storage engines such as InnoDB
that employ row-level locking, no locking of partitions takes
place.) For more information, see
Section 22.6.4, “Partitioning and Locking”.
INSERT [LOW_PRIORITY | HIGH_PRIORITY] [IGNORE] [INTO]tbl_name
[PARTITION (partition_name
[,partition_name
] ...)] [(col_name
[,col_name
] ...)] SELECT ... [ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATEassignment_list
]value
: {expr
| DEFAULT}assignment
:col_name
=value
assignment_list
:assignment
[,assignment
] ...
With INSERT ...
SELECT
, you can quickly insert many rows into a table
from the result of a SELECT
statement, which can select from one or many tables. For
example:
INSERT INTO tbl_temp2 (fld_id) SELECT tbl_temp1.fld_order_id FROM tbl_temp1 WHERE tbl_temp1.fld_order_id > 100;
The following conditions hold for
INSERT ...
SELECT
statements:
Specify IGNORE
to ignore rows that would
cause duplicate-key violations.
The target table of the
INSERT
statement may appear
in the FROM
clause of the
SELECT
part of the query.
However, you cannot insert into a table and select from the
same table in a subquery.
When selecting from and inserting into the same table, MySQL
creates an internal temporary table to hold the rows from
the SELECT
and then inserts
those rows into the target table. However, you cannot use
INSERT INTO t ... SELECT ... FROM t
when
t
is a TEMPORARY
table, because TEMPORARY
tables cannot be
referred to twice in the same statement. See
Section 8.4.4, “Internal Temporary Table Use in MySQL”, and
Section B.4.6.2, “TEMPORARY Table Problems”.
AUTO_INCREMENT
columns work as usual.
To ensure that the binary log can be used to re-create the
original tables, MySQL does not permit concurrent inserts
for INSERT
... SELECT
statements (see
Section 8.11.3, “Concurrent Inserts”).
To avoid ambiguous column reference problems when the
SELECT
and the
INSERT
refer to the same
table, provide a unique alias for each table used in the
SELECT
part, and qualify
column names in that part with the appropriate alias.
You can explicitly select which partitions or subpartitions (or
both) of the source or target table (or both) are to be used
with a PARTITION
option following the name of
the table. When PARTITION
is used with the
name of the source table in the
SELECT
portion of the statement,
rows are selected only from the partitions or subpartitions
named in its partition list. When PARTITION
is used with the name of the target table for the
INSERT
portion of the statement,
it must be possible to insert all rows selected into the
partitions or subpartitions named in the partition list
following the option. Otherwise, the INSERT ...
SELECT
statement fails. For more information and
examples, see Section 22.5, “Partition Selection”.
For INSERT
... SELECT
statements, see
Section 13.2.5.2, “INSERT ... ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE Statement” for conditions under which
the SELECT
columns can be
referred to in an ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE
clause.
The order in which a SELECT
statement with no ORDER BY
clause returns
rows is nondeterministic. This means that, when using
replication, there is no guarantee that such a
SELECT
returns rows in the same
order on the master and the slave, which can lead to
inconsistencies between them. To prevent this from occurring,
always write INSERT ... SELECT
statements
that are to be replicated using an ORDER BY
clause that produces the same row order on the master and the
slave. See also Section 16.4.1.17, “Replication and LIMIT”.
Due to this issue,
INSERT ...
SELECT ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE
and
INSERT IGNORE ...
SELECT
statements are flagged as unsafe for
statement-based replication. Such statements produce a warning
in the error log when using statement-based mode and are written
to the binary log using the row-based format when using
MIXED
mode. (Bug #11758262, Bug #50439)
See also Section 16.2.1.1, “Advantages and Disadvantages of Statement-Based and Row-Based Replication”.
An INSERT ... SELECT
statement affecting
partitioned tables using a storage engine such as
MyISAM
that employs table-level
locks locks all partitions of the target table; however, only
those partitions that are actually read from the source table
are locked. (This does not occur with tables using storage
engines such as InnoDB
that employ
row-level locking.) For more information, see
Section 22.6.4, “Partitioning and Locking”.
If you specify an ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE
clause and a row to be inserted would cause a duplicate value in
a UNIQUE
index or PRIMARY
KEY
, an UPDATE
of the
old row occurs. For example, if column a
is
declared as UNIQUE
and contains the value
1
, the following two statements have similar
effect:
INSERT INTO t1 (a,b,c) VALUES (1,2,3) ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE c=c+1; UPDATE t1 SET c=c+1 WHERE a=1;
(The effects are not identical for an InnoDB
table where a
is an auto-increment column.
With an auto-increment column, an INSERT
statement increases the auto-increment value but
UPDATE
does not.)
If column b
is also unique, the
INSERT
is equivalent to this
UPDATE
statement instead:
UPDATE t1 SET c=c+1 WHERE a=1 OR b=2 LIMIT 1;
If a=1 OR b=2
matches several rows, only
one row is updated. In general, you should
try to avoid using an ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE
clause on tables with multiple unique indexes.
With ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE
, the
affected-rows value per row is 1 if the row is inserted as a new
row, 2 if an existing row is updated, and 0 if an existing row
is set to its current values. If you specify the
CLIENT_FOUND_ROWS
flag to the
mysql_real_connect()
C API
function when connecting to mysqld, the
affected-rows value is 1 (not 0) if an existing row is set to
its current values.
If a table contains an AUTO_INCREMENT
column
and INSERT
... ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE
inserts or updates a row,
the LAST_INSERT_ID()
function
returns the AUTO_INCREMENT
value.
The ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE
clause can
contain multiple column assignments, separated by commas.
In assignment value expressions in the ON DUPLICATE KEY
UPDATE
clause, you can use the
VALUES(
function to refer to column values from the
col_name
)INSERT
portion of the
INSERT ...
ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE
statement. In other words,
VALUES(
in the col_name
)ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE
clause refers
to the value of col_name
that would
be inserted, had no duplicate-key conflict occurred. This
function is especially useful in multiple-row inserts. The
VALUES()
function is meaningful
only in the ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE
clause or
INSERT
statements and returns
NULL
otherwise. Example:
INSERT INTO t1 (a,b,c) VALUES (1,2,3),(4,5,6) ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE c=VALUES(a)+VALUES(b);
That statement is identical to the following two statements:
INSERT INTO t1 (a,b,c) VALUES (1,2,3) ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE c=3; INSERT INTO t1 (a,b,c) VALUES (4,5,6) ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE c=9;
For INSERT
... SELECT
statements, these rules apply regarding
acceptable forms of SELECT
query expressions
that you can refer to in an ON DUPLICATE KEY
UPDATE
clause:
References to columns from queries on a single table, which may be a derived table.
References to columns from queries on a join over multiple tables.
References to columns from DISTINCT
queries.
References to columns in other tables, as long as the
SELECT
does not use
GROUP BY
. One side effect is that you
must qualify references to nonunique column names.
References to columns from a
UNION
do not work reliably. To
work around this restriction, rewrite the
UNION
as a derived table so that
its rows can be treated as a single-table result set. For
example, this statement can produce incorrect results:
INSERT INTO t1 (a, b) SELECT c, d FROM t2 UNION SELECT e, f FROM t3 ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE b = b + c;
Instead, use an equivalent statement that rewrites the
UNION
as a derived table:
INSERT INTO t1 (a, b) SELECT * FROM (SELECT c, d FROM t2 UNION SELECT e, f FROM t3) AS dt ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE b = b + c;
The technique of rewriting a query as a derived table also
enables references to columns from GROUP BY
queries.
Because the results of
INSERT ...
SELECT
statements depend on the ordering of rows from
the SELECT
and this order cannot
always be guaranteed, it is possible when logging
INSERT ...
SELECT ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE
statements for the
master and the slave to diverge. Thus,
INSERT ...
SELECT ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE
statements are flagged
as unsafe for statement-based replication. Such statements
produce a warning in the error log when using statement-based
mode and are written to the binary log using the row-based
format when using MIXED
mode. An
INSERT ...
ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE
statement against a table
having more than one unique or primary key is also marked as
unsafe. (Bug #11765650, Bug #58637)
See also Section 16.2.1.1, “Advantages and Disadvantages of Statement-Based and Row-Based Replication”.
An INSERT ... ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE
on a
partitioned table using a storage engine such as
MyISAM
that employs table-level
locks locks any partitions of the table in which a partitioning
key column is updated. (This does not occur with tables using
storage engines such as InnoDB
that
employ row-level locking.) For more information, see
Section 22.6.4, “Partitioning and Locking”.
INSERT DELAYED ...
The DELAYED
option for the
INSERT
statement is a MySQL
extension to standard SQL. In previous versions of MySQL, it can
be used for certain kinds of tables (such as
MyISAM
), such that when a client uses
INSERT DELAYED
, it gets an okay
from the server at once, and the row is queued to be inserted
when the table is not in use by any other thread.
DELAYED
inserts and replaces were deprecated
in MySQL 5.6. In MySQL 5.7,
DELAYED
is not supported. The server
recognizes but ignores the DELAYED
keyword,
handles the insert as a nondelayed insert, and generates an
ER_WARN_LEGACY_SYNTAX_CONVERTED
warning
(“INSERT DELAYED is no longer supported. The statement was
converted to INSERT”). The DELAYED
keyword is scheduled for removal in a future release.
LOAD DATA [LOW_PRIORITY | CONCURRENT] [LOCAL] INFILE 'file_name
' [REPLACE | IGNORE] INTO TABLEtbl_name
[PARTITION (partition_name
[,partition_name
] ...)] [CHARACTER SETcharset_name
] [{FIELDS | COLUMNS} [TERMINATED BY 'string
'] [[OPTIONALLY] ENCLOSED BY 'char
'] [ESCAPED BY 'char
'] ] [LINES [STARTING BY 'string
'] [TERMINATED BY 'string
'] ] [IGNOREnumber
{LINES | ROWS}] [(col_name_or_user_var
[,col_name_or_user_var
] ...)] [SETcol_name
={expr
| DEFAULT}, [,col_name
={expr
| DEFAULT}] ...]
The LOAD DATA
statement reads rows
from a text file into a table at a very high speed.
LOAD DATA
is the complement of
SELECT ... INTO
OUTFILE
. (See Section 13.2.9.1, “SELECT ... INTO Statement”.) To write
data from a table to a file, use
SELECT ... INTO
OUTFILE
. To read the file back into a table, use
LOAD DATA
. The syntax of the
FIELDS
and LINES
clauses is
the same for both statements.
You can also load data files by using the
mysqlimport utility; see
Section 4.5.5, “mysqlimport — A Data Import Program”. mysqlimport
operates by sending a LOAD DATA
statement to the server.
For more information about the efficiency of
INSERT
versus
LOAD DATA
and speeding up
LOAD DATA
, see
Section 8.2.4.1, “Optimizing INSERT Statements”.
LOAD DATA
supports explicit
partition selection using the PARTITION
option with a list of one or more comma-separated names of
partitions, subpartitions, or both. When this option is used, if
any rows from the file cannot be inserted into any of the
partitions or subpartitions named in the list, the statement
fails with the error Found a row not matching the
given partition set. For more information and
examples, see Section 22.5, “Partition Selection”.
For partitioned tables using storage engines that employ table
locks, such as MyISAM
,
LOAD DATA
cannot prune any
partition locks. This does not apply to tables using storage
engines that employ row-level locking, such as
InnoDB
. For more information, see
Section 22.6.4, “Partitioning and Locking”.
The file name must be given as a literal string. On Windows,
specify backslashes in path names as forward slashes or doubled
backslashes. The
character_set_filesystem
system
variable controls the interpretation of the file name character
set.
The server uses the character set indicated by the
character_set_database
system
variable to interpret the information in the file.
SET NAMES
and the setting of
character_set_client
do not
affect interpretation of input. If the contents of the input
file use a character set that differs from the default, it is
usually preferable to specify the character set of the file by
using the CHARACTER SET
clause. A character
set of binary
specifies “no
conversion.”
LOAD DATA
interprets all fields
in the file as having the same character set, regardless of the
data types of the columns into which field values are loaded.
For proper interpretation of file contents, you must ensure that
it was written with the correct character set. For example, if
you write a data file with mysqldump -T or by
issuing a SELECT
... INTO OUTFILE
statement in
mysql, be sure to use a
--default-character-set
option so that output
is written in the character set to be used when the file is
loaded with LOAD DATA
.
It is not possible to load data files that use the
ucs2
, utf16
,
utf16le
, or utf32
character set.
If you use the LOW_PRIORITY
modifier,
execution of the LOAD DATA
statement is delayed until no other clients are reading from the
table. This affects only storage engines that use only
table-level locking (such as MyISAM
,
MEMORY
, and MERGE
).
If you specify the CONCURRENT
modifier with a
MyISAM
table that satisfies the condition for
concurrent inserts (that is, it contains no free blocks in the
middle), other threads can retrieve data from the table while
LOAD DATA
is executing. This
modifier affects the performance of LOAD
DATA
a bit, even if no other thread is using the table
at the same time.
For information about LOAD DATA
in relation to replication, see
Section 16.4.1.18, “Replication and LOAD DATA”.
The LOCAL
modifier affects expected location
of the file and error handling, as described later.
LOCAL
works only if your server and your
client both have been configured to permit it. For example, if
mysqld was started with the
local_infile
system variable
disabled, LOCAL
does not work. See
Section 6.1.6, “Security Issues with LOAD DATA LOCAL”.
The LOCAL
modifier affects where the file is
expected to be found:
If LOCAL
is specified, the file is read
by the client program on the client host and sent to the
server. The file can be given as a full path name to specify
its exact location. If given as a relative path name, the
name is interpreted relative to the directory in which the
client program was started.
When using LOCAL
with
LOAD DATA
, a copy of the file
is created in the directory where the MySQL server stores
temporary files. See Section B.4.3.5, “Where MySQL Stores Temporary Files”. Lack
of sufficient space for the copy in this directory can cause
the LOAD DATA
LOCAL
statement to fail.
If LOCAL
is not specified, the file must
be located on the server host and is read directly by the
server. The server uses the following rules to locate the
file:
If the file name is an absolute path name, the server uses it as given.
If the file name is a relative path name with one or more leading components, the server searches for the file relative to the server's data directory.
If a file name with no leading components is given, the server looks for the file in the database directory of the default database.
In the non-LOCAL
case, these rules mean that
a file named as ./myfile.txt
is read from
the server's data directory, whereas the file named as
myfile.txt
is read from the database
directory of the default database. For example, if
db1
is the default database, the following
LOAD DATA
statement reads the
file data.txt
from the database directory
for db1
, even though the statement explicitly
loads the file into a table in the db2
database:
LOAD DATA INFILE 'data.txt' INTO TABLE db2.my_table;
Non-LOCAL
load operations read text files
located on the server. For security reasons, such operations
require that you have the FILE
privilege. See Section 6.2.2, “Privileges Provided by MySQL”. Also,
non-LOCAL
load operations are subject to the
secure_file_priv
system
variable setting. If the variable value is a nonempty directory
name, the file to be loaded must be located in that directory.
If the variable value is empty (which is insecure), the file
need only be readable by the server.
Using LOCAL
is a bit slower than letting the
server access the files directly, because the file contents must
be sent over the connection by the client to the server. On the
other hand, you do not need the
FILE
privilege to load local
files.
LOCAL
also affects error handling:
With LOAD DATA
,
data-interpretation and duplicate-key errors terminate the
operation.
With LOAD DATA
LOCAL
, data-interpretation and duplicate-key
errors become warnings and the operation continues because
the server has no way to stop transmission of the file in
the middle of the operation. For duplicate-key errors, this
is the same as if IGNORE
is specified.
IGNORE
is explained further later in this
section.
The REPLACE
and IGNORE
modifiers control handling of input rows that duplicate existing
rows on unique key values:
If you specify REPLACE
, input rows
replace existing rows. In other words, rows that have the
same value for a primary key or unique index as an existing
row. See Section 13.2.8, “REPLACE Statement”.
If you specify IGNORE
, rows that
duplicate an existing row on a unique key value are
discarded. For more information, see
Comparison of the IGNORE Keyword and Strict SQL Mode.
If you do not specify either modifier, the behavior depends
on whether the LOCAL
modifier is
specified. Without LOCAL
, an error occurs
when a duplicate key value is found, and the rest of the
text file is ignored. With LOCAL
, the
default behavior is the same as if IGNORE
is specified; this is because the server has no way to stop
transmission of the file in the middle of the operation.
To ignore foreign key constraints during the load operation,
execute a SET foreign_key_checks = 0
statement before executing LOAD
DATA
.
If you use LOAD DATA
on an empty
MyISAM
table, all nonunique indexes are
created in a separate batch (as for REPAIR
TABLE
). Normally, this makes LOAD
DATA
much faster when you have many indexes. In some
extreme cases, you can create the indexes even faster by turning
them off with ALTER
TABLE ... DISABLE KEYS
before loading the file into
the table and using
ALTER TABLE ...
ENABLE KEYS
to re-create the indexes after loading the
file. See Section 8.2.4.1, “Optimizing INSERT Statements”.
For both the LOAD DATA
and
SELECT ... INTO
OUTFILE
statements, the syntax of the
FIELDS
and LINES
clauses
is the same. Both clauses are optional, but
FIELDS
must precede LINES
if both are specified.
If you specify a FIELDS
clause, each of its
subclauses (TERMINATED BY
,
[OPTIONALLY] ENCLOSED BY
, and
ESCAPED BY
) is also optional, except that you
must specify at least one of them. Arguments to these clauses
are permitted to contain only ASCII characters.
If you specify no FIELDS
or
LINES
clause, the defaults are the same as if
you had written this:
FIELDS TERMINATED BY '\t' ENCLOSED BY '' ESCAPED BY '\\' LINES TERMINATED BY '\n' STARTING BY ''
Backslash is the MySQL escape character within strings in SQL
statements. Thus, to specify a literal backslash, you must
specify two backslashes for the value to be interpreted as a
single backslash. The escape sequences '\t'
and '\n'
specify tab and newline characters,
respectively.
In other words, the defaults cause LOAD
DATA
to act as follows when reading input:
Look for line boundaries at newlines.
Do not skip any line prefix.
Break lines into fields at tabs.
Do not expect fields to be enclosed within any quoting characters.
Interpret characters preceded by the escape character
\
as escape sequences. For example,
\t
, \n
, and
\\
signify tab, newline, and backslash,
respectively. See the discussion of FIELDS ESCAPED
BY
later for the full list of escape sequences.
Conversely, the defaults cause
SELECT ... INTO
OUTFILE
to act as follows when writing output:
Write tabs between fields.
Do not enclose fields within any quoting characters.
Use \
to escape instances of tab,
newline, or \
that occur within field
values.
Write newlines at the ends of lines.
For a text file generated on a Windows system, proper file
reading might require LINES TERMINATED BY
'\r\n'
because Windows programs typically use two
characters as a line terminator. Some programs, such as
WordPad, might use \r
as
a line terminator when writing files. To read such files, use
LINES TERMINATED BY '\r'
.
If all the input lines have a common prefix that you want to
ignore, you can use LINES STARTING BY
'
to skip the
prefix and anything before it. If a line
does not include the prefix, the entire line is skipped. Suppose
that you issue the following statement:
prefix_string
'
LOAD DATA INFILE '/tmp/test.txt' INTO TABLE test FIELDS TERMINATED BY ',' LINES STARTING BY 'xxx';
If the data file looks like this:
xxx"abc",1 something xxx"def",2 "ghi",3
The resulting rows will be ("abc",1)
and
("def",2)
. The third row in the file is
skipped because it does not contain the prefix.
The IGNORE
option can be used to ignore lines at the start
of the file. For example, you can use number
LINESIGNORE 1
LINES
to skip an initial header line containing column
names:
LOAD DATA INFILE '/tmp/test.txt' INTO TABLE test IGNORE 1 LINES;
When you use SELECT
... INTO OUTFILE
in tandem with
LOAD DATA
to write data from a
database into a file and then read the file back into the
database later, the field- and line-handling options for both
statements must match. Otherwise, LOAD
DATA
will not interpret the contents of the file
properly. Suppose that you use
SELECT ... INTO
OUTFILE
to write a file with fields delimited by
commas:
SELECT * INTO OUTFILE 'data.txt' FIELDS TERMINATED BY ',' FROM table2;
To read the comma-delimited file, the correct statement would be:
LOAD DATA INFILE 'data.txt' INTO TABLE table2 FIELDS TERMINATED BY ',';
If instead you tried to read the file with the statement shown
following, it wouldn't work because it instructs
LOAD DATA
to look for tabs
between fields:
LOAD DATA INFILE 'data.txt' INTO TABLE table2 FIELDS TERMINATED BY '\t';
The likely result is that each input line would be interpreted as a single field.
LOAD DATA
can be used to read
files obtained from external sources. For example, many programs
can export data in comma-separated values (CSV) format, such
that lines have fields separated by commas and enclosed within
double quotation marks, with an initial line of column names. If
the lines in such a file are terminated by carriage
return/newline pairs, the statement shown here illustrates the
field- and line-handling options you would use to load the file:
LOAD DATA INFILE 'data.txt' INTO TABLE tbl_name
FIELDS TERMINATED BY ',' ENCLOSED BY '"'
LINES TERMINATED BY '\r\n'
IGNORE 1 LINES;
If the input values are not necessarily enclosed within
quotation marks, use OPTIONALLY
before the
ENCLOSED BY
option.
Any of the field- or line-handling options can specify an empty
string (''
). If not empty, the
FIELDS [OPTIONALLY] ENCLOSED BY
and
FIELDS ESCAPED BY
values must be a single
character. The FIELDS TERMINATED BY
,
LINES STARTING BY
, and LINES
TERMINATED BY
values can be more than one character.
For example, to write lines that are terminated by carriage
return/linefeed pairs, or to read a file containing such lines,
specify a LINES TERMINATED BY '\r\n'
clause.
To read a file containing jokes that are separated by lines
consisting of %%
, you can do this
CREATE TABLE jokes (a INT NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT PRIMARY KEY, joke TEXT NOT NULL); LOAD DATA INFILE '/tmp/jokes.txt' INTO TABLE jokes FIELDS TERMINATED BY '' LINES TERMINATED BY '\n%%\n' (joke);
FIELDS [OPTIONALLY] ENCLOSED BY
controls
quoting of fields. For output
(SELECT ... INTO
OUTFILE
), if you omit the word
OPTIONALLY
, all fields are enclosed by the
ENCLOSED BY
character. An example of such
output (using a comma as the field delimiter) is shown here:
"1","a string","100.20" "2","a string containing a , comma","102.20" "3","a string containing a \" quote","102.20" "4","a string containing a \", quote and comma","102.20"
If you specify OPTIONALLY
, the
ENCLOSED BY
character is used only to enclose
values from columns that have a string data type (such as
CHAR
,
BINARY
,
TEXT
, or
ENUM
):
1,"a string",100.20 2,"a string containing a , comma",102.20 3,"a string containing a \" quote",102.20 4,"a string containing a \", quote and comma",102.20
Occurrences of the ENCLOSED BY
character
within a field value are escaped by prefixing them with the
ESCAPED BY
character. Also, if you specify an
empty ESCAPED BY
value, it is possible to
inadvertently generate output that cannot be read properly by
LOAD DATA
. For example, the
preceding output just shown would appear as follows if the
escape character is empty. Observe that the second field in the
fourth line contains a comma following the quote, which
(erroneously) appears to terminate the field:
1,"a string",100.20 2,"a string containing a , comma",102.20 3,"a string containing a " quote",102.20 4,"a string containing a ", quote and comma",102.20
For input, the ENCLOSED BY
character, if
present, is stripped from the ends of field values. (This is
true regardless of whether OPTIONALLY
is
specified; OPTIONALLY
has no effect on input
interpretation.) Occurrences of the ENCLOSED
BY
character preceded by the ESCAPED
BY
character are interpreted as part of the current
field value.
If the field begins with the ENCLOSED BY
character, instances of that character are recognized as
terminating a field value only if followed by the field or line
TERMINATED BY
sequence. To avoid ambiguity,
occurrences of the ENCLOSED BY
character
within a field value can be doubled and are interpreted as a
single instance of the character. For example, if
ENCLOSED BY '"'
is specified, quotation marks
are handled as shown here:
"The ""BIG"" boss" -> The "BIG" boss The "BIG" boss -> The "BIG" boss The ""BIG"" boss -> The ""BIG"" boss
FIELDS ESCAPED BY
controls how to read or
write special characters:
For input, if the FIELDS ESCAPED BY
character is not empty, occurrences of that character are
stripped and the following character is taken literally as
part of a field value. Some two-character sequences that are
exceptions, where the first character is the escape
character. These sequences are shown in the following table
(using \
for the escape character). The
rules for NULL
handling are described
later in this section.
For more information about \
-escape
syntax, see Section 9.1.1, “String Literals”.
If the FIELDS ESCAPED BY
character is
empty, escape-sequence interpretation does not occur.
For output, if the FIELDS ESCAPED BY
character is not empty, it is used to prefix the following
characters on output:
The FIELDS ESCAPED BY
character.
The FIELDS [OPTIONALLY] ENCLOSED BY
character.
The first character of the FIELDS TERMINATED
BY
and LINES TERMINATED BY
values, if the ENCLOSED BY
character
is empty or unspecified.
ASCII 0
(what is actually written
following the escape character is ASCII
0
, not a zero-valued byte).
If the FIELDS ESCAPED BY
character is
empty, no characters are escaped and NULL
is output as NULL
, not
\N
. It is probably not a good idea to
specify an empty escape character, particularly if field
values in your data contain any of the characters in the
list just given.
In certain cases, field- and line-handling options interact:
If LINES TERMINATED BY
is an empty string
and FIELDS TERMINATED BY
is nonempty,
lines are also terminated with FIELDS TERMINATED
BY
.
If the FIELDS TERMINATED BY
and
FIELDS ENCLOSED BY
values are both empty
(''
), a fixed-row (nondelimited) format
is used. With fixed-row format, no delimiters are used
between fields (but you can still have a line terminator).
Instead, column values are read and written using a field
width wide enough to hold all values in the field. For
TINYINT
,
SMALLINT
,
MEDIUMINT
,
INT
, and
BIGINT
, the field widths are
4, 6, 8, 11, and 20, respectively, no matter what the
declared display width is.
LINES TERMINATED BY
is still used to
separate lines. If a line does not contain all fields, the
rest of the columns are set to their default values. If you
do not have a line terminator, you should set this to
''
. In this case, the text file must
contain all fields for each row.
Fixed-row format also affects handling of
NULL
values, as described later.
Fixed-size format does not work if you are using a multibyte character set.
Handling of NULL
values varies according to
the FIELDS
and LINES
options in use:
For the default FIELDS
and
LINES
values, NULL
is
written as a field value of \N
for
output, and a field value of \N
is read
as NULL
for input (assuming that the
ESCAPED BY
character is
\
).
If FIELDS ENCLOSED BY
is not empty, a
field containing the literal word NULL
as
its value is read as a NULL
value. This
differs from the word NULL
enclosed
within FIELDS ENCLOSED BY
characters,
which is read as the string 'NULL'
.
If FIELDS ESCAPED BY
is empty,
NULL
is written as the word
NULL
.
With fixed-row format (which is used when FIELDS
TERMINATED BY
and FIELDS ENCLOSED
BY
are both empty), NULL
is
written as an empty string. This causes both
NULL
values and empty strings in the
table to be indistinguishable when written to the file
because both are written as empty strings. If you need to be
able to tell the two apart when reading the file back in,
you should not use fixed-row format.
An attempt to load NULL
into a NOT
NULL
column causes assignment of the implicit default
value for the column's data type and a warning, or an error in
strict SQL mode. Implicit default values are discussed in
Section 11.6, “Data Type Default Values”.
Some cases are not supported by LOAD
DATA
:
Fixed-size rows (FIELDS TERMINATED BY
and
FIELDS ENCLOSED BY
both empty) and
BLOB
or
TEXT
columns.
If you specify one separator that is the same as or a prefix
of another, LOAD DATA
cannot
interpret the input properly. For example, the following
FIELDS
clause would cause problems:
FIELDS TERMINATED BY '"' ENCLOSED BY '"'
If FIELDS ESCAPED BY
is empty, a field
value that contains an occurrence of FIELDS
ENCLOSED BY
or LINES TERMINATED
BY
followed by the FIELDS TERMINATED
BY
value causes LOAD
DATA
to stop reading a field or line too early.
This happens because LOAD
DATA
cannot properly determine where the field or
line value ends.
The following example loads all columns of the
persondata
table:
LOAD DATA INFILE 'persondata.txt' INTO TABLE persondata;
By default, when no column list is provided at the end of the
LOAD DATA
statement, input lines
are expected to contain a field for each table column. If you
want to load only some of a table's columns, specify a column
list:
LOAD DATA INFILE 'persondata.txt' INTO TABLE persondata (col_name_or_user_var
[,col_name_or_user_var
] ...);
You must also specify a column list if the order of the fields in the input file differs from the order of the columns in the table. Otherwise, MySQL cannot tell how to match input fields with table columns.
Each col_name_or_user_var
value is
either a column name or a user variable. With user variables,
the SET
clause enables you to perform
preprocessing transformations on their values before assigning
the result to columns.
User variables in the SET
clause can be used
in several ways. The following example uses the first input
column directly for the value of t1.column1
,
and assigns the second input column to a user variable that is
subjected to a division operation before being used for the
value of t1.column2
:
LOAD DATA INFILE 'file.txt' INTO TABLE t1 (column1, @var1) SET column2 = @var1/100;
The SET
clause can be used to supply values
not derived from the input file. The following statement sets
column3
to the current date and time:
LOAD DATA INFILE 'file.txt' INTO TABLE t1 (column1, column2) SET column3 = CURRENT_TIMESTAMP;
You can also discard an input value by assigning it to a user variable and not assigning the variable to a table column:
LOAD DATA INFILE 'file.txt' INTO TABLE t1 (column1, @dummy, column2, @dummy, column3);
Use of the column/variable list and SET
clause is subject to the following restrictions:
Assignments in the SET
clause should have
only column names on the left hand side of assignment
operators.
You can use subqueries in the right hand side of
SET
assignments. A subquery that returns
a value to be assigned to a column may be a scalar subquery
only. Also, you cannot use a subquery to select from the
table that is being loaded.
Lines ignored by an IGNORE
clause are not
processed for the column/variable list or
SET
clause.
User variables cannot be used when loading data with fixed-row format because user variables do not have a display width.
When processing an input line, LOAD
DATA
splits it into fields and uses the values
according to the column/variable list and the
SET
clause, if they are present. Then the
resulting row is inserted into the table. If there are
BEFORE INSERT
or AFTER
INSERT
triggers for the table, they are activated
before or after inserting the row, respectively.
If an input line has too many fields, the extra fields are ignored and the number of warnings is incremented.
If an input line has too few fields, the table columns for which input fields are missing are set to their default values. Default value assignment is described in Section 11.6, “Data Type Default Values”.
An empty field value is interpreted different from a missing field:
For string types, the column is set to the empty string.
For numeric types, the column is set to
0
.
For date and time types, the column is set to the appropriate “zero” value for the type. See Section 11.2, “Date and Time Data Types”.
These are the same values that result if you assign an empty
string explicitly to a string, numeric, or date or time type
explicitly in an INSERT
or
UPDATE
statement.
Treatment of empty or incorrect field values differs from that
just described if the SQL mode is set to a restrictive value.
For example, if sql_mode
is set
to TRADITIONAL
, conversion of
an empty value or a value such as 'x'
for a
numeric column results in an error, not conversion to 0. (With
LOCAL
or IGNORE
, warnings
occur rather than errors, even with a restrictive
sql_mode
value, and the row is
inserted using the same closest-value behavior used for
nonrestrictive SQL modes. This occurs because the server has no
way to stop transmission of the file in the middle of the
operation.)
TIMESTAMP
columns are set to the
current date and time only if there is a NULL
value for the column (that is, \N
) and the
column is not declared to permit NULL
values,
or if the TIMESTAMP
column's
default value is the current timestamp and it is omitted from
the field list when a field list is specified.
LOAD DATA
regards all input as
strings, so you cannot use numeric values for
ENUM
or
SET
columns the way you can with
INSERT
statements. All
ENUM
and
SET
values must be specified as
strings.
BIT
values cannot be loaded
directly using binary notation (for example,
b'011010'
). To work around this, use the
SET
clause to strip off the leading
b'
and trailing '
and
perform a base-2 to base-10 conversion so that MySQL loads the
values into the BIT
column
properly:
shell>cat /tmp/bit_test.txt
b'10' b'1111111' shell>mysql test
mysql>LOAD DATA INFILE '/tmp/bit_test.txt'
INTO TABLE bit_test (@var1)
SET b = CAST(CONV(MID(@var1, 3, LENGTH(@var1)-3), 2, 10) AS UNSIGNED);
Query OK, 2 rows affected (0.00 sec) Records: 2 Deleted: 0 Skipped: 0 Warnings: 0 mysql>SELECT BIN(b+0) FROM bit_test;
+----------+ | BIN(b+0) | +----------+ | 10 | | 1111111 | +----------+ 2 rows in set (0.00 sec)
For BIT
values in
0b
binary notation (for example,
0b011010
), use this SET
clause instead to strip off the leading 0b
:
SET b = CAST(CONV(MID(@var1, 3, LENGTH(@var1)-2), 2, 10) AS UNSIGNED)
When the LOAD DATA
statement
finishes, it returns an information string in the following
format:
Records: 1 Deleted: 0 Skipped: 0 Warnings: 0
Warnings occur under the same circumstances as when values are
inserted using the INSERT
statement (see Section 13.2.5, “INSERT Statement”), except that
LOAD DATA
also generates warnings
when there are too few or too many fields in the input row.
You can use SHOW WARNINGS
to get
a list of the first
max_error_count
warnings as
information about what went wrong. See
Section 13.7.5.40, “SHOW WARNINGS Statement”.
If you are using the C API, you can get information about the
statement by calling the
mysql_info()
function. See
Section 27.7.6.36, “mysql_info()”.
On Unix, if you need LOAD DATA
to
read from a pipe, you can use the following technique (the
example loads a listing of the /
directory
into the table db1.t1
):
mkfifo /mysql/data/db1/ls.dat chmod 666 /mysql/data/db1/ls.dat find / -ls > /mysql/data/db1/ls.dat & mysql -e "LOAD DATA INFILE 'ls.dat' INTO TABLE t1" db1
Here you must run the command that generates the data to be loaded and the mysql commands either on separate terminals, or run the data generation process in the background (as shown in the preceding example). If you do not do this, the pipe will block until data is read by the mysql process.
LOAD XML [LOW_PRIORITY | CONCURRENT] [LOCAL] INFILE 'file_name
' [REPLACE | IGNORE] INTO TABLE [db_name
.]tbl_name
[CHARACTER SETcharset_name
] [ROWS IDENTIFIED BY '<tagname
>'] [IGNOREnumber
{LINES | ROWS}] [(field_name_or_user_var
[,field_name_or_user_var
] ...)] [SETcol_name
={expr
| DEFAULT}, [,col_name
={expr
| DEFAULT}] ...]
The LOAD XML
statement reads data
from an XML file into a table. The
file_name
must be given as a literal
string. The tagname
in the optional
ROWS IDENTIFIED BY
clause must also be given as
a literal string, and must be surrounded by angle brackets
(<
and >
).
LOAD XML
acts as the complement of
running the mysql client in XML output mode
(that is, starting the client with the
--xml
option). To write data from a
table to an XML file, you can invoke the mysql
client with the --xml
and
-e
options from
the system shell, as shown here:
shell> mysql --xml -e 'SELECT * FROM mydb.mytable' > file.xml
To read the file back into a table, use LOAD
XML
. By default, the <row>
element is considered to be the equivalent of a database table
row; this can be changed using the ROWS IDENTIFIED
BY
clause.
This statement supports three different XML formats:
Column names as attributes and column values as attribute values:
<row
column1
="value1
"column2
="value2
" .../>
Column names as tags and column values as the content of these tags:
<row
> <column1
>value1
</column1
> <column2
>value2
</column2
> </row
>
Column names are the name
attributes of
<field>
tags, and values are the
contents of these tags:
<row> <field name='column1
'>value1
</field> <field name='column2
'>value2
</field> </row>
This is the format used by other MySQL tools, such as mysqldump.
All three formats can be used in the same XML file; the import routine automatically detects the format for each row and interprets it correctly. Tags are matched based on the tag or attribute name and the column name.
The following clauses work essentially the same way for
LOAD XML
as they do for
LOAD DATA
:
LOW_PRIORITY
or
CONCURRENT
LOCAL
REPLACE
or IGNORE
CHARACTER SET
SET
See Section 13.2.6, “LOAD DATA Statement”, for more information about these clauses.
(
is a list of one or more comma-separated XML fields
or user variables. The name of a user variable used for this
purpose must match the name of a field from the XML file, prefixed
with field_name_or_user_var
,
...)@
. You can use field names to select only
desired fields. User variables can be employed to store the
corresponding field values for subsequent re-use.
The IGNORE
or number
LINESIGNORE
clause causes the
first number
ROWSnumber
rows in the XML file to be
skipped. It is analogous to the LOAD
DATA
statement's IGNORE ... LINES
clause.
Suppose that we have a table named person
,
created as shown here:
USE test; CREATE TABLE person ( person_id INT NOT NULL PRIMARY KEY, fname VARCHAR(40) NULL, lname VARCHAR(40) NULL, created TIMESTAMP );
Suppose further that this table is initially empty.
Now suppose that we have a simple XML file
person.xml
, whose contents are as shown here:
<list> <person person_id="1" fname="Kapek" lname="Sainnouine"/> <person person_id="2" fname="Sajon" lname="Rondela"/> <person person_id="3"><fname>Likame</fname><lname>Örrtmons</lname></person> <person person_id="4"><fname>Slar</fname><lname>Manlanth</lname></person> <person><field name="person_id">5</field><field name="fname">Stoma</field> <field name="lname">Milu</field></person> <person><field name="person_id">6</field><field name="fname">Nirtam</field> <field name="lname">Sklöd</field></person> <person person_id="7"><fname>Sungam</fname><lname>Dulbåd</lname></person> <person person_id="8" fname="Sraref" lname="Encmelt"/> </list>
Each of the permissible XML formats discussed previously is represented in this example file.
To import the data in person.xml
into the
person
table, you can use this statement:
mysql>LOAD XML LOCAL INFILE 'person.xml'
->INTO TABLE person
->ROWS IDENTIFIED BY '<person>';
Query OK, 8 rows affected (0.00 sec) Records: 8 Deleted: 0 Skipped: 0 Warnings: 0
Here, we assume that person.xml
is located in
the MySQL data directory. If the file cannot be found, the
following error results:
ERROR 2 (HY000): File '/person.xml' not found (Errcode: 2)
The ROWS IDENTIFIED BY '<person>'
clause
means that each <person>
element in the
XML file is considered equivalent to a row in the table into which
the data is to be imported. In this case, this is the
person
table in the test
database.
As can be seen by the response from the server, 8 rows were
imported into the test.person
table. This can
be verified by a simple SELECT
statement:
mysql> SELECT * FROM person;
+-----------+--------+------------+---------------------+
| person_id | fname | lname | created |
+-----------+--------+------------+---------------------+
| 1 | Kapek | Sainnouine | 2007-07-13 16:18:47 |
| 2 | Sajon | Rondela | 2007-07-13 16:18:47 |
| 3 | Likame | Örrtmons | 2007-07-13 16:18:47 |
| 4 | Slar | Manlanth | 2007-07-13 16:18:47 |
| 5 | Stoma | Nilu | 2007-07-13 16:18:47 |
| 6 | Nirtam | Sklöd | 2007-07-13 16:18:47 |
| 7 | Sungam | Dulbåd | 2007-07-13 16:18:47 |
| 8 | Sreraf | Encmelt | 2007-07-13 16:18:47 |
+-----------+--------+------------+---------------------+
8 rows in set (0.00 sec)
This shows, as stated earlier in this section, that any or all of
the 3 permitted XML formats may appear in a single file and be
read using LOAD XML
.
The inverse of the import operation just shown—that is, dumping MySQL table data into an XML file—can be accomplished using the mysql client from the system shell, as shown here:
shell>mysql --xml -e "SELECT * FROM test.person" > person-dump.xml
shell>cat person-dump.xml
<?xml version="1.0"?> <resultset statement="SELECT * FROM test.person" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance"> <row> <field name="person_id">1</field> <field name="fname">Kapek</field> <field name="lname">Sainnouine</field> </row> <row> <field name="person_id">2</field> <field name="fname">Sajon</field> <field name="lname">Rondela</field> </row> <row> <field name="person_id">3</field> <field name="fname">Likema</field> <field name="lname">Örrtmons</field> </row> <row> <field name="person_id">4</field> <field name="fname">Slar</field> <field name="lname">Manlanth</field> </row> <row> <field name="person_id">5</field> <field name="fname">Stoma</field> <field name="lname">Nilu</field> </row> <row> <field name="person_id">6</field> <field name="fname">Nirtam</field> <field name="lname">Sklöd</field> </row> <row> <field name="person_id">7</field> <field name="fname">Sungam</field> <field name="lname">Dulbåd</field> </row> <row> <field name="person_id">8</field> <field name="fname">Sreraf</field> <field name="lname">Encmelt</field> </row> </resultset>
The --xml
option causes the
mysql client to use XML formatting for its
output; the -e
option causes the client to execute the SQL statement
immediately following the option. See Section 4.5.1, “mysql — The MySQL Command-Line Client”.
You can verify that the dump is valid by creating a copy of the
person
table and importing the dump file into
the new table, like this:
mysql>USE test;
mysql>CREATE TABLE person2 LIKE person;
Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.00 sec) mysql>LOAD XML LOCAL INFILE 'person-dump.xml'
->INTO TABLE person2;
Query OK, 8 rows affected (0.01 sec) Records: 8 Deleted: 0 Skipped: 0 Warnings: 0 mysql>SELECT * FROM person2;
+-----------+--------+------------+---------------------+ | person_id | fname | lname | created | +-----------+--------+------------+---------------------+ | 1 | Kapek | Sainnouine | 2007-07-13 16:18:47 | | 2 | Sajon | Rondela | 2007-07-13 16:18:47 | | 3 | Likema | Örrtmons | 2007-07-13 16:18:47 | | 4 | Slar | Manlanth | 2007-07-13 16:18:47 | | 5 | Stoma | Nilu | 2007-07-13 16:18:47 | | 6 | Nirtam | Sklöd | 2007-07-13 16:18:47 | | 7 | Sungam | Dulbåd | 2007-07-13 16:18:47 | | 8 | Sreraf | Encmelt | 2007-07-13 16:18:47 | +-----------+--------+------------+---------------------+ 8 rows in set (0.00 sec)
There is no requirement that every field in the XML file be
matched with a column in the corresponding table. Fields which
have no corresponding columns are skipped. You can see this by
first emptying the person2
table and dropping
the created
column, then using the same
LOAD XML
statement we just employed
previously, like this:
mysql>TRUNCATE person2;
Query OK, 8 rows affected (0.26 sec) mysql>ALTER TABLE person2 DROP COLUMN created;
Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.52 sec) Records: 0 Duplicates: 0 Warnings: 0 mysql>SHOW CREATE TABLE person2\G
*************************** 1. row *************************** Table: person2 Create Table: CREATE TABLE `person2` ( `person_id` int(11) NOT NULL, `fname` varchar(40) DEFAULT NULL, `lname` varchar(40) DEFAULT NULL, PRIMARY KEY (`person_id`) ) ENGINE=InnoDB DEFAULT CHARSET=utf8 1 row in set (0.00 sec) mysql>LOAD XML LOCAL INFILE 'person-dump.xml'
->INTO TABLE person2;
Query OK, 8 rows affected (0.01 sec) Records: 8 Deleted: 0 Skipped: 0 Warnings: 0 mysql>SELECT * FROM person2;
+-----------+--------+------------+ | person_id | fname | lname | +-----------+--------+------------+ | 1 | Kapek | Sainnouine | | 2 | Sajon | Rondela | | 3 | Likema | Örrtmons | | 4 | Slar | Manlanth | | 5 | Stoma | Nilu | | 6 | Nirtam | Sklöd | | 7 | Sungam | Dulbåd | | 8 | Sreraf | Encmelt | +-----------+--------+------------+ 8 rows in set (0.00 sec)
The order in which the fields are given within each row of the XML
file does not affect the operation of LOAD
XML
; the field order can vary from row to row, and is
not required to be in the same order as the corresponding columns
in the table.
As mentioned previously, you can use a
(
list of one or more XML fields (to select desired
fields only) or user variables (to store the corresponding field
values for later use). User variables can be especially useful
when you want to insert data from an XML file into table columns
whose names do not match those of the XML fields. To see how this
works, we first create a table named field_name_or_user_var
,
...)individual
whose structure matches that of the person
table, but whose columns are named differently:
mysql>CREATE TABLE individual (
->individual_id INT NOT NULL PRIMARY KEY,
->name1 VARCHAR(40) NULL,
->name2 VARCHAR(40) NULL,
->made TIMESTAMP
-> ); Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.42 sec)
In this case, you cannot simply load the XML file directly into the table, because the field and column names do not match:
mysql> LOAD XML INFILE '../bin/person-dump.xml' INTO TABLE test.individual;
ERROR 1263 (22004): Column set to default value; NULL supplied to NOT NULL column 'individual_id' at row 1
This happens because the MySQL server looks for field names
matching the column names of the target table. You can work around
this problem by selecting the field values into user variables,
then setting the target table's columns equal to the values
of those variables using SET
. You can perform
both of these operations in a single statement, as shown here:
mysql>LOAD XML INFILE '../bin/person-dump.xml'
->INTO TABLE test.individual (@person_id, @fname, @lname, @created)
->SET individual_id=@person_id, name1=@fname, name2=@lname, made=@created;
Query OK, 8 rows affected (0.05 sec) Records: 8 Deleted: 0 Skipped: 0 Warnings: 0 mysql>SELECT * FROM individual;
+---------------+--------+------------+---------------------+ | individual_id | name1 | name2 | made | +---------------+--------+------------+---------------------+ | 1 | Kapek | Sainnouine | 2007-07-13 16:18:47 | | 2 | Sajon | Rondela | 2007-07-13 16:18:47 | | 3 | Likema | Örrtmons | 2007-07-13 16:18:47 | | 4 | Slar | Manlanth | 2007-07-13 16:18:47 | | 5 | Stoma | Nilu | 2007-07-13 16:18:47 | | 6 | Nirtam | Sklöd | 2007-07-13 16:18:47 | | 7 | Sungam | Dulbåd | 2007-07-13 16:18:47 | | 8 | Srraf | Encmelt | 2007-07-13 16:18:47 | +---------------+--------+------------+---------------------+ 8 rows in set (0.00 sec)
The names of the user variables must match
those of the corresponding fields from the XML file, with the
addition of the required @
prefix to indicate
that they are variables. The user variables need not be listed or
assigned in the same order as the corresponding fields.
Using a ROWS IDENTIFIED BY
'<
clause, it
is possible to import data from the same XML file into database
tables with different definitions. For this example, suppose that
you have a file named tagname
>'address.xml
which
contains the following XML:
<?xml version="1.0"?> <list> <person person_id="1"> <fname>Robert</fname> <lname>Jones</lname> <address address_id="1" street="Mill Creek Road" zip="45365" city="Sidney"/> <address address_id="2" street="Main Street" zip="28681" city="Taylorsville"/> </person> <person person_id="2"> <fname>Mary</fname> <lname>Smith</lname> <address address_id="3" street="River Road" zip="80239" city="Denver"/> <!-- <address address_id="4" street="North Street" zip="37920" city="Knoxville"/> --> </person> </list>
You can again use the test.person
table as
defined previously in this section, after clearing all the
existing records from the table and then showing its structure as
shown here:
mysql<TRUNCATE person;
Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.04 sec) mysql<SHOW CREATE TABLE person\G
*************************** 1. row *************************** Table: person Create Table: CREATE TABLE `person` ( `person_id` int(11) NOT NULL, `fname` varchar(40) DEFAULT NULL, `lname` varchar(40) DEFAULT NULL, `created` timestamp NOT NULL DEFAULT CURRENT_TIMESTAMP ON UPDATE CURRENT_TIMESTAMP, PRIMARY KEY (`person_id`) ) ENGINE=MyISAM DEFAULT CHARSET=latin1 1 row in set (0.00 sec)
Now create an address
table in the
test
database using the following
CREATE TABLE
statement:
CREATE TABLE address ( address_id INT NOT NULL PRIMARY KEY, person_id INT NULL, street VARCHAR(40) NULL, zip INT NULL, city VARCHAR(40) NULL, created TIMESTAMP );
To import the data from the XML file into the
person
table, execute the following
LOAD XML
statement, which specifies
that rows are to be specified by the
<person>
element, as shown here;
mysql>LOAD XML LOCAL INFILE 'address.xml'
->INTO TABLE person
->ROWS IDENTIFIED BY '<person>';
Query OK, 2 rows affected (0.00 sec) Records: 2 Deleted: 0 Skipped: 0 Warnings: 0
You can verify that the records were imported using a
SELECT
statement:
mysql> SELECT * FROM person;
+-----------+--------+-------+---------------------+
| person_id | fname | lname | created |
+-----------+--------+-------+---------------------+
| 1 | Robert | Jones | 2007-07-24 17:37:06 |
| 2 | Mary | Smith | 2007-07-24 17:37:06 |
+-----------+--------+-------+---------------------+
2 rows in set (0.00 sec)
Since the <address>
elements in the XML
file have no corresponding columns in the
person
table, they are skipped.
To import the data from the <address>
elements into the address
table, use the
LOAD XML
statement shown here:
mysql>LOAD XML LOCAL INFILE 'address.xml'
->INTO TABLE address
->ROWS IDENTIFIED BY '<address>';
Query OK, 3 rows affected (0.00 sec) Records: 3 Deleted: 0 Skipped: 0 Warnings: 0
You can see that the data was imported using a
SELECT
statement such as this one:
mysql> SELECT * FROM address;
+------------+-----------+-----------------+-------+--------------+---------------------+
| address_id | person_id | street | zip | city | created |
+------------+-----------+-----------------+-------+--------------+---------------------+
| 1 | 1 | Mill Creek Road | 45365 | Sidney | 2007-07-24 17:37:37 |
| 2 | 1 | Main Street | 28681 | Taylorsville | 2007-07-24 17:37:37 |
| 3 | 2 | River Road | 80239 | Denver | 2007-07-24 17:37:37 |
+------------+-----------+-----------------+-------+--------------+---------------------+
3 rows in set (0.00 sec)
The data from the <address>
element that
is enclosed in XML comments is not imported. However, since there
is a person_id
column in the
address
table, the value of the
person_id
attribute from the parent
<person>
element for each
<address>
is
imported into the address
table.
Security Considerations.
As with the LOAD DATA
statement,
the transfer of the XML file from the client host to the server
host is initiated by the MySQL server. In theory, a patched
server could be built that would tell the client program to
transfer a file of the server's choosing rather than the file
named by the client in the LOAD
XML
statement. Such a server could access any file on
the client host to which the client user has read access.
In a Web environment, clients usually connect to MySQL from a Web
server. A user that can run any command against the MySQL server
can use LOAD XML
LOCAL
to read any files to which the Web server process
has read access. In this environment, the client with respect to
the MySQL server is actually the Web server, not the remote
program being run by the user who connects to the Web server.
You can disable loading of XML files from clients by starting the
server with --local-infile=0
or
--local-infile=OFF
. This option
can also be used when starting the mysql client
to disable LOAD XML
for the
duration of the client session.
To prevent a client from loading XML files from the server, do not
grant the FILE
privilege to the
corresponding MySQL user account, or revoke this privilege if the
client user account already has it.
Revoking the FILE
privilege (or
not granting it in the first place) keeps the user only from
executing the LOAD XML
statement
(as well as the LOAD_FILE()
function; it does not prevent the user from
executing LOAD XML
LOCAL
. To disallow this statement, you must start the
server or the client with --local-infile=OFF
.
In other words, the FILE
privilege affects only whether the client can read files on the
server; it has no bearing on whether the client can read files
on the local file system.
For partitioned tables using storage engines that employ table
locks, such as MyISAM
, any locks
caused by LOAD XML
perform locks on
all partitions of the table. This does not apply to tables using
storage engines which employ row-level locking, such as
InnoDB
. For more information, see
Section 22.6.4, “Partitioning and Locking”.
REPLACE [LOW_PRIORITY | DELAYED] [INTO]tbl_name
[PARTITION (partition_name
[,partition_name
] ...)] [(col_name
[,col_name
] ...)] {VALUES | VALUE} (value_list
) [, (value_list
)] ... REPLACE [LOW_PRIORITY | DELAYED] [INTO]tbl_name
[PARTITION (partition_name
[,partition_name
] ...)] SETassignment_list
REPLACE [LOW_PRIORITY | DELAYED] [INTO]tbl_name
[PARTITION (partition_name
[,partition_name
] ...)] [(col_name
[,col_name
] ...)] SELECT ...value
: {expr
| DEFAULT}value_list
:value
[,value
] ...assignment
:col_name
=value
assignment_list
:assignment
[,assignment
] ...
REPLACE
works exactly like
INSERT
, except that if an old row
in the table has the same value as a new row for a
PRIMARY KEY
or a UNIQUE
index, the old row is deleted before the new row is inserted. See
Section 13.2.5, “INSERT Statement”.
REPLACE
is a MySQL extension to the
SQL standard. It either inserts, or deletes
and inserts. For another MySQL extension to standard
SQL—that either inserts or
updates—see
Section 13.2.5.2, “INSERT ... ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE Statement”.
DELAYED
inserts and replaces were deprecated in
MySQL 5.6. In MySQL 5.7, DELAYED
is not supported. The server recognizes but ignores the
DELAYED
keyword, handles the replace as a
nondelayed replace, and generates an
ER_WARN_LEGACY_SYNTAX_CONVERTED
warning.
(“REPLACE DELAYED is no longer supported. The statement was
converted to REPLACE.”) The DELAYED
keyword will be removed in a future release.
REPLACE
makes sense only if a
table has a PRIMARY KEY
or
UNIQUE
index. Otherwise, it becomes
equivalent to INSERT
, because
there is no index to be used to determine whether a new row
duplicates another.
Values for all columns are taken from the values specified in the
REPLACE
statement. Any missing
columns are set to their default values, just as happens for
INSERT
. You cannot refer to values
from the current row and use them in the new row. If you use an
assignment such as SET
, the reference
to the column name on the right hand side is treated as
col_name
=
col_name
+ 1DEFAULT(
,
so the assignment is equivalent to col_name
)SET
.
col_name
=
DEFAULT(col_name
) + 1
To use REPLACE
, you must have both
the INSERT
and
DELETE
privileges for the table.
If a generated column is replaced explicitly, the only permitted
value is DEFAULT
. For information about
generated columns, see
Section 13.1.18.8, “CREATE TABLE and Generated Columns”.
REPLACE
supports explicit partition selection
using the PARTITION
keyword with a list of
comma-separated names of partitions, subpartitions, or both. As
with INSERT
, if it is not possible
to insert the new row into any of these partitions or
subpartitions, the REPLACE
statement fails with
the error Found a row not matching the given partition
set. For more information and examples, see
Section 22.5, “Partition Selection”.
The REPLACE
statement returns a
count to indicate the number of rows affected. This is the sum of
the rows deleted and inserted. If the count is 1 for a single-row
REPLACE
, a row was inserted and no
rows were deleted. If the count is greater than 1, one or more old
rows were deleted before the new row was inserted. It is possible
for a single row to replace more than one old row if the table
contains multiple unique indexes and the new row duplicates values
for different old rows in different unique indexes.
The affected-rows count makes it easy to determine whether
REPLACE
only added a row or whether
it also replaced any rows: Check whether the count is 1 (added) or
greater (replaced).
If you are using the C API, the affected-rows count can be
obtained using the
mysql_affected_rows()
function.
You cannot replace into a table and select from the same table in a subquery.
MySQL uses the following algorithm for
REPLACE
(and
LOAD DATA ...
REPLACE
):
Try to insert the new row into the table
While the insertion fails because a duplicate-key error occurs for a primary key or unique index:
Delete from the table the conflicting row that has the duplicate key value
Try again to insert the new row into the table
It is possible that in the case of a duplicate-key error, a
storage engine may perform the REPLACE
as an
update rather than a delete plus insert, but the semantics are the
same. There are no user-visible effects other than a possible
difference in how the storage engine increments
Handler_
status
variables.
xxx
Because the results of REPLACE ... SELECT
statements depend on the ordering of rows from the
SELECT
and this order cannot always
be guaranteed, it is possible when logging these statements for
the master and the slave to diverge. For this reason,
REPLACE ... SELECT
statements are flagged as
unsafe for statement-based replication. such statements produce a
warning in the error log when using statement-based mode and are
written to the binary log using the row-based format when using
MIXED
mode. See also
Section 16.2.1.1, “Advantages and Disadvantages of Statement-Based and Row-Based
Replication”.
When modifying an existing table that is not partitioned to
accommodate partitioning, or, when modifying the partitioning of
an already partitioned table, you may consider altering the
table's primary key (see
Section 22.6.1, “Partitioning Keys, Primary Keys, and Unique Keys”).
You should be aware that, if you do this, the results of
REPLACE
statements may be affected, just as
they would be if you modified the primary key of a nonpartitioned
table. Consider the table created by the following
CREATE TABLE
statement:
CREATE TABLE test ( id INT UNSIGNED NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT, data VARCHAR(64) DEFAULT NULL, ts TIMESTAMP NOT NULL DEFAULT CURRENT_TIMESTAMP ON UPDATE CURRENT_TIMESTAMP, PRIMARY KEY (id) );
When we create this table and run the statements shown in the mysql client, the result is as follows:
mysql>REPLACE INTO test VALUES (1, 'Old', '2014-08-20 18:47:00');
Query OK, 1 row affected (0.04 sec) mysql>REPLACE INTO test VALUES (1, 'New', '2014-08-20 18:47:42');
Query OK, 2 rows affected (0.04 sec) mysql>SELECT * FROM test;
+----+------+---------------------+ | id | data | ts | +----+------+---------------------+ | 1 | New | 2014-08-20 18:47:42 | +----+------+---------------------+ 1 row in set (0.00 sec)
Now we create a second table almost identical to the first, except that the primary key now covers 2 columns, as shown here (emphasized text):
CREATE TABLE test2 (
id INT UNSIGNED NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT,
data VARCHAR(64) DEFAULT NULL,
ts TIMESTAMP NOT NULL DEFAULT CURRENT_TIMESTAMP ON UPDATE CURRENT_TIMESTAMP,
PRIMARY KEY (id, ts)
);
When we run on test2
the same two
REPLACE
statements as we did on the original
test
table, we obtain a different result:
mysql>REPLACE INTO test2 VALUES (1, 'Old', '2014-08-20 18:47:00');
Query OK, 1 row affected (0.05 sec) mysql>REPLACE INTO test2 VALUES (1, 'New', '2014-08-20 18:47:42');
Query OK, 1 row affected (0.06 sec) mysql>SELECT * FROM test2;
+----+------+---------------------+ | id | data | ts | +----+------+---------------------+ | 1 | Old | 2014-08-20 18:47:00 | | 1 | New | 2014-08-20 18:47:42 | +----+------+---------------------+ 2 rows in set (0.00 sec)
This is due to the fact that, when run on
test2
, both the id
and
ts
column values must match those of an
existing row for the row to be replaced; otherwise, a row is
inserted.
A REPLACE
statement affecting a partitioned
table using a storage engine such as
MyISAM
that employs table-level locks
locks only those partitions containing rows that match the
REPLACE
statement WHERE
clause, as long as none of the table partitioning columns are
updated; otherwise the entire table is locked. (For storage
engines such as InnoDB
that employ
row-level locking, no locking of partitions takes place.) For more
information, see
Section 22.6.4, “Partitioning and Locking”.
SELECT [ALL | DISTINCT | DISTINCTROW ] [HIGH_PRIORITY] [STRAIGHT_JOIN] [SQL_SMALL_RESULT] [SQL_BIG_RESULT] [SQL_BUFFER_RESULT] [SQL_CACHE | SQL_NO_CACHE] [SQL_CALC_FOUND_ROWS]select_expr
[,select_expr
] ... [into_option
] [FROMtable_references
[PARTITIONpartition_list
]] [WHEREwhere_condition
] [GROUP BY {col_name
|expr
|position
} [ASC | DESC], ... [WITH ROLLUP]] [HAVINGwhere_condition
] [ORDER BY {col_name
|expr
|position
} [ASC | DESC], ...] [LIMIT {[offset
,]row_count
|row_count
OFFSEToffset
}] [PROCEDUREprocedure_name
(argument_list
)] [into_option
] [FOR UPDATE | LOCK IN SHARE MODE]into_option
: { INTO OUTFILE 'file_name
' [CHARACTER SETcharset_name
]export_options
| INTO DUMPFILE 'file_name
' | INTOvar_name
[,var_name
] ... }
SELECT
is used to retrieve rows
selected from one or more tables, and can include
UNION
statements and subqueries.
See Section 13.2.9.3, “UNION Clause”, and Section 13.2.10, “Subqueries”.
The most commonly used clauses of
SELECT
statements are these:
Each select_expr
indicates a column
that you want to retrieve. There must be at least one
select_expr
.
table_references
indicates the
table or tables from which to retrieve rows. Its syntax is
described in Section 13.2.9.2, “JOIN Clause”.
SELECT
supports explicit partition
selection using the PARTITION
with a list
of partitions or subpartitions (or both) following the name of
the table in a table_reference
(see
Section 13.2.9.2, “JOIN Clause”). In this case, rows are selected only
from the partitions listed, and any other partitions of the
table are ignored. For more information and examples, see
Section 22.5, “Partition Selection”.
SELECT ... PARTITION
from tables using
storage engines such as MyISAM
that perform table-level locks (and thus partition locks) lock
only the partitions or subpartitions named by the
PARTITION
option.
For more information, see Section 22.6.4, “Partitioning and Locking”.
The WHERE
clause, if given, indicates the
condition or conditions that rows must satisfy to be selected.
where_condition
is an expression
that evaluates to true for each row to be selected. The
statement selects all rows if there is no
WHERE
clause.
In the WHERE
expression, you can use any of
the functions and operators that MySQL supports, except for
aggregate (summary) functions. See
Section 9.5, “Expressions”, and
Chapter 12, Functions and Operators.
SELECT
can also be used to retrieve
rows computed without reference to any table.
For example:
mysql> SELECT 1 + 1;
-> 2
You are permitted to specify DUAL
as a dummy
table name in situations where no tables are referenced:
mysql> SELECT 1 + 1 FROM DUAL;
-> 2
DUAL
is purely for the convenience of people
who require that all SELECT
statements should have FROM
and possibly other
clauses. MySQL may ignore the clauses. MySQL does not require
FROM DUAL
if no tables are referenced.
In general, clauses used must be given in exactly the order shown
in the syntax description. For example, a
HAVING
clause must come after any
GROUP BY
clause and before any ORDER
BY
clause. The INTO
clause, if
present, can appear in any position indicated by the syntax
description, but within a given statement can appear only once,
not in multiple positions. For more information about
INTO
, see Section 13.2.9.1, “SELECT ... INTO Statement”.
The list of select_expr
terms comprises
the select list that indicates which columns to retrieve. Terms
specify a column or expression or can use
*
-shorthand:
A select list consisting only of a single unqualified
*
can be used as shorthand to select all
columns from all tables:
SELECT * FROM t1 INNER JOIN t2 ...
can
be used as a qualified shorthand to select all columns from
the named table:
tbl_name
.*
SELECT t1.*, t2.* FROM t1 INNER JOIN t2 ...
Use of an unqualified *
with other items in
the select list may produce a parse error. To avoid this
problem, use a qualified
reference
tbl_name
.*
SELECT AVG(score), t1.* FROM t1 ...
The following list provides additional information about other
SELECT
clauses:
A select_expr
can be given an alias
using AS
. The alias is
used as the expression's column name and can be used in
alias_name
GROUP BY
, ORDER BY
, or
HAVING
clauses. For example:
SELECT CONCAT(last_name,', ',first_name) AS full_name FROM mytable ORDER BY full_name;
The AS
keyword is optional when aliasing a
select_expr
with an identifier. The
preceding example could have been written like this:
SELECT CONCAT(last_name,', ',first_name) full_name FROM mytable ORDER BY full_name;
However, because the AS
is optional, a
subtle problem can occur if you forget the comma between two
select_expr
expressions: MySQL
interprets the second as an alias name. For example, in the
following statement, columnb
is treated as
an alias name:
SELECT columna columnb FROM mytable;
For this reason, it is good practice to be in the habit of
using AS
explicitly when specifying column
aliases.
It is not permissible to refer to a column alias in a
WHERE
clause, because the column value
might not yet be determined when the WHERE
clause is executed. See Section B.4.4.4, “Problems with Column Aliases”.
The FROM
clause
indicates the table or tables from which to retrieve rows. If
you name more than one table, you are performing a join. For
information on join syntax, see Section 13.2.9.2, “JOIN Clause”. For
each table specified, you can optionally specify an alias.
table_references
tbl_name
[[AS]alias
] [index_hint
]
The use of index hints provides the optimizer with information about how to choose indexes during query processing. For a description of the syntax for specifying these hints, see Section 8.9.4, “Index Hints”.
You can use SET
max_seeks_for_key=
as an alternative way to force MySQL to prefer key scans
instead of table scans. See
Section 5.1.7, “Server System Variables”.
value
You can refer to a table within the default database as
tbl_name
, or as
db_name
.tbl_name
to specify a database explicitly. You can refer to a column as
col_name
,
tbl_name
.col_name
,
or
db_name
.tbl_name
.col_name
.
You need not specify a tbl_name
or
db_name
.tbl_name
prefix for a column reference unless the reference would be
ambiguous. See Section 9.2.2, “Identifier Qualifiers”, for
examples of ambiguity that require the more explicit column
reference forms.
A table reference can be aliased using
or
tbl_name
AS
alias_name
tbl_name alias_name
. These
statements are equivalent:
SELECT t1.name, t2.salary FROM employee AS t1, info AS t2 WHERE t1.name = t2.name; SELECT t1.name, t2.salary FROM employee t1, info t2 WHERE t1.name = t2.name;
Columns selected for output can be referred to in
ORDER BY
and GROUP BY
clauses using column names, column aliases, or column
positions. Column positions are integers and begin with 1:
SELECT college, region, seed FROM tournament ORDER BY region, seed; SELECT college, region AS r, seed AS s FROM tournament ORDER BY r, s; SELECT college, region, seed FROM tournament ORDER BY 2, 3;
To sort in reverse order, add the DESC
(descending) keyword to the name of the column in the
ORDER BY
clause that you are sorting by.
The default is ascending order; this can be specified
explicitly using the ASC
keyword.
If ORDER BY
occurs within a subquery and
also is applied in the outer query, the outermost
ORDER BY
takes precedence. For example,
results for the following statement are sorted in descending
order, not ascending order:
(SELECT ... ORDER BY a) ORDER BY a DESC;
Use of column positions is deprecated because the syntax has been removed from the SQL standard.
MySQL extends the GROUP BY
clause so that
you can also specify ASC
and
DESC
after columns named in the clause.
However, this syntax is deprecated. To produce a given sort
order, provide an ORDER BY
clause.
If you use GROUP BY
, output rows are sorted
according to the GROUP BY
columns as if you
had an ORDER BY
for the same columns. To
avoid the overhead of sorting that GROUP BY
produces, add ORDER BY NULL
:
SELECT a, COUNT(b) FROM test_table GROUP BY a ORDER BY NULL;
Relying on implicit GROUP BY
sorting (that
is, sorting in the absence of ASC
or
DESC
designators) or explicit sorting for
GROUP BY
(that is, by using explicit
ASC
or DESC
designators
for GROUP BY
columns) is deprecated. To
produce a given sort order, provide an ORDER
BY
clause.
When you use ORDER BY
or GROUP
BY
to sort a column in a
SELECT
, the server sorts values
using only the initial number of bytes indicated by the
max_sort_length
system
variable.
MySQL extends the use of GROUP BY
to permit
selecting fields that are not mentioned in the GROUP
BY
clause. If you are not getting the results that
you expect from your query, please read the description of
GROUP BY
found in
Section 12.20, “Aggregate (GROUP BY) Functions”.
GROUP BY
permits a WITH
ROLLUP
modifier. See
Section 12.20.2, “GROUP BY Modifiers”.
The HAVING
clause is applied nearly last,
just before items are sent to the client, with no
optimization. (LIMIT
is applied after
HAVING
.)
The SQL standard requires that HAVING
must
reference only columns in the GROUP BY
clause or columns used in aggregate functions. However, MySQL
supports an extension to this behavior, and permits
HAVING
to refer to columns in the
SELECT
list and columns in
outer subqueries as well.
If the HAVING
clause refers to a column
that is ambiguous, a warning occurs. In the following
statement, col2
is ambiguous because it is
used as both an alias and a column name:
SELECT COUNT(col1) AS col2 FROM t GROUP BY col2 HAVING col2 = 2;
Preference is given to standard SQL behavior, so if a
HAVING
column name is used both in
GROUP BY
and as an aliased column in the
output column list, preference is given to the column in the
GROUP BY
column.
Do not use HAVING
for items that should be
in the WHERE
clause. For example, do not
write the following:
SELECTcol_name
FROMtbl_name
HAVINGcol_name
> 0;
Write this instead:
SELECTcol_name
FROMtbl_name
WHEREcol_name
> 0;
The HAVING
clause can refer to aggregate
functions, which the WHERE
clause cannot:
SELECT user, MAX(salary) FROM users GROUP BY user HAVING MAX(salary) > 10;
(This did not work in some older versions of MySQL.)
MySQL permits duplicate column names. That is, there can be
more than one select_expr
with the
same name. This is an extension to standard SQL. Because MySQL
also permits GROUP BY
and
HAVING
to refer to
select_expr
values, this can result
in an ambiguity:
SELECT 12 AS a, a FROM t GROUP BY a;
In that statement, both columns have the name
a
. To ensure that the correct column is
used for grouping, use different names for each
select_expr
.
MySQL resolves unqualified column or alias references in
ORDER BY
clauses by searching in the
select_expr
values, then in the
columns of the tables in the FROM
clause.
For GROUP BY
or HAVING
clauses, it searches the FROM
clause before
searching in the select_expr
values. (For GROUP BY
and
HAVING
, this differs from the pre-MySQL 5.0
behavior that used the same rules as for ORDER
BY
.)
The LIMIT
clause can be used to constrain
the number of rows returned by the
SELECT
statement.
LIMIT
takes one or two numeric arguments,
which must both be nonnegative integer constants, with these
exceptions:
Within prepared statements, LIMIT
parameters can be specified using ?
placeholder markers.
Within stored programs, LIMIT
parameters can be specified using integer-valued routine
parameters or local variables.
With two arguments, the first argument specifies the offset of the first row to return, and the second specifies the maximum number of rows to return. The offset of the initial row is 0 (not 1):
SELECT * FROM tbl LIMIT 5,10; # Retrieve rows 6-15
To retrieve all rows from a certain offset up to the end of the result set, you can use some large number for the second parameter. This statement retrieves all rows from the 96th row to the last:
SELECT * FROM tbl LIMIT 95,18446744073709551615;
With one argument, the value specifies the number of rows to return from the beginning of the result set:
SELECT * FROM tbl LIMIT 5; # Retrieve first 5 rows
In other words, LIMIT
is equivalent
to row_count
LIMIT 0,
.
row_count
For prepared statements, you can use placeholders. The
following statements will return one row from the
tbl
table:
SET @a=1; PREPARE STMT FROM 'SELECT * FROM tbl LIMIT ?'; EXECUTE STMT USING @a;
The following statements will return the second to sixth row
from the tbl
table:
SET @skip=1; SET @numrows=5; PREPARE STMT FROM 'SELECT * FROM tbl LIMIT ?, ?'; EXECUTE STMT USING @skip, @numrows;
For compatibility with PostgreSQL, MySQL also supports the
LIMIT
syntax.
row_count
OFFSET
offset
If LIMIT
occurs within a subquery and also
is applied in the outer query, the outermost
LIMIT
takes precedence. For example, the
following statement produces two rows, not one:
(SELECT ... LIMIT 1) LIMIT 2;
A PROCEDURE
clause names a procedure that
should process the data in the result set. For an example, see
Section 8.4.2.4, “Using PROCEDURE ANALYSE”, which describes
ANALYSE
, a procedure that can be used to
obtain suggestions for optimal column data types that may help
reduce table sizes.
A PROCEDURE
clause is not permitted in a
UNION
statement.
PROCEDURE
syntax is deprecated as of
MySQL 5.7.18, and is removed in MySQL 8.0.
The SELECT ...
INTO
form of SELECT
enables the query result to be written to a file or stored in
variables. For more information, see
Section 13.2.9.1, “SELECT ... INTO Statement”.
If you use FOR UPDATE
with a storage engine
that uses page or row locks, rows examined by the query are
write-locked until the end of the current transaction. Using
LOCK IN SHARE MODE
sets a shared lock that
permits other transactions to read the examined rows but not
to update or delete them. See
Section 14.7.2.4, “Locking Reads”.
In addition, you cannot use FOR UPDATE
as
part of the SELECT
in a
statement such as
CREATE
TABLE
. (If you
attempt to do so, the statement is rejected with the error
Can't update table
'new_table
SELECT ... FROM
old_table
...old_table
' while
'new_table
' is being
created.) This is a change in behavior from MySQL
5.5 and earlier, which permitted
CREATE
TABLE ... SELECT
statements to make changes in
tables other than the table being created.
Following the SELECT
keyword, you
can use a number of modifiers that affect the operation of the
statement. HIGH_PRIORITY
,
STRAIGHT_JOIN
, and modifiers beginning with
SQL_
are MySQL extensions to standard SQL.
The ALL
and DISTINCT
modifiers specify whether duplicate rows should be returned.
ALL
(the default) specifies that all
matching rows should be returned, including duplicates.
DISTINCT
specifies removal of duplicate
rows from the result set. It is an error to specify both
modifiers. DISTINCTROW
is a synonym for
DISTINCT
.
HIGH_PRIORITY
gives the
SELECT
higher priority than a
statement that updates a table. You should use this only for
queries that are very fast and must be done at once. A
SELECT HIGH_PRIORITY
query that is issued
while the table is locked for reading runs even if there is an
update statement waiting for the table to be free. This
affects only storage engines that use only table-level locking
(such as MyISAM
, MEMORY
,
and MERGE
).
HIGH_PRIORITY
cannot be used with
SELECT
statements that are part
of a UNION
.
STRAIGHT_JOIN
forces the optimizer to join
the tables in the order in which they are listed in the
FROM
clause. You can use this to speed up a
query if the optimizer joins the tables in nonoptimal order.
STRAIGHT_JOIN
also can be used in the
table_references
list. See
Section 13.2.9.2, “JOIN Clause”.
STRAIGHT_JOIN
does not apply to any table
that the optimizer treats as a
const
or
system
table. Such a table
produces a single row, is read during the optimization phase
of query execution, and references to its columns are replaced
with the appropriate column values before query execution
proceeds. These tables will appear first in the query plan
displayed by EXPLAIN
. See
Section 8.8.1, “Optimizing Queries with EXPLAIN”. This exception may not apply
to const
or
system
tables that are used
on the NULL
-complemented side of an outer
join (that is, the right-side table of a LEFT
JOIN
or the left-side table of a RIGHT
JOIN
.
SQL_BIG_RESULT
or
SQL_SMALL_RESULT
can be used with
GROUP BY
or DISTINCT
to
tell the optimizer that the result set has many rows or is
small, respectively. For SQL_BIG_RESULT
,
MySQL directly uses disk-based temporary tables if they are
created, and prefers sorting to using a temporary table with a
key on the GROUP BY
elements. For
SQL_SMALL_RESULT
, MySQL uses in-memory
temporary tables to store the resulting table instead of using
sorting. This should not normally be needed.
SQL_BUFFER_RESULT
forces the result to be
put into a temporary table. This helps MySQL free the table
locks early and helps in cases where it takes a long time to
send the result set to the client. This modifier can be used
only for top-level SELECT
statements, not for subqueries or following
UNION
.
SQL_CALC_FOUND_ROWS
tells MySQL to
calculate how many rows there would be in the result set,
disregarding any LIMIT
clause. The number
of rows can then be retrieved with SELECT
FOUND_ROWS()
. See
Section 12.15, “Information Functions”.
The SQL_CACHE
and
SQL_NO_CACHE
modifiers affect caching of
query results in the query cache (see
Section 8.10.3, “The MySQL Query Cache”). SQL_CACHE
tells MySQL to store the result in the query cache if it is
cacheable and the value of the
query_cache_type
system
variable is 2
or DEMAND
.
With SQL_NO_CACHE
, the server does not use
the query cache. It neither checks the query cache to see
whether the result is already cached, nor does it cache the
query result.
These two modifiers are mutually exclusive and an error occurs
if they are both specified. Also, these modifiers are not
permitted in subqueries (including subqueries in the
FROM
clause), and
SELECT
statements in unions
other than the first SELECT
.
For views, SQL_NO_CACHE
applies if it
appears in any SELECT
in the
query. For a cacheable query, SQL_CACHE
applies if it appears in the first
SELECT
of a view referred to by
the query.
The query cache is deprecated as of MySQL 5.7.20, and is
removed in MySQL 8.0. Deprecation includes
SQL_CACHE
and
SQL_NO_CACHE
.
A SELECT
from a partitioned table using a
storage engine such as MyISAM
that
employs table-level locks locks only those partitions containing
rows that match the SELECT
statement
WHERE
clause. (This does not occur with storage
engines such as InnoDB
that employ
row-level locking.) For more information, see
Section 22.6.4, “Partitioning and Locking”.
The SELECT ...
INTO
form of SELECT
enables a query result to be stored in variables or written to a
file:
SELECT ... INTO
selects column
values and stores them into variables.
var_list
SELECT ... INTO OUTFILE
writes the
selected rows to a file. Column and line terminators can be
specified to produce a specific output format.
SELECT ... INTO DUMPFILE
writes a single
row to a file without any formatting.
A given SELECT
statement can
contain at most one INTO
clause, although as
shown by the SELECT
syntax
description (see Section 13.2.9, “SELECT Statement”), the
INTO
can appear in different positions:
Before FROM
. Example:
SELECT * INTO @myvar FROM t1;
Before a trailing locking clause. Example:
SELECT * FROM t1 INTO @myvar FOR UPDATE;
An INTO
clause should not be used in a nested
SELECT
because such a
SELECT
must return its result to
the outer context. There are also constraints on the use of
INTO
within
UNION
statements; see
Section 13.2.9.3, “UNION Clause”.
For the INTO
variant:
var_list
var_list
names a list of one or
more variables, each of which can be a user-defined
variable, stored procedure or function parameter, or stored
program local variable. (Within a prepared SELECT
... INTO
statement, only user-defined variables are permitted; see
Section 13.6.4.2, “Local Variable Scope and Resolution”.)
var_list
The selected values are assigned to the variables. The
number of variables must match the number of columns. The
query should return a single row. If the query returns no
rows, a warning with error code 1329 occurs (No
data
), and the variable values remain unchanged.
If the query returns multiple rows, error 1172 occurs
(Result consisted of more than one row
).
If it is possible that the statement may retrieve multiple
rows, you can use LIMIT 1
to limit the
result set to a single row.
SELECT id, data INTO @x, @y FROM test.t1 LIMIT 1;
User variable names are not case-sensitive. See Section 9.4, “User-Defined Variables”.
The SELECT ... INTO
OUTFILE '
form of
file_name
'SELECT
writes the selected rows
to a file. The file is created on the server host, so you must
have the FILE
privilege to use
this syntax. file_name
cannot be an
existing file, which among other things prevents files such as
/etc/passwd
and database tables from being
modified. The
character_set_filesystem
system
variable controls the interpretation of the file name.
The SELECT ... INTO
OUTFILE
statement is intended to enable dumping a
table to a text file on the server host. To create the resulting
file on some other host,
SELECT ... INTO
OUTFILE
normally is unsuitable because there is no way
to write a path to the file relative to the server host file
system, unless the location of the file on the remote host can
be accessed using a network-mapped path on the server host file
system.
Alternatively, if the MySQL client software is installed on the
remote host, you can use a client command such as mysql
-e "SELECT ..." >
to generate the
file on that host.
file_name
SELECT ... INTO
OUTFILE
is the complement of LOAD
DATA
. Column values are written converted to the
character set specified in the CHARACTER SET
clause. If no such clause is present, values are dumped using
the binary
character set. In effect, there is
no character set conversion. If a result set contains columns in
several character sets, so will the output data file and it may
not be possible to reload the file correctly.
The syntax for the export_options
part of the statement consists of the same
FIELDS
and LINES
clauses
that are used with the LOAD DATA
statement. For information about the FIELDS
and LINES
clauses, including their default
values and permissible values, see Section 13.2.6, “LOAD DATA Statement”.
FIELDS ESCAPED BY
controls how to write
special characters. If the FIELDS ESCAPED BY
character is not empty, it is used when necessary to avoid
ambiguity as a prefix that precedes following characters on
output:
The FIELDS ESCAPED BY
character
The FIELDS [OPTIONALLY] ENCLOSED BY
character
The first character of the FIELDS TERMINATED
BY
and LINES TERMINATED BY
values
ASCII NUL
(the zero-valued byte; what is
actually written following the escape character is ASCII
0
, not a zero-valued byte)
The FIELDS TERMINATED BY
, ENCLOSED
BY
, ESCAPED BY
, or LINES
TERMINATED BY
characters must be
escaped so that you can read the file back in reliably. ASCII
NUL
is escaped to make it easier to view with
some pagers.
The resulting file need not conform to SQL syntax, so nothing else need be escaped.
If the FIELDS ESCAPED BY
character is empty,
no characters are escaped and NULL
is output
as NULL
, not \N
. It is
probably not a good idea to specify an empty escape character,
particularly if field values in your data contain any of the
characters in the list just given.
Here is an example that produces a file in the comma-separated values (CSV) format used by many programs:
SELECT a,b,a+b INTO OUTFILE '/tmp/result.txt' FIELDS TERMINATED BY ',' OPTIONALLY ENCLOSED BY '"' LINES TERMINATED BY '\n' FROM test_table;
If you use INTO DUMPFILE
instead of
INTO OUTFILE
, MySQL writes only one row into
the file, without any column or line termination and without
performing any escape processing. This is useful for selecting a
BLOB
value and storing it in a
file.
Any file created by INTO OUTFILE
or
INTO DUMPFILE
is writable by all users on
the server host. The reason for this is that the MySQL server
cannot create a file that is owned by anyone other than the
user under whose account it is running. (You should
never run mysqld as
root
for this and other reasons.) The file
thus must be world-writable so that you can manipulate its
contents.
If the secure_file_priv
system variable is set to a nonempty directory name, the file
to be written must be located in that directory.
In the context of
SELECT ...
INTO
statements that occur as part of events executed
by the Event Scheduler, diagnostics messages (not only errors,
but also warnings) are written to the error log, and, on
Windows, to the application event log. For additional
information, see Section 23.4.5, “Event Scheduler Status”.
MySQL supports the following JOIN
syntax for
the table_references
part of
SELECT
statements and
multiple-table DELETE
and
UPDATE
statements:
table_references:
escaped_table_reference
[,escaped_table_reference
] ...escaped_table_reference
:table_reference
| { OJtable_reference
}table_reference
:table_factor
|joined_table
table_factor
:tbl_name
[PARTITION (partition_names
)] [[AS]alias
] [index_hint_list
] |table_subquery
[AS]alias
| (table_references
)joined_table
:table_reference
[INNER | CROSS] JOINtable_factor
[join_specification
] |table_reference
STRAIGHT_JOINtable_factor
|table_reference
STRAIGHT_JOINtable_factor
ONsearch_condition
|table_reference
{LEFT|RIGHT} [OUTER] JOINtable_reference
join_specification
|table_reference
NATURAL [{LEFT|RIGHT} [OUTER]] JOINtable_factor
join_specification
: ONsearch_condition
| USING (join_column_list
)join_column_list
:column_name
[,column_name
] ...index_hint_list
:index_hint
[,index_hint
] ...index_hint
: USE {INDEX|KEY} [FOR {JOIN|ORDER BY|GROUP BY}] ([index_list
]) | {IGNORE|FORCE} {INDEX|KEY} [FOR {JOIN|ORDER BY|GROUP BY}] (index_list
)index_list
:index_name
[,index_name
] ...
A table reference is also known as a join expression.
A table reference (when it refers to a partitioned table) may
contain a PARTITION
option, including a list
of comma-separated partitions, subpartitions, or both. This
option follows the name of the table and precedes any alias
declaration. The effect of this option is that rows are selected
only from the listed partitions or subpartitions. Any partitions
or subpartitions not named in the list are ignored. For more
information and examples, see
Section 22.5, “Partition Selection”.
The syntax of table_factor
is
extended in MySQL in comparison with standard SQL. The standard
accepts only table_reference
, not a
list of them inside a pair of parentheses.
This is a conservative extension if each comma in a list of
table_reference
items is considered
as equivalent to an inner join. For example:
SELECT * FROM t1 LEFT JOIN (t2, t3, t4) ON (t2.a = t1.a AND t3.b = t1.b AND t4.c = t1.c)
is equivalent to:
SELECT * FROM t1 LEFT JOIN (t2 CROSS JOIN t3 CROSS JOIN t4) ON (t2.a = t1.a AND t3.b = t1.b AND t4.c = t1.c)
In MySQL, JOIN
, CROSS
JOIN
, and INNER JOIN
are syntactic
equivalents (they can replace each other). In standard SQL, they
are not equivalent. INNER JOIN
is used with
an ON
clause, CROSS JOIN
is used otherwise.
In general, parentheses can be ignored in join expressions containing only inner join operations. MySQL also supports nested joins. See Section 8.2.1.7, “Nested Join Optimization”.
Index hints can be specified to affect how the MySQL optimizer
makes use of indexes. For more information, see
Section 8.9.4, “Index Hints”. Optimizer hints and the
optimizer_switch
system variable are other
ways to influence optimizer use of indexes. See
Section 8.9.3, “Optimizer Hints”, and
Section 8.9.2, “Switchable Optimizations”.
The following list describes general factors to take into account when writing joins:
A table reference can be aliased using
or
tbl_name
AS
alias_name
tbl_name alias_name
:
SELECT t1.name, t2.salary FROM employee AS t1 INNER JOIN info AS t2 ON t1.name = t2.name; SELECT t1.name, t2.salary FROM employee t1 INNER JOIN info t2 ON t1.name = t2.name;
A table_subquery
is also known as
a derived table or subquery in the FROM
clause. See Section 13.2.10.8, “Derived Tables”. Such
subqueries must include an alias to
give the subquery result a table name. A trivial example
follows:
SELECT * FROM (SELECT 1, 2, 3) AS t1;
The maximum number of tables that can be referenced in a
single join is 61. This includes a join handled by merging
derived tables and views in the FROM
clause into the outer query block (see
Section 8.2.2.4, “Optimizing Derived Tables and View References with Merging or
Materialization”).
INNER JOIN
and ,
(comma) are semantically equivalent in the absence of a join
condition: both produce a Cartesian product between the
specified tables (that is, each and every row in the first
table is joined to each and every row in the second table).
However, the precedence of the comma operator is less than
that of INNER JOIN
, CROSS
JOIN
, LEFT JOIN
, and so on. If
you mix comma joins with the other join types when there is
a join condition, an error of the form Unknown
column '
may occur. Information about dealing with
this problem is given later in this section.
col_name
' in 'on
clause'
The search_condition
used with
ON
is any conditional expression of the
form that can be used in a WHERE
clause.
Generally, the ON
clause serves for
conditions that specify how to join tables, and the
WHERE
clause restricts which rows to
include in the result set.
If there is no matching row for the right table in the
ON
or USING
part in a
LEFT JOIN
, a row with all columns set to
NULL
is used for the right table. You can
use this fact to find rows in a table that have no
counterpart in another table:
SELECT left_tbl.* FROM left_tbl LEFT JOIN right_tbl ON left_tbl.id = right_tbl.id WHERE right_tbl.id IS NULL;
This example finds all rows in left_tbl
with an id
value that is not present in
right_tbl
(that is, all rows in
left_tbl
with no corresponding row in
right_tbl
). See
Section 8.2.1.8, “Outer Join Optimization”.
The
USING(
clause names a list of columns that must exist in both
tables. If tables join_column_list
)a
and
b
both contain columns
c1
, c2
, and
c3
, the following join compares
corresponding columns from the two tables:
a LEFT JOIN b USING (c1, c2, c3)
The NATURAL [LEFT] JOIN
of two tables is
defined to be semantically equivalent to an INNER
JOIN
or a LEFT JOIN
with a
USING
clause that names all columns that
exist in both tables.
RIGHT JOIN
works analogously to
LEFT JOIN
. To keep code portable across
databases, it is recommended that you use LEFT
JOIN
instead of RIGHT JOIN
.
The { OJ ... }
syntax shown in the join
syntax description exists only for compatibility with ODBC.
The curly braces in the syntax should be written literally;
they are not metasyntax as used elsewhere in syntax
descriptions.
SELECT left_tbl.* FROM { OJ left_tbl LEFT OUTER JOIN right_tbl ON left_tbl.id = right_tbl.id } WHERE right_tbl.id IS NULL;
You can use other types of joins within { OJ ...
}
, such as INNER JOIN
or
RIGHT OUTER JOIN
. This helps with
compatibility with some third-party applications, but is not
official ODBC syntax.
STRAIGHT_JOIN
is similar to
JOIN
, except that the left table is
always read before the right table. This can be used for
those (few) cases for which the join optimizer processes the
tables in a suboptimal order.
Some join examples:
SELECT * FROM table1, table2; SELECT * FROM table1 INNER JOIN table2 ON table1.id = table2.id; SELECT * FROM table1 LEFT JOIN table2 ON table1.id = table2.id; SELECT * FROM table1 LEFT JOIN table2 USING (id); SELECT * FROM table1 LEFT JOIN table2 ON table1.id = table2.id LEFT JOIN table3 ON table2.id = table3.id;
Natural joins and joins with USING
, including
outer join variants, are processed according to the SQL:2003
standard:
Redundant columns of a NATURAL
join do
not appear. Consider this set of statements:
CREATE TABLE t1 (i INT, j INT); CREATE TABLE t2 (k INT, j INT); INSERT INTO t1 VALUES(1, 1); INSERT INTO t2 VALUES(1, 1); SELECT * FROM t1 NATURAL JOIN t2; SELECT * FROM t1 JOIN t2 USING (j);
In the first SELECT
statement, column j
appears in both
tables and thus becomes a join column, so, according to
standard SQL, it should appear only once in the output, not
twice. Similarly, in the second SELECT statement, column
j
is named in the
USING
clause and should appear only once
in the output, not twice.
Thus, the statements produce this output:
+------+------+------+ | j | i | k | +------+------+------+ | 1 | 1 | 1 | +------+------+------+ +------+------+------+ | j | i | k | +------+------+------+ | 1 | 1 | 1 | +------+------+------+
Redundant column elimination and column ordering occurs according to standard SQL, producing this display order:
First, coalesced common columns of the two joined tables, in the order in which they occur in the first table
Second, columns unique to the first table, in order in which they occur in that table
Third, columns unique to the second table, in order in which they occur in that table
The single result column that replaces two common columns is
defined using the coalesce operation. That is, for two
t1.a
and t2.a
the
resulting single join column a
is defined
as a = COALESCE(t1.a, t2.a)
, where:
COALESCE(x, y) = (CASE WHEN x IS NOT NULL THEN x ELSE y END)
If the join operation is any other join, the result columns of the join consist of the concatenation of all columns of the joined tables.
A consequence of the definition of coalesced columns is
that, for outer joins, the coalesced column contains the
value of the non-NULL
column if one of
the two columns is always NULL
. If
neither or both columns are NULL
, both
common columns have the same value, so it doesn't matter
which one is chosen as the value of the coalesced column. A
simple way to interpret this is to consider that a coalesced
column of an outer join is represented by the common column
of the inner table of a JOIN
. Suppose
that the tables t1(a, b)
and
t2(a, c)
have the following contents:
t1 t2 ---- ---- 1 x 2 z 2 y 3 w
Then, for this join, column a
contains
the values of t1.a
:
mysql> SELECT * FROM t1 NATURAL LEFT JOIN t2;
+------+------+------+
| a | b | c |
+------+------+------+
| 1 | x | NULL |
| 2 | y | z |
+------+------+------+
By contrast, for this join, column a
contains the values of t2.a
.
mysql> SELECT * FROM t1 NATURAL RIGHT JOIN t2;
+------+------+------+
| a | c | b |
+------+------+------+
| 2 | z | y |
| 3 | w | NULL |
+------+------+------+
Compare those results to the otherwise equivalent queries
with JOIN ... ON
:
mysql> SELECT * FROM t1 LEFT JOIN t2 ON (t1.a = t2.a);
+------+------+------+------+
| a | b | a | c |
+------+------+------+------+
| 1 | x | NULL | NULL |
| 2 | y | 2 | z |
+------+------+------+------+
mysql> SELECT * FROM t1 RIGHT JOIN t2 ON (t1.a = t2.a);
+------+------+------+------+
| a | b | a | c |
+------+------+------+------+
| 2 | y | 2 | z |
| NULL | NULL | 3 | w |
+------+------+------+------+
A USING
clause can be rewritten as an
ON
clause that compares corresponding
columns. However, although USING
and
ON
are similar, they are not quite the
same. Consider the following two queries:
a LEFT JOIN b USING (c1, c2, c3) a LEFT JOIN b ON a.c1 = b.c1 AND a.c2 = b.c2 AND a.c3 = b.c3
With respect to determining which rows satisfy the join condition, both joins are semantically identical.
With respect to determining which columns to display for
SELECT *
expansion, the two joins are not
semantically identical. The USING
join
selects the coalesced value of corresponding columns,
whereas the ON
join selects all columns
from all tables. For the USING
join,
SELECT *
selects these values:
COALESCE(a.c1, b.c1), COALESCE(a.c2, b.c2), COALESCE(a.c3, b.c3)
For the ON
join, SELECT
*
selects these values:
a.c1, a.c2, a.c3, b.c1, b.c2, b.c3
With an inner join, COALESCE(a.c1,
b.c1)
is the same as either
a.c1
or b.c1
because
both columns will have the same value. With an outer join
(such as LEFT JOIN
), one of the two
columns can be NULL
. That column is
omitted from the result.
An ON
clause can refer only to its
operands.
Example:
CREATE TABLE t1 (i1 INT); CREATE TABLE t2 (i2 INT); CREATE TABLE t3 (i3 INT); SELECT * FROM t1 JOIN t2 ON (i1 = i3) JOIN t3;
The statement fails with an Unknown column 'i3' in
'on clause'
error because i3
is
a column in t3
, which is not an operand
of the ON
clause. To enable the join to
be processed, rewrite the statement as follows:
SELECT * FROM t1 JOIN t2 JOIN t3 ON (i1 = i3);
JOIN
has higher precedence than the comma
operator (,
), so the join expression
t1, t2 JOIN t3
is interpreted as
(t1, (t2 JOIN t3))
, not as ((t1,
t2) JOIN t3)
. This affects statements that use an
ON
clause because that clause can refer
only to columns in the operands of the join, and the
precedence affects interpretation of what those operands
are.
Example:
CREATE TABLE t1 (i1 INT, j1 INT); CREATE TABLE t2 (i2 INT, j2 INT); CREATE TABLE t3 (i3 INT, j3 INT); INSERT INTO t1 VALUES(1, 1); INSERT INTO t2 VALUES(1, 1); INSERT INTO t3 VALUES(1, 1); SELECT * FROM t1, t2 JOIN t3 ON (t1.i1 = t3.i3);
The JOIN
takes precedence over the comma
operator, so the operands for the ON
clause are t2
and t3
.
Because t1.i1
is not a column in either
of the operands, the result is an Unknown column
't1.i1' in 'on clause'
error.
To enable the join to be processed, use either of these strategies:
Group the first two tables explicitly with parentheses
so that the operands for the ON
clause are (t1, t2)
and
t3
:
SELECT * FROM (t1, t2) JOIN t3 ON (t1.i1 = t3.i3);
Avoid the use of the comma operator and use
JOIN
instead:
SELECT * FROM t1 JOIN t2 JOIN t3 ON (t1.i1 = t3.i3);
The same precedence interpretation also applies to
statements that mix the comma operator with INNER
JOIN
, CROSS JOIN
, LEFT
JOIN
, and RIGHT JOIN
, all of
which have higher precedence than the comma operator.
A MySQL extension compared to the SQL:2003 standard is that
MySQL permits you to qualify the common (coalesced) columns
of NATURAL
or USING
joins, whereas the standard disallows that.
SELECT ... UNION [ALL | DISTINCT] SELECT ... [UNION [ALL | DISTINCT] SELECT ...]
UNION
combines the result from
multiple SELECT
statements into a
single result set. The result set column names are taken from
the column names of the first
SELECT
statement.
Selected columns listed in corresponding positions of each
SELECT
statement should have the
same data type. (For example, the first column selected by the
first statement should have the same type as the first column
selected by the other statements.) If the data types of
corresponding SELECT
columns do
not match, the types and lengths of the columns in the
UNION
result take into account
the values retrieved by all of the
SELECT
statements. For example,
consider the following:
mysql> SELECT REPEAT('a',1) UNION SELECT REPEAT('b',10);
+---------------+
| REPEAT('a',1) |
+---------------+
| a |
| bbbbbbbbbb |
+---------------+
The SELECT
statements are normal
select statements, but with the following restrictions:
HIGH_PRIORITY
cannot be used with
SELECT
statements that are
part of a UNION
. If you
specify it for the first
SELECT
, it has no effect. If
you specify it for any subsequent
SELECT
statements, a syntax
error results.
Only the last SELECT
statement can use an INTO
clause.
However, the entire UNION
result is written to the INTO
output
destination.
By default, duplicate rows are removed from
UNION
results. The optional
DISTINCT
keyword has the same effect but
makes it explicit. With the optional ALL
keyword, duplicate-row removal does not occur and the result
includes all matching rows from all the
SELECT
statements.
You can mix UNION
ALL
and UNION
DISTINCT
in the same query. Mixed
UNION
types are treated such that
a DISTINCT
union overrides any
ALL
union to its left. A
DISTINCT
union can be produced explicitly by
using UNION
DISTINCT
or implicitly by using
UNION
with no following
DISTINCT
or ALL
keyword.
To apply ORDER BY
or LIMIT
to an individual SELECT
, place
the clause inside the parentheses that enclose the
SELECT
:
(SELECT a FROM t1 WHERE a=10 AND B=1 ORDER BY a LIMIT 10) UNION (SELECT a FROM t2 WHERE a=11 AND B=2 ORDER BY a LIMIT 10);
Previous versions of MySQL may permit such statements without parentheses. In MySQL 5.7, the requirement for parentheses is enforced.
Use of ORDER BY
for individual
SELECT
statements implies nothing
about the order in which the rows appear in the final result
because UNION
by default produces
an unordered set of rows. Therefore, ORDER BY
in this context typically is used in conjunction with
LIMIT
, to determine the subset of the
selected rows to retrieve for the
SELECT
, even though it does not
necessarily affect the order of those rows in the final
UNION
result. If ORDER
BY
appears without LIMIT
in a
SELECT
, it is optimized away
because it will have no effect, anyway.
To use an ORDER BY
or
LIMIT
clause to sort or limit the entire
UNION
result, parenthesize the
individual SELECT
statements and
place the ORDER BY
or
LIMIT
after the last one. The following
example uses both clauses:
(SELECT a FROM t1 WHERE a=10 AND B=1) UNION (SELECT a FROM t2 WHERE a=11 AND B=2) ORDER BY a LIMIT 10;
A statement without parentheses is equivalent to one parenthesized as just shown.
This kind of ORDER BY
cannot use column
references that include a table name (that is, names in
tbl_name
.col_name
format). Instead, provide a column alias in the first
SELECT
statement and refer to the
alias in the ORDER BY
. (Alternatively, refer
to the column in the ORDER BY
using its
column position. However, use of column positions is
deprecated.)
Also, if a column to be sorted is aliased, the ORDER
BY
clause must refer to the
alias, not the column name. The first of the following
statements is permitted, but the second fails with an
Unknown column 'a' in 'order clause'
error:
(SELECT a AS b FROM t) UNION (SELECT ...) ORDER BY b; (SELECT a AS b FROM t) UNION (SELECT ...) ORDER BY a;
To cause rows in a UNION
result
to consist of the sets of rows retrieved by each
SELECT
one after the other,
select an additional column in each
SELECT
to use as a sort column
and add an ORDER BY
following the last
SELECT
:
(SELECT 1 AS sort_col, col1a, col1b, ... FROM t1) UNION (SELECT 2, col2a, col2b, ... FROM t2) ORDER BY sort_col;
To additionally maintain sort order within individual
SELECT
results, add a secondary
column to the ORDER BY
clause:
(SELECT 1 AS sort_col, col1a, col1b, ... FROM t1) UNION (SELECT 2, col2a, col2b, ... FROM t2) ORDER BY sort_col, col1a;
Use of an additional column also enables you to determine which
SELECT
each row comes from. Extra
columns can provide other identifying information as well, such
as a string that indicates a table name.
UNION
queries with an aggregate
function in an ORDER BY
clause are rejected
with an
ER_AGGREGATE_ORDER_FOR_UNION
error. Example:
SELECT 1 AS foo UNION SELECT 2 ORDER BY MAX(1);
A subquery is a SELECT
statement
within another statement.
All subquery forms and operations that the SQL standard requires are supported, as well as a few features that are MySQL-specific.
Here is an example of a subquery:
SELECT * FROM t1 WHERE column1 = (SELECT column1 FROM t2);
In this example, SELECT * FROM t1 ...
is the
outer query (or outer
statement), and (SELECT column1 FROM
t2)
is the subquery. We say that
the subquery is nested within the outer
query, and in fact it is possible to nest subqueries within other
subqueries, to a considerable depth. A subquery must always appear
within parentheses.
The main advantages of subqueries are:
They allow queries that are structured so that it is possible to isolate each part of a statement.
They provide alternative ways to perform operations that would otherwise require complex joins and unions.
Many people find subqueries more readable than complex joins or unions. Indeed, it was the innovation of subqueries that gave people the original idea of calling the early SQL “Structured Query Language.”
Here is an example statement that shows the major points about subquery syntax as specified by the SQL standard and supported in MySQL:
DELETE FROM t1 WHERE s11 > ANY (SELECT COUNT(*) /* no hint */ FROM t2 WHERE NOT EXISTS (SELECT * FROM t3 WHERE ROW(5*t2.s1,77)= (SELECT 50,11*s1 FROM t4 UNION SELECT 50,77 FROM (SELECT * FROM t5) AS t5)));
A subquery can return a scalar (a single value), a single row, a single column, or a table (one or more rows of one or more columns). These are called scalar, column, row, and table subqueries. Subqueries that return a particular kind of result often can be used only in certain contexts, as described in the following sections.
There are few restrictions on the type of statements in which
subqueries can be used. A subquery can contain many of the
keywords or clauses that an ordinary
SELECT
can contain:
DISTINCT
, GROUP BY
,
ORDER BY
, LIMIT
, joins,
index hints, UNION
constructs,
comments, functions, and so on.
A subquery's outer statement can be any one of:
SELECT
,
INSERT
,
UPDATE
,
DELETE
,
SET
, or
DO
.
In MySQL, you cannot modify a table and select from the same table
in a subquery. This applies to statements such as
DELETE
,
INSERT
,
REPLACE
,
UPDATE
, and (because subqueries can
be used in the SET
clause)
LOAD DATA
.
For information about how the optimizer handles subqueries, see Section 8.2.2, “Optimizing Subqueries, Derived Tables, and View References”. For a discussion of restrictions on subquery use, including performance issues for certain forms of subquery syntax, see Section 13.2.10.12, “Restrictions on Subqueries”.
In its simplest form, a subquery is a scalar subquery that
returns a single value. A scalar subquery is a simple operand,
and you can use it almost anywhere a single column value or
literal is legal, and you can expect it to have those
characteristics that all operands have: a data type, a length,
an indication that it can be NULL
, and so on.
For example:
CREATE TABLE t1 (s1 INT, s2 CHAR(5) NOT NULL); INSERT INTO t1 VALUES(100, 'abcde'); SELECT (SELECT s2 FROM t1);
The subquery in this SELECT
returns a single value ('abcde'
) that has a
data type of CHAR
, a length of 5,
a character set and collation equal to the defaults in effect at
CREATE TABLE
time, and an
indication that the value in the column can be
NULL
. Nullability of the value selected by a
scalar subquery is not copied because if the subquery result is
empty, the result is NULL
. For the subquery
just shown, if t1
were empty, the result
would be NULL
even though
s2
is NOT NULL
.
There are a few contexts in which a scalar subquery cannot be
used. If a statement permits only a literal value, you cannot
use a subquery. For example, LIMIT
requires
literal integer arguments, and LOAD
DATA
requires a literal string file name. You cannot
use subqueries to supply these values.
When you see examples in the following sections that contain the
rather spartan construct (SELECT column1 FROM
t1)
, imagine that your own code contains much more
diverse and complex constructions.
Suppose that we make two tables:
CREATE TABLE t1 (s1 INT); INSERT INTO t1 VALUES (1); CREATE TABLE t2 (s1 INT); INSERT INTO t2 VALUES (2);
Then perform a SELECT
:
SELECT (SELECT s1 FROM t2) FROM t1;
The result is 2
because there is a row in
t2
containing a column s1
that has a value of 2
.
A scalar subquery can be part of an expression, but remember the parentheses, even if the subquery is an operand that provides an argument for a function. For example:
SELECT UPPER((SELECT s1 FROM t1)) FROM t2;
The most common use of a subquery is in the form:
non_subquery_operand
comparison_operator
(subquery
)
Where comparison_operator
is one of
these operators:
= > < >= <= <> != <=>
For example:
... WHERE 'a' = (SELECT column1 FROM t1)
MySQL also permits this construct:
non_subquery_operand
LIKE (subquery
)
At one time the only legal place for a subquery was on the right side of a comparison, and you might still find some old DBMSs that insist on this.
Here is an example of a common-form subquery comparison that you
cannot do with a join. It finds all the rows in table
t1
for which the column1
value is equal to a maximum value in table
t2
:
SELECT * FROM t1 WHERE column1 = (SELECT MAX(column2) FROM t2);
Here is another example, which again is impossible with a join
because it involves aggregating for one of the tables. It finds
all rows in table t1
containing a value that
occurs twice in a given column:
SELECT * FROM t1 AS t WHERE 2 = (SELECT COUNT(*) FROM t1 WHERE t1.id = t.id);
For a comparison of the subquery to a scalar, the subquery must return a scalar. For a comparison of the subquery to a row constructor, the subquery must be a row subquery that returns a row with the same number of values as the row constructor. See Section 13.2.10.5, “Row Subqueries”.
Syntax:
operand
comparison_operator
ANY (subquery
)operand
IN (subquery
)operand
comparison_operator
SOME (subquery
)
Where comparison_operator
is one of
these operators:
= > < >= <= <> !=
The ANY
keyword, which must follow a
comparison operator, means “return TRUE
if the comparison is TRUE
for
ANY
of the values in the column that the
subquery returns.” For example:
SELECT s1 FROM t1 WHERE s1 > ANY (SELECT s1 FROM t2);
Suppose that there is a row in table t1
containing (10)
. The expression is
TRUE
if table t2
contains
(21,14,7)
because there is a value
7
in t2
that is less than
10
. The expression is
FALSE
if table t2
contains
(20,10)
, or if table t2
is
empty. The expression is unknown (that is,
NULL
) if table t2
contains
(NULL,NULL,NULL)
.
When used with a subquery, the word IN
is an
alias for = ANY
. Thus, these two statements
are the same:
SELECT s1 FROM t1 WHERE s1 = ANY (SELECT s1 FROM t2); SELECT s1 FROM t1 WHERE s1 IN (SELECT s1 FROM t2);
IN
and = ANY
are not
synonyms when used with an expression list.
IN
can take an expression list, but
= ANY
cannot. See
Section 12.3.2, “Comparison Functions and Operators”.
NOT IN
is not an alias for <>
ANY
, but for <> ALL
. See
Section 13.2.10.4, “Subqueries with ALL”.
The word SOME
is an alias for
ANY
. Thus, these two statements are the same:
SELECT s1 FROM t1 WHERE s1 <> ANY (SELECT s1 FROM t2); SELECT s1 FROM t1 WHERE s1 <> SOME (SELECT s1 FROM t2);
Use of the word SOME
is rare, but this
example shows why it might be useful. To most people, the
English phrase “a is not equal to any b” means
“there is no b which is equal to a,” but that is
not what is meant by the SQL syntax. The syntax means
“there is some b to which a is not equal.” Using
<> SOME
instead helps ensure that
everyone understands the true meaning of the query.
Syntax:
operand
comparison_operator
ALL (subquery
)
The word ALL
, which must follow a comparison
operator, means “return TRUE
if the
comparison is TRUE
for ALL
of the values in the column that the subquery returns.”
For example:
SELECT s1 FROM t1 WHERE s1 > ALL (SELECT s1 FROM t2);
Suppose that there is a row in table t1
containing (10)
. The expression is
TRUE
if table t2
contains
(-5,0,+5)
because 10
is
greater than all three values in t2
. The
expression is FALSE
if table
t2
contains
(12,6,NULL,-100)
because there is a single
value 12
in table t2
that
is greater than 10
. The expression is
unknown (that is, NULL
)
if table t2
contains
(0,NULL,1)
.
Finally, the expression is TRUE
if table
t2
is empty. So, the following expression is
TRUE
when table t2
is
empty:
SELECT * FROM t1 WHERE 1 > ALL (SELECT s1 FROM t2);
But this expression is NULL
when table
t2
is empty:
SELECT * FROM t1 WHERE 1 > (SELECT s1 FROM t2);
In addition, the following expression is NULL
when table t2
is empty:
SELECT * FROM t1 WHERE 1 > ALL (SELECT MAX(s1) FROM t2);
In general, tables containing NULL
values and empty tables are
“edge cases.” When writing subqueries, always
consider whether you have taken those two possibilities into
account.
NOT IN
is an alias for <>
ALL
. Thus, these two statements are the same:
SELECT s1 FROM t1 WHERE s1 <> ALL (SELECT s1 FROM t2); SELECT s1 FROM t1 WHERE s1 NOT IN (SELECT s1 FROM t2);
Scalar or column subqueries return a single value or a column of values. A row subquery is a subquery variant that returns a single row and can thus return more than one column value. Legal operators for row subquery comparisons are:
= > < >= <= <> != <=>
Here are two examples:
SELECT * FROM t1 WHERE (col1,col2) = (SELECT col3, col4 FROM t2 WHERE id = 10); SELECT * FROM t1 WHERE ROW(col1,col2) = (SELECT col3, col4 FROM t2 WHERE id = 10);
For both queries, if the table t2
contains a
single row with id = 10
, the subquery returns
a single row. If this row has col3
and
col4
values equal to the
col1
and col2
values of
any rows in t1
, the WHERE
expression is TRUE
and each query returns
those t1
rows. If the t2
row col3
and col4
values
are not equal the col1
and
col2
values of any t1
row,
the expression is FALSE
and the query returns
an empty result set. The expression is
unknown (that is, NULL
)
if the subquery produces no rows. An error occurs if the
subquery produces multiple rows because a row subquery can
return at most one row.
For information about how each operator works for row comparisons, see Section 12.3.2, “Comparison Functions and Operators”.
The expressions (1,2)
and
ROW(1,2)
are sometimes called
row constructors. The two
are equivalent. The row constructor and the row returned by the
subquery must contain the same number of values.
A row constructor is used for comparisons with subqueries that return two or more columns. When a subquery returns a single column, this is regarded as a scalar value and not as a row, so a row constructor cannot be used with a subquery that does not return at least two columns. Thus, the following query fails with a syntax error:
SELECT * FROM t1 WHERE ROW(1) = (SELECT column1 FROM t2)
Row constructors are legal in other contexts. For example, the following two statements are semantically equivalent (and are handled in the same way by the optimizer):
SELECT * FROM t1 WHERE (column1,column2) = (1,1); SELECT * FROM t1 WHERE column1 = 1 AND column2 = 1;
The following query answers the request, “find all rows in
table t1
that also exist in table
t2
”:
SELECT column1,column2,column3 FROM t1 WHERE (column1,column2,column3) IN (SELECT column1,column2,column3 FROM t2);
For more information about the optimizer and row constructors, see Section 8.2.1.19, “Row Constructor Expression Optimization”
If a subquery returns any rows at all, EXISTS
is
subquery
TRUE
, and NOT EXISTS
is
subquery
FALSE
. For example:
SELECT column1 FROM t1 WHERE EXISTS (SELECT * FROM t2);
Traditionally, an EXISTS
subquery starts with
SELECT *
, but it could begin with
SELECT 5
or SELECT column1
or anything at all. MySQL ignores the
SELECT
list in such a subquery,
so it makes no difference.
For the preceding example, if t2
contains any
rows, even rows with nothing but NULL
values,
the EXISTS
condition is
TRUE
. This is actually an unlikely example
because a [NOT] EXISTS
subquery almost always
contains correlations. Here are some more realistic examples:
What kind of store is present in one or more cities?
SELECT DISTINCT store_type FROM stores WHERE EXISTS (SELECT * FROM cities_stores WHERE cities_stores.store_type = stores.store_type);
What kind of store is present in no cities?
SELECT DISTINCT store_type FROM stores WHERE NOT EXISTS (SELECT * FROM cities_stores WHERE cities_stores.store_type = stores.store_type);
What kind of store is present in all cities?
SELECT DISTINCT store_type FROM stores s1 WHERE NOT EXISTS ( SELECT * FROM cities WHERE NOT EXISTS ( SELECT * FROM cities_stores WHERE cities_stores.city = cities.city AND cities_stores.store_type = stores.store_type));
The last example is a double-nested NOT
EXISTS
query. That is, it has a NOT
EXISTS
clause within a NOT EXISTS
clause. Formally, it answers the question “does a city
exist with a store that is not in
Stores
”? But it is easier to say that
a nested NOT EXISTS
answers the question
“is x
TRUE
for all y
?”
A correlated subquery is a subquery that contains a reference to a table that also appears in the outer query. For example:
SELECT * FROM t1 WHERE column1 = ANY (SELECT column1 FROM t2 WHERE t2.column2 = t1.column2);
Notice that the subquery contains a reference to a column of
t1
, even though the subquery's
FROM
clause does not mention a table
t1
. So, MySQL looks outside the subquery, and
finds t1
in the outer query.
Suppose that table t1
contains a row where
column1 = 5
and column2 =
6
; meanwhile, table t2
contains a
row where column1 = 5
and column2 =
7
. The simple expression ... WHERE column1 =
ANY (SELECT column1 FROM t2)
would be
TRUE
, but in this example, the
WHERE
clause within the subquery is
FALSE
(because (5,6)
is
not equal to (5,7)
), so the expression as a
whole is FALSE
.
Scoping rule: MySQL evaluates from inside to outside. For example:
SELECT column1 FROM t1 AS x WHERE x.column1 = (SELECT column1 FROM t2 AS x WHERE x.column1 = (SELECT column1 FROM t3 WHERE x.column2 = t3.column1));
In this statement, x.column2
must be a column
in table t2
because SELECT column1
FROM t2 AS x ...
renames t2
. It is
not a column in table t1
because
SELECT column1 FROM t1 ...
is an outer query
that is farther out.
For subqueries in HAVING
or ORDER
BY
clauses, MySQL also looks for column names in the
outer select list.
For certain cases, a correlated subquery is optimized. For example:
val
IN (SELECTkey_val
FROMtbl_name
WHEREcorrelated_condition
)
Otherwise, they are inefficient and likely to be slow. Rewriting the query as a join might improve performance.
Aggregate functions in correlated subqueries may contain outer references, provided the function contains nothing but outer references, and provided the function is not contained in another function or expression.
A derived table is an expression that generates a table within
the scope of a query FROM
clause. For
example, a subquery in a SELECT
statement FROM
clause is a derived table:
SELECT ... FROM (subquery
) [AS]tbl_name
...
The [AS]
clause is mandatory because every table in a
tbl_name
FROM
clause must have a name. Any columns in
the derived table must have unique names.
For the sake of illustration, assume that you have this table:
CREATE TABLE t1 (s1 INT, s2 CHAR(5), s3 FLOAT);
Here is how to use a subquery in the FROM
clause, using the example table:
INSERT INTO t1 VALUES (1,'1',1.0); INSERT INTO t1 VALUES (2,'2',2.0); SELECT sb1,sb2,sb3 FROM (SELECT s1 AS sb1, s2 AS sb2, s3*2 AS sb3 FROM t1) AS sb WHERE sb1 > 1;
Result:
+------+------+------+ | sb1 | sb2 | sb3 | +------+------+------+ | 2 | 2 | 4 | +------+------+------+
Here is another example: Suppose that you want to know the average of a set of sums for a grouped table. This does not work:
SELECT AVG(SUM(column1)) FROM t1 GROUP BY column1;
However, this query provides the desired information:
SELECT AVG(sum_column1) FROM (SELECT SUM(column1) AS sum_column1 FROM t1 GROUP BY column1) AS t1;
Notice that the column name used within the subquery
(sum_column1
) is recognized in the outer
query.
A derived table can return a scalar, column, row, or table.
Derived tables are subject to these restrictions:
A derived table cannot be a correlated subquery.
A derived table cannot contain references to other tables of
the same SELECT
.
A derived table cannot contain outer references. This is a MySQL restriction, not a restriction of the SQL standard.
The optimizer determines information about derived tables in
such a way that EXPLAIN
does not
need to materialize them. See
Section 8.2.2.4, “Optimizing Derived Tables and View References with Merging or
Materialization”.
It is possible under certain circumstances that using
EXPLAIN
SELECT
will modify table data. This can occur if the
outer query accesses any tables and an inner query invokes a
stored function that changes one or more rows of a table.
Suppose that there are two tables t1
and
t2
in database d1
, and a
stored function f1
that modifies
t2
, created as shown here:
CREATE DATABASE d1; USE d1; CREATE TABLE t1 (c1 INT); CREATE TABLE t2 (c1 INT); CREATE FUNCTION f1(p1 INT) RETURNS INT BEGIN INSERT INTO t2 VALUES (p1); RETURN p1; END;
Referencing the function directly in an
EXPLAIN
SELECT
has no effect on t2
, as
shown here:
mysql>SELECT * FROM t2;
Empty set (0.02 sec) mysql>EXPLAIN SELECT f1(5)\G
*************************** 1. row *************************** id: 1 select_type: SIMPLE table: NULL partitions: NULL type: NULL possible_keys: NULL key: NULL key_len: NULL ref: NULL rows: NULL filtered: NULL Extra: No tables used 1 row in set (0.01 sec) mysql>SELECT * FROM t2;
Empty set (0.01 sec)
This is because the SELECT
statement did not reference any tables, as can be seen in the
table
and Extra
columns of
the output. This is also true of the following nested
SELECT
:
mysql>EXPLAIN SELECT NOW() AS a1, (SELECT f1(5)) AS a2\G
*************************** 1. row *************************** id: 1 select_type: SIMPLE table: NULL type: NULL possible_keys: NULL key: NULL key_len: NULL ref: NULL rows: NULL filtered: NULL Extra: No tables used 1 row in set, 1 warning (0.00 sec) mysql>SHOW WARNINGS;
+-------+------+------------------------------------------+ | Level | Code | Message | +-------+------+------------------------------------------+ | Note | 1249 | Select 2 was reduced during optimization | +-------+------+------------------------------------------+ 1 row in set (0.00 sec) mysql>SELECT * FROM t2;
Empty set (0.00 sec)
However, if the outer SELECT
references any tables, the optimizer executes the statement in
the subquery as well, with the result that t2
is modified:
mysql>EXPLAIN SELECT * FROM t1 AS a1, (SELECT f1(5)) AS a2\G
*************************** 1. row *************************** id: 1 select_type: PRIMARY table: <derived2> partitions: NULL type: system possible_keys: NULL key: NULL key_len: NULL ref: NULL rows: 1 filtered: 100.00 Extra: NULL *************************** 2. row *************************** id: 1 select_type: PRIMARY table: a1 partitions: NULL type: ALL possible_keys: NULL key: NULL key_len: NULL ref: NULL rows: 1 filtered: 100.00 Extra: NULL *************************** 3. row *************************** id: 2 select_type: DERIVED table: NULL partitions: NULL type: NULL possible_keys: NULL key: NULL key_len: NULL ref: NULL rows: NULL filtered: NULL Extra: No tables used 3 rows in set (0.00 sec) mysql>SELECT * FROM t2;
+------+ | c1 | +------+ | 5 | +------+ 1 row in set (0.00 sec)
This also means that an
EXPLAIN
SELECT
statement such as the one shown here may take a
long time to execute because the
BENCHMARK()
function is executed
once for each row in t1
:
EXPLAIN SELECT * FROM t1 AS a1, (SELECT BENCHMARK(1000000, MD5(NOW())));
There are some errors that apply only to subqueries. This section describes them.
Unsupported subquery syntax:
ERROR 1235 (ER_NOT_SUPPORTED_YET) SQLSTATE = 42000 Message = "This version of MySQL doesn't yet support 'LIMIT & IN/ALL/ANY/SOME subquery'"
This means that MySQL does not support statements of the following form:
SELECT * FROM t1 WHERE s1 IN (SELECT s2 FROM t2 ORDER BY s1 LIMIT 1)
Incorrect number of columns from subquery:
ERROR 1241 (ER_OPERAND_COL) SQLSTATE = 21000 Message = "Operand should contain 1 column(s)"
This error occurs in cases like this:
SELECT (SELECT column1, column2 FROM t2) FROM t1;
You may use a subquery that returns multiple columns, if the purpose is row comparison. In other contexts, the subquery must be a scalar operand. See Section 13.2.10.5, “Row Subqueries”.
Incorrect number of rows from subquery:
ERROR 1242 (ER_SUBSELECT_NO_1_ROW) SQLSTATE = 21000 Message = "Subquery returns more than 1 row"
This error occurs for statements where the subquery must return at most one row but returns multiple rows. Consider the following example:
SELECT * FROM t1 WHERE column1 = (SELECT column1 FROM t2);
If SELECT column1 FROM t2
returns just
one row, the previous query will work. If the subquery
returns more than one row, error 1242 will occur. In that
case, the query should be rewritten as:
SELECT * FROM t1 WHERE column1 = ANY (SELECT column1 FROM t2);
Incorrectly used table in subquery:
Error 1093 (ER_UPDATE_TABLE_USED) SQLSTATE = HY000 Message = "You can't specify target table 'x' for update in FROM clause"
This error occurs in cases such as the following, which attempts to modify a table and select from the same table in the subquery:
UPDATE t1 SET column2 = (SELECT MAX(column1) FROM t1);
You can use a subquery for assignment within an
UPDATE
statement because
subqueries are legal in
UPDATE
and
DELETE
statements as well as
in SELECT
statements.
However, you cannot use the same table (in this case, table
t1
) for both the subquery
FROM
clause and the update target.
For transactional storage engines, the failure of a subquery causes the entire statement to fail. For nontransactional storage engines, data modifications made before the error was encountered are preserved.
Development is ongoing, so no optimization tip is reliable for the long term. The following list provides some interesting tricks that you might want to play with. See also Section 8.2.2, “Optimizing Subqueries, Derived Tables, and View References”.
Use subquery clauses that affect the number or order of the rows in the subquery. For example:
SELECT * FROM t1 WHERE t1.column1 IN (SELECT column1 FROM t2 ORDER BY column1); SELECT * FROM t1 WHERE t1.column1 IN (SELECT DISTINCT column1 FROM t2); SELECT * FROM t1 WHERE EXISTS (SELECT * FROM t2 LIMIT 1);
Replace a join with a subquery. For example, try this:
SELECT DISTINCT column1 FROM t1 WHERE t1.column1 IN ( SELECT column1 FROM t2);
Instead of this:
SELECT DISTINCT t1.column1 FROM t1, t2 WHERE t1.column1 = t2.column1;
Some subqueries can be transformed to joins for compatibility with older versions of MySQL that do not support subqueries. However, in some cases, converting a subquery to a join may improve performance. See Section 13.2.10.11, “Rewriting Subqueries as Joins”.
Move clauses from outside to inside the subquery. For example, use this query:
SELECT * FROM t1 WHERE s1 IN (SELECT s1 FROM t1 UNION ALL SELECT s1 FROM t2);
Instead of this query:
SELECT * FROM t1 WHERE s1 IN (SELECT s1 FROM t1) OR s1 IN (SELECT s1 FROM t2);
For another example, use this query:
SELECT (SELECT column1 + 5 FROM t1) FROM t2;
Instead of this query:
SELECT (SELECT column1 FROM t1) + 5 FROM t2;
Use a row subquery instead of a correlated subquery. For example, use this query:
SELECT * FROM t1 WHERE (column1,column2) IN (SELECT column1,column2 FROM t2);
Instead of this query:
SELECT * FROM t1 WHERE EXISTS (SELECT * FROM t2 WHERE t2.column1=t1.column1 AND t2.column2=t1.column2);
Use NOT (a = ANY (...))
rather than
a <> ALL (...)
.
Use x = ANY (
rather than table containing
(1,2)
)x=1 OR
x=2
.
Use = ANY
rather than
EXISTS
.
For uncorrelated subqueries that always return one row,
IN
is always slower than
=
. For example, use this query:
SELECT * FROM t1 WHERE t1.col_name
= (SELECT a FROM t2 WHERE b =some_const
);
Instead of this query:
SELECT * FROM t1 WHERE t1.col_name
IN (SELECT a FROM t2 WHERE b =some_const
);
These tricks might cause programs to go faster or slower. Using
MySQL facilities like the
BENCHMARK()
function, you can get
an idea about what helps in your own situation. See
Section 12.15, “Information Functions”.
Some optimizations that MySQL itself makes are:
MySQL executes uncorrelated subqueries only once. Use
EXPLAIN
to make sure that a
given subquery really is uncorrelated.
MySQL rewrites IN
,
ALL
, ANY
, and
SOME
subqueries in an attempt to take
advantage of the possibility that the select-list columns in
the subquery are indexed.
MySQL replaces subqueries of the following form with an
index-lookup function, which
EXPLAIN
describes as a
special join type
(unique_subquery
or
index_subquery
):
... IN (SELECTindexed_column
FROMsingle_table
...)
MySQL enhances expressions of the following form with an
expression involving MIN()
or
MAX()
, unless
NULL
values or empty sets are involved:
value
{ALL|ANY|SOME} {> | < | >= | <=} (uncorrelated subquery
)
For example, this WHERE
clause:
WHERE 5 > ALL (SELECT x FROM t)
might be treated by the optimizer like this:
WHERE 5 > (SELECT MAX(x) FROM t)
Sometimes there are other ways to test membership in a set of
values than by using a subquery. Also, on some occasions, it is
not only possible to rewrite a query without a subquery, but it
can be more efficient to make use of some of these techniques
rather than to use subqueries. One of these is the
IN()
construct:
For example, this query:
SELECT * FROM t1 WHERE id IN (SELECT id FROM t2);
Can be rewritten as:
SELECT DISTINCT t1.* FROM t1, t2 WHERE t1.id=t2.id;
The queries:
SELECT * FROM t1 WHERE id NOT IN (SELECT id FROM t2); SELECT * FROM t1 WHERE NOT EXISTS (SELECT id FROM t2 WHERE t1.id=t2.id);
Can be rewritten as:
SELECT table1.* FROM table1 LEFT JOIN table2 ON table1.id=table2.id WHERE table2.id IS NULL;
A LEFT [OUTER] JOIN
can be faster than an
equivalent subquery because the server might be able to optimize
it better—a fact that is not specific to MySQL Server
alone. Prior to SQL-92, outer joins did not exist, so subqueries
were the only way to do certain things. Today, MySQL Server and
many other modern database systems offer a wide range of outer
join types.
MySQL Server supports multiple-table
DELETE
statements that can be
used to efficiently delete rows based on information from one
table or even from many tables at the same time. Multiple-table
UPDATE
statements are also
supported. See Section 13.2.2, “DELETE Statement”, and
Section 13.2.11, “UPDATE Statement”.
In general, you cannot modify a table and select from the same table in a subquery. For example, this limitation applies to statements of the following forms:
DELETE FROM t WHERE ... (SELECT ... FROM t ...); UPDATE t ... WHERE col = (SELECT ... FROM t ...); {INSERT|REPLACE} INTO t (SELECT ... FROM t ...);
Exception: The preceding prohibition does not apply if for the modified table you are using a derived table and that derived table is materialized rather than merged into the outer query. (See Section 8.2.2.4, “Optimizing Derived Tables and View References with Merging or Materialization”.) Example:
UPDATE t ... WHERE col = (SELECT * FROM (SELECT ... FROM t...) AS dt ...);
Here the result from the derived table is materialized as a
temporary table, so the relevant rows in
t
have already been selected by the time
the update to t
takes place.
Row comparison operations are only partially supported:
For
,
expr
[NOT] IN
subquery
expr
can be an
n
-tuple (specified using row
constructor syntax) and the subquery can return rows of
n
-tuples. The permitted
syntax is therefore more specifically expressed as
row_constructor
[NOT] IN
table_subquery
For
,
expr
op
{ALL|ANY|SOME}
subquery
expr
must be a scalar value
and the subquery must be a column subquery; it cannot
return multiple-column rows.
In other words, for a subquery that returns rows of
n
-tuples, this is supported:
(expr_1
, ...,expr_n
) [NOT] INtable_subquery
But this is not supported:
(expr_1
, ...,expr_n
)op
{ALL|ANY|SOME}subquery
The reason for supporting row comparisons for
IN
but not for the others is that
IN
is implemented by rewriting it as a
sequence of =
comparisons and AND
operations.
This approach cannot be used for ALL
,
ANY
, or SOME
.
Subqueries in the FROM
clause cannot be
correlated subqueries. They are materialized in whole
(evaluated to produce a result set) during query execution,
so they cannot be evaluated per row of the outer query. The
optimizer delays materialization until the result is needed,
which may permit materialization to be avoided. See
Section 8.2.2.4, “Optimizing Derived Tables and View References with Merging or
Materialization”.
MySQL does not support LIMIT
in
subqueries for certain subquery operators:
mysql>SELECT * FROM t1
WHERE s1 IN (SELECT s2 FROM t2 ORDER BY s1 LIMIT 1);
ERROR 1235 (42000): This version of MySQL doesn't yet support 'LIMIT & IN/ALL/ANY/SOME subquery'
MySQL permits a subquery to refer to a stored function that
has data-modifying side effects such as inserting rows into
a table. For example, if f()
inserts
rows, the following query can modify data:
SELECT ... WHERE x IN (SELECT f() ...);
This behavior is an extension to the SQL standard. In MySQL,
it can produce nondeterministic results because
f()
might be executed a different number
of times for different executions of a given query depending
on how the optimizer chooses to handle it.
For statement-based or mixed-format replication, one implication of this indeterminism is that such a query can produce different results on the master and its slaves.
UPDATE
is a DML statement that
modifies rows in a table.
Single-table syntax:
UPDATE [LOW_PRIORITY] [IGNORE]table_reference
SETassignment_list
[WHEREwhere_condition
] [ORDER BY ...] [LIMITrow_count
]value
: {expr
| DEFAULT}assignment
:col_name
=value
assignment_list
:assignment
[,assignment
] ...
Multiple-table syntax:
UPDATE [LOW_PRIORITY] [IGNORE]table_references
SETassignment_list
[WHEREwhere_condition
]
For the single-table syntax, the
UPDATE
statement updates columns of
existing rows in the named table with new values. The
SET
clause indicates which columns to modify
and the values they should be given. Each value can be given as an
expression, or the keyword DEFAULT
to set a
column explicitly to its default value. The
WHERE
clause, if given, specifies the
conditions that identify which rows to update. With no
WHERE
clause, all rows are updated. If the
ORDER BY
clause is specified, the rows are
updated in the order that is specified. The
LIMIT
clause places a limit on the number of
rows that can be updated.
For the multiple-table syntax,
UPDATE
updates rows in each table
named in table_references
that satisfy
the conditions. Each matching row is updated once, even if it
matches the conditions multiple times. For multiple-table syntax,
ORDER BY
and LIMIT
cannot be
used.
For partitioned tables, both the single-single and multiple-table
forms of this statement support the use of a
PARTITION
option as part of a table reference.
This option takes a list of one or more partitions or
subpartitions (or both). Only the partitions (or subpartitions)
listed are checked for matches, and a row that is not in any of
these partitions or subpartitions is not updated, whether it
satisfies the where_condition
or not.
Unlike the case when using PARTITION
with an
INSERT
or
REPLACE
statement, an otherwise
valid UPDATE ... PARTITION
statement is
considered successful even if no rows in the listed partitions
(or subpartitions) match the
where_condition
.
For more information and examples, see Section 22.5, “Partition Selection”.
where_condition
is an expression that
evaluates to true for each row to be updated. For expression
syntax, see Section 9.5, “Expressions”.
table_references
and
where_condition
are specified as
described in Section 13.2.9, “SELECT Statement”.
You need the UPDATE
privilege only
for columns referenced in an UPDATE
that are actually updated. You need only the
SELECT
privilege for any columns
that are read but not modified.
The UPDATE
statement supports the
following modifiers:
With the LOW_PRIORITY
modifier, execution
of the UPDATE
is delayed until
no other clients are reading from the table. This affects only
storage engines that use only table-level locking (such as
MyISAM
, MEMORY
, and
MERGE
).
With the IGNORE
modifier, the update
statement does not abort even if errors occur during the
update. Rows for which duplicate-key conflicts occur on a
unique key value are not updated. Rows updated to values that
would cause data conversion errors are updated to the closest
valid values instead. For more information, see
Comparison of the IGNORE Keyword and Strict SQL Mode.
UPDATE IGNORE
statements, including those having an ORDER BY
clause, are flagged as unsafe for statement-based replication.
(This is because the order in which the rows are updated
determines which rows are ignored.) Such statements produce a
warning in the error log when using statement-based mode and are
written to the binary log using the row-based format when using
MIXED
mode. (Bug #11758262, Bug #50439) See
Section 16.2.1.3, “Determination of Safe and Unsafe Statements in Binary Logging”, for more
information.
If you access a column from the table to be updated in an
expression, UPDATE
uses the current
value of the column. For example, the following statement sets
col1
to one more than its current value:
UPDATE t1 SET col1 = col1 + 1;
The second assignment in the following statement sets
col2
to the current (updated)
col1
value, not the original
col1
value. The result is that
col1
and col2
have the same
value. This behavior differs from standard SQL.
UPDATE t1 SET col1 = col1 + 1, col2 = col1;
Single-table UPDATE
assignments are
generally evaluated from left to right. For multiple-table
updates, there is no guarantee that assignments are carried out in
any particular order.
If you set a column to the value it currently has, MySQL notices this and does not update it.
If you update a column that has been declared NOT
NULL
by setting to NULL
, an error
occurs if strict SQL mode is enabled; otherwise, the column is set
to the implicit default value for the column data type and the
warning count is incremented. The implicit default value is
0
for numeric types, the empty string
(''
) for string types, and the
“zero” value for date and time types. See
Section 11.6, “Data Type Default Values”.
If a generated column is updated explicitly, the only permitted
value is DEFAULT
. For information about
generated columns, see
Section 13.1.18.8, “CREATE TABLE and Generated Columns”.
UPDATE
returns the number of rows
that were actually changed. The
mysql_info()
C API function
returns the number of rows that were matched and updated and the
number of warnings that occurred during the
UPDATE
.
You can use LIMIT
to restrict the
scope of the row_count
UPDATE
. A
LIMIT
clause is a rows-matched restriction. The
statement stops as soon as it has found
row_count
rows that satisfy the
WHERE
clause, whether or not they actually were
changed.
If an UPDATE
statement includes an
ORDER BY
clause, the rows are updated in the
order specified by the clause. This can be useful in certain
situations that might otherwise result in an error. Suppose that a
table t
contains a column id
that has a unique index. The following statement could fail with a
duplicate-key error, depending on the order in which rows are
updated:
UPDATE t SET id = id + 1;
For example, if the table contains 1 and 2 in the
id
column and 1 is updated to 2 before 2 is
updated to 3, an error occurs. To avoid this problem, add an
ORDER BY
clause to cause the rows with larger
id
values to be updated before those with
smaller values:
UPDATE t SET id = id + 1 ORDER BY id DESC;
You can also perform UPDATE
operations covering multiple tables. However, you cannot use
ORDER BY
or LIMIT
with a
multiple-table UPDATE
. The
table_references
clause lists the
tables involved in the join. Its syntax is described in
Section 13.2.9.2, “JOIN Clause”. Here is an example:
UPDATE items,month SET items.price=month.price WHERE items.id=month.id;
The preceding example shows an inner join that uses the comma
operator, but multiple-table UPDATE
statements can use any type of join permitted in
SELECT
statements, such as
LEFT JOIN
.
If you use a multiple-table UPDATE
statement involving InnoDB
tables for which
there are foreign key constraints, the MySQL optimizer might
process tables in an order that differs from that of their
parent/child relationship. In this case, the statement fails and
rolls back. Instead, update a single table and rely on the
ON UPDATE
capabilities that
InnoDB
provides to cause the other tables to be
modified accordingly. See
Section 13.1.18.6, “FOREIGN KEY Constraints”.
You cannot update a table and select directly from the same table
in a subquery. You can work around this by using a multi-table
update in which one of the tables is derived from the table that
you actually wish to update, and referring to the derived table
using an alias. Suppose you wish to update a table named
items
which is defined using the statement
shown here:
CREATE TABLE items ( id BIGINT NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT PRIMARY KEY, wholesale DECIMAL(6,2) NOT NULL DEFAULT 0.00, retail DECIMAL(6,2) NOT NULL DEFAULT 0.00, quantity BIGINT NOT NULL DEFAULT 0 );
To reduce the retail price of any items for which the markup is
30% or greater and of which you have fewer than one hundred in
stock, you might try to use an UPDATE
statement
such as the one following, which uses a subquery in the
WHERE
clause. As shown here, this statement
does not work:
mysql>UPDATE items
>SET retail = retail * 0.9
>WHERE id IN
>(SELECT id FROM items
>WHERE retail / wholesale >= 1.3 AND quantity > 100);
ERROR 1093 (HY000): You can't specify target table 'items' for update in FROM clause
Instead, you can employ a multi-table update in which the subquery
is moved into the list of tables to be updated, using an alias to
reference it in the outermost WHERE
clause,
like this:
UPDATE items, (SELECT id FROM items WHERE id IN (SELECT id FROM items WHERE retail / wholesale >= 1.3 AND quantity < 100)) AS discounted SET items.retail = items.retail * 0.9 WHERE items.id = discounted.id;
Because the optimizer tries by default to merge the derived table
discounted
into the outermost query block, this
works only if you force materialization of the derived table. You
can do this by setting the derived_merge
flag
of the optimizer_switch
system
variable to off
before running the update, or
by using the NO_MERGE
optimizer
hint, as shown here:
UPDATE /*+ NO_MERGE(discounted) */ items, (SELECT id FROM items WHERE retail / wholesale >= 1.3 AND quantity < 100) AS discounted SET items.retail = items.retail * 0.9 WHERE items.id = discounted.id;
The advantage of using the optimizer hint in such a case is that
it applies only within the query block where it is used, so that
it is not necessary to change the value of
optimizer_switch
again after executing the
UPDATE
.
Another possibility is to rewrite the subquery so that it does not
use IN
or EXISTS
, like this:
UPDATE items, (SELECT id, retail / wholesale AS markup, quantity FROM items) AS discounted SET items.retail = items.retail * 0.9 WHERE discounted.markup >= 1.3 AND discounted.quantity < 100 AND items.id = discounted.id;
In this case, the subquery is materialized by default rather than merged, so it is not necessary to disable merging of the derived table.
MySQL supports local transactions (within a given client session)
through statements such as
SET autocommit
,
START TRANSACTION
,
COMMIT
, and
ROLLBACK
. See
Section 13.3.1, “START TRANSACTION, COMMIT, and ROLLBACK Statements”. XA transaction support enables MySQL to
participate in distributed transactions as well. See
Section 13.3.7, “XA Transactions”.
START TRANSACTION [transaction_characteristic
[,transaction_characteristic
] ...]transaction_characteristic
: { WITH CONSISTENT SNAPSHOT | READ WRITE | READ ONLY } BEGIN [WORK] COMMIT [WORK] [AND [NO] CHAIN] [[NO] RELEASE] ROLLBACK [WORK] [AND [NO] CHAIN] [[NO] RELEASE] SET autocommit = {0 | 1}
These statements provide control over use of transactions:
START TRANSACTION
or
BEGIN
start a new transaction.
COMMIT
commits the current transaction,
making its changes permanent.
ROLLBACK
rolls back the current
transaction, canceling its changes.
SET autocommit
disables or enables the
default autocommit mode for the current session.
By default, MySQL runs with
autocommit mode enabled.
This means that, when not otherwise inside a transaction, each
statement is atomic, as if it were surrounded by START
TRANSACTION
and COMMIT
. You cannot
use ROLLBACK
to undo the effect; however, if an
error occurs during statement execution, the statement is rolled
back.
To disable autocommit mode implicitly for a single series of
statements, use the START TRANSACTION
statement:
START TRANSACTION; SELECT @A:=SUM(salary) FROM table1 WHERE type=1; UPDATE table2 SET summary=@A WHERE type=1; COMMIT;
With START TRANSACTION
, autocommit remains
disabled until you end the transaction with
COMMIT
or ROLLBACK
. The
autocommit mode then reverts to its previous state.
START TRANSACTION
permits several modifiers
that control transaction characteristics. To specify multiple
modifiers, separate them by commas.
The WITH CONSISTENT SNAPSHOT
modifier
starts a consistent
read for storage engines that are capable of it. This
applies only to InnoDB
. The effect is the
same as issuing a START TRANSACTION
followed by a SELECT
from any
InnoDB
table. See
Section 14.7.2.3, “Consistent Nonlocking Reads”. The WITH
CONSISTENT SNAPSHOT
modifier does not change the
current transaction
isolation level,
so it provides a consistent snapshot only if the current
isolation level is one that permits a consistent read. The
only isolation level that permits a consistent read is
REPEATABLE READ
. For all
other isolation levels, the WITH CONSISTENT
SNAPSHOT
clause is ignored. As of MySQL 5.7.2, a
warning is generated when the WITH CONSISTENT
SNAPSHOT
clause is ignored.
The READ WRITE
and READ
ONLY
modifiers set the transaction access mode. They
permit or prohibit changes to tables used in the transaction.
The READ ONLY
restriction prevents the
transaction from modifying or locking both transactional and
nontransactional tables that are visible to other
transactions; the transaction can still modify or lock
temporary tables.
MySQL enables extra optimizations for queries on
InnoDB
tables when the transaction is known
to be read-only. Specifying READ ONLY
ensures these optimizations are applied in cases where the
read-only status cannot be determined automatically. See
Section 8.5.3, “Optimizing InnoDB Read-Only Transactions” for more
information.
If no access mode is specified, the default mode applies.
Unless the default has been changed, it is read/write. It is
not permitted to specify both READ WRITE
and READ ONLY
in the same statement.
In read-only mode, it remains possible to change tables
created with the TEMPORARY
keyword using
DML statements. Changes made with DDL statements are not
permitted, just as with permanent tables.
For additional information about transaction access mode, including ways to change the default mode, see Section 13.3.6, “SET TRANSACTION Statement”.
If the read_only
system
variable is enabled, explicitly starting a transaction with
START TRANSACTION READ WRITE
requires the
SUPER
privilege.
Many APIs used for writing MySQL client applications (such as
JDBC) provide their own methods for starting transactions that
can (and sometimes should) be used instead of sending a
START TRANSACTION
statement from the client.
See Chapter 27, Connectors and APIs, or the documentation for
your API, for more information.
To disable autocommit mode explicitly, use the following statement:
SET autocommit=0;
After disabling autocommit mode by setting the
autocommit
variable to zero,
changes to transaction-safe tables (such as those for
InnoDB
or
NDB
) are not made permanent
immediately. You must use COMMIT
to
store your changes to disk or ROLLBACK
to
ignore the changes.
autocommit
is a session variable
and must be set for each session. To disable autocommit mode for
each new connection, see the description of the
autocommit
system variable at
Section 5.1.7, “Server System Variables”.
BEGIN
and BEGIN WORK
are
supported as aliases of START TRANSACTION
for
initiating a transaction. START TRANSACTION
is
standard SQL syntax, is the recommended way to start an ad-hoc
transaction, and permits modifiers that BEGIN
does not.
The BEGIN
statement differs from the use of the
BEGIN
keyword that starts a
BEGIN ... END
compound statement. The latter does not begin a transaction. See
Section 13.6.1, “BEGIN ... END Compound Statement”.
Within all stored programs (stored procedures and functions,
triggers, and events), the parser treats BEGIN
[WORK]
as the beginning of a
BEGIN ...
END
block. Begin a transaction in this context with
START
TRANSACTION
instead.
The optional WORK
keyword is supported for
COMMIT
and ROLLBACK
, as are
the CHAIN
and RELEASE
clauses. CHAIN
and RELEASE
can be used for additional control over transaction completion.
The value of the completion_type
system variable determines the default completion behavior. See
Section 5.1.7, “Server System Variables”.
The AND CHAIN
clause causes a new transaction
to begin as soon as the current one ends, and the new transaction
has the same isolation level as the just-terminated transaction.
The new transaction also uses the same access mode (READ
WRITE
or READ ONLY
) as the
just-terminated transaction. The RELEASE
clause
causes the server to disconnect the current client session after
terminating the current transaction. Including the
NO
keyword suppresses CHAIN
or RELEASE
completion, which can be useful if
the completion_type
system
variable is set to cause chaining or release completion by
default.
Beginning a transaction causes any pending transaction to be committed. See Section 13.3.3, “Statements That Cause an Implicit Commit”, for more information.
Beginning a transaction also causes table locks acquired with
LOCK TABLES
to be released, as
though you had executed
UNLOCK
TABLES
. Beginning a transaction does not release a
global read lock acquired with FLUSH TABLES
WITH READ LOCK
.
For best results, transactions should be performed using only tables managed by a single transaction-safe storage engine. Otherwise, the following problems can occur:
If you use tables from more than one transaction-safe storage
engine (such as InnoDB
), and the
transaction isolation level is not
SERIALIZABLE
, it is
possible that when one transaction commits, another ongoing
transaction that uses the same tables will see only some of
the changes made by the first transaction. That is, the
atomicity of transactions is not guaranteed with mixed engines
and inconsistencies can result. (If mixed-engine transactions
are infrequent, you can use
SET
TRANSACTION ISOLATION LEVEL
to set the isolation
level to SERIALIZABLE
on a
per-transaction basis as necessary.)
If you use tables that are not transaction-safe within a transaction, changes to those tables are stored at once, regardless of the status of autocommit mode.
If you issue a
ROLLBACK
statement after updating a nontransactional table within a
transaction, an
ER_WARNING_NOT_COMPLETE_ROLLBACK
warning occurs. Changes to transaction-safe tables are rolled
back, but not changes to nontransaction-safe tables.
Each transaction is stored in the binary log in one chunk, upon
COMMIT
. Transactions that are
rolled back are not logged.
(Exception: Modifications to
nontransactional tables cannot be rolled back. If a transaction
that is rolled back includes modifications to nontransactional
tables, the entire transaction is logged with a
ROLLBACK
statement at the end to ensure that modifications to the
nontransactional tables are replicated.) See
Section 5.4.4, “The Binary Log”.
You can change the isolation level or access mode for transactions
with the SET TRANSACTION
statement.
See Section 13.3.6, “SET TRANSACTION Statement”.
Rolling back can be a slow operation that may occur implicitly
without the user having explicitly asked for it (for example, when
an error occurs). Because of this, SHOW
PROCESSLIST
displays Rolling back
in
the State
column for the session, not only for
explicit rollbacks performed with the
ROLLBACK
statement but also for implicit rollbacks.
In MySQL 5.7, BEGIN
,
COMMIT
, and ROLLBACK
are
not affected by --replicate-do-db
or --replicate-ignore-db
rules.
Some statements cannot be rolled back. In general, these include data definition language (DDL) statements, such as those that create or drop databases, those that create, drop, or alter tables or stored routines.
You should design your transactions not to include such
statements. If you issue a statement early in a transaction that
cannot be rolled back, and then another statement later fails, the
full effect of the transaction cannot be rolled back in such cases
by issuing a
ROLLBACK
statement.
The statements listed in this section (and any synonyms for them)
implicitly end any transaction active in the current session, as
if you had done a COMMIT
before
executing the statement.
Most of these statements also cause an implicit commit after executing. The intent is to handle each such statement in its own special transaction because it cannot be rolled back anyway. Transaction-control and locking statements are exceptions: If an implicit commit occurs before execution, another does not occur after.
Data definition language (DDL)
statements that define or modify database objects.
ALTER DATABASE
... UPGRADE DATA DIRECTORY NAME
,
ALTER EVENT
,
ALTER PROCEDURE
,
ALTER SERVER
,
ALTER TABLE
,
ALTER VIEW
,
CREATE DATABASE
,
CREATE EVENT
,
CREATE INDEX
,
CREATE PROCEDURE
,
CREATE SERVER
,
CREATE TABLE
,
CREATE TRIGGER
,
CREATE VIEW
,
DROP DATABASE
,
DROP EVENT
,
DROP INDEX
,
DROP PROCEDURE
,
DROP SERVER
,
DROP TABLE
,
DROP TRIGGER
,
DROP VIEW
,
INSTALL PLUGIN
,
RENAME TABLE
,
TRUNCATE TABLE
,
UNINSTALL PLUGIN
.
ALTER FUNCTION
,
CREATE FUNCTION
and
DROP FUNCTION
also cause an
implicit commit when used with stored functions, but not with
user-defined functions. (ALTER
FUNCTION
can only be used with stored functions.)
CREATE TABLE
and
DROP TABLE
statements do not
commit a transaction if the TEMPORARY
keyword is used. (This does not apply to other operations on
temporary tables such as ALTER
TABLE
and CREATE
INDEX
, which do cause a commit.) However, although
no implicit commit occurs, neither can the statement be rolled
back, which means that the use of such statements causes
transactional atomicity to be violated. For example, if you
use CREATE
TEMPORARY TABLE
and then roll back the transaction,
the table remains in existence.
The CREATE TABLE
statement in
InnoDB
is processed as a single
transaction. This means that a
ROLLBACK
from the user does not undo CREATE
TABLE
statements the user made during that
transaction.
CREATE TABLE ...
SELECT
causes an implicit commit before and after
the statement is executed when you are creating nontemporary
tables. (No commit occurs for CREATE TEMPORARY TABLE
... SELECT
.)
Statements that implicitly use or modify
tables in the mysql
database.
ALTER USER
,
CREATE USER
,
DROP USER
,
GRANT
,
RENAME USER
,
REVOKE
,
SET PASSWORD
.
Transaction-control and locking
statements.
BEGIN
,
LOCK TABLES
, SET
autocommit = 1
(if the value is not already 1),
START
TRANSACTION
,
UNLOCK
TABLES
.
UNLOCK
TABLES
commits a transaction only if any tables
currently have been locked with LOCK
TABLES
to acquire nontransactional table locks. A
commit does not occur for
UNLOCK
TABLES
following FLUSH TABLES
WITH READ LOCK
because the latter statement does not
acquire table-level locks.
Transactions cannot be nested. This is a consequence of the
implicit commit performed for any current transaction when you
issue a START
TRANSACTION
statement or one of its synonyms.
Statements that cause an implicit commit cannot be used in an
XA transaction while the transaction is in an
ACTIVE
state.
The BEGIN
statement differs from the use of the BEGIN
keyword that starts a
BEGIN ...
END
compound statement. The latter does not cause an
implicit commit. See Section 13.6.1, “BEGIN ... END Compound Statement”.
Data loading statements.
LOAD DATA
.
LOAD DATA
causes an implicit
commit only for tables using the
NDB
storage engine.
Administrative statements.
ANALYZE TABLE
,
CACHE INDEX
,
CHECK TABLE
,
FLUSH
,
LOAD INDEX INTO
CACHE
, OPTIMIZE
TABLE
, REPAIR TABLE
,
RESET
.
Replication control
statements. START
SLAVE
, STOP SLAVE
,
RESET SLAVE
,
CHANGE MASTER TO
.
SAVEPOINTidentifier
ROLLBACK [WORK] TO [SAVEPOINT]identifier
RELEASE SAVEPOINTidentifier
InnoDB
supports the SQL statements
SAVEPOINT
,
ROLLBACK TO
SAVEPOINT
,
RELEASE
SAVEPOINT
and the optional WORK
keyword for
ROLLBACK
.
The SAVEPOINT
statement sets a
named transaction savepoint with a name of
identifier
. If the current transaction
has a savepoint with the same name, the old savepoint is deleted
and a new one is set.
The ROLLBACK TO
SAVEPOINT
statement rolls back a transaction to the
named savepoint without terminating the transaction. Modifications
that the current transaction made to rows after the savepoint was
set are undone in the rollback, but InnoDB
does
not release the row locks that were stored in
memory after the savepoint. (For a new inserted row, the lock
information is carried by the transaction ID stored in the row;
the lock is not separately stored in memory. In this case, the row
lock is released in the undo.) Savepoints that were set at a later
time than the named savepoint are deleted.
If the ROLLBACK TO
SAVEPOINT
statement returns the following error, it
means that no savepoint with the specified name exists:
ERROR 1305 (42000): SAVEPOINT identifier
does not exist
The RELEASE
SAVEPOINT
statement removes the named savepoint from the
set of savepoints of the current transaction. No commit or
rollback occurs. It is an error if the savepoint does not exist.
All savepoints of the current transaction are deleted if you
execute a COMMIT
, or a
ROLLBACK
that
does not name a savepoint.
A new savepoint level is created when a stored function is invoked or a trigger is activated. The savepoints on previous levels become unavailable and thus do not conflict with savepoints on the new level. When the function or trigger terminates, any savepoints it created are released and the previous savepoint level is restored.
LOCK TABLEStbl_name
[[AS]alias
]lock_type
[,tbl_name
[[AS]alias
]lock_type
] ...lock_type
: { READ [LOCAL] | [LOW_PRIORITY] WRITE } UNLOCK TABLES
MySQL enables client sessions to acquire table locks explicitly for the purpose of cooperating with other sessions for access to tables, or to prevent other sessions from modifying tables during periods when a session requires exclusive access to them. A session can acquire or release locks only for itself. One session cannot acquire locks for another session or release locks held by another session.
Locks may be used to emulate transactions or to get more speed when updating tables. This is explained in more detail in Table-Locking Restrictions and Conditions.
LOCK TABLES
explicitly acquires
table locks for the current client session. Table locks can be
acquired for base tables or views. You must have the
LOCK TABLES
privilege, and the
SELECT
privilege for each object to
be locked.
For view locking, LOCK TABLES
adds
all base tables used in the view to the set of tables to be locked
and locks them automatically. If you lock a table explicitly with
LOCK TABLES
, any tables used in
triggers are also locked implicitly, as described in
LOCK TABLES and Triggers.
UNLOCK
TABLES
explicitly releases any table locks held by the
current session. LOCK TABLES
implicitly releases any table locks held by the current session
before acquiring new locks.
Another use for
UNLOCK
TABLES
is to release the global read lock acquired with
the FLUSH TABLES WITH READ LOCK
statement, which enables you to lock all tables in all databases.
See Section 13.7.6.3, “FLUSH Statement”. (This is a very convenient way to get
backups if you have a file system such as Veritas that can take
snapshots in time.)
A table lock protects only against inappropriate reads or writes
by other sessions. A session holding a WRITE
lock can perform table-level operations such as
DROP TABLE
or
TRUNCATE TABLE
. For sessions
holding a READ
lock, DROP
TABLE
and TRUNCATE TABLE
operations are not permitted.
The following discussion applies only to
non-TEMPORARY
tables. LOCK
TABLES
is permitted (but ignored) for a
TEMPORARY
table. The table can be accessed
freely by the session within which it was created, regardless of
what other locking may be in effect. No lock is necessary because
no other session can see the table.
To acquire table locks within the current session, use the
LOCK TABLES
statement, which
acquires metadata locks (see
Section 8.11.4, “Metadata Locking”).
The following lock types are available:
READ [LOCAL]
lock:
The session that holds the lock can read the table (but not write it).
Multiple sessions can acquire a READ
lock
for the table at the same time.
Other sessions can read the table without explicitly
acquiring a READ
lock.
The LOCAL
modifier enables nonconflicting
INSERT
statements (concurrent
inserts) by other sessions to execute while the lock is
held. (See Section 8.11.3, “Concurrent Inserts”.) However,
READ LOCAL
cannot be used if you are
going to manipulate the database using processes external to
the server while you hold the lock. For
InnoDB
tables, READ
LOCAL
is the same as READ
.
[LOW_PRIORITY] WRITE
lock:
The session that holds the lock can read and write the table.
Only the session that holds the lock can access the table. No other session can access it until the lock is released.
Lock requests for the table by other sessions block while
the WRITE
lock is held.
The LOW_PRIORITY
modifier has no effect.
In previous versions of MySQL, it affected locking behavior,
but this is no longer true. It is now deprecated and its use
produces a warning. Use WRITE
without
LOW_PRIORITY
instead.
WRITE
locks normally have higher priority
than READ
locks to ensure that updates are
processed as soon as possible. This means that if one session
obtains a READ
lock and then another session
requests a WRITE
lock, subsequent
READ
lock requests wait until the session
that requested the WRITE
lock has obtained
the lock and released it. (An exception to this policy can occur
for small values of the
max_write_lock_count
system
variable; see Section 8.11.4, “Metadata Locking”.)
If the LOCK TABLES
statement must
wait due to locks held by other sessions on any of the tables,
it blocks until all locks can be acquired.
A session that requires locks must acquire all the locks that it
needs in a single LOCK TABLES
statement. While the locks thus obtained are held, the session
can access only the locked tables. For example, in the following
sequence of statements, an error occurs for the attempt to
access t2
because it was not locked in the
LOCK TABLES
statement:
mysql>LOCK TABLES t1 READ;
mysql>SELECT COUNT(*) FROM t1;
+----------+ | COUNT(*) | +----------+ | 3 | +----------+ mysql>SELECT COUNT(*) FROM t2;
ERROR 1100 (HY000): Table 't2' was not locked with LOCK TABLES
Tables in the INFORMATION_SCHEMA
database are
an exception. They can be accessed without being locked
explicitly even while a session holds table locks obtained with
LOCK TABLES
.
You cannot refer to a locked table multiple times in a single query using the same name. Use aliases instead, and obtain a separate lock for the table and each alias:
mysql>LOCK TABLE t WRITE, t AS t1 READ;
mysql>INSERT INTO t SELECT * FROM t;
ERROR 1100: Table 't' was not locked with LOCK TABLES mysql>INSERT INTO t SELECT * FROM t AS t1;
The error occurs for the first
INSERT
because there are two
references to the same name for a locked table. The second
INSERT
succeeds because the
references to the table use different names.
If your statements refer to a table by means of an alias, you must lock the table using that same alias. It does not work to lock the table without specifying the alias:
mysql>LOCK TABLE t READ;
mysql>SELECT * FROM t AS myalias;
ERROR 1100: Table 'myalias' was not locked with LOCK TABLES
Conversely, if you lock a table using an alias, you must refer to it in your statements using that alias:
mysql>LOCK TABLE t AS myalias READ;
mysql>SELECT * FROM t;
ERROR 1100: Table 't' was not locked with LOCK TABLES mysql>SELECT * FROM t AS myalias;
LOCK TABLES
or UNLOCK
TABLES
, when applied to a partitioned table, always
locks or unlocks the entire table; these statements do not
support partition lock pruning. See
Section 22.6.4, “Partitioning and Locking”.
When the table locks held by a session are released, they are all released at the same time. A session can release its locks explicitly, or locks may be released implicitly under certain conditions.
A session can release its locks explicitly with
UNLOCK
TABLES
.
If a session issues a LOCK
TABLES
statement to acquire a lock while already
holding locks, its existing locks are released implicitly
before the new locks are granted.
If a session begins a transaction (for example, with
START
TRANSACTION
), an implicit
UNLOCK
TABLES
is performed, which causes existing locks
to be released. (For additional information about the
interaction between table locking and transactions, see
Interaction of Table Locking and Transactions.)
If the connection for a client session terminates, whether normally or abnormally, the server implicitly releases all table locks held by the session (transactional and nontransactional). If the client reconnects, the locks will no longer be in effect. In addition, if the client had an active transaction, the server rolls back the transaction upon disconnect, and if reconnect occurs, the new session begins with autocommit enabled. For this reason, clients may wish to disable auto-reconnect. With auto-reconnect in effect, the client is not notified if reconnect occurs but any table locks or current transaction will have been lost. With auto-reconnect disabled, if the connection drops, an error occurs for the next statement issued. The client can detect the error and take appropriate action such as reacquiring the locks or redoing the transaction. See Section 27.7.19, “C API Automatic Reconnection Control”.
If you use ALTER TABLE
on a
locked table, it may become unlocked. For example, if you
attempt a second ALTER TABLE
operation, the result may be an error Table
'
. To handle this, lock the table again prior
to the second alteration. See also
Section B.4.6.1, “Problems with ALTER TABLE”.
tbl_name
' was not locked with LOCK
TABLES
LOCK TABLES
and
UNLOCK
TABLES
interact with the use of transactions as
follows:
LOCK TABLES
is not
transaction-safe and implicitly commits any active
transaction before attempting to lock the tables.
UNLOCK
TABLES
implicitly commits any active transaction,
but only if LOCK TABLES
has
been used to acquire table locks. For example, in the
following set of statements,
UNLOCK
TABLES
releases the global read lock but does not
commit the transaction because no table locks are in effect:
FLUSH TABLES WITH READ LOCK; START TRANSACTION; SELECT ... ; UNLOCK TABLES;
Beginning a transaction (for example, with
START
TRANSACTION
) implicitly commits any current
transaction and releases existing table locks.
FLUSH TABLES WITH READ LOCK
acquires a global read lock and not table locks, so it is
not subject to the same behavior as
LOCK TABLES
and
UNLOCK
TABLES
with respect to table locking and implicit
commits. For example,
START
TRANSACTION
does not release the global read lock.
See Section 13.7.6.3, “FLUSH Statement”.
Other statements that implicitly cause transactions to be committed do not release existing table locks. For a list of such statements, see Section 13.3.3, “Statements That Cause an Implicit Commit”.
The correct way to use LOCK
TABLES
and
UNLOCK
TABLES
with transactional tables, such as
InnoDB
tables, is to begin a transaction
with SET autocommit = 0
(not
START
TRANSACTION
) followed by LOCK
TABLES
, and to not call
UNLOCK
TABLES
until you commit the transaction
explicitly. For example, if you need to write to table
t1
and read from table
t2
, you can do this:
SET autocommit=0;
LOCK TABLES t1 WRITE, t2 READ, ...;... do something with tables t1 and t2 here ...
COMMIT;
UNLOCK TABLES;
When you call LOCK TABLES
,
InnoDB
internally takes its own table
lock, and MySQL takes its own table lock.
InnoDB
releases its internal table lock
at the next commit, but for MySQL to release its table lock,
you have to call
UNLOCK
TABLES
. You should not have
autocommit = 1
, because
then InnoDB
releases its internal table
lock immediately after the call of LOCK
TABLES
, and deadlocks can very easily happen.
InnoDB
does not acquire the internal
table lock at all if autocommit =
1
, to help old applications avoid unnecessary
deadlocks.
ROLLBACK
does not release table locks.
If you lock a table explicitly with LOCK
TABLES
, any tables used in triggers are also locked
implicitly:
The locks are taken as the same time as those acquired
explicitly with the LOCK
TABLES
statement.
The lock on a table used in a trigger depends on whether the table is used only for reading. If so, a read lock suffices. Otherwise, a write lock is used.
If a table is locked explicitly for reading with
LOCK TABLES
, but needs to be
locked for writing because it might be modified within a
trigger, a write lock is taken rather than a read lock.
(That is, an implicit write lock needed due to the table's
appearance within a trigger causes an explicit read lock
request for the table to be converted to a write lock
request.)
Suppose that you lock two tables, t1
and
t2
, using this statement:
LOCK TABLES t1 WRITE, t2 READ;
If t1
or t2
have any
triggers, tables used within the triggers will also be locked.
Suppose that t1
has a trigger defined like
this:
CREATE TRIGGER t1_a_ins AFTER INSERT ON t1 FOR EACH ROW BEGIN UPDATE t4 SET count = count+1 WHERE id = NEW.id AND EXISTS (SELECT a FROM t3); INSERT INTO t2 VALUES(1, 2); END;
The result of the LOCK TABLES
statement is that t1
and
t2
are locked because they appear in the
statement, and t3
and t4
are locked because they are used within the trigger:
t1
is locked for writing per the
WRITE
lock request.
t2
is locked for writing, even though the
request is for a READ
lock. This occurs
because t2
is inserted into within the
trigger, so the READ
request is converted
to a WRITE
request.
t3
is locked for reading because it is
only read from within the trigger.
t4
is locked for writing because it might
be updated within the trigger.
You can safely use KILL
to
terminate a session that is waiting for a table lock. See
Section 13.7.6.4, “KILL Statement”.
LOCK TABLES
and
UNLOCK
TABLES
cannot be used within stored programs.
Tables in the performance_schema
database
cannot be locked with LOCK
TABLES
, except the
setup_
tables.
xxx
The following statements are prohibited while a
LOCK TABLES
statement is in
effect: CREATE TABLE
,
CREATE TABLE ...
LIKE
, CREATE VIEW
,
DROP VIEW
, and DDL statements on
stored functions and procedures and events.
For some operations, system tables in the
mysql
database must be accessed. For example,
the HELP
statement requires the
contents of the server-side help tables, and
CONVERT_TZ()
might need to read
the time zone tables. The server implicitly locks the system
tables for reading as necessary so that you need not lock them
explicitly. These tables are treated as just described:
mysql.help_category mysql.help_keyword mysql.help_relation mysql.help_topic mysql.proc mysql.time_zone mysql.time_zone_leap_second mysql.time_zone_name mysql.time_zone_transition mysql.time_zone_transition_type
If you want to explicitly place a WRITE
lock
on any of those tables with a LOCK
TABLES
statement, the table must be the only one
locked; no other table can be locked with the same statement.
Normally, you do not need to lock tables, because all single
UPDATE
statements are atomic; no
other session can interfere with any other currently executing
SQL statement. However, there are a few cases when locking
tables may provide an advantage:
If you are going to run many operations on a set of
MyISAM
tables, it is much faster to lock
the tables you are going to use. Locking
MyISAM
tables speeds up inserting,
updating, or deleting on them because MySQL does not flush
the key cache for the locked tables until
UNLOCK
TABLES
is called. Normally, the key cache is
flushed after each SQL statement.
The downside to locking the tables is that no session can
update a READ
-locked table (including the
one holding the lock) and no session can access a
WRITE
-locked table other than the one
holding the lock.
If you are using tables for a nontransactional storage
engine, you must use LOCK
TABLES
if you want to ensure that no other session
modifies the tables between a
SELECT
and an
UPDATE
. The example shown
here requires LOCK TABLES
to
execute safely:
LOCK TABLES trans READ, customer WRITE; SELECT SUM(value) FROM trans WHERE customer_id=some_id
; UPDATE customer SET total_value=sum_from_previous_statement
WHERE customer_id=some_id
; UNLOCK TABLES;
Without LOCK TABLES
, it is
possible that another session might insert a new row in the
trans
table between execution of the
SELECT
and
UPDATE
statements.
You can avoid using LOCK TABLES
in many cases by using relative updates (UPDATE
customer SET
)
or the value
=value
+new_value
LAST_INSERT_ID()
function.
You can also avoid locking tables in some cases by using the
user-level advisory lock functions
GET_LOCK()
and
RELEASE_LOCK()
. These locks are
saved in a hash table in the server and implemented with
pthread_mutex_lock()
and
pthread_mutex_unlock()
for high speed. See
Section 12.14, “Locking Functions”.
See Section 8.11.1, “Internal Locking Methods”, for more information on locking policy.
SET [GLOBAL | SESSION] TRANSACTIONtransaction_characteristic
[,transaction_characteristic
] ...transaction_characteristic
: { ISOLATION LEVELlevel
|access_mode
}level
: { REPEATABLE READ | READ COMMITTED | READ UNCOMMITTED | SERIALIZABLE }access_mode
: { READ WRITE | READ ONLY }
This statement specifies
transaction
characteristics. It takes a list of one or more characteristic
values separated by commas. Each characteristic value sets the
transaction isolation
level or access mode. The isolation level is used for
operations on InnoDB
tables. The
access mode specifies whether transactions operate in read/write
or read-only mode.
In addition, SET TRANSACTION
can
include an optional GLOBAL
or
SESSION
keyword to indicate the scope of the
statement.
To set the transaction isolation level, use an
ISOLATION LEVEL
clause. It is not
permitted to specify multiple level
ISOLATION LEVEL
clauses in the same SET
TRANSACTION
statement.
The default isolation level is
REPEATABLE READ
. Other
permitted values are READ
COMMITTED
, READ
UNCOMMITTED
, and
SERIALIZABLE
. For information
about these isolation levels, see
Section 14.7.2.1, “Transaction Isolation Levels”.
To set the transaction access mode, use a READ
WRITE
or READ ONLY
clause. It is
not permitted to specify multiple access-mode clauses in the
same SET TRANSACTION
statement.
By default, a transaction takes place in read/write mode, with
both reads and writes permitted to tables used in the
transaction. This mode may be specified explicitly using
SET TRANSACTION
with an access
mode of READ WRITE
.
If the transaction access mode is set to READ
ONLY
, changes to tables are prohibited. This may
enable storage engines to make performance improvements that are
possible when writes are not permitted.
In read-only mode, it remains possible to change tables created
with the TEMPORARY
keyword using DML
statements. Changes made with DDL statements are not permitted,
just as with permanent tables.
The READ WRITE
and READ
ONLY
access modes also may be specified for an
individual transaction using the
START
TRANSACTION
statement.
You can set transaction characteristics globally, for the current session, or for the next transaction only:
With the GLOBAL
keyword:
The statement applies globally for all subsequent sessions.
Existing sessions are unaffected.
With the SESSION
keyword:
The statement applies to all subsequent transactions performed within the current session.
The statement is permitted within transactions, but does not affect the current ongoing transaction.
If executed between transactions, the statement overrides any preceding statement that sets the next-transaction value of the named characteristics.
Without any SESSION
or
GLOBAL
keyword:
The statement applies only to the next single transaction performed within the session.
Subsequent transactions revert to using the session value of the named characteristics.
The statement is not permitted within transactions:
mysql>START TRANSACTION;
Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.02 sec) mysql>SET TRANSACTION ISOLATION LEVEL SERIALIZABLE;
ERROR 1568 (25001): Transaction characteristics can't be changed while a transaction is in progress
A change to global transaction characteristics requires the
SUPER
privilege. Any session is
free to change its session characteristics (even in the middle
of a transaction), or the characteristics for its next
transaction (prior to the start of that transaction).
To set the global isolation level at server startup, use the
--transaction-isolation=
option on the command line or in an option file. Values of
level
level
for this option use dashes
rather than spaces, so the permissible values are
READ-UNCOMMITTED
,
READ-COMMITTED
,
REPEATABLE-READ
, or
SERIALIZABLE
.
Similarly, to set the global transaction access mode at server
startup, use the
--transaction-read-only
option.
The default is OFF
(read/write mode) but the
value can be set to ON
for a mode of read
only.
For example, to set the isolation level to
REPEATABLE READ
and the
access mode to READ WRITE
, use these lines in
the [mysqld]
section of an option file:
[mysqld] transaction-isolation = REPEATABLE-READ transaction-read-only = OFF
At runtime, characteristics at the global, session, and
next-transaction scope levels can be set indirectly using the
SET TRANSACTION
statement, as
described previously. They can also be set directly using the
SET
statement to assign values to the
transaction_isolation
and
transaction_read_only
system
variables:
SET TRANSACTION
permits
optional GLOBAL
and
SESSION
keywords for setting transaction
characteristics at different scope levels.
The
SET
statement for assigning values to the
transaction_isolation
and
transaction_read_only
system variables has syntaxes for setting these variables at
different scope levels.
The following tables show the characteristic scope level set by
each SET TRANSACTION
and
variable-assignment syntax.
Table 13.6 SET TRANSACTION Syntax for Transaction Characteristics
Syntax | Affected Characteristic Scope |
---|---|
SET GLOBAL TRANSACTION
|
Global |
SET SESSION TRANSACTION
|
Session |
SET TRANSACTION
|
Next transaction only |
Table 13.7 SET Syntax for Transaction Characteristics
Syntax | Affected Characteristic Scope |
---|---|
SET GLOBAL |
Global |
SET @@GLOBAL. |
Global |
SET SESSION |
Session |
SET @@SESSION. |
Session |
SET |
Session |
SET @@ |
Next transaction only |
It is possible to check the global and session values of transaction characteristics at runtime:
SELECT @@GLOBAL.transaction_isolation, @@GLOBAL.transaction_read_only; SELECT @@SESSION.transaction_isolation, @@SESSION.transaction_read_only;
Prior to MySQL 5.7.20, use
tx_isolation
and
tx_read_only
rather than
transaction_isolation
and
transaction_read_only
.
Support for XA transactions is
available for the InnoDB
storage
engine. The MySQL XA implementation is based on the X/Open CAE
document Distributed Transaction Processing: The XA
Specification. This document is published by The Open
Group and available at
http://www.opengroup.org/public/pubs/catalog/c193.htm.
Limitations of the current XA implementation are described in
Section 13.3.7.3, “Restrictions on XA Transactions”.
On the client side, there are no special requirements. The XA
interface to a MySQL server consists of SQL statements that begin
with the XA
keyword. MySQL client programs must
be able to send SQL statements and to understand the semantics of
the XA statement interface. They do not need be linked against a
recent client library. Older client libraries also will work.
Among the MySQL Connectors, MySQL Connector/J 5.0.0 and higher supports XA directly, by means of a class interface that handles the XA SQL statement interface for you.
XA supports distributed transactions, that is, the ability to permit multiple separate transactional resources to participate in a global transaction. Transactional resources often are RDBMSs but may be other kinds of resources.
A global transaction involves several actions that are
transactional in themselves, but that all must either complete
successfully as a group, or all be rolled back as a group. In
essence, this extends ACID properties “up a level” so
that multiple ACID transactions can be executed in concert as
components of a global operation that also has ACID properties.
(As with nondistributed transactions,
SERIALIZABLE
may be preferred
if your applications are sensitive to read phenomena.
REPEATABLE READ
may not be
sufficient for distributed transactions.)
Some examples of distributed transactions:
An application may act as an integration tool that combines a messaging service with an RDBMS. The application makes sure that transactions dealing with message sending, retrieval, and processing that also involve a transactional database all happen in a global transaction. You can think of this as “transactional email.”
An application performs actions that involve different database servers, such as a MySQL server and an Oracle server (or multiple MySQL servers), where actions that involve multiple servers must happen as part of a global transaction, rather than as separate transactions local to each server.
A bank keeps account information in an RDBMS and distributes and receives money through automated teller machines (ATMs). It is necessary to ensure that ATM actions are correctly reflected in the accounts, but this cannot be done with the RDBMS alone. A global transaction manager integrates the ATM and database resources to ensure overall consistency of financial transactions.
Applications that use global transactions involve one or more Resource Managers and a Transaction Manager:
A Resource Manager (RM) provides access to transactional resources. A database server is one kind of resource manager. It must be possible to either commit or roll back transactions managed by the RM.
A Transaction Manager (TM) coordinates the transactions that are part of a global transaction. It communicates with the RMs that handle each of these transactions. The individual transactions within a global transaction are “branches” of the global transaction. Global transactions and their branches are identified by a naming scheme described later.
The MySQL implementation of XA enables a MySQL server to act as a Resource Manager that handles XA transactions within a global transaction. A client program that connects to the MySQL server acts as the Transaction Manager.
To carry out a global transaction, it is necessary to know which components are involved, and bring each component to a point when it can be committed or rolled back. Depending on what each component reports about its ability to succeed, they must all commit or roll back as an atomic group. That is, either all components must commit, or all components must roll back. To manage a global transaction, it is necessary to take into account that any component or the connecting network might fail.
The process for executing a global transaction uses two-phase commit (2PC). This takes place after the actions performed by the branches of the global transaction have been executed.
In the first phase, all branches are prepared. That is, they are told by the TM to get ready to commit. Typically, this means each RM that manages a branch records the actions for the branch in stable storage. The branches indicate whether they are able to do this, and these results are used for the second phase.
In the second phase, the TM tells the RMs whether to commit or roll back. If all branches indicated when they were prepared that they will be able to commit, all branches are told to commit. If any branch indicated when it was prepared that it will not be able to commit, all branches are told to roll back.
In some cases, a global transaction might use one-phase commit (1PC). For example, when a Transaction Manager finds that a global transaction consists of only one transactional resource (that is, a single branch), that resource can be told to prepare and commit at the same time.
To perform XA transactions in MySQL, use the following statements:
XA {START|BEGIN}xid
[JOIN|RESUME] XA ENDxid
[SUSPEND [FOR MIGRATE]] XA PREPARExid
XA COMMITxid
[ONE PHASE] XA ROLLBACKxid
XA RECOVER [CONVERT XID]
For XA
START
, the JOIN
and
RESUME
clauses are recognized but have no
effect.
For XA
END
the SUSPEND [FOR MIGRATE]
clause is recognized but has no effect.
Each XA statement begins with the XA
keyword,
and most of them require an xid
value. An xid
is an XA transaction
identifier. It indicates which transaction the statement applies
to. xid
values are supplied by the
client, or generated by the MySQL server. An
xid
value has from one to three
parts:
xid
:gtrid
[,bqual
[,formatID
]]
gtrid
is a global transaction
identifier, bqual
is a branch
qualifier, and formatID
is a number
that identifies the format used by the
gtrid
and
bqual
values. As indicated by the
syntax, bqual
and
formatID
are optional. The default
bqual
value is ''
if not given. The default formatID
value is 1 if not given.
gtrid
and
bqual
must be string literals, each
up to 64 bytes (not characters) long.
gtrid
and
bqual
can be specified in several
ways. You can use a quoted string ('ab'
), hex
string (X'6162'
, 0x6162
),
or bit value
(b'
).
nnnn
'
formatID
is an unsigned integer.
The gtrid
and
bqual
values are interpreted in bytes
by the MySQL server's underlying XA support routines. However,
while an SQL statement containing an XA statement is being
parsed, the server works with some specific character set. To be
safe, write gtrid
and
bqual
as hex strings.
xid
values typically are generated by
the Transaction Manager. Values generated by one TM must be
different from values generated by other TMs. A given TM must be
able to recognize its own xid
values
in a list of values returned by the
XA
RECOVER
statement.
XA START
starts an XA
transaction with the given xid
xid
value.
Each XA transaction must have a unique
xid
value, so the value must not
currently be used by another XA transaction. Uniqueness is
assessed using the gtrid
and
bqual
values. All following XA
statements for the XA transaction must be specified using the
same xid
value as that given in the
XA
START
statement. If you use any of those statements
but specify an xid
value that does
not correspond to some existing XA transaction, an error occurs.
One or more XA transactions can be part of the same global
transaction. All XA transactions within a given global
transaction must use the same gtrid
value in the xid
value. For this
reason, gtrid
values must be globally
unique so that there is no ambiguity about which global
transaction a given XA transaction is part of. The
bqual
part of the
xid
value must be different for each
XA transaction within a global transaction. (The requirement
that bqual
values be different is a
limitation of the current MySQL XA implementation. It is not
part of the XA specification.)
The XA
RECOVER
statement returns information for those XA
transactions on the MySQL server that are in the
PREPARED
state. (See
Section 13.3.7.2, “XA Transaction States”.) The output includes a row for each
such XA transaction on the server, regardless of which client
started it.
XA
RECOVER
output rows look like this (for an example
xid
value consisting of the parts
'abc'
, 'def'
, and
7
):
mysql> XA RECOVER;
+----------+--------------+--------------+--------+
| formatID | gtrid_length | bqual_length | data |
+----------+--------------+--------------+--------+
| 7 | 3 | 3 | abcdef |
+----------+--------------+--------------+--------+
The output columns have the following meanings:
formatID
is the
formatID
part of the transaction
xid
gtrid_length
is the length in bytes of
the gtrid
part of the
xid
bqual_length
is the length in bytes of
the bqual
part of the
xid
data
is the concatenation of the
gtrid
and
bqual
parts of the
xid
XID values may contain nonprintable characters. As of MySQL
5.7.5, XA
RECOVER
permits an optional CONVERT
XID
clause so that clients can request XID values in
hexadecimal.
An XA transaction progresses through the following states:
Use XA
START
to start an XA transaction and put it in the
ACTIVE
state.
For an ACTIVE
XA transaction, issue the
SQL statements that make up the transaction, and then issue
an XA
END
statement.
XA
END
puts the transaction in the
IDLE
state.
For an IDLE
XA transaction, you can issue
either an XA
PREPARE
statement or an XA COMMIT ... ONE
PHASE
statement:
XA
PREPARE
puts the transaction in the
PREPARED
state. An
XA
RECOVER
statement at this point will include
the transaction's xid
value
in its output, because
XA
RECOVER
lists all XA transactions that are in
the PREPARED
state.
XA COMMIT ... ONE PHASE
prepares and
commits the transaction. The
xid
value will not be listed
by XA
RECOVER
because the transaction terminates.
For a PREPARED
XA transaction, you can
issue an XA
COMMIT
statement to commit and terminate the
transaction, or
XA
ROLLBACK
to roll back and terminate the
transaction.
Here is a simple XA transaction that inserts a row into a table as part of a global transaction:
mysql>XA START 'xatest';
Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.00 sec) mysql>INSERT INTO mytable (i) VALUES(10);
Query OK, 1 row affected (0.04 sec) mysql>XA END 'xatest';
Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.00 sec) mysql>XA PREPARE 'xatest';
Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.00 sec) mysql>XA COMMIT 'xatest';
Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.00 sec)
Within the context of a given client connection, XA transactions
and local (non-XA) transactions are mutually exclusive. For
example, if XA
START
has been issued to begin an XA transaction, a
local transaction cannot be started until the XA transaction has
been committed or rolled back. Conversely, if a local
transaction has been started with
START
TRANSACTION
, no XA statements can be used until the
transaction has been committed or rolled back.
If an XA transaction is in the ACTIVE
state,
you cannot issue any statements that cause an implicit commit.
That would violate the XA contract because you could not roll
back the XA transaction. You will receive the following error if
you try to execute such a statement:
ERROR 1399 (XAE07): XAER_RMFAIL: The command cannot be executed when global transaction is in the ACTIVE state
Statements to which the preceding remark applies are listed at Section 13.3.3, “Statements That Cause an Implicit Commit”.
XA transaction support is limited to the
InnoDB
storage engine.
For “external XA,” a MySQL server acts as a
Resource Manager and client programs act as Transaction
Managers. For “Internal XA”, storage engines within
a MySQL server act as RMs, and the server itself acts as a TM.
Internal XA support is limited by the capabilities of individual
storage engines. Internal XA is required for handling XA
transactions that involve more than one storage engine. The
implementation of internal XA requires that a storage engine
support two-phase commit at the table handler level, and
currently this is true only for InnoDB
.
For XA
START
, the JOIN
and
RESUME
clauses are recognized but have no
effect.
For XA
END
the SUSPEND [FOR MIGRATE]
clause is recognized but has no effect.
The requirement that the bqual
part
of the xid
value be different for
each XA transaction within a global transaction is a limitation
of the current MySQL XA implementation. It is not part of the XA
specification.
Prior to MySQL 5.7.7, XA transactions were not compatible with
replication. This was because an XA transaction that was in
PREPARED
state would be rolled back on clean
server shutdown or client disconnect. Similarly, an XA
transaction that was in PREPARED
state would
still exist in PREPARED
state in case the
server was shutdown abnormally and then started again, but the
contents of the transaction could not be written to the binary
log. In both of these situations the XA transaction could not be
replicated correctly.
In MySQL 5.7.7 and later, there is a change in behavior and an
XA transaction is written to the binary log in two parts. When
XA PREPARE
is issued, the first part of the
transaction up to XA PREPARE
is written using
an initial GTID. A XA_prepare_log_event
is
used to identify such transactions in the binary log. When
XA COMMIT
or XA ROLLBACK
is issued, a second part of the transaction containing only the
XA COMMIT
or XA ROLLBACK
statement is written using a second GTID. Note that the initial
part of the transaction, identified by
XA_prepare_log_event
, is not necessarily
followed by its XA COMMIT
or XA
ROLLBACK
, which can cause interleaved binary logging
of any two XA transactions. The two parts of the XA transaction
can even appear in different binary log files. This means that
an XA transaction in PREPARED
state is now
persistent until an explicit XA COMMIT
or
XA ROLLBACK
statement is issued, ensuring
that XA transactions are compatible with replication.
On a replication slave, immediately after the XA transaction is
prepared, it is detached from the slave applier thread, and can
be committed or rolled back by any thread on the slave. This
means that the same XA transaction can appear in the
events_transactions_current
table
with different states on different threads. The
events_transactions_current
table
displays the current status of the most recent monitored
transaction event on the thread, and does not update this status
when the thread is idle. So the XA transaction can still be
displayed in the PREPARED
state for the
original applier thread, after it has been processed by another
thread. To positively identify XA transactions that are still in
the PREPARED
state and need to be recovered,
use the XA
RECOVER
statement rather than the Performance Schema
transaction tables.
The following restrictions exist for using XA transactions in MySQL 5.7.7 and later:
XA transactions are not fully resilient to an unexpected
halt with respect to the binary log. If there is an
unexpected halt while the server is in the middle of
executing an XA PREPARE
, XA
COMMIT
, XA ROLLBACK
, or
XA COMMIT ... ONE PHASE
statement, the
server might not be able to recover to a correct state,
leaving the server and the binary log in an inconsistent
state. In this situation, the binary log might either
contain extra XA transactions that are not applied, or miss
XA transactions that are applied. Also, if GTIDs are
enabled, after recovery
@@GLOBAL.GTID_EXECUTED
might not
correctly describe the transactions that have been applied.
Note that if an unexpected halt occurs before XA
PREPARE
, between XA PREPARE
and
XA COMMIT
(or XA
ROLLBACK
), or after XA COMMIT
(or XA ROLLBACK
), the server and binary
log are correctly recovered and taken to a consistent state.
The use of replication filters or binary log filters in
combination with XA transactions is not supported. Filtering
of tables could cause an XA transaction to be empty on a
replication slave, and empty XA transactions are not
supported. Also, with the settings
master_info_repository=TABLE
and
relay_log_info_repository=TABLE
on a replication slave, which became the defaults in MySQL
8.0, the internal state of the data engine transaction is
changed following a filtered XA transaction, and can become
inconsistent with the replication transaction context state.
The error
ER_XA_REPLICATION_FILTERS
is
logged whenever an XA transaction is impacted by a
replication filter, whether or not the transaction was empty
as a result. If the transaction is not empty, the
replication slave is able to continue running, but you
should take steps to discontinue the use of replication
filters with XA transactions in order to avoid potential
issues. If the transaction is empty, the replication slave
stops. In that event, the replication slave might be in an
undetermined state in which the consistency of the
replication process might be compromised. In particular, the
gtid_executed
set on a slave of the slave
might be inconsistent with that on the master. To resolve
this situation, isolate the master and stop all replication,
then check GTID consistency across the replication topology.
Undo the XA transaction that generated the error message,
then restart replication.
Prior to MySQL 5.7.19, FLUSH TABLES
WITH READ LOCK
is not compatible with XA
transactions.
XA transactions are considered unsafe for statement-based
replication. If two XA transactions committed in parallel on
the master are being prepared on the slave in the inverse
order, locking dependencies can occur that cannot be safely
resolved, and it is possible for replication to fail with
deadlock on the slave. This situation can occur for a
single-threaded or multithreaded replication slave. When
binlog_format=STATEMENT
is
set, a warning is issued for DML statements inside XA
transactions. When
binlog_format=MIXED
or
binlog_format=ROW
is set,
DML statements inside XA transactions are logged using
row-based replication, and the potential issue is not
present.
Replication can be controlled through the SQL interface using the statements described in this section. Statements are split into a group which controls master servers, a group which controls slave servers, and a group which can be applied to any replication servers.
This section discusses statements for managing master replication servers. Section 13.4.2, “SQL Statements for Controlling Slave Servers”, discusses statements for managing slave servers.
In addition to the statements described here, the following
SHOW
statements are used with
master servers in replication. For information about these
statements, see Section 13.7.5, “SHOW Statements”.
PURGE { BINARY | MASTER } LOGS { TO 'log_name
' | BEFOREdatetime_expr
}
The binary log is a set of files that contain information about data modifications made by the MySQL server. The log consists of a set of binary log files, plus an index file (see Section 5.4.4, “The Binary Log”).
The PURGE BINARY LOGS
statement
deletes all the binary log files listed in the log index file
prior to the specified log file name or date.
BINARY
and MASTER
are
synonyms. Deleted log files also are removed from the list
recorded in the index file, so that the given log file becomes
the first in the list.
PURGE BINARY LOGS
requires the
BINLOG_ADMIN
privilege. This
statement has no effect if the server was not started with the
--log-bin
option to enable binary
logging.
Examples:
PURGE BINARY LOGS TO 'mysql-bin.010'; PURGE BINARY LOGS BEFORE '2019-04-02 22:46:26';
The BEFORE
variant's
datetime_expr
argument should
evaluate to a DATETIME
value (a
value in '
format).
YYYY-MM-DD
hh:mm:ss
'
This statement is safe to run while slaves are replicating. You need not stop them. If you have an active slave that currently is reading one of the log files you are trying to delete, this statement does not delete the log file that is in use or any log files later than that one, but it deletes any earlier log files. A warning message is issued in this situation. However, if a slave is not connected and you happen to purge one of the log files it has yet to read, the slave will be unable to replicate after it reconnects.
To safely purge binary log files, follow this procedure:
On each slave server, use SHOW SLAVE
STATUS
to check which log file it is reading.
Obtain a listing of the binary log files on the master
server with SHOW BINARY LOGS
.
Determine the earliest log file among all the slaves. This is the target file. If all the slaves are up to date, this is the last log file on the list.
Make a backup of all the log files you are about to delete. (This step is optional, but always advisable.)
Purge all log files up to but not including the target file.
You can also set the
expire_logs_days
system
variable to expire binary log files automatically after a given
number of days (see Section 5.1.7, “Server System Variables”).
If you are using replication, you should set the variable no
lower than the maximum number of days your slaves might lag
behind the master.
PURGE BINARY LOGS TO
and PURGE
BINARY LOGS BEFORE
both fail with an error when binary
log files listed in the .index
file had
been removed from the system by some other means (such as using
rm on Linux). (Bug #18199, Bug #18453) To
handle such errors, edit the .index
file
(which is a simple text file) manually to ensure that it lists
only the binary log files that are actually present, then run
again the PURGE BINARY LOGS
statement that failed.
RESET MASTER
Use this statement with caution to ensure you do not lose any wanted binary log file data and GTID execution history.
RESET MASTER
requires the
RELOAD
privilege.
For a server where binary logging is enabled
(log_bin
is
ON
), RESET MASTER
deletes
all existing binary log files and resets the binary log index
file, resetting the server to its state before binary logging
was started. A new empty binary log file is created so that
binary logging can be restarted.
For a server where GTIDs are in use
(gtid_mode
is
ON
), issuing RESET MASTER
resets the GTID execution history. The value of the
gtid_purged
system variable is
set to an empty string (''
), the global value
(but not the session value) of the
gtid_executed
system variable
is set to an empty string, and the
mysql.gtid_executed
table is cleared (see
mysql.gtid_executed Table). If the
GTID-enabled server has binary logging enabled,
RESET MASTER
also resets the
binary log as described above. Note that
RESET MASTER
is the method to
reset the GTID execution history even if the GTID-enabled server
is a replication slave where binary logging is disabled;
RESET SLAVE
has no effect on the
GTID execution history. For more information on resetting the
GTID execution history, see
Resetting the GTID Execution History.
The effects of RESET MASTER
differ from those of PURGE BINARY
LOGS
in 2 key ways:
RESET MASTER
removes
all binary log files that are listed
in the index file, leaving only a single, empty binary log
file with a numeric suffix of .000001
,
whereas the numbering is not reset by
PURGE BINARY LOGS
.
RESET MASTER
is
not intended to be used while any
replication slaves are running. The behavior of
RESET MASTER
when used
while slaves are running is undefined (and thus
unsupported), whereas PURGE BINARY
LOGS
may be safely used while replication slaves
are running.
RESET MASTER
can prove useful
when you first set up the master and the slave, so that you can
verify the setup as follows:
Start the master and slave, and start replication (see Section 16.1.2, “Setting Up Binary Log File Position Based Replication”).
Execute a few test queries on the master.
Check that the queries were replicated to the slave.
When replication is running correctly, issue
STOP SLAVE
followed by
RESET SLAVE
on the slave,
then verify that any unwanted data no longer exists on the
slave.
Issue RESET MASTER
on the
master to clean up the test queries.
After verifying the setup, resetting the master and slave and ensuring that no unwanted data or binary log files generated by testing remain on master or slave, you can start the slave and begin replicating.
SET sql_log_bin = {OFF|ON}
The sql_log_bin
variable
controls whether logging to the binary log is enabled for the
current session (assuming that the binary log itself is
enabled). The default value is ON
. To disable
or enable binary logging for the current session, set the
session sql_log_bin
variable to
OFF
or ON
.
Set this variable to OFF
for a session to
temporarily disable binary logging while making changes to the
master you do not want replicated to the slave.
Setting the session value of this system variable is a restricted operation. The session user must have privileges sufficient to set restricted session variables. See Section 5.1.8.1, “System Variable Privileges”.
It is not possible to set the session value of
sql_log_bin
within a
transaction or subquery.
Setting this variable to OFF
prevents GTIDs from being assigned to transactions in the binary
log. If you are using GTIDs for replication, this
means that even when binary logging is later enabled again, the
GTIDs written into the log from this point do not account for
any transactions that occurred in the meantime, so in effect
those transactions are lost.
The global sql_log_bin
variable
is read only and cannot be modified. The global scope is
deprecated and will be removed in a future MySQL release.
This section discusses statements for managing slave replication servers. Section 13.4.1, “SQL Statements for Controlling Master Servers”, discusses statements for managing master servers.
In addition to the statements described here,
SHOW SLAVE STATUS
and
SHOW RELAYLOG EVENTS
are also used
with replication slaves. For information about these statements,
see Section 13.7.5.34, “SHOW SLAVE STATUS Statement”, and
Section 13.7.5.32, “SHOW RELAYLOG EVENTS Statement”.
CHANGE MASTER TOoption
[,option
] ... [channel_option
]option
: MASTER_BIND = 'interface_name
' | MASTER_HOST = 'host_name
' | MASTER_USER = 'user_name
' | MASTER_PASSWORD = 'password
' | MASTER_PORT =port_num
| MASTER_CONNECT_RETRY =interval
| MASTER_RETRY_COUNT =count
| MASTER_DELAY =interval
| MASTER_HEARTBEAT_PERIOD =interval
| MASTER_LOG_FILE = 'master_log_name
' | MASTER_LOG_POS =master_log_pos
| MASTER_AUTO_POSITION = {0|1} | RELAY_LOG_FILE = 'relay_log_name
' | RELAY_LOG_POS =relay_log_pos
| MASTER_SSL = {0|1} | MASTER_SSL_CA = 'ca_file_name
' | MASTER_SSL_CAPATH = 'ca_directory_name
' | MASTER_SSL_CERT = 'cert_file_name
' | MASTER_SSL_CRL = 'crl_file_name
' | MASTER_SSL_CRLPATH = 'crl_directory_name
' | MASTER_SSL_KEY = 'key_file_name
' | MASTER_SSL_CIPHER = 'cipher_list
' | MASTER_SSL_VERIFY_SERVER_CERT = {0|1} | MASTER_TLS_VERSION = 'protocol_list
' | IGNORE_SERVER_IDS = (server_id_list
)channel_option
: FOR CHANNELchannel
server_id_list
: [server_id
[,server_id
] ... ]
CHANGE MASTER TO
changes the
parameters that the slave server uses for connecting to the
master server, for reading the master binary log, and reading
the slave relay log. It also updates the contents of the master
info and relay log info repositories (see
Section 16.2.4, “Replication Relay and Status Logs”). CHANGE
MASTER TO
requires the
SUPER
privilege.
Prior to MySQL 5.7.4, the slave replication threads must be
stopped, using STOP SLAVE
if
necessary, before issuing this statement. In MySQL 5.7.4 and
later, you can issue CHANGE MASTER TO
statements on a running slave without doing this, depending on
the states of the slave SQL thread and slave I/O thread. The
rules governing such use are provided later in this section.
When using a multithreaded slave (in other words
slave_parallel_workers
is
greater than 0), stopping the slave can cause
“gaps” in the sequence of transactions that have
been executed from the relay log, regardless of whether the
slave was stopped intentionally or otherwise. When such gaps
exist, issuing CHANGE MASTER TO
fails. The solution in this situation is to issue
START SLAVE UNTIL
SQL_AFTER_MTS_GAPS
which ensures that the gaps are
closed.
The optional FOR CHANNEL
clause enables you
to name which replication channel the statement applies to.
Providing a channel
FOR CHANNEL
clause applies the
channel
CHANGE MASTER TO
statement to a specific
replication channel, and is used to add a new channel or modify
an existing channel. For example, to add a new channel called
channel2:
CHANGE MASTER TO MASTER_HOST=host1, MASTER_PORT=3002 FOR CHANNEL 'channel2'
If no clause is named and no extra channels exist, the statement applies to the default channel.
When using multiple replication channels, if a CHANGE
MASTER TO
statement does not name a channel using a
FOR CHANNEL
clause, an error
occurs. See Section 16.2.3, “Replication Channels” for more
information.
channel
Options not specified retain their value, except as indicated in the following discussion. Thus, in most cases, there is no need to specify options that do not change. For example, if the password to connect to your MySQL master has changed, issue this statement to tell the slave about the new password:
CHANGE MASTER TO MASTER_PASSWORD='new3cret';
MASTER_HOST
, MASTER_USER
,
MASTER_PASSWORD
, and
MASTER_PORT
provide information to the slave
about how to connect to its master:
MASTER_HOST
and
MASTER_PORT
are the host name (or IP
address) of the master host and its TCP/IP port.
Replication cannot use Unix socket files. You must be able to connect to the master MySQL server using TCP/IP.
If you specify the MASTER_HOST
or
MASTER_PORT
option, the slave assumes
that the master server is different from before (even if the
option value is the same as its current value.) In this
case, the old values for the master binary log file name and
position are considered no longer applicable, so if you do
not specify MASTER_LOG_FILE
and
MASTER_LOG_POS
in the statement,
MASTER_LOG_FILE=''
and
MASTER_LOG_POS=4
are silently appended to
it.
Setting MASTER_HOST=''
(that is, setting
its value explicitly to an empty string) is
not the same as not setting
MASTER_HOST
at all. Beginning with MySQL
5.5, trying to set MASTER_HOST
to an
empty string fails with an error. Previously, setting
MASTER_HOST
to an empty string caused
START SLAVE
subsequently to
fail. (Bug #28796)
Values used for MASTER_HOST
and other
CHANGE MASTER TO
options are checked for
linefeed (\n
or 0x0A
)
characters; the presence of such characters in these values
causes the statement to fail with
ER_MASTER_INFO
. (Bug
#11758581, Bug #50801)
MASTER_USER
and
MASTER_PASSWORD
are the user name and
password of the account to use for connecting to the master.
MASTER_USER
cannot be made empty; setting
MASTER_USER = ''
or leaving it unset when
setting a value for MASTER_PASSWORD
causes an error (Bug #13427949).
The password used for a MySQL Replication slave account in a
CHANGE MASTER TO
statement is limited to
32 characters in length; prior to MySQL 5.7.5, if the
password was longer, the statement succeeded, but any excess
characters were silently truncated. In MySQL 5.7.5 and
later, trying to use a password of more than 32 characters
causes CHANGE MASTER TO
to fail. (Bug
#11752299, Bug #43439)
The text of a running CHANGE MASTER
TO
statement, including values for
MASTER_USER
and
MASTER_PASSWORD
, can be seen in the
output of a concurrent SHOW
PROCESSLIST
statement. (The complete text of a
START SLAVE
statement is also
visible to SHOW PROCESSLIST
.)
The MASTER_SSL_
options and the xxx
MASTER_TLS_VERSION
option
specify how the slave uses encryption and ciphers to secure the
replication connection. These options can be changed even on
slaves that are compiled without SSL support. They are saved to
the master info repository, but are ignored if the slave does
not have SSL support enabled. The
MASTER_SSL_
and
xxx
MASTER_TLS_VERSION
options perform the same
functions as the
--ssl-
and
xxx
--tls-version
client options described in
Command Options for Encrypted Connections. The
correspondence between the two sets of options, and the use of
the MASTER_SSL_
and xxx
MASTER_TLS_VERSION
options to set up a
secure connection, is explained in
Section 16.3.8, “Setting Up Replication to Use Encrypted Connections”.
As of MySQL 5.7.3, setting MASTER_SSL=1
means
that the slave connection to the master must use SSL, or the
connection attempt fails. Before 5.7.3, the use of an SSL
connection by the slave was not enforced with
MASTER_SSL=1
. This is analogous to the
client-side meaning of the --ssl
command-line option; see
Command Options for Encrypted Connections.
The MASTER_HEARTBEAT_PERIOD
,
MASTER_CONNECT_RETRY
, and
MASTER_RETRY_COUNT
options control how the
slave recognizes that the connection to the master has been lost
and makes attempts to reconnect.
The slave_net_timeout
system variable specifies the number of seconds that the
slave waits for either more data or a heartbeat signal from
the master, before the slave considers the connection
broken, aborts the read, and tries to reconnect. The default
value is 60 seconds (one minute). Prior to MySQL 5.7.7, the
default was 3600 seconds (one hour).
The heartbeat interval, which stops the connection timeout
occurring in the absence of data if the connection is still
good, is controlled by the
MASTER_HEARTBEAT_PERIOD
option. A
heartbeat signal is sent to the slave after that number of
seconds, and the waiting period is reset whenever the
master's binary log is updated with an event. Heartbeats are
therefore sent by the master only if there are no unsent
events in the binary log file for a period longer than this.
The heartbeat interval interval
is a decimal value having the range 0 to 4294967 seconds and
a resolution in milliseconds; the smallest nonzero value is
0.001. Setting interval
to 0
disables heartbeats altogether. The heartbeat interval
defaults to half the value of the
slave_net_timeout
system
variable. It is recorded in the master info log and shown in
the
replication_connection_configuration
Performance Schema table. Issuing RESET
SLAVE
resets the heartbeat interval to the default
value.
Prior to MySQL 5.7.4, not including
MASTER_HEARTBEAT_PERIOD
caused
CHANGE MASTER TO
to reset the heartbeat
interval to the default (half the value of the
slave_net_timeout
system
variable), and
Slave_received_heartbeats
to 0. The heartbeat interval is now not reset except by
RESET SLAVE
. (Bug #18185490)
Note that a change to the value or default setting of
slave_net_timeout
does not
automatically change the heartbeat interval, whether that
has been set explicitly or is using a previously calculated
default. A warning is issued if you set
@@GLOBAL.slave_net_timeout
to a value
less than that of the current heartbeat interval. If
slave_net_timeout
is
changed, you must also issue CHANGE
MASTER TO
to adjust the heartbeat interval to an
appropriate value so that the heartbeat signal occurs before
the connection timeout. If you do not do this, the heartbeat
signal has no effect, and if no data is received from the
master, the slave can make repeated reconnection attempts,
creating zombie dump threads.
If the slave does need to reconnect, the first retry occurs
immediately after the timeout.
MASTER_CONNECT_RETRY
specifies the
interval between reconnection attempts, and
MASTER_RETRY_COUNT
limits the number of
reconnection attempts. If both the default settings are
used, the slave waits 60 seconds between reconnection
attempts (MASTER_CONNECT_RETRY=60
), and
keeps attempting to reconnect at this rate for 60 days
(MASTER_RETRY_COUNT=86400
). These values
are recorded in the master info log and shown in the
replication_connection_configuration
Performance Schema table.
MASTER_RETRY_COUNT
supersedes the
--master-retry-count
server
startup option.
MASTER_DELAY
specifies how many seconds
behind the master the slave must lag. An event received from the
master is not executed until at least
interval
seconds later than its
execution on the master. The default is 0. An error occurs if
interval
is not a nonnegative integer
in the range from 0 to 231−1.
For more information, see Section 16.3.10, “Delayed Replication”.
From MySQL 5.7, a CHANGE MASTER TO
statement
employing the MASTER_DELAY
option can be
executed on a running slave when the slave SQL thread is
stopped.
MASTER_BIND
is for use on replication slaves
having multiple network interfaces, and determines which of the
slave's network interfaces is chosen for connecting to the
master.
The address configured with this option, if any, can be seen in
the Master_Bind
column of the output from
SHOW SLAVE STATUS
. If you are
using slave status log tables (server started with
master_info_repository=TABLE
),
the value can also be seen as the Master_bind
column of the mysql.slave_master_info
table.
The ability to bind a replication slave to a specific network interface is also supported by NDB Cluster.
MASTER_LOG_FILE
and
MASTER_LOG_POS
are the coordinates at which
the slave I/O thread should begin reading from the master the
next time the thread starts. RELAY_LOG_FILE
and RELAY_LOG_POS
are the coordinates at
which the slave SQL thread should begin reading from the relay
log the next time the thread starts. If you specify either of
MASTER_LOG_FILE
or
MASTER_LOG_POS
, you cannot specify
RELAY_LOG_FILE
or
RELAY_LOG_POS
. If you specify either of
MASTER_LOG_FILE
or
MASTER_LOG_POS
, you also cannot specify
MASTER_AUTO_POSITION = 1
(described later in
this section). If neither of MASTER_LOG_FILE
or MASTER_LOG_POS
is specified, the slave
uses the last coordinates of the slave SQL
thread before CHANGE MASTER
TO
was issued. This ensures that there is no
discontinuity in replication, even if the slave SQL thread was
late compared to the slave I/O thread, when you merely want to
change, say, the password to use.
From MySQL 5.7, a CHANGE MASTER TO
statement
employing RELAY_LOG_FILE
,
RELAY_LOG_POS
, or both options can be
executed on a running slave when the slave SQL thread is
stopped. Prior to MySQL 5.7.4, CHANGE MASTER
TO
deletes all relay log files and starts a new one,
unless you specify RELAY_LOG_FILE
or
RELAY_LOG_POS
. In that case, relay log files
are kept; the
relay_log_purge
global variable is set silently to 0. In MySQL 5.7.4 and later,
relay logs are preserved if at least one of the slave SQL thread
and the slave I/O thread is running. If both threads are
stopped, all relay log files are deleted unless at least one of
RELAY_LOG_FILE
or
RELAY_LOG_POS
is specified. Note that the
Group Replication applier channel
(group_replication_applier
) has no I/O
thread, only a SQL thread. For this channel, the relay logs are
not preserved when the SQL thread is stopped.
RELAY_LOG_FILE
can use either an absolute or
relative path, and uses the same base name as
MASTER_LOG_FILE
. (Bug #12190)
When MASTER_AUTO_POSITION = 1
is used with
CHANGE MASTER TO
, the slave attempts to
connect to the master using the GTID-based replication protocol.
From MySQL 5.7, this option can be employed by CHANGE
MASTER TO
only if both the slave SQL and slave I/O
threads are stopped. Both the slave and the master must have
GTIDs enabled (GTID_MODE=ON
,
ON_PERMISSIVE,
or
OFF_PERMISSIVE
on the slave, and
GTID_MODE=ON
on the master).
Auto-positioning is used for the connection, so the coordinates
represented by MASTER_LOG_FILE
and
MASTER_LOG_POS
are not used, and the use of
either or both of these options together with
MASTER_AUTO_POSITION = 1
causes an error. If
multi-source replication is enabled on the slave, you need to
set the MASTER_AUTO_POSITION = 1
option for
each applicable replication channel.
With MASTER_AUTO_POSITION = 1
set, in the
initial connection handshake, the slave sends a GTID set
containing the transactions that it has already received,
committed, or both. The master responds by sending all
transactions recorded in its binary log whose GTID is not
included in the GTID set sent by the slave. This exchange
ensures that the master only sends the transactions with a GTID
that the slave has not already recorded or committed. If the
slave receives transactions from more than one master, as in the
case of a diamond topology, the auto-skip function ensures that
the transactions are not applied twice. For details of how the
GTID set sent by the slave is computed, see
Section 16.1.3.3, “GTID Auto-Positioning”.
If any of the transactions that should be sent by the master
have been purged from the master's binary log, or added to the
set of GTIDs in the gtid_purged
system variable by another method, the master sends the error
ER_MASTER_HAS_PURGED_REQUIRED_GTIDS to
the slave, and replication does not start. Also, if during the
exchange of transactions it is found that the slave has recorded
or committed transactions with the master's UUID in the GTID,
but the master itself has not committed them, the master sends
the error
ER_SLAVE_HAS_MORE_GTIDS_THAN_MASTER to
the slave and replication does not start. For information on how
to handle these situations, see
Section 16.1.3.3, “GTID Auto-Positioning”.
You can see whether replication is running with auto-positioning
enabled by checking the Performance Schema
replication_connection_status
table
or the output of SHOW SLAVE
STATUS
. Disabling the
MASTER_AUTO_POSITION
option again makes the
slave revert to file-based replication, in which case you must
also specify one or both of the
MASTER_LOG_FILE
or
MASTER_LOG_POS
options.
IGNORE_SERVER_IDS
takes a comma-separated
list of 0 or more server IDs. Events originating from the
corresponding servers are ignored, with the exception of log
rotation and deletion events, which are still recorded in the
relay log.
In circular replication, the originating server normally acts as
the terminator of its own events, so that they are not applied
more than once. Thus, this option is useful in circular
replication when one of the servers in the circle is removed.
Suppose that you have a circular replication setup with 4
servers, having server IDs 1, 2, 3, and 4, and server 3 fails.
When bridging the gap by starting replication from server 2 to
server 4, you can include IGNORE_SERVER_IDS =
(3)
in the CHANGE MASTER
TO
statement that you issue on server 4 to tell it to
use server 2 as its master instead of server 3. Doing so causes
it to ignore and not to propagate any statements that originated
with the server that is no longer in use.
If a CHANGE MASTER TO
statement
is issued without any IGNORE_SERVER_IDS
option, any existing list is preserved. To clear the list of
ignored servers, it is necessary to use the option with an empty
list:
CHANGE MASTER TO IGNORE_SERVER_IDS = ();
Prior to MySQL 5.7.5,
RESET SLAVE
ALL
has no effect on the server ID list. In MySQL
5.7.5 and later, RESET SLAVE ALL
clears
IGNORE_SERVER_IDS
. (Bug #18816897)
If IGNORE_SERVER_IDS
contains the
server's own ID and the server was started with the
--replicate-same-server-id
option
enabled, an error results.
The master info repository and the output of
SHOW SLAVE STATUS
provide the
list of servers that are currently ignored. For more
information, see Section 16.2.4.2, “Slave Status Logs”, and
Section 13.7.5.34, “SHOW SLAVE STATUS Statement”.
Invoking CHANGE MASTER TO
causes
the previous values for MASTER_HOST
,
MASTER_PORT
,
MASTER_LOG_FILE
, and
MASTER_LOG_POS
to be written to the error
log, along with other information about the slave's state
prior to execution.
CHANGE MASTER TO
causes an implicit commit of
an ongoing transaction. See Section 13.3.3, “Statements That Cause an Implicit Commit”.
In MySQL 5.7.4 and later, the strict requirement to execute
STOP SLAVE
prior to issuing any
CHANGE MASTER TO
statement (and
START SLAVE
afterward) is
removed. Instead of depending on whether the slave is stopped,
the behavior of CHANGE MASTER TO
depends (in
MySQL 5.7.4 and later) on the states of the slave SQL thread and
slave I/O threads; which of these threads is stopped or running
now determines the options that can or cannot be used with a
CHANGE MASTER TO
statement at a given point
in time. The rules for making this determination are listed
here:
If the SQL thread is stopped, you can execute
CHANGE MASTER TO
using any combination
that is otherwise allowed of
RELAY_LOG_FILE
,
RELAY_LOG_POS
, and
MASTER_DELAY
options, even if the slave
I/O thread is running. No other options may be used with
this statement when the I/O thread is running.
If the I/O thread is stopped, you can execute
CHANGE MASTER TO
using any of the options
for this statement (in any allowed combination)
except
RELAY_LOG_FILE
,
RELAY_LOG_POS
,
MASTER_DELAY
, or
MASTER_AUTO_POSITION = 1
even when the
SQL thread is running.
Both the SQL thread and the I/O thread must be stopped
before issuing a CHANGE MASTER TO
statement that employs MASTER_AUTO_POSITION =
1
.
You can check the current state of the slave SQL and I/O threads
using SHOW SLAVE STATUS
. Note
that the Group Replication applier channel
(group_replication_applier
) has no I/O
thread, only a SQL thread.
For more information, see Section 16.3.7, “Switching Masters During Failover”.
If you are using statement-based replication and temporary
tables, it is possible for a CHANGE MASTER TO
statement following a STOP SLAVE
statement to
leave behind temporary tables on the slave. From MySQL 5.7, a
warning
(ER_WARN_OPEN_TEMP_TABLES_MUST_BE_ZERO
)
is issued whenever this occurs. You can avoid this in such cases
by making sure that the value of the
Slave_open_temp_tables
system
status variable is equal to 0 prior to executing such a
CHANGE MASTER TO
statement.
CHANGE MASTER TO
is useful for
setting up a slave when you have the snapshot of the master and
have recorded the master binary log coordinates corresponding to
the time of the snapshot. After loading the snapshot into the
slave to synchronize it with the master, you can run
CHANGE MASTER TO
MASTER_LOG_FILE='
on
the slave to specify the coordinates at which the slave should
begin reading the master binary log.
log_name
',
MASTER_LOG_POS=log_pos
The following example changes the master server the slave uses and establishes the master binary log coordinates from which the slave begins reading. This is used when you want to set up the slave to replicate the master:
CHANGE MASTER TO
MASTER_HOST='master2.example.com',
MASTER_USER='replication',
MASTER_PASSWORD='password
',
MASTER_PORT=3306,
MASTER_LOG_FILE='master2-bin.001',
MASTER_LOG_POS=4,
MASTER_CONNECT_RETRY=10;
The next example shows an operation that is less frequently
employed. It is used when the slave has relay log files that you
want it to execute again for some reason. To do this, the master
need not be reachable. You need only use
CHANGE MASTER TO
and start the
SQL thread (START SLAVE SQL_THREAD
):
CHANGE MASTER TO RELAY_LOG_FILE='slave-relay-bin.006', RELAY_LOG_POS=4025;
The following table shows the maximum permissible length for the string-valued options.
Option | Maximum Length |
---|---|
MASTER_HOST |
60 |
MASTER_USER |
96 |
MASTER_PASSWORD |
32 |
MASTER_LOG_FILE |
511 |
RELAY_LOG_FILE |
511 |
MASTER_SSL_CA |
511 |
MASTER_SSL_CAPATH |
511 |
MASTER_SSL_CERT |
511 |
MASTER_SSL_CRL |
511 |
MASTER_SSL_CRLPATH |
511 |
MASTER_SSL_KEY |
511 |
MASTER_SSL_CIPHER |
511 |
MASTER_TLS_VERSION |
511 |
CHANGE REPLICATION FILTERfilter
[,filter
][, ...]filter
: REPLICATE_DO_DB = (db_list
) | REPLICATE_IGNORE_DB = (db_list
) | REPLICATE_DO_TABLE = (tbl_list
) | REPLICATE_IGNORE_TABLE = (tbl_list
) | REPLICATE_WILD_DO_TABLE = (wild_tbl_list
) | REPLICATE_WILD_IGNORE_TABLE = (wild_tbl_list
) | REPLICATE_REWRITE_DB = (db_pair_list
)db_list
:db_name
[,db_name
][, ...]tbl_list
:db_name.table_name
[,db_table_name
][, ...]wild_tbl_list
: 'db_pattern.table_pattern
'[, 'db_pattern.table_pattern
'][, ...]db_pair_list
: (db_pair
)[, (db_pair
)][, ...]db_pair
:from_db
,to_db
CHANGE REPLICATION FILTER
sets one or more
replication filtering rules on the slave in the same way as
starting the slave mysqld with replication
filtering options such as
--replicate-do-db
or
--replicate-wild-ignore-table
.
Unlike the case with the server options, this statement does not
require restarting the server to take effect, only that the
slave SQL thread be stopped using
STOP SLAVE
SQL_THREAD
first (and restarted with
START SLAVE
SQL_THREAD
afterwards). CHANGE
REPLICATION FILTER
requires the
SUPER
privilege.
Replication filters cannot be set on a MySQL server instance that is configured for Group Replication, because filtering transactions on some servers would make the group unable to reach agreement on a consistent state.
The following list shows the CHANGE REPLICATION
FILTER
options and how they relate to
--replicate-*
server options:
REPLICATE_DO_DB
: Include updates based on
database name. Equivalent to
--replicate-do-db
.
REPLICATE_IGNORE_DB
: Exclude updates
based on database name. Equivalent to
--replicate-ignore-db
.
REPLICATE_DO_TABLE
: Include updates based
on table name. Equivalent to
--replicate-do-table
.
REPLICATE_IGNORE_TABLE
: Exclude updates
based on table name. Equivalent to
--replicate-ignore-table
.
REPLICATE_WILD_DO_TABLE
: Include updates
based on wildcard pattern matching table name. Equivalent to
--replicate-wild-do-table
.
REPLICATE_WILD_IGNORE_TABLE
: Exclude
updates based on wildcard pattern matching table name.
Equivalent to
--replicate-wild-ignore-table
.
REPLICATE_REWRITE_DB
: Perform updates on
slave after substituting new name on slave for specified
database on master. Equivalent to
--replicate-rewrite-db
.
The precise effects of REPLICATE_DO_DB
and
REPLICATE_IGNORE_DB
filters are dependent on
whether statement-based or row-based replication is in effect.
See Section 16.2.5, “How Servers Evaluate Replication Filtering Rules”, for more information.
Multiple replication filtering rules can be created in a single
CHANGE REPLICATION FILTER
statement by
separating the rules with commas, as shown here:
CHANGE REPLICATION FILTER REPLICATE_DO_DB = (d1), REPLICATE_IGNORE_DB = (d2);
Issuing the statement just shown is equivalent to starting the
slave mysqld with the options
--replicate-do-db=d1
--replicate-ignore-db=d2
.
If the same filtering rule is specified multiple times, only the
last such rule is actually used. For
example, the two statements shown here have exactly the same
effect, because the first REPLICATE_DO_DB
rule in the first statement is ignored:
CHANGE REPLICATION FILTER REPLICATE_DO_DB = (db1, db2), REPLICATE_DO_DB = (db3, db4); CHANGE REPLICATION FILTER REPLICATE_DO_DB = (db3,db4);
This behavior differs from that of the
--replicate-*
filter options where specifying
the same option multiple times causes the creation of multiple
filter rules.
Names of tables and database not containing any special
characters need not be quoted. Values used with
REPLICATION_WILD_TABLE
and
REPLICATION_WILD_IGNORE_TABLE
are string
expressions, possibly containing (special) wildcard characters,
and so must be quoted. This is shown in the following example
statements:
CHANGE REPLICATION FILTER REPLICATE_WILD_DO_TABLE = ('db1.old%'); CHANGE REPLICATION FILTER REPLICATE_WILD_IGNORE_TABLE = ('db1.new%', 'db2.new%');
Values used with REPLICATE_REWRITE_DB
represent pairs of database names; each
such value must be enclosed in parentheses. The following
statement rewrites statements occurring on database
db1
on the master to database
db2
on the slave:
CHANGE REPLICATION FILTER REPLICATE_REWRITE_DB = ((db1, db2));
The statement just shown contains two sets of parentheses, one
enclosing the pair of database names, and the other enclosing
the entire list. This is perhaps more easily seen in the
following example, which creates two
rewrite-db
rules, one rewriting database
dbA
to dbB
, and one
rewriting database dbC
to
dbD
:
CHANGE REPLICATION FILTER REPLICATE_REWRITE_DB = ((dbA, dbB), (dbC, dbD));
This statement leaves any existing replication filtering rules
unchanged; to unset all filters of a given type, set the
filter's value to an explicitly empty list, as shown in
this example, which removes all existing
REPLICATE_DO_DB
and
REPLICATE_IGNORE_DB
rules:
CHANGE REPLICATION FILTER REPLICATE_DO_DB = (), REPLICATE_IGNORE_DB = ();
Setting a filter to empty in this way removes all existing
rules, does not create any new ones, and does not restore any
rules set at mysqld startup using --replicate-*
options on the command line or in the configuration file.
Values employed with REPLICATE_WILD_DO_TABLE
and REPLICATE_WILD_IGNORE_TABLE
must be in
the format
.
Prior to MySQL 5.7.5, this was not strictly enforced, although
using nonconforming values with these options could lead to
erroneous results (Bug #18095449).
db_name
.tbl_name
For more information, see Section 16.2.5, “How Servers Evaluate Replication Filtering Rules”.
SELECT MASTER_POS_WAIT('master_log_file
',master_log_pos
[,timeout
][,channel
])
This is actually a function, not a statement. It is used to ensure that the slave has read and executed events up to a given position in the master's binary log. See Section 12.21, “Miscellaneous Functions”, for a full description.
RESET SLAVE [ALL] [channel_option
]channel_option
: FOR CHANNELchannel
RESET SLAVE
makes the slave
forget its replication position in the master's binary log. This
statement is meant to be used for a clean start: It clears the
master info and relay log info repositories, deletes all the
relay log files, and starts a new relay log file. It also resets
to 0 the replication delay specified with the
MASTER_DELAY
option to CHANGE MASTER
TO
.
All relay log files are deleted, even if they have not been
completely executed by the slave SQL thread. (This is a
condition likely to exist on a replication slave if you have
issued a STOP SLAVE
statement
or if the slave is highly loaded.)
For a server where GTIDs are in use
(gtid_mode
is
ON
), issuing RESET
SLAVE
has no effect on the GTID execution history. The
statement does not change the values of
gtid_executed
or
gtid_purged
, or the
mysql.gtid_executed
table. If you need to
reset the GTID execution history, use RESET
MASTER
, even if the GTID-enabled server is a
replication slave where binary logging is disabled.
RESET SLAVE
requires the
RELOAD
privilege.
To use RESET SLAVE
, the slave
replication threads must be stopped, so on a running slave use
STOP SLAVE
before issuing
RESET SLAVE
. To use
RESET SLAVE
on a Group
Replication group member, the member status must be
OFFLINE
, meaning that the plugin is loaded
but the member does not currently belong to any group. A group
member can be taken offline by using a STOP
GROUP REPLICATION
statement.
The optional FOR CHANNEL
clause enables you
to name which replication channel the statement applies to.
Providing a channel
FOR CHANNEL
clause applies the
channel
RESET SLAVE
statement to a specific
replication channel. Combining a FOR CHANNEL
clause with the
channel
ALL
option deletes the specified channel. If
no channel is named and no extra channels exist, the statement
applies to the default channel. Issuing a
RESET SLAVE
ALL
statement without a FOR CHANNEL
clause when
multiple replication channels exist deletes
all replication channels and recreates only
the default channel. See Section 16.2.3, “Replication Channels”
for more information.
channel
RESET SLAVE
does not change any
replication connection parameters such as master host, master
port, master user, or master password.
From MySQL 5.7.24, when
master_info_repository=TABLE
is set on the server, replication connection parameters are
preserved in the crash-safe InnoDB
table
mysql.slave_master_info
as part of the
RESET SLAVE
operation. They
are also retained in memory. In the event of a server crash
or deliberate restart after issuing
RESET SLAVE
but before
issuing START SLAVE
, the
replication connection parameters are retrieved from the
table and reused for the new connection.
When
master_info_repository=FILE
is set on the server (which is the default in MySQL 5.7),
replication connection parameters are only retained in
memory. If the slave mysqld is restarted
immediately after issuing RESET
SLAVE
due to a server crash or deliberate restart,
the connection parameters are lost. In that case, you must
issue a CHANGE MASTER TO
statement after the server start to respecify the connection
parameters before issuing START
SLAVE
.
If you want to reset the connection parameters intentionally,
you need to use
RESET SLAVE
ALL
, which clears the connection parameters. In that
case, you must issue a CHANGE MASTER
TO
statement after the server start to specify the new
connection parameters.
RESET SLAVE
causes an implicit commit of an
ongoing transaction. See Section 13.3.3, “Statements That Cause an Implicit Commit”.
If the slave SQL thread was in the middle of replicating
temporary tables when it was stopped, and
RESET SLAVE
is issued, these
replicated temporary tables are deleted on the slave.
Prior to MySQL 5.7.5, RESET SLAVE
also had
the effect of resetting both the heartbeat period
(Slave_heartbeat_period
) and
SSL_VERIFY_SERVER_CERT
. This issue is fixed
in MySQL 5.7.5 and later. (Bug #18777899, Bug #18778485)
Prior to MySQL 5.7.5, RESET SLAVE ALL
did not
clear the IGNORE_SERVER_IDS
list set by
CHANGE MASTER TO
. In MySQL 5.7.5
and later, the statement clears the list. (Bug #18816897)
When used on an NDB Cluster replication slave SQL node,
RESET SLAVE
clears the
mysql.ndb_apply_status
table. You should
keep in mind when using this statement that
ndb_apply_status
uses the
NDB
storage engine and so is
shared by all SQL nodes attached to the slave cluster.
You can override this behavior by issuing
SET
GLOBAL
@@
ndb_clear_apply_status=OFF
prior to executing RESET SLAVE
, which keeps
the slave from purging the ndb_apply_status
table in such cases.
SET GLOBAL sql_slave_skip_counter = N
This statement skips the next N
events from the master. This is useful for recovering from
replication stops caused by a statement.
This statement is valid only when the slave threads are not running. Otherwise, it produces an error.
When using this statement, it is important to understand that the binary log is actually organized as a sequence of groups known as event groups. Each event group consists of a sequence of events.
For transactional tables, an event group corresponds to a transaction.
For nontransactional tables, an event group corresponds to a single SQL statement.
A single transaction can contain changes to both transactional and nontransactional tables.
When you use SET GLOBAL
sql_slave_skip_counter
to skip events and the result
is in the middle of a group, the slave continues to skip events
until it reaches the end of the group. Execution then starts
with the next event group.
START SLAVE [thread_types
] [until_option
] [connection_options
] [channel_option
]thread_types
: [thread_type
[,thread_type
] ... ]thread_type
: IO_THREAD | SQL_THREADuntil_option
: UNTIL { {SQL_BEFORE_GTIDS | SQL_AFTER_GTIDS} =gtid_set
| MASTER_LOG_FILE = 'log_name
', MASTER_LOG_POS =log_pos
| RELAY_LOG_FILE = 'log_name
', RELAY_LOG_POS =log_pos
| SQL_AFTER_MTS_GAPS }connection_options
: [USER='user_name
'] [PASSWORD='user_pass
'] [DEFAULT_AUTH='plugin_name
'] [PLUGIN_DIR='plugin_dir
']channel_option
: FOR CHANNELchannel
gtid_set
:uuid_set
[,uuid_set
] ... | ''uuid_set
:uuid
:interval
[:interval
]...uuid
:hhhhhhhh
-hhhh
-hhhh
-hhhh
-hhhhhhhhhhhh
h
: [0-9,A-F]interval
:n
[-n
] (n
>= 1)
START SLAVE
with no
thread_type
options starts both of
the slave threads. The I/O thread reads events from the master
server and stores them in the relay log. The SQL thread reads
events from the relay log and executes them.
START SLAVE
requires the
REPLICATION_SLAVE_ADMIN
or
SUPER
privilege.
If START SLAVE
succeeds in
starting the slave threads, it returns without any error.
However, even in that case, it might be that the slave threads
start and then later stop (for example, because they do not
manage to connect to the master or read its binary log, or some
other problem). START SLAVE
does
not warn you about this. You must check the slave's error log
for error messages generated by the slave threads, or check that
they are running satisfactorily with SHOW
SLAVE STATUS
.
In MySQL 5.7, START SLAVE
causes
an implicit commit of an ongoing transaction. See
Section 13.3.3, “Statements That Cause an Implicit Commit”.
gtid_next
must be set to
AUTOMATIC
before issuing this statement.
The optional FOR CHANNEL
clause enables you
to name which replication channel the statement applies to.
Providing a channel
FOR CHANNEL
clause applies the
channel
START SLAVE
statement to a specific
replication channel. If no clause is named and no extra channels
exist, the statement applies to the default channel. If a
START SLAVE
statement does not have a channel
defined when using multiple channels, this statement starts the
specified threads for all channels. This statement is disallowed
for the group_replication_recovery
channel.
See Section 16.2.3, “Replication Channels” for more information.
You can add IO_THREAD
and
SQL_THREAD
options to the statement to name
which of the threads to start. Note that the Group Replication
applier channel (group_replication_applier
)
has no I/O thread, only a SQL thread. Specifying the
IO_THREAD
or SQL_THREAD
options when you start this channel has no benefit.
MySQL supports pluggable user-password authentication with
START SLAVE
with the USER
,
PASSWORD
, DEFAULT_AUTH
and
PLUGIN_DIR
options, as described in the
following list:
USER
: User name. Cannot be set to an
empty or null string, or left unset if
PASSWORD
is used.
PASSWORD
: Password.
DEFAULT_AUTH
: Name of plugin; default is
MySQL native authentication.
PLUGIN_DIR
: Location of plugin.
You cannot use the SQL_THREAD
option when
specifying any of USER
,
PASSWORD
, DEFAULT_AUTH
, or
PLUGIN_DIR
, unless the
IO_THREAD
option is also provided.
See Section 6.2.13, “Pluggable Authentication”, for more information.
If an insecure connection is used with any these options, the server issues the warning Sending passwords in plain text without SSL/TLS is extremely insecure.
START SLAVE ... UNTIL
supports two additional
options for use with global transaction identifiers (GTIDs) (see
Section 16.1.3, “Replication with Global Transaction Identifiers”). Each of these takes a set
of one or more global transaction identifiers
gtid_set
as an argument (see
GTID Sets, for more
information).
When no thread_type
is specified,
START SLAVE UNTIL SQL_BEFORE_GTIDS
causes the
slave SQL thread to process transactions until it has reached
the first transaction whose GTID is listed
in the gtid_set
. START SLAVE
UNTIL SQL_AFTER_GTIDS
causes the slave threads to
process all transactions until the
last
transaction in the
gtid_set
has been processed by both
threads. In other words, START SLAVE UNTIL
SQL_BEFORE_GTIDS
causes the slave SQL thread to
process all transactions occurring before the first GTID in the
gtid_set
is reached, and
START SLAVE UNTIL SQL_AFTER_GTIDS
causes the
slave threads to handle all transactions, including those whose
GTIDs are found in gtid_set
, until
each has encountered a transaction whose GTID is not part of the
set. SQL_BEFORE_GTIDS
and
SQL_AFTER_GTIDS
each support the
SQL_THREAD
and IO_THREAD
options, although using IO_THREAD
with them
currently has no effect.
For example, START SLAVE SQL_THREAD UNTIL
SQL_BEFORE_GTIDS =
3E11FA47-71CA-11E1-9E33-C80AA9429562:11-56
causes the
slave SQL thread to process all transactions originating from
the master whose server_uuid
is
3E11FA47-71CA-11E1-9E33-C80AA9429562
until it
encounters the transaction having sequence number 11; it then
stops without processing this transaction. In other words, all
transactions up to and including the transaction with sequence
number 10 are processed. Executing START SLAVE
SQL_THREAD UNTIL SQL_AFTER_GTIDS =
3E11FA47-71CA-11E1-9E33-C80AA9429562:11-56
, on the
other hand, would cause the slave SQL thread to obtain all
transactions just mentioned from the master, including all of
the transactions having the sequence numbers 11 through 56, and
then to stop without processing any additional transactions;
that is, the transaction having sequence number 56 would be the
last transaction fetched by the slave SQL thread.
Prior to MySQL 5.7.3, SQL_AFTER_GTIDS
did not
stop the slave once the indicated transaction was completed, but
waited until another GTID event was received (Bug #14767986).
When using a multithreaded slave, there is a chance of gaps in the sequence of transactions that have been executed from the relay log in the following cases:
killing the coordinator thread
after an error occurs in the worker threads
mysqld shuts down unexpectedly
Use the START SLAVE
UNTIL SQL_AFTER_MTS_GAPS
statement to cause a
multithreaded slave's worker threads to only run until no
more gaps are found in the relay log, and then to stop. This
statement can take an SQL_THREAD
option, but
the effects of the statement remain unchanged. It has no effect
on the slave I/O thread (and cannot be used with the
IO_THREAD
option).
Issuing START SLAVE
on a
multithreaded slave with gaps in the sequence of transactions
executed from the relay log generates a warning. In such a
situation, the solution is to use
START SLAVE UNTIL
SQL_AFTER_MTS_GAPS
, then issue
RESET SLAVE
to remove any
remaining relay logs. See
Section 16.4.1.32, “Replication and Transaction Inconsistencies”
for more information.
To change a failed multithreaded slave to single-threaded mode, you can issue the following series of statements, in the order shown:
START SLAVE UNTIL SQL_AFTER_MTS_GAPS; SET @@GLOBAL.slave_parallel_workers = 0; START SLAVE SQL_THREAD;
It is possible to view the entire text of a running
START SLAVE ...
statement, including any
USER
or PASSWORD
values
used, in the output of SHOW
PROCESSLIST
. This is also true for the text of a
running CHANGE MASTER TO
statement, including any values it employs for
MASTER_USER
or
MASTER_PASSWORD
.
START SLAVE
sends an
acknowledgment to the user after both the I/O thread and the SQL
thread have started. However, the I/O thread may not yet have
connected. For this reason, a successful
START SLAVE
causes
SHOW SLAVE STATUS
to show
Slave_SQL_Running=Yes
, but this does not
guarantee that Slave_IO_Running=Yes
(because
Slave_IO_Running=Yes
only if the I/O thread
is running and connected). For more
information, see Section 13.7.5.34, “SHOW SLAVE STATUS Statement”, and
Section 16.1.7.1, “Checking Replication Status”.
An UNTIL
clause
(until_option
, in the preceding
grammar) may be added to specify that the slave should start and
run until the SQL thread reaches a given point in the master
binary log, specified by the MASTER_LOG_POS
and MASTER_LOG_FILE options, or a given point in the slave relay
log, indicated with the RELAY_LOG_POS
and
RELAY_LOG_FILE
options. When the SQL thread
reaches the point specified, it stops. If the
SQL_THREAD
option is specified in the
statement, it starts only the SQL thread. Otherwise, it starts
both slave threads. If the SQL thread is running, the
UNTIL
clause is ignored and a warning is
issued. You cannot use an UNTIL
clause with
the IO_THREAD
option.
It is also possible with START SLAVE UNTIL
to
specify a stop point relative to a given GTID or set of GTIDs
using one of the options SQL_BEFORE_GTIDS
or
SQL_AFTER_GTIDS
, as explained previously in
this section. When using one of these options, you can specify
SQL_THREAD
, IO_THREAD
,
both of these, or neither of them. If you specify only
SQL_THREAD
, then only the slave SQL thread is
affected by the statement; if only IO_THREAD
is used, then only the slave I/O is affected. If both
SQL_THREAD
and IO_THREAD
are used, or if neither of them is used, then both the SQL and
I/O threads are affected by the statement.
For an UNTIL
clause, you must specify any one
of the following:
Both a log file name and a position in that file
Either of
SQL_BEFORE_GTIDS
or
SQL_AFTER_GTIDS
SQL_AFTER_MTS_GAPS
Do not mix master and relay log options. Do not mix log file options with GTID options.
The UNTIL
clause is not supported for
multithreaded slaves except when also using
SQL_AFTER_MTS_GAPS
.
If UNTIL
is used on a multithreaded slave
without
SQL_AFTER_MTS_GAPS
,
the slave operates in single-threaded (sequential) mode for
replication until the point specified by the
UNTIL
clause is reached.
Any UNTIL
condition is reset by a subsequent
STOP SLAVE
statement, a
START SLAVE
statement that
includes no UNTIL
clause, or a server
restart.
When specifying a log file and position, you can use the
IO_THREAD
option with START SLAVE
... UNTIL
even though only the SQL thread is affected
by this statement. The IO_THREAD
option is
ignored in such cases. The preceding restriction does not apply
when using one of the GTID options
(SQL_BEFORE_GTIDS
and
SQL_AFTER_GTIDS
); the GTID options support
both SQL_THREAD
and
IO_THREAD
, as explained previously in this
section.
The UNTIL
clause can be useful for debugging
replication, or to cause replication to proceed until just
before the point where you want to avoid having the slave
replicate an event. For example, if an unwise
DROP TABLE
statement was executed
on the master, you can use UNTIL
to tell the
slave to execute up to that point but no farther. To find what
the event is, use mysqlbinlog with the master
binary log or slave relay log, or by using a
SHOW BINLOG EVENTS
statement.
If you are using UNTIL
to have the slave
process replicated queries in sections, it is recommended that
you start the slave with the
--skip-slave-start
option to
prevent the SQL thread from running when the slave server
starts. It is probably best to use this option in an option file
rather than on the command line, so that an unexpected server
restart does not cause it to be forgotten.
The SHOW SLAVE STATUS
statement
includes output fields that display the current values of the
UNTIL
condition.
Prior to MySQL 5.7.5, the failure of this statement caused the slave heartbeat period to be reset. This issue is fixed in MySQL 5.7.5 and later. (Bug #18791604)
In very old versions of MySQL (before 4.0.5), this statement was
called SLAVE START
. That syntax now produces
an error.
STOP SLAVE [thread_types
] [channel_option
]thread_types
: [thread_type
[,thread_type
] ... ]thread_type
: IO_THREAD | SQL_THREADchannel_option
: FOR CHANNELchannel
Stops the slave threads. STOP
SLAVE
requires the
REPLICATION_SLAVE_ADMIN
or
SUPER
privilege. Recommended best
practice is to execute STOP SLAVE
on the
slave before stopping the slave server (see
Section 5.1.15, “The Server Shutdown Process”, for more information).
When using the row-based logging format:
You should execute STOP SLAVE
or
STOP SLAVE SQL_THREAD
on the slave prior to
shutting down the slave server if you are replicating any tables
that use a nontransactional storage engine (see the
Note later in this section).
Like START SLAVE
, this statement
may be used with the IO_THREAD
and
SQL_THREAD
options to name the thread or
threads to be stopped. Note that the Group Replication applier
channel (group_replication_applier
) has no
I/O thread, only a SQL thread. Using the
SQL_THREAD
option therefore stops this
channel completely.
STOP SLAVE
causes an implicit commit of an
ongoing transaction. See Section 13.3.3, “Statements That Cause an Implicit Commit”.
From MySQL 5.7, gtid_next
must
be set to AUTOMATIC
before issuing this
statement (Bug #16062608).
From MySQL 5.7, you can control how long STOP
SLAVE
waits before timing out by setting the
rpl_stop_slave_timeout
system
variable. This can be used to avoid deadlocks between
STOP SLAVE
and other slave SQL statements
using different client connections to the slave. When the
timeout value is reached, the issuing client returns an error
message and stops waiting, but the STOP SLAVE
instruction remains in effect. Once the slave threads are no
longer busy, the STOP SLAVE
statement is
executed and the slave stops. (Bug #16856735)
Some CHANGE MASTER TO
statements are allowed
while the slave is running, depending on the states of the slave
SQL and I/O threads. However, using STOP
SLAVE
prior to executing CHANGE MASTER
TO
in such cases is still supported. See
Section 13.4.2.1, “CHANGE MASTER TO Statement”, and
Section 16.3.7, “Switching Masters During Failover”, for more
information.
The optional FOR CHANNEL
clause enables you
to name which replication channel the statement applies to.
Providing a channel
FOR CHANNEL
clause applies the
channel
STOP SLAVE
statement to a specific
replication channel. If no channel is named and no extra
channels exist, the statement applies to the default channel. If
a STOP SLAVE
statement does not name a
channel when using multiple channels, this statement stops the
specified threads for all channels. This statement cannot be
used with the group_replication_recovery
channel. See Section 16.2.3, “Replication Channels” for more
information.
When using statement-based replication:
changing the master while it has open temporary tables is
potentially unsafe. This is one of the reasons why
statement-based replication of temporary tables is not
recommended. You can find out whether there are any temporary
tables on the slave by checking the value of
Slave_open_temp_tables
; when
using statement-based replication, this value should be 0 before
executing CHANGE MASTER TO
. If there are any
temporary tables open on the slave, issuing a CHANGE
MASTER TO
statement after issuing a STOP
SLAVE
causes an
ER_WARN_OPEN_TEMP_TABLES_MUST_BE_ZERO
warning.
When using a multithreaded slave
(slave_parallel_workers
is a
nonzero value), any gaps in the sequence of transactions
executed from the relay log are closed as part of stopping the
worker threads. If the slave is stopped unexpectedly (for
example due to an error in a worker thread, or another thread
issuing KILL
) while a
STOP SLAVE
statement is
executing, the sequence of executed transactions from the relay
log may become inconsistent. See
Section 16.4.1.32, “Replication and Transaction Inconsistencies”,
for more information.
If the current replication event group has modified one or more
nontransactional tables, STOP SLAVE waits for up to 60 seconds
for the event group to complete, unless you issue a
KILL QUERY
or
KILL CONNECTION
statement for the slave SQL thread. If the event group remains
incomplete after the timeout, an error message is logged.
This section provides information about the statements used to control servers running the MySQL Group Replication plugin. See Chapter 17, Group Replication for more information.
START GROUP_REPLICATION
Starts Group Replication on this server instance. This statement
requires the SUPER
privilege. If
super_read_only=ON
and the
member should join as a primary,
super_read_only
is set to
OFF
once Group Replication successfully
starts.
STOP GROUP_REPLICATION
Stops Group Replication. This statement requires the
GROUP_REPLICATION_ADMIN
or
SUPER
privilege. As soon as you
issue STOP GROUP_REPLICATION
the
member is set to
super_read_only=ON
, which
ensures that no writes can be made to the member while Group
Replication stops. Any other replication channels running on the
member are also stopped.
Use this statement with extreme caution because it removes the server instance from the group, meaning it is no longer protected by Group Replication's consistency guarantee mechanisms. To be completely safe, ensure that your applications can no longer connect to the instance before issuing this statement to avoid any chance of stale reads.
MySQL 5.7 provides support for server-side prepared statements. This support takes advantage of the efficient client/server binary protocol. Using prepared statements with placeholders for parameter values has the following benefits:
Less overhead for parsing the statement each time it is
executed. Typically, database applications process large volumes
of almost-identical statements, with only changes to literal or
variable values in clauses such as WHERE
for
queries and deletes, SET
for updates, and
VALUES
for inserts.
Protection against SQL injection attacks. The parameter values can contain unescaped SQL quote and delimiter characters.
You can use server-side prepared statements through client
programming interfaces, including the MySQL C
API client library for C programs,
MySQL Connector/J for Java
programs, and MySQL Connector/NET for
programs using .NET technologies. For example, the C API provides a
set of function calls that make up its prepared statement API. See
Section 27.7.7, “C API Prepared Statements”. Other language
interfaces can provide support for prepared statements that use the
binary protocol by linking in the C client library, one example
being the
mysqli
extension, available in PHP 5.0 and later.
An alternative SQL interface to prepared statements is available. This interface is not as efficient as using the binary protocol through a prepared statement API, but requires no programming because it is available directly at the SQL level:
You can use it when no programming interface is available to you.
You can use it from any program that can send SQL statements to the server to be executed, such as the mysql client program.
You can use it even if the client is using an old version of the client library, as long as you connect to a server running MySQL 4.1 or higher.
SQL syntax for prepared statements is intended to be used for situations such as these:
To test how prepared statements work in your application before coding it.
To use prepared statements when you do not have access to a programming API that supports them.
To interactively troubleshoot application issues with prepared statements.
To create a test case that reproduces a problem with prepared statements, so that you can file a bug report.
SQL syntax for prepared statements is based on three SQL statements:
PREPARE
prepares a statement for
execution (see Section 13.5.1, “PREPARE Statement”).
EXECUTE
executes a prepared
statement (see Section 13.5.2, “EXECUTE Statement”).
DEALLOCATE PREPARE
releases a
prepared statement (see Section 13.5.3, “DEALLOCATE PREPARE Statement”).
The following examples show two equivalent ways of preparing a statement that computes the hypotenuse of a triangle given the lengths of the two sides.
The first example shows how to create a prepared statement by using a string literal to supply the text of the statement:
mysql>PREPARE stmt1 FROM 'SELECT SQRT(POW(?,2) + POW(?,2)) AS hypotenuse';
mysql>SET @a = 3;
mysql>SET @b = 4;
mysql>EXECUTE stmt1 USING @a, @b;
+------------+ | hypotenuse | +------------+ | 5 | +------------+ mysql>DEALLOCATE PREPARE stmt1;
The second example is similar, but supplies the text of the statement as a user variable:
mysql>SET @s = 'SELECT SQRT(POW(?,2) + POW(?,2)) AS hypotenuse';
mysql>PREPARE stmt2 FROM @s;
mysql>SET @a = 6;
mysql>SET @b = 8;
mysql>EXECUTE stmt2 USING @a, @b;
+------------+ | hypotenuse | +------------+ | 10 | +------------+ mysql>DEALLOCATE PREPARE stmt2;
Here is an additional example that demonstrates how to choose the table on which to perform a query at runtime, by storing the name of the table as a user variable:
mysql>USE test;
mysql>CREATE TABLE t1 (a INT NOT NULL);
mysql>INSERT INTO t1 VALUES (4), (8), (11), (32), (80);
mysql>SET @table = 't1';
mysql>SET @s = CONCAT('SELECT * FROM ', @table);
mysql>PREPARE stmt3 FROM @s;
mysql>EXECUTE stmt3;
+----+ | a | +----+ | 4 | | 8 | | 11 | | 32 | | 80 | +----+ mysql>DEALLOCATE PREPARE stmt3;
A prepared statement is specific to the session in which it was created. If you terminate a session without deallocating a previously prepared statement, the server deallocates it automatically.
A prepared statement is also global to the session. If you create a prepared statement within a stored routine, it is not deallocated when the stored routine ends.
To guard against too many prepared statements being created
simultaneously, set the
max_prepared_stmt_count
system
variable. To prevent the use of prepared statements, set the value
to 0.
The following SQL statements can be used as prepared statements:
ALTER TABLE ALTER USER ANALYZE TABLE CACHE INDEX CALL CHANGE MASTER CHECKSUM {TABLE | TABLES} COMMIT {CREATE | DROP} INDEX {CREATE | RENAME | DROP} DATABASE {CREATE | DROP} TABLE {CREATE | RENAME | DROP} USER {CREATE | DROP} VIEW DELETE DO FLUSH {TABLE | TABLES | TABLES WITH READ LOCK | HOSTS | PRIVILEGES | LOGS | STATUS | MASTER | SLAVE | DES_KEY_FILE | USER_RESOURCES} GRANT INSERT INSTALL PLUGIN KILL LOAD INDEX INTO CACHE OPTIMIZE TABLE RENAME TABLE REPAIR TABLE REPLACE RESET {MASTER | SLAVE | QUERY CACHE} REVOKE SELECT SET SHOW {WARNINGS | ERRORS} SHOW BINLOG EVENTS SHOW CREATE {PROCEDURE | FUNCTION | EVENT | TABLE | VIEW} SHOW {MASTER | BINARY} LOGS SHOW {MASTER | SLAVE} STATUS SLAVE {START | STOP} TRUNCATE TABLE UNINSTALL PLUGIN UPDATE
As of MySQL 5.7.2, for compliance with the SQL standard, which states that diagnostics statements are not preparable, MySQL does not support the following as prepared statements:
SHOW WARNINGS
, SHOW COUNT(*)
WARNINGS
SHOW ERRORS
, SHOW COUNT(*)
ERRORS
Statements containing any reference to the
warning_count
or
error_count
system variable.
Other statements are not supported in MySQL 5.7.
Generally, statements not permitted in SQL prepared statements are also not permitted in stored programs. Exceptions are noted in Section 23.8, “Restrictions on Stored Programs”.
Metadata changes to tables or views referred to by prepared statements are detected and cause automatic repreparation of the statement when it is next executed. For more information, see Section 8.10.4, “Caching of Prepared Statements and Stored Programs”.
Placeholders can be used for the arguments of the
LIMIT
clause when using prepared statements. See
Section 13.2.9, “SELECT Statement”.
In prepared CALL
statements used with
PREPARE
and
EXECUTE
, placeholder support for
OUT
and INOUT
parameters is
available beginning with MySQL 5.7. See
Section 13.2.1, “CALL Statement”, for an example and a workaround for earlier
versions. Placeholders can be used for IN
parameters regardless of version.
SQL syntax for prepared statements cannot be used in nested fashion.
That is, a statement passed to
PREPARE
cannot itself be a
PREPARE
,
EXECUTE
, or
DEALLOCATE PREPARE
statement.
SQL syntax for prepared statements is distinct from using prepared
statement API calls. For example, you cannot use the
mysql_stmt_prepare()
C API function
to prepare a PREPARE
,
EXECUTE
, or
DEALLOCATE PREPARE
statement.
SQL syntax for prepared statements can be used within stored
procedures, but not in stored functions or triggers. However, a
cursor cannot be used for a dynamic statement that is prepared and
executed with PREPARE
and
EXECUTE
. The statement for a cursor
is checked at cursor creation time, so the statement cannot be
dynamic.
SQL syntax for prepared statements does not support multi-statements
(that is, multiple statements within a single string separated by
;
characters).
Prepared statements use the query cache under the conditions described in Section 8.10.3.1, “How the Query Cache Operates”.
To write C programs that use the CALL
SQL statement to execute stored procedures that contain prepared
statements, the CLIENT_MULTI_RESULTS
flag must be
enabled. This is because each CALL
returns a result to indicate the call status, in addition to any
result sets that might be returned by statements executed within the
procedure.
CLIENT_MULTI_RESULTS
can be enabled when you call
mysql_real_connect()
, either
explicitly by passing the CLIENT_MULTI_RESULTS
flag itself, or implicitly by passing
CLIENT_MULTI_STATEMENTS
(which also enables
CLIENT_MULTI_RESULTS
). For additional
information, see Section 13.2.1, “CALL Statement”.
PREPAREstmt_name
FROMpreparable_stmt
The PREPARE
statement prepares a
SQL statement and assigns it a name,
stmt_name
, by which to refer to the
statement later. The prepared statement is executed with
EXECUTE
and released with
DEALLOCATE PREPARE
. For examples,
see Section 13.5, “Prepared Statements”.
Statement names are not case-sensitive.
preparable_stmt
is either a string
literal or a user variable that contains the text of the SQL
statement. The text must represent a single statement, not
multiple statements. Within the statement, ?
characters can be used as parameter markers to indicate where data
values are to be bound to the query later when you execute it. The
?
characters should not be enclosed within
quotation marks, even if you intend to bind them to string values.
Parameter markers can be used only where data values should
appear, not for SQL keywords, identifiers, and so forth.
If a prepared statement with the given name already exists, it is deallocated implicitly before the new statement is prepared. This means that if the new statement contains an error and cannot be prepared, an error is returned and no statement with the given name exists.
The scope of a prepared statement is the session within which it is created, which as several implications:
A prepared statement created in one session is not available to other sessions.
When a session ends, whether normally or abnormally, its prepared statements no longer exist. If auto-reconnect is enabled, the client is not notified that the connection was lost. For this reason, clients may wish to disable auto-reconnect. See Section 27.7.19, “C API Automatic Reconnection Control”.
A prepared statement created within a stored program continues to exist after the program finishes executing and can be executed outside the program later.
A statement prepared in stored program context cannot refer to stored procedure or function parameters or local variables because they go out of scope when the program ends and would be unavailable were the statement to be executed later outside the program. As a workaround, refer instead to user-defined variables, which also have session scope; see Section 9.4, “User-Defined Variables”.
EXECUTEstmt_name
[USING @var_name
[, @var_name
] ...]
After preparing a statement with
PREPARE
, you execute it with an
EXECUTE
statement that refers to
the prepared statement name. If the prepared statement contains
any parameter markers, you must supply a USING
clause that lists user variables containing the values to be bound
to the parameters. Parameter values can be supplied only by user
variables, and the USING
clause must name
exactly as many variables as the number of parameter markers in
the statement.
You can execute a given prepared statement multiple times, passing different variables to it or setting the variables to different values before each execution.
For examples, see Section 13.5, “Prepared Statements”.
{DEALLOCATE | DROP} PREPARE stmt_name
To deallocate a prepared statement produced with
PREPARE
, use a
DEALLOCATE PREPARE
statement that
refers to the prepared statement name. Attempting to execute a
prepared statement after deallocating it results in an error. If
too many prepared statements are created and not deallocated by
either the DEALLOCATE PREPARE
statement or the
end of the session, you might encounter the upper limit enforced
by the max_prepared_stmt_count
system variable.
For examples, see Section 13.5, “Prepared Statements”.
This section describes the syntax for the
BEGIN ... END
compound statement and other statements that can be used in the body
of stored programs: Stored procedures and functions, triggers, and
events. These objects are defined in terms of SQL code that is
stored on the server for later invocation (see
Chapter 23, Stored Objects).
A compound statement is a block that can contain other blocks; declarations for variables, condition handlers, and cursors; and flow control constructs such as loops and conditional tests.
[begin_label
:] BEGIN [statement_list
] END [end_label
]
BEGIN ... END
syntax is used for writing compound statements, which can appear
within stored programs (stored procedures and functions, triggers,
and events). A compound statement can contain multiple statements,
enclosed by the BEGIN
and
END
keywords.
statement_list
represents a list of one
or more statements, each terminated by a semicolon
(;
) statement delimiter. The
statement_list
itself is optional, so
the empty compound statement (BEGIN END
) is
legal.
BEGIN ... END
blocks can be nested.
Use of multiple statements requires that a client is able to send
statement strings containing the ;
statement
delimiter. In the mysql command-line client,
this is handled with the delimiter
command.
Changing the ;
end-of-statement delimiter (for
example, to //
) permit ;
to
be used in a program body. For an example, see
Section 23.1, “Defining Stored Programs”.
A BEGIN ...
END
block can be labeled. See
Section 13.6.2, “Statement Labels”.
The optional [NOT] ATOMIC
clause is not
supported. This means that no transactional savepoint is set at
the start of the instruction block and the
BEGIN
clause used in this context has no effect
on the current transaction.
Within all stored programs, the parser treats
BEGIN [WORK]
as the beginning of a
BEGIN ...
END
block. To begin a transaction in this context, use
START
TRANSACTION
instead.
[begin_label
:] BEGIN [statement_list
] END [end_label
] [begin_label
:] LOOPstatement_list
END LOOP [end_label
] [begin_label
:] REPEATstatement_list
UNTILsearch_condition
END REPEAT [end_label
] [begin_label
:] WHILEsearch_condition
DOstatement_list
END WHILE [end_label
]
Labels are permitted for
BEGIN ... END
blocks and for the LOOP
,
REPEAT
, and
WHILE
statements. Label use for
those statements follows these rules:
begin_label
must be followed by a
colon.
begin_label
can be given without
end_label
. If
end_label
is present, it must be
the same as begin_label
.
end_label
cannot be given without
begin_label
.
Labels at the same nesting level must be distinct.
Labels can be up to 16 characters long.
To refer to a label within the labeled construct, use an
ITERATE
or
LEAVE
statement. The following
example uses those statements to continue iterating or terminate
the loop:
CREATE PROCEDURE doiterate(p1 INT) BEGIN label1: LOOP SET p1 = p1 + 1; IF p1 < 10 THEN ITERATE label1; END IF; LEAVE label1; END LOOP label1; END;
The scope of a block label does not include the code for handlers declared within the block. For details, see Section 13.6.7.2, “DECLARE ... HANDLER Statement”.
The DECLARE
statement is used to
define various items local to a program:
Local variables. See Section 13.6.4, “Variables in Stored Programs”.
Conditions and handlers. See Section 13.6.7, “Condition Handling”.
Cursors. See Section 13.6.6, “Cursors”.
DECLARE
is permitted only inside a
BEGIN ... END
compound statement and must be at its start, before any other
statements.
Declarations must follow a certain order. Cursor declarations must appear before handler declarations. Variable and condition declarations must appear before cursor or handler declarations.
System variables and user-defined variables can be used in stored
programs, just as they can be used outside stored-program context.
In addition, stored programs can use DECLARE
to
define local variables, and stored routines (procedures and
functions) can be declared to take parameters that communicate
values between the routine and its caller.
To declare local variables, use the
DECLARE
statement, as described in
Section 13.6.4.1, “Local Variable DECLARE Statement”.
Variables can be set directly with the
SET
statement. See Section 13.7.4.1, “SET Syntax for Variable Assignment”.
Results from queries can be retrieved into local variables
using SELECT ...
INTO
or by
opening a cursor and using
var_list
FETCH ... INTO
. See
Section 13.2.9.1, “SELECT ... INTO Statement”, and Section 13.6.6, “Cursors”.
var_list
For information about the scope of local variables and how MySQL resolves ambiguous names, see Section 13.6.4.2, “Local Variable Scope and Resolution”.
It is not permitted to assign the value DEFAULT
to stored procedure or function parameters or stored program local
variables (for example with a SET
statement). In MySQL 5.7, this results in a syntax
error.
var_name
= DEFAULT
DECLAREvar_name
[,var_name
] ...type
[DEFAULTvalue
]
This statement declares local variables within stored programs.
To provide a default value for a variable, include a
DEFAULT
clause. The value can be specified as
an expression; it need not be a constant. If the
DEFAULT
clause is missing, the initial value
is NULL
.
Local variables are treated like stored routine parameters with respect to data type and overflow checking. See Section 13.1.16, “CREATE PROCEDURE and CREATE FUNCTION Statements”.
Variable declarations must appear before cursor or handler declarations.
Local variable names are not case-sensitive. Permissible characters and quoting rules are the same as for other identifiers, as described in Section 9.2, “Schema Object Names”.
The scope of a local variable is the
BEGIN ...
END
block within which it is declared. The variable
can be referred to in blocks nested within the declaring block,
except those blocks that declare a variable with the same name.
For examples of variable declarations, see Section 13.6.4.2, “Local Variable Scope and Resolution”.
The scope of a local variable is the
BEGIN ...
END
block within which it is declared. The variable
can be referred to in blocks nested within the declaring block,
except those blocks that declare a variable with the same name.
Because local variables are in scope only during stored program
execution, references to them are not permitted in prepared
statements created within a stored program. Prepared statement
scope is the current session, not the stored program, so the
statement could be executed after the program ends, at which
point the variables would no longer be in scope. For example,
SELECT ... INTO
cannot be used as
a prepared statement. This restriction also applies to stored
procedure and function parameters. See
Section 13.5.1, “PREPARE Statement”.
local_var
A local variable should not have the same name as a table
column. If an SQL statement, such as a
SELECT ...
INTO
statement, contains a reference to a column and a
declared local variable with the same name, MySQL currently
interprets the reference as the name of a variable. Consider the
following procedure definition:
CREATE PROCEDURE sp1 (x VARCHAR(5)) BEGIN DECLARE xname VARCHAR(5) DEFAULT 'bob'; DECLARE newname VARCHAR(5); DECLARE xid INT; SELECT xname, id INTO newname, xid FROM table1 WHERE xname = xname; SELECT newname; END;
MySQL interprets xname
in the
SELECT
statement as a reference
to the xname
variable
rather than the xname
column. Consequently, when the procedure
sp1()
is called, the
newname
variable returns the value
'bob'
regardless of the value of the
table1.xname
column.
Similarly, the cursor definition in the following procedure
contains a SELECT
statement that
refers to xname
. MySQL interprets this as a
reference to the variable of that name rather than a column
reference.
CREATE PROCEDURE sp2 (x VARCHAR(5)) BEGIN DECLARE xname VARCHAR(5) DEFAULT 'bob'; DECLARE newname VARCHAR(5); DECLARE xid INT; DECLARE done TINYINT DEFAULT 0; DECLARE cur1 CURSOR FOR SELECT xname, id FROM table1; DECLARE CONTINUE HANDLER FOR NOT FOUND SET done = 1; OPEN cur1; read_loop: LOOP FETCH FROM cur1 INTO newname, xid; IF done THEN LEAVE read_loop; END IF; SELECT newname; END LOOP; CLOSE cur1; END;
MySQL supports the IF
,
CASE
,
ITERATE
,
LEAVE
LOOP
,
WHILE
, and
REPEAT
constructs for flow control
within stored programs. It also supports
RETURN
within stored functions.
Many of these constructs contain other statements, as indicated by
the grammar specifications in the following sections. Such
constructs may be nested. For example, an
IF
statement might contain a
WHILE
loop, which itself contains a
CASE
statement.
MySQL does not support FOR
loops.
CASEcase_value
WHENwhen_value
THENstatement_list
[WHENwhen_value
THENstatement_list
] ... [ELSEstatement_list
] END CASE
Or:
CASE WHENsearch_condition
THENstatement_list
[WHENsearch_condition
THENstatement_list
] ... [ELSEstatement_list
] END CASE
The CASE
statement for stored
programs implements a complex conditional construct.
There is also a CASE
expr, which differs from the
CASE
statement described here. See
Section 12.4, “Control Flow Functions”. The
CASE
statement cannot have an
ELSE NULL
clause, and it is terminated with
END CASE
instead of END
.
For the first syntax, case_value
is
an expression. This value is compared to the
when_value
expression in each
WHEN
clause until one of them is equal. When
an equal when_value
is found, the
corresponding THEN
clause
statement_list
executes. If no
when_value
is equal, the
ELSE
clause
statement_list
executes, if there is
one.
This syntax cannot be used to test for equality with
NULL
because NULL = NULL
is false. See Section 3.3.4.6, “Working with NULL Values”.
For the second syntax, each WHEN
clause
search_condition
expression is
evaluated until one is true, at which point its corresponding
THEN
clause
statement_list
executes. If no
search_condition
is equal, the
ELSE
clause
statement_list
executes, if there is
one.
If no when_value
or
search_condition
matches the value
tested and the CASE
statement
contains no ELSE
clause, a Case
not found for CASE statement error results.
Each statement_list
consists of one
or more SQL statements; an empty
statement_list
is not permitted.
To handle situations where no value is matched by any
WHEN
clause, use an ELSE
containing an empty
BEGIN ...
END
block, as shown in this example. (The indentation
used here in the ELSE
clause is for purposes
of clarity only, and is not otherwise significant.)
DELIMITER | CREATE PROCEDURE p() BEGIN DECLARE v INT DEFAULT 1; CASE v WHEN 2 THEN SELECT v; WHEN 3 THEN SELECT 0; ELSE BEGIN END; END CASE; END; |
IFsearch_condition
THENstatement_list
[ELSEIFsearch_condition
THENstatement_list
] ... [ELSEstatement_list
] END IF
The IF
statement for stored
programs implements a basic conditional construct.
There is also an IF()
function, which differs from the
IF
statement described here. See
Section 12.4, “Control Flow Functions”. The
IF
statement can have
THEN
, ELSE
, and
ELSEIF
clauses, and it is terminated with
END IF
.
If a given search_condition
evaluates
to true, the corresponding THEN
or
ELSEIF
clause
statement_list
executes. If no
search_condition
matches, the
ELSE
clause
statement_list
executes.
Each statement_list
consists of one
or more SQL statements; an empty
statement_list
is not permitted.
An IF ... END IF
block, like all other
flow-control blocks used within stored programs, must be
terminated with a semicolon, as shown in this example:
DELIMITER // CREATE FUNCTION SimpleCompare(n INT, m INT) RETURNS VARCHAR(20) BEGIN DECLARE s VARCHAR(20); IF n > m THEN SET s = '>'; ELSEIF n = m THEN SET s = '='; ELSE SET s = '<'; END IF; SET s = CONCAT(n, ' ', s, ' ', m); RETURN s; END // DELIMITER ;
As with other flow-control constructs, IF ... END
IF
blocks may be nested within other flow-control
constructs, including other IF
statements. Each IF
must be
terminated by its own END IF
followed by a
semicolon. You can use indentation to make nested flow-control
blocks more easily readable by humans (although this is not
required by MySQL), as shown here:
DELIMITER // CREATE FUNCTION VerboseCompare (n INT, m INT) RETURNS VARCHAR(50) BEGIN DECLARE s VARCHAR(50); IF n = m THEN SET s = 'equals'; ELSE IF n > m THEN SET s = 'greater'; ELSE SET s = 'less'; END IF; SET s = CONCAT('is ', s, ' than'); END IF; SET s = CONCAT(n, ' ', s, ' ', m, '.'); RETURN s; END // DELIMITER ;
In this example, the inner IF
is
evaluated only if n
is not equal to
m
.
ITERATE label
ITERATE
can appear only within
LOOP
,
REPEAT
, and
WHILE
statements.
ITERATE
means “start the
loop again.”
For an example, see Section 13.6.5.5, “LOOP Statement”.
LEAVE label
This statement is used to exit the flow control construct that
has the given label. If the label is for the outermost stored
program block, LEAVE
exits the
program.
LEAVE
can be used within
BEGIN ...
END
or loop constructs
(LOOP
,
REPEAT
,
WHILE
).
For an example, see Section 13.6.5.5, “LOOP Statement”.
[begin_label
:] LOOPstatement_list
END LOOP [end_label
]
LOOP
implements a simple loop
construct, enabling repeated execution of the statement list,
which consists of one or more statements, each terminated by a
semicolon (;
) statement delimiter. The
statements within the loop are repeated until the loop is
terminated. Usually, this is accomplished with a
LEAVE
statement. Within a stored
function, RETURN
can also be
used, which exits the function entirely.
Neglecting to include a loop-termination statement results in an infinite loop.
A LOOP
statement can be labeled.
For the rules regarding label use, see
Section 13.6.2, “Statement Labels”.
Example:
CREATE PROCEDURE doiterate(p1 INT) BEGIN label1: LOOP SET p1 = p1 + 1; IF p1 < 10 THEN ITERATE label1; END IF; LEAVE label1; END LOOP label1; SET @x = p1; END;
[begin_label
:] REPEATstatement_list
UNTILsearch_condition
END REPEAT [end_label
]
The statement list within a
REPEAT
statement is repeated
until the search_condition
expression
is true. Thus, a REPEAT
always
enters the loop at least once.
statement_list
consists of one or
more statements, each terminated by a semicolon
(;
) statement delimiter.
A REPEAT
statement can be
labeled. For the rules regarding label use, see
Section 13.6.2, “Statement Labels”.
Example:
mysql>delimiter //
mysql>CREATE PROCEDURE dorepeat(p1 INT)
BEGIN
SET @x = 0;
REPEAT
SET @x = @x + 1;
UNTIL @x > p1 END REPEAT;
END
//
Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.00 sec) mysql>CALL dorepeat(1000)//
Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.00 sec) mysql>SELECT @x//
+------+ | @x | +------+ | 1001 | +------+ 1 row in set (0.00 sec)
RETURN expr
The RETURN
statement terminates
execution of a stored function and returns the value
expr
to the function caller. There
must be at least one RETURN
statement in a stored function. There may be more than one if
the function has multiple exit points.
This statement is not used in stored procedures, triggers, or
events. The LEAVE
statement can
be used to exit a stored program of those types.
[begin_label
:] WHILEsearch_condition
DOstatement_list
END WHILE [end_label
]
The statement list within a WHILE
statement is repeated as long as the
search_condition
expression is true.
statement_list
consists of one or
more SQL statements, each terminated by a semicolon
(;
) statement delimiter.
A WHILE
statement can be labeled.
For the rules regarding label use, see
Section 13.6.2, “Statement Labels”.
Example:
CREATE PROCEDURE dowhile() BEGIN DECLARE v1 INT DEFAULT 5; WHILE v1 > 0 DO ... SET v1 = v1 - 1; END WHILE; END;
MySQL supports cursors inside stored programs. The syntax is as in embedded SQL. Cursors have these properties:
Asensitive: The server may or may not make a copy of its result table
Read only: Not updatable
Nonscrollable: Can be traversed only in one direction and cannot skip rows
Cursor declarations must appear before handler declarations and after variable and condition declarations.
Example:
CREATE PROCEDURE curdemo() BEGIN DECLARE done INT DEFAULT FALSE; DECLARE a CHAR(16); DECLARE b, c INT; DECLARE cur1 CURSOR FOR SELECT id,data FROM test.t1; DECLARE cur2 CURSOR FOR SELECT i FROM test.t2; DECLARE CONTINUE HANDLER FOR NOT FOUND SET done = TRUE; OPEN cur1; OPEN cur2; read_loop: LOOP FETCH cur1 INTO a, b; FETCH cur2 INTO c; IF done THEN LEAVE read_loop; END IF; IF b < c THEN INSERT INTO test.t3 VALUES (a,b); ELSE INSERT INTO test.t3 VALUES (a,c); END IF; END LOOP; CLOSE cur1; CLOSE cur2; END;
CLOSE cursor_name
This statement closes a previously opened cursor. For an example, see Section 13.6.6, “Cursors”.
An error occurs if the cursor is not open.
If not closed explicitly, a cursor is closed at the end of the
BEGIN ...
END
block in which it was declared.
DECLAREcursor_name
CURSOR FORselect_statement
This statement declares a cursor and associates it with a
SELECT
statement that retrieves
the rows to be traversed by the cursor. To fetch the rows later,
use a FETCH
statement. The number
of columns retrieved by the
SELECT
statement must match the
number of output variables specified in the
FETCH
statement.
The SELECT
statement cannot have
an INTO
clause.
Cursor declarations must appear before handler declarations and after variable and condition declarations.
A stored program may contain multiple cursor declarations, but each cursor declared in a given block must have a unique name. For an example, see Section 13.6.6, “Cursors”.
For information available through
SHOW
statements, it is possible
in many cases to obtain equivalent information by using a cursor
with an INFORMATION_SCHEMA
table.
FETCH [[NEXT] FROM]cursor_name
INTOvar_name
[,var_name
] ...
This statement fetches the next row for the
SELECT
statement associated with
the specified cursor (which must be open), and advances the
cursor pointer. If a row exists, the fetched columns are stored
in the named variables. The number of columns retrieved by the
SELECT
statement must match the
number of output variables specified in the
FETCH
statement.
If no more rows are available, a No Data condition occurs with
SQLSTATE value '02000'
. To detect this
condition, you can set up a handler for it (or for a
NOT FOUND
condition). For an example, see
Section 13.6.6, “Cursors”.
Be aware that another operation, such as a
SELECT
or another FETCH
,
may also cause the handler to execute by raising the same
condition. If it is necessary to distinguish which operation
raised the condition, place the operation within its own
BEGIN ...
END
block so that it can be associated with its own
handler.
OPEN cursor_name
This statement opens a previously declared cursor. For an example, see Section 13.6.6, “Cursors”.
Server-side cursors are implemented in the C API using the
mysql_stmt_attr_set()
function.
The same implementation is used for cursors in stored routines.
A server-side cursor enables a result set to be generated on the
server side, but not transferred to the client except for those
rows that the client requests. For example, if a client executes
a query but is only interested in the first row, the remaining
rows are not transferred.
In MySQL, a server-side cursor is materialized into an internal
temporary table. Initially, this is a MEMORY
table, but is converted to a MyISAM
table
when its size exceeds the minimum value of the
max_heap_table_size
and
tmp_table_size
system
variables. The same restrictions apply to internal temporary
tables created to hold the result set for a cursor as for other
uses of internal temporary tables. See
Section 8.4.4, “Internal Temporary Table Use in MySQL”. One limitation of
the implementation is that for a large result set, retrieving
its rows through a cursor might be slow.
Cursors are read only; you cannot use a cursor to update rows.
UPDATE WHERE CURRENT OF
and DELETE
WHERE CURRENT OF
are not implemented, because
updatable cursors are not supported.
Cursors are nonholdable (not held open after a commit).
Cursors are asensitive.
Cursors are nonscrollable.
Cursors are not named. The statement handler acts as the cursor ID.
You can have open only a single cursor per prepared statement. If you need several cursors, you must prepare several statements.
You cannot use a cursor for a statement that generates a result
set if the statement is not supported in prepared mode. This
includes statements such as CHECK
TABLE
, HANDLER READ
, and
SHOW BINLOG EVENTS
.
Conditions may arise during stored program execution that require special handling, such as exiting the current program block or continuing execution. Handlers can be defined for general conditions such as warnings or exceptions, or for specific conditions such as a particular error code. Specific conditions can be assigned names and referred to that way in handlers.
To name a condition, use the
DECLARE ...
CONDITION
statement. To declare a handler, use the
DECLARE ...
HANDLER
statement. See
Section 13.6.7.1, “DECLARE ... CONDITION Statement”, and
Section 13.6.7.2, “DECLARE ... HANDLER Statement”. For information about how the
server chooses handlers when a condition occurs, see
Section 13.6.7.6, “Scope Rules for Handlers”.
To raise a condition, use the
SIGNAL
statement. To modify
condition information within a condition handler, use
RESIGNAL
. See
Section 13.6.7.1, “DECLARE ... CONDITION Statement”, and
Section 13.6.7.2, “DECLARE ... HANDLER Statement”.
To retrieve information from the diagnostics area, use the
GET DIAGNOSTICS
statement (see
Section 13.6.7.3, “GET DIAGNOSTICS Statement”). For information about the
diagnostics area, see Section 13.6.7.7, “The MySQL Diagnostics Area”.
DECLAREcondition_name
CONDITION FORcondition_value
condition_value
: {mysql_error_code
| SQLSTATE [VALUE]sqlstate_value
}
The DECLARE
... CONDITION
statement declares a named error
condition, associating a name with a condition that needs
specific handling. The name can be referred to in a subsequent
DECLARE ...
HANDLER
statement (see
Section 13.6.7.2, “DECLARE ... HANDLER Statement”).
Condition declarations must appear before cursor or handler declarations.
The condition_value
for
DECLARE ...
CONDITION
indicates the specific condition or class of
conditions to associate with the condition name. It can take the
following forms:
mysql_error_code
: An integer
literal indicating a MySQL error code.
Do not use MySQL error code 0 because that indicates success rather than an error condition. For a list of MySQL error codes, see Section B.3.1, “Server Error Message Reference”.
SQLSTATE [VALUE] sqlstate_value
:
A 5-character string literal indicating an SQLSTATE value.
Do not use SQLSTATE values that begin with
'00'
because those indicate success
rather than an error condition. For a list of SQLSTATE
values, see Section B.3.1, “Server Error Message Reference”.
Condition names referred to in
SIGNAL
or use
RESIGNAL
statements must be
associated with SQLSTATE values, not MySQL error codes.
Using names for conditions can help make stored program code clearer. For example, this handler applies to attempts to drop a nonexistent table, but that is apparent only if you know that 1051 is the MySQL error code for “unknown table”:
DECLARE CONTINUE HANDLER FOR 1051 BEGIN -- body of handler END;
By declaring a name for the condition, the purpose of the handler is more readily seen:
DECLARE no_such_table CONDITION FOR 1051; DECLARE CONTINUE HANDLER FOR no_such_table BEGIN -- body of handler END;
Here is a named condition for the same condition, but based on the corresponding SQLSTATE value rather than the MySQL error code:
DECLARE no_such_table CONDITION FOR SQLSTATE '42S02'; DECLARE CONTINUE HANDLER FOR no_such_table BEGIN -- body of handler END;
DECLAREhandler_action
HANDLER FORcondition_value
[,condition_value
] ...statement
handler_action
: { CONTINUE | EXIT | UNDO }condition_value
: {mysql_error_code
| SQLSTATE [VALUE]sqlstate_value
|condition_name
| SQLWARNING | NOT FOUND | SQLEXCEPTION }
The DECLARE ...
HANDLER
statement specifies a handler that deals with
one or more conditions. If one of these conditions occurs, the
specified statement
executes.
statement
can be a simple statement
such as SET
, or a compound
statement written using var_name
=
value
BEGIN
and
END
(see Section 13.6.1, “BEGIN ... END Compound Statement”).
Handler declarations must appear after variable or condition declarations.
The handler_action
value indicates
what action the handler takes after execution of the handler
statement:
CONTINUE
: Execution of the current
program continues.
EXIT
: Execution terminates for the
BEGIN ...
END
compound statement in which the handler is
declared. This is true even if the condition occurs in an
inner block.
UNDO
: Not supported.
The condition_value
for
DECLARE ...
HANDLER
indicates the specific condition or class of
conditions that activates the handler. It can take the following
forms:
mysql_error_code
: An integer
literal indicating a MySQL error code, such as 1051 to
specify “unknown table”:
DECLARE CONTINUE HANDLER FOR 1051 BEGIN -- body of handler END;
Do not use MySQL error code 0 because that indicates success rather than an error condition. For a list of MySQL error codes, see Section B.3.1, “Server Error Message Reference”.
SQLSTATE [VALUE] sqlstate_value
:
A 5-character string literal indicating an SQLSTATE value,
such as '42S01'
to specify “unknown
table”:
DECLARE CONTINUE HANDLER FOR SQLSTATE '42S02' BEGIN -- body of handler END;
Do not use SQLSTATE values that begin with
'00'
because those indicate success
rather than an error condition. For a list of SQLSTATE
values, see Section B.3.1, “Server Error Message Reference”.
condition_name
: A condition name
previously specified with
DECLARE
... CONDITION
. A condition name can be associated
with a MySQL error code or SQLSTATE value. See
Section 13.6.7.1, “DECLARE ... CONDITION Statement”.
SQLWARNING
: Shorthand for the class of
SQLSTATE values that begin with '01'
.
DECLARE CONTINUE HANDLER FOR SQLWARNING BEGIN -- body of handler END;
NOT FOUND
: Shorthand for the class of
SQLSTATE values that begin with '02'
.
This is relevant within the context of cursors and is used
to control what happens when a cursor reaches the end of a
data set. If no more rows are available, a No Data condition
occurs with SQLSTATE value '02000'
. To
detect this condition, you can set up a handler for it or
for a NOT FOUND
condition.
DECLARE CONTINUE HANDLER FOR NOT FOUND BEGIN -- body of handler END;
For another example, see Section 13.6.6, “Cursors”. The
NOT FOUND
condition also occurs for
SELECT ... INTO
statements
that retrieve no rows.
var_list
SQLEXCEPTION
: Shorthand for the class of
SQLSTATE values that do not begin with
'00'
, '01'
, or
'02'
.
DECLARE CONTINUE HANDLER FOR SQLEXCEPTION BEGIN -- body of handler END;
For information about how the server chooses handlers when a condition occurs, see Section 13.6.7.6, “Scope Rules for Handlers”.
If a condition occurs for which no handler has been declared, the action taken depends on the condition class:
For SQLEXCEPTION
conditions, the stored
program terminates at the statement that raised the
condition, as if there were an EXIT
handler. If the program was called by another stored
program, the calling program handles the condition using the
handler selection rules applied to its own handlers.
For SQLWARNING
conditions, the program
continues executing, as if there were a
CONTINUE
handler.
For NOT FOUND
conditions, if the
condition was raised normally, the action is
CONTINUE
. If it was raised by
SIGNAL
or
RESIGNAL
, the action is
EXIT
.
The following example uses a handler for SQLSTATE
'23000'
, which occurs for a duplicate-key error:
mysql>CREATE TABLE test.t (s1 INT, PRIMARY KEY (s1));
Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.00 sec) mysql>delimiter //
mysql>CREATE PROCEDURE handlerdemo ()
BEGIN
DECLARE CONTINUE HANDLER FOR SQLSTATE '23000' SET @x2 = 1;
SET @x = 1;
INSERT INTO test.t VALUES (1);
SET @x = 2;
INSERT INTO test.t VALUES (1);
SET @x = 3;
END;
//
Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.00 sec) mysql>CALL handlerdemo()//
Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.00 sec) mysql>SELECT @x//
+------+ | @x | +------+ | 3 | +------+ 1 row in set (0.00 sec)
Notice that @x
is 3
after
the procedure executes, which shows that execution continued to
the end of the procedure after the error occurred. If the
DECLARE ...
HANDLER
statement had not been present, MySQL would
have taken the default action (EXIT
) after
the second INSERT
failed due to
the PRIMARY KEY
constraint, and
SELECT @x
would have returned
2
.
To ignore a condition, declare a CONTINUE
handler for it and associate it with an empty block. For
example:
DECLARE CONTINUE HANDLER FOR SQLWARNING BEGIN END;
The scope of a block label does not include the code for
handlers declared within the block. Therefore, the statement
associated with a handler cannot use
ITERATE
or
LEAVE
to refer to labels for
blocks that enclose the handler declaration. Consider the
following example, where the
REPEAT
block has a label of
retry
:
CREATE PROCEDURE p () BEGIN DECLARE i INT DEFAULT 3; retry: REPEAT BEGIN DECLARE CONTINUE HANDLER FOR SQLWARNING BEGIN ITERATE retry; # illegal END; IF i < 0 THEN LEAVE retry; # legal END IF; SET i = i - 1; END; UNTIL FALSE END REPEAT; END;
The retry
label is in scope for the
IF
statement within the block. It
is not in scope for the CONTINUE
handler, so
the reference there is invalid and results in an error:
ERROR 1308 (42000): LEAVE with no matching label: retry
To avoid references to outer labels in handlers, use one of these strategies:
To leave the block, use an EXIT
handler.
If no block cleanup is required, the
BEGIN ...
END
handler body can be empty:
DECLARE EXIT HANDLER FOR SQLWARNING BEGIN END;
Otherwise, put the cleanup statements in the handler body:
DECLARE EXIT HANDLER FOR SQLWARNING
BEGIN
block cleanup statements
END;
To continue execution, set a status variable in a
CONTINUE
handler that can be checked in
the enclosing block to determine whether the handler was
invoked. The following example uses the variable
done
for this purpose:
CREATE PROCEDURE p () BEGIN DECLARE i INT DEFAULT 3; DECLARE done INT DEFAULT FALSE; retry: REPEAT BEGIN DECLARE CONTINUE HANDLER FOR SQLWARNING BEGIN SET done = TRUE; END; IF done OR i < 0 THEN LEAVE retry; END IF; SET i = i - 1; END; UNTIL FALSE END REPEAT; END;
GET [CURRENT | STACKED] DIAGNOSTICS {statement_information_item
[,statement_information_item
] ... | CONDITIONcondition_number
condition_information_item
[,condition_information_item
] ... }statement_information_item
:target
=statement_information_item_name
condition_information_item
:target
=condition_information_item_name
statement_information_item_name
: NUMBER | ROW_COUNTcondition_information_item_name
: { CLASS_ORIGIN | SUBCLASS_ORIGIN | RETURNED_SQLSTATE | MESSAGE_TEXT | MYSQL_ERRNO | CONSTRAINT_CATALOG | CONSTRAINT_SCHEMA | CONSTRAINT_NAME | CATALOG_NAME | SCHEMA_NAME | TABLE_NAME | COLUMN_NAME | CURSOR_NAME }condition_number
,target
: (see following discussion)
SQL statements produce diagnostic information that populates the
diagnostics area. The GET
DIAGNOSTICS
statement enables applications to inspect
this information. (You can also use SHOW
WARNINGS
or SHOW ERRORS
to see conditions or errors.)
No special privileges are required to execute
GET DIAGNOSTICS
.
The keyword CURRENT
means to retrieve
information from the current diagnostics area. The keyword
STACKED
means to retrieve information from
the second diagnostics area, which is available only if the
current context is a condition handler. If neither keyword is
given, the default is to use the current diagnostics area.
The GET DIAGNOSTICS
statement is
typically used in a handler within a stored program. It is a
MySQL extension that
GET [CURRENT]
DIAGNOSTICS
is permitted outside handler context to
check the execution of any SQL statement. For example, if you
invoke the mysql client program, you can
enter these statements at the prompt:
mysql>DROP TABLE test.no_such_table;
ERROR 1051 (42S02): Unknown table 'test.no_such_table' mysql>GET DIAGNOSTICS CONDITION 1
@p1 = RETURNED_SQLSTATE, @p2 = MESSAGE_TEXT;
mysql>SELECT @p1, @p2;
+-------+------------------------------------+ | @p1 | @p2 | +-------+------------------------------------+ | 42S02 | Unknown table 'test.no_such_table' | +-------+------------------------------------+
This extension applies only to the current diagnostics area. It
does not apply to the second diagnostics area because
GET STACKED DIAGNOSTICS
is permitted only if
the current context is a condition handler. If that is not the
case, a GET STACKED DIAGNOSTICS when handler not
active
error occurs.
For a description of the diagnostics area, see Section 13.6.7.7, “The MySQL Diagnostics Area”. Briefly, it contains two kinds of information:
Statement information, such as the number of conditions that occurred or the affected-rows count.
Condition information, such as the error code and message. If a statement raises multiple conditions, this part of the diagnostics area has a condition area for each one. If a statement raises no conditions, this part of the diagnostics area is empty.
For a statement that produces three conditions, the diagnostics area contains statement and condition information like this:
Statement information: row count ... other statement information items ... Condition area list: Condition area 1: error code for condition 1 error message for condition 1 ... other condition information items ... Condition area 2: error code for condition 2: error message for condition 2 ... other condition information items ... Condition area 3: error code for condition 3 error message for condition 3 ... other condition information items ...
GET DIAGNOSTICS
can obtain either
statement or condition information, but not both in the same
statement:
To obtain statement information, retrieve the desired
statement items into target variables. This instance of
GET DIAGNOSTICS
assigns the
number of available conditions and the rows-affected count
to the user variables @p1
and
@p2
:
GET DIAGNOSTICS @p1 = NUMBER, @p2 = ROW_COUNT;
To obtain condition information, specify the condition
number and retrieve the desired condition items into target
variables. This instance of GET
DIAGNOSTICS
assigns the SQLSTATE value and error
message to the user variables @p3
and
@p4
:
GET DIAGNOSTICS CONDITION 1 @p3 = RETURNED_SQLSTATE, @p4 = MESSAGE_TEXT;
The retrieval list specifies one or more
assignments,
separated by commas. Each assignment names a target variable and
either a
target
=
item_name
statement_information_item_name
or
condition_information_item_name
designator, depending on whether the statement retrieves
statement or condition information.
Valid target
designators for storing
item information can be stored procedure or function parameters,
stored program local variables declared with
DECLARE
, or user-defined
variables.
Valid condition_number
designators
can be stored procedure or function parameters, stored program
local variables declared with
DECLARE
, user-defined variables,
system variables, or literals. A character literal may include a
_charset
introducer. A warning occurs
if the condition number is not in the range from 1 to the number
of condition areas that have information. In this case, the
warning is added to the diagnostics area without clearing it.
When a condition occurs, MySQL does not populate all condition
items recognized by GET
DIAGNOSTICS
. For example:
mysql>GET DIAGNOSTICS CONDITION 1
@p5 = SCHEMA_NAME, @p6 = TABLE_NAME;
mysql>SELECT @p5, @p6;
+------+------+ | @p5 | @p6 | +------+------+ | | | +------+------+
In standard SQL, if there are multiple conditions, the first
condition relates to the SQLSTATE
value
returned for the previous SQL statement. In MySQL, this is not
guaranteed. To get the main error, you cannot do this:
GET DIAGNOSTICS CONDITION 1 @errno = MYSQL_ERRNO;
Instead, retrieve the condition count first, then use it to specify which condition number to inspect:
GET DIAGNOSTICS @cno = NUMBER; GET DIAGNOSTICS CONDITION @cno @errno = MYSQL_ERRNO;
For information about permissible statement and condition information items, and which ones are populated when a condition occurs, see Diagnostics Area Information Items.
Here is an example that uses GET
DIAGNOSTICS
and an exception handler in stored
procedure context to assess the outcome of an insert operation.
If the insert was successful, the procedure uses
GET DIAGNOSTICS
to get the
rows-affected count. This shows that you can use
GET DIAGNOSTICS
multiple times to
retrieve information about a statement as long as the current
diagnostics area has not been cleared.
CREATE PROCEDURE do_insert(value INT) BEGIN -- Declare variables to hold diagnostics area information DECLARE code CHAR(5) DEFAULT '00000'; DECLARE msg TEXT; DECLARE nrows INT; DECLARE result TEXT; -- Declare exception handler for failed insert DECLARE CONTINUE HANDLER FOR SQLEXCEPTION BEGIN GET DIAGNOSTICS CONDITION 1 code = RETURNED_SQLSTATE, msg = MESSAGE_TEXT; END; -- Perform the insert INSERT INTO t1 (int_col) VALUES(value); -- Check whether the insert was successful IF code = '00000' THEN GET DIAGNOSTICS nrows = ROW_COUNT; SET result = CONCAT('insert succeeded, row count = ',nrows); ELSE SET result = CONCAT('insert failed, error = ',code,', message = ',msg); END IF; -- Say what happened SELECT result; END;
Suppose that t1.int_col
is an integer column
that is declared as NOT NULL
. The procedure
produces these results when invoked to insert
non-NULL
and NULL
values,
respectively:
mysql>CALL do_insert(1);
+---------------------------------+ | result | +---------------------------------+ | insert succeeded, row count = 1 | +---------------------------------+ mysql>CALL do_insert(NULL);
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------+ | result | +-------------------------------------------------------------------------+ | insert failed, error = 23000, message = Column 'int_col' cannot be null | +-------------------------------------------------------------------------+
When a condition handler activates, a push to the diagnostics area stack occurs:
The first (current) diagnostics area becomes the second (stacked) diagnostics area and a new current diagnostics area is created as a copy of it.
GET
[CURRENT] DIAGNOSTICS
and
GET STACKED
DIAGNOSTICS
can be used within the handler to
access the contents of the current and stacked diagnostics
areas.
Initially, both diagnostics areas return the same result, so it is possible to get information from the current diagnostics area about the condition that activated the handler, as long as you execute no statements within the handler that change its current diagnostics area.
However, statements executing within the handler can modify the current diagnostics area, clearing and setting its contents according to the normal rules (see How the Diagnostics Area is Cleared and Populated).
A more reliable way to obtain information about the
handler-activating condition is to use the stacked
diagnostics area, which cannot be modified by statements
executing within the handler except
RESIGNAL
. For information
about when the current diagnostics area is set and cleared,
see Section 13.6.7.7, “The MySQL Diagnostics Area”.
The next example shows how GET STACKED
DIAGNOSTICS
can be used within a handler to obtain
information about the handled exception, even after the current
diagnostics area has been modified by handler statements.
Within a stored procedure p()
, we attempt to
insert two values into a table that contains a TEXT NOT
NULL
column. The first value is a
non-NULL
string and the second is
NULL
. The column prohibits
NULL
values, so the first insert succeeds but
the second causes an exception. The procedure includes an
exception handler that maps attempts to insert
NULL
into inserts of the empty string:
DROP TABLE IF EXISTS t1; CREATE TABLE t1 (c1 TEXT NOT NULL); DROP PROCEDURE IF EXISTS p; delimiter // CREATE PROCEDURE p () BEGIN -- Declare variables to hold diagnostics area information DECLARE errcount INT; DECLARE errno INT; DECLARE msg TEXT; DECLARE EXIT HANDLER FOR SQLEXCEPTION BEGIN -- Here the current DA is nonempty because no prior statements -- executing within the handler have cleared it GET CURRENT DIAGNOSTICS CONDITION 1 errno = MYSQL_ERRNO, msg = MESSAGE_TEXT; SELECT 'current DA before mapped insert' AS op, errno, msg; GET STACKED DIAGNOSTICS CONDITION 1 errno = MYSQL_ERRNO, msg = MESSAGE_TEXT; SELECT 'stacked DA before mapped insert' AS op, errno, msg; -- Map attempted NULL insert to empty string insert INSERT INTO t1 (c1) VALUES(''); -- Here the current DA should be empty (if the INSERT succeeded), -- so check whether there are conditions before attempting to -- obtain condition information GET CURRENT DIAGNOSTICS errcount = NUMBER; IF errcount = 0 THEN SELECT 'mapped insert succeeded, current DA is empty' AS op; ELSE GET CURRENT DIAGNOSTICS CONDITION 1 errno = MYSQL_ERRNO, msg = MESSAGE_TEXT; SELECT 'current DA after mapped insert' AS op, errno, msg; END IF ; GET STACKED DIAGNOSTICS CONDITION 1 errno = MYSQL_ERRNO, msg = MESSAGE_TEXT; SELECT 'stacked DA after mapped insert' AS op, errno, msg; END; INSERT INTO t1 (c1) VALUES('string 1'); INSERT INTO t1 (c1) VALUES(NULL); END; // delimiter ; CALL p(); SELECT * FROM t1;
When the handler activates, a copy of the current diagnostics area is pushed to the diagnostics area stack. The handler first displays the contents of the current and stacked diagnostics areas, which are both the same initially:
+---------------------------------+-------+----------------------------+ | op | errno | msg | +---------------------------------+-------+----------------------------+ | current DA before mapped insert | 1048 | Column 'c1' cannot be null | +---------------------------------+-------+----------------------------+ +---------------------------------+-------+----------------------------+ | op | errno | msg | +---------------------------------+-------+----------------------------+ | stacked DA before mapped insert | 1048 | Column 'c1' cannot be null | +---------------------------------+-------+----------------------------+
Statements executing after the GET
DIAGNOSTICS
statements may reset the current
diagnostics area. statements may reset the current diagnostics
area. For example, the handler maps the NULL
insert to an empty-string insert and displays the result. The
new insert succeeds and clears the current diagnostics area, but
the stacked diagnostics area remains unchanged and still
contains information about the condition that activated the
handler:
+----------------------------------------------+ | op | +----------------------------------------------+ | mapped insert succeeded, current DA is empty | +----------------------------------------------+ +--------------------------------+-------+----------------------------+ | op | errno | msg | +--------------------------------+-------+----------------------------+ | stacked DA after mapped insert | 1048 | Column 'c1' cannot be null | +--------------------------------+-------+----------------------------+
When the condition handler ends, its current diagnostics area is popped from the stack and the stacked diagnostics area becomes the current diagnostics area in the stored procedure.
After the procedure returns, the table contains two rows. The
empty row results from the attempt to insert
NULL
that was mapped to an empty-string
insert:
+----------+ | c1 | +----------+ | string 1 | | | +----------+
In the preceding example, the first two GET
DIAGNOSTICS
statements within the condition handler
that retrieve information from the current and stacked
diagnostics areas return the same values. This will not be the
case if statements that reset the current diagnostics area
execute earlier within the handler. Suppose that
p()
is rewritten to place the
DECLARE
statements within the
handler definition rather than preceding it:
CREATE PROCEDURE p () BEGIN DECLARE EXIT HANDLER FOR SQLEXCEPTION BEGIN -- Declare variables to hold diagnostics area information DECLARE errcount INT; DECLARE errno INT; DECLARE msg TEXT; GET CURRENT DIAGNOSTICS CONDITION 1 errno = MYSQL_ERRNO, msg = MESSAGE_TEXT; SELECT 'current DA before mapped insert' AS op, errno, msg; GET STACKED DIAGNOSTICS CONDITION 1 errno = MYSQL_ERRNO, msg = MESSAGE_TEXT; SELECT 'stacked DA before mapped insert' AS op, errno, msg; ...
In this case, the result is version dependent:
Before MySQL 5.7.2, DECLARE
does not change the current diagnostics area, so the first
two GET DIAGNOSTICS
statements return the same result, just as in the original
version of p()
.
In MySQL 5.7.2, work was done to ensure that all
nondiagnostic statements populate the diagnostics area, per
the SQL standard. DECLARE
is
one of them, so in 5.7.2 and higher,
DECLARE
statements executing
at the beginning of the handler clear the current
diagnostics area and the GET
DIAGNOSTICS
statements produce different results:
+---------------------------------+-------+------+ | op | errno | msg | +---------------------------------+-------+------+ | current DA before mapped insert | NULL | NULL | +---------------------------------+-------+------+ +---------------------------------+-------+----------------------------+ | op | errno | msg | +---------------------------------+-------+----------------------------+ | stacked DA before mapped insert | 1048 | Column 'c1' cannot be null | +---------------------------------+-------+----------------------------+
To avoid this issue within a condition handler when seeking to obtain information about the condition that activated the handler, be sure to access the stacked diagnostics area, not the current diagnostics area.
RESIGNAL [condition_value
] [SETsignal_information_item
[,signal_information_item
] ...]condition_value
: { SQLSTATE [VALUE]sqlstate_value
|condition_name
}signal_information_item
:condition_information_item_name
=simple_value_specification
condition_information_item_name
: { CLASS_ORIGIN | SUBCLASS_ORIGIN | MESSAGE_TEXT | MYSQL_ERRNO | CONSTRAINT_CATALOG | CONSTRAINT_SCHEMA | CONSTRAINT_NAME | CATALOG_NAME | SCHEMA_NAME | TABLE_NAME | COLUMN_NAME | CURSOR_NAME }condition_name
,simple_value_specification
: (see following discussion)
RESIGNAL
passes on the error
condition information that is available during execution of a
condition handler within a compound statement inside a stored
procedure or function, trigger, or event.
RESIGNAL
may change some or all
information before passing it on.
RESIGNAL
is related to
SIGNAL
, but instead of
originating a condition as SIGNAL
does, RESIGNAL
relays existing
condition information, possibly after modifying it.
RESIGNAL
makes it possible to
both handle an error and return the error information.
Otherwise, by executing an SQL statement within the handler,
information that caused the handler's activation is destroyed.
RESIGNAL
also can make some
procedures shorter if a given handler can handle part of a
situation, then pass the condition “up the line” to
another handler.
No privileges are required to execute the
RESIGNAL
statement.
All forms of RESIGNAL
require
that the current context be a condition handler. Otherwise,
RESIGNAL
is illegal and a
RESIGNAL when handler not active
error
occurs.
To retrieve information from the diagnostics area, use the
GET DIAGNOSTICS
statement (see
Section 13.6.7.3, “GET DIAGNOSTICS Statement”). For information about the
diagnostics area, see Section 13.6.7.7, “The MySQL Diagnostics Area”.
For condition_value
and
signal_information_item
, the
definitions and rules are the same for
RESIGNAL
as for
SIGNAL
. For example, the
condition_value
can be an
SQLSTATE
value, and the value can indicate
errors, warnings, or “not found.” For additional
information, see Section 13.6.7.5, “SIGNAL Statement”.
The RESIGNAL
statement takes
condition_value
and
SET
clauses, both of which are optional.
This leads to several possible uses:
These use cases all cause changes to the diagnostics and condition areas:
A diagnostics area contains one or more condition areas.
A condition area contains condition information items,
such as the SQLSTATE
value,
MYSQL_ERRNO
, or
MESSAGE_TEXT
.
There is a stack of diagnostics areas. When a handler takes control, it pushes a diagnostics area to the top of the stack, so there are two diagnostics areas during handler execution:
The first (current) diagnostics area, which starts as a copy of the last diagnostics area, but will be overwritten by the first statement in the handler that changes the current diagnostics area.
The last (stacked) diagnostics area, which has the condition areas that were set up before the handler took control.
The maximum number of condition areas in a diagnostics area is
determined by the value of the
max_error_count
system
variable. See
Diagnostics Area-Related System Variables.
A simple RESIGNAL
alone means
“pass on the error with no change.” It restores
the last diagnostics area and makes it the current diagnostics
area. That is, it “pops” the diagnostics area
stack.
Within a condition handler that catches a condition, one use
for RESIGNAL
alone is to
perform some other actions, and then pass on without change
the original condition information (the information that
existed before entry into the handler).
Example:
DROP TABLE IF EXISTS xx; delimiter // CREATE PROCEDURE p () BEGIN DECLARE EXIT HANDLER FOR SQLEXCEPTION BEGIN SET @error_count = @error_count + 1; IF @a = 0 THEN RESIGNAL; END IF; END; DROP TABLE xx; END// delimiter ; SET @error_count = 0; SET @a = 0; CALL p();
Suppose that the DROP TABLE xx
statement
fails. The diagnostics area stack looks like this:
DA 1. ERROR 1051 (42S02): Unknown table 'xx'
Then execution enters the EXIT
handler. It
starts by pushing a diagnostics area to the top of the stack,
which now looks like this:
DA 1. ERROR 1051 (42S02): Unknown table 'xx' DA 2. ERROR 1051 (42S02): Unknown table 'xx'
At this point, the contents of the first (current) and second (stacked) diagnostics areas are the same. The first diagnostics area may be modified by statements executing subsequently within the handler.
Usually a procedure statement clears the first diagnostics
area. BEGIN
is an exception, it does not
clear, it does nothing. SET
is not an
exception, it clears, performs the operation, and produces a
result of “success.” The diagnostics area stack
now looks like this:
DA 1. ERROR 0000 (00000): Successful operation DA 2. ERROR 1051 (42S02): Unknown table 'xx'
At this point, if @a = 0
,
RESIGNAL
pops the diagnostics
area stack, which now looks like this:
DA 1. ERROR 1051 (42S02): Unknown table 'xx'
And that is what the caller sees.
If @a
is not 0, the handler simply ends,
which means that there is no more use for the current
diagnostics area (it has been “handled”), so it
can be thrown away, causing the stacked diagnostics area to
become the current diagnostics area again. The diagnostics
area stack looks like this:
DA 1. ERROR 0000 (00000): Successful operation
The details make it look complex, but the end result is quite useful: Handlers can execute without destroying information about the condition that caused activation of the handler.
RESIGNAL
with a
SET
clause provides new signal information,
so the statement means “pass on the error with
changes”:
RESIGNAL SETsignal_information_item
[,signal_information_item
] ...;
As with RESIGNAL
alone, the
idea is to pop the diagnostics area stack so that the original
information will go out. Unlike
RESIGNAL
alone, anything
specified in the SET
clause changes.
Example:
DROP TABLE IF EXISTS xx; delimiter // CREATE PROCEDURE p () BEGIN DECLARE EXIT HANDLER FOR SQLEXCEPTION BEGIN SET @error_count = @error_count + 1; IF @a = 0 THEN RESIGNAL SET MYSQL_ERRNO = 5; END IF; END; DROP TABLE xx; END// delimiter ; SET @error_count = 0; SET @a = 0; CALL p();
Remember from the previous discussion that
RESIGNAL
alone results in a
diagnostics area stack like this:
DA 1. ERROR 1051 (42S02): Unknown table 'xx'
The RESIGNAL SET MYSQL_ERRNO = 5
statement
results in this stack instead, which is what the caller sees:
DA 1. ERROR 5 (42S02): Unknown table 'xx'
In other words, it changes the error number, and nothing else.
The RESIGNAL
statement can
change any or all of the signal information items, making the
first condition area of the diagnostics area look quite
different.
RESIGNAL
with a condition value
means “push a condition into the current diagnostics
area.” If the SET
clause is present,
it also changes the error information.
RESIGNALcondition_value
[SETsignal_information_item
[,signal_information_item
] ...];
This form of RESIGNAL
restores
the last diagnostics area and makes it the current diagnostics
area. That is, it “pops” the diagnostics area
stack, which is the same as what a simple
RESIGNAL
alone would do.
However, it also changes the diagnostics area depending on the
condition value or signal information.
Example:
DROP TABLE IF EXISTS xx; delimiter // CREATE PROCEDURE p () BEGIN DECLARE EXIT HANDLER FOR SQLEXCEPTION BEGIN SET @error_count = @error_count + 1; IF @a = 0 THEN RESIGNAL SQLSTATE '45000' SET MYSQL_ERRNO=5; END IF; END; DROP TABLE xx; END// delimiter ; SET @error_count = 0; SET @a = 0; SET @@max_error_count = 2; CALL p(); SHOW ERRORS;
This is similar to the previous example, and the effects are
the same, except that if
RESIGNAL
happens, the current
condition area looks different at the end. (The reason the
condition adds to rather than replaces the existing condition
is the use of a condition value.)
The RESIGNAL
statement includes
a condition value (SQLSTATE '45000'
), so it
adds a new condition area, resulting in a diagnostics area
stack that looks like this:
DA 1. (condition 2) ERROR 1051 (42S02): Unknown table 'xx' (condition 1) ERROR 5 (45000) Unknown table 'xx'
The result of CALL
p()
and SHOW ERRORS
for this example is:
mysql>CALL p();
ERROR 5 (45000): Unknown table 'xx' mysql>SHOW ERRORS;
+-------+------+----------------------------------+ | Level | Code | Message | +-------+------+----------------------------------+ | Error | 1051 | Unknown table 'xx' | | Error | 5 | Unknown table 'xx' | +-------+------+----------------------------------+
All forms of RESIGNAL
require
that the current context be a condition handler. Otherwise,
RESIGNAL
is illegal and a
RESIGNAL when handler not active
error
occurs. For example:
mysql>CREATE PROCEDURE p () RESIGNAL;
Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.00 sec) mysql>CALL p();
ERROR 1645 (0K000): RESIGNAL when handler not active
Here is a more difficult example:
delimiter // CREATE FUNCTION f () RETURNS INT BEGIN RESIGNAL; RETURN 5; END// CREATE PROCEDURE p () BEGIN DECLARE EXIT HANDLER FOR SQLEXCEPTION SET @a=f(); SIGNAL SQLSTATE '55555'; END// delimiter ; CALL p();
RESIGNAL
occurs within the
stored function f()
. Although
f()
itself is invoked within the context of
the EXIT
handler, execution within
f()
has its own context, which is not
handler context. Thus, RESIGNAL
within
f()
results in a “handler not
active” error.
SIGNALcondition_value
[SETsignal_information_item
[,signal_information_item
] ...]condition_value
: { SQLSTATE [VALUE]sqlstate_value
|condition_name
}signal_information_item
:condition_information_item_name
=simple_value_specification
condition_information_item_name
: { CLASS_ORIGIN | SUBCLASS_ORIGIN | MESSAGE_TEXT | MYSQL_ERRNO | CONSTRAINT_CATALOG | CONSTRAINT_SCHEMA | CONSTRAINT_NAME | CATALOG_NAME | SCHEMA_NAME | TABLE_NAME | COLUMN_NAME | CURSOR_NAME }condition_name
,simple_value_specification
: (see following discussion)
SIGNAL
is the way to
“return” an error.
SIGNAL
provides error information
to a handler, to an outer portion of the application, or to the
client. Also, it provides control over the error's
characteristics (error number, SQLSTATE
value, message). Without SIGNAL
,
it is necessary to resort to workarounds such as deliberately
referring to a nonexistent table to cause a routine to return an
error.
No privileges are required to execute the
SIGNAL
statement.
To retrieve information from the diagnostics area, use the
GET DIAGNOSTICS
statement (see
Section 13.6.7.3, “GET DIAGNOSTICS Statement”). For information about the
diagnostics area, see Section 13.6.7.7, “The MySQL Diagnostics Area”.
The condition_value
in a
SIGNAL
statement indicates the
error value to be returned. It can be an
SQLSTATE
value (a 5-character string
literal) or a condition_name
that
refers to a named condition previously defined with
DECLARE ...
CONDITION
(see Section 13.6.7.1, “DECLARE ... CONDITION Statement”).
An SQLSTATE
value can indicate errors,
warnings, or “not found.” The first two
characters of the value indicate its error class, as discussed
in Signal Condition Information Items. Some
signal values cause statement termination; see
Effect of Signals on Handlers, Cursors, and Statements.
The SQLSTATE
value for a
SIGNAL
statement should not
start with '00'
because such values
indicate success and are not valid for signaling an error.
This is true whether the SQLSTATE
value is
specified directly in the
SIGNAL
statement or in a named
condition referred to in the statement. If the value is
invalid, a Bad SQLSTATE
error occurs.
To signal a generic SQLSTATE
value, use
'45000'
, which means “unhandled
user-defined exception.”
The SIGNAL
statement optionally
includes a SET
clause that contains
multiple signal items, in a list of
condition_information_item_name
=
simple_value_specification
assignments, separated by commas.
Each
condition_information_item_name
may
be specified only once in the SET
clause.
Otherwise, a Duplicate condition information
item
error occurs.
Valid simple_value_specification
designators can be specified using stored procedure or
function parameters, stored program local variables declared
with DECLARE
, user-defined
variables, system variables, or literals. A character literal
may include a _charset
introducer.
For information about permissible
condition_information_item_name
values, see
Signal Condition Information Items.
The following procedure signals an error or warning depending
on the value of pval
, its input parameter:
CREATE PROCEDURE p (pval INT) BEGIN DECLARE specialty CONDITION FOR SQLSTATE '45000'; IF pval = 0 THEN SIGNAL SQLSTATE '01000'; ELSEIF pval = 1 THEN SIGNAL SQLSTATE '45000' SET MESSAGE_TEXT = 'An error occurred'; ELSEIF pval = 2 THEN SIGNAL specialty SET MESSAGE_TEXT = 'An error occurred'; ELSE SIGNAL SQLSTATE '01000' SET MESSAGE_TEXT = 'A warning occurred', MYSQL_ERRNO = 1000; SIGNAL SQLSTATE '45000' SET MESSAGE_TEXT = 'An error occurred', MYSQL_ERRNO = 1001; END IF; END;
If pval
is 0, p()
signals a warning because SQLSTATE
values
that begin with '01'
are signals in the
warning class. The warning does not terminate the procedure,
and can be seen with SHOW
WARNINGS
after the procedure returns.
If pval
is 1, p()
signals an error and sets the MESSAGE_TEXT
condition information item. The error terminates the
procedure, and the text is returned with the error
information.
If pval
is 2, the same error is signaled,
although the SQLSTATE
value is specified
using a named condition in this case.
If pval
is anything else,
p()
first signals a warning and sets the
message text and error number condition information items.
This warning does not terminate the procedure, so execution
continues and p()
then signals an error.
The error does terminate the procedure. The message text and
error number set by the warning are replaced by the values set
by the error, which are returned with the error information.
SIGNAL
is typically used within
stored programs, but it is a MySQL extension that it is
permitted outside handler context. For example, if you invoke
the mysql client program, you can enter any
of these statements at the prompt:
SIGNAL SQLSTATE '77777'; CREATE TRIGGER t_bi BEFORE INSERT ON t FOR EACH ROW SIGNAL SQLSTATE '77777'; CREATE EVENT e ON SCHEDULE EVERY 1 SECOND DO SIGNAL SQLSTATE '77777';
SIGNAL
executes according to
the following rules:
If the SIGNAL
statement
indicates a particular SQLSTATE
value, that
value is used to signal the condition specified. Example:
CREATE PROCEDURE p (divisor INT) BEGIN IF divisor = 0 THEN SIGNAL SQLSTATE '22012'; END IF; END;
If the SIGNAL
statement uses a
named condition, the condition must be declared in some scope
that applies to the SIGNAL
statement, and must be defined using an
SQLSTATE
value, not a MySQL error number.
Example:
CREATE PROCEDURE p (divisor INT) BEGIN DECLARE divide_by_zero CONDITION FOR SQLSTATE '22012'; IF divisor = 0 THEN SIGNAL divide_by_zero; END IF; END;
If the named condition does not exist in the scope of the
SIGNAL
statement, an
Undefined CONDITION
error occurs.
If SIGNAL
refers to a named
condition that is defined with a MySQL error number rather
than an SQLSTATE
value, a
SIGNAL/RESIGNAL can only use a CONDITION defined with
SQLSTATE
error occurs. The following statements
cause that error because the named condition is associated
with a MySQL error number:
DECLARE no_such_table CONDITION FOR 1051; SIGNAL no_such_table;
If a condition with a given name is declared multiple times in different scopes, the declaration with the most local scope applies. Consider the following procedure:
CREATE PROCEDURE p (divisor INT) BEGIN DECLARE my_error CONDITION FOR SQLSTATE '45000'; IF divisor = 0 THEN BEGIN DECLARE my_error CONDITION FOR SQLSTATE '22012'; SIGNAL my_error; END; END IF; SIGNAL my_error; END;
If divisor
is 0, the first
SIGNAL
statement executes. The
innermost my_error
condition declaration
applies, raising SQLSTATE
'22012'
.
If divisor
is not 0, the second
SIGNAL
statement executes. The
outermost my_error
condition declaration
applies, raising SQLSTATE
'45000'
.
For information about how the server chooses handlers when a condition occurs, see Section 13.6.7.6, “Scope Rules for Handlers”.
Signals can be raised within exception handlers:
CREATE PROCEDURE p () BEGIN DECLARE EXIT HANDLER FOR SQLEXCEPTION BEGIN SIGNAL SQLSTATE VALUE '99999' SET MESSAGE_TEXT = 'An error occurred'; END; DROP TABLE no_such_table; END;
CALL p()
reaches the
DROP TABLE
statement. There is
no table named no_such_table
, so the error
handler is activated. The error handler destroys the original
error (“no such table”) and makes a new error
with SQLSTATE
'99999'
and message An error occurred
.
The following table lists the names of diagnostics area
condition information items that can be set in a
SIGNAL
(or
RESIGNAL
) statement. All items
are standard SQL except MYSQL_ERRNO
, which
is a MySQL extension. For more information about these items
see Section 13.6.7.7, “The MySQL Diagnostics Area”.
Item Name Definition --------- ---------- CLASS_ORIGIN VARCHAR(64) SUBCLASS_ORIGIN VARCHAR(64) CONSTRAINT_CATALOG VARCHAR(64) CONSTRAINT_SCHEMA VARCHAR(64) CONSTRAINT_NAME VARCHAR(64) CATALOG_NAME VARCHAR(64) SCHEMA_NAME VARCHAR(64) TABLE_NAME VARCHAR(64) COLUMN_NAME VARCHAR(64) CURSOR_NAME VARCHAR(64) MESSAGE_TEXT VARCHAR(128) MYSQL_ERRNO SMALLINT UNSIGNED
The character set for character items is UTF-8.
It is illegal to assign NULL
to a condition
information item in a SIGNAL
statement.
A SIGNAL
statement always
specifies an SQLSTATE
value, either
directly, or indirectly by referring to a named condition
defined with an SQLSTATE
value. The first
two characters of an SQLSTATE
value are its
class, and the class determines the default value for the
condition information items:
Class = '00'
(success)
Illegal. SQLSTATE
values that begin
with '00'
indicate success and are not
valid for SIGNAL
.
Class = '01'
(warning)
MESSAGE_TEXT = 'Unhandled user-defined warning condition';
MYSQL_ERRNO = ER_SIGNAL_WARN
Class = '02'
(not found)
MESSAGE_TEXT = 'Unhandled user-defined not found condition';
MYSQL_ERRNO = ER_SIGNAL_NOT_FOUND
Class > '02'
(exception)
MESSAGE_TEXT = 'Unhandled user-defined exception condition';
MYSQL_ERRNO = ER_SIGNAL_EXCEPTION
For legal classes, the other condition information items are set as follows:
CLASS_ORIGIN = SUBCLASS_ORIGIN = ''; CONSTRAINT_CATALOG = CONSTRAINT_SCHEMA = CONSTRAINT_NAME = ''; CATALOG_NAME = SCHEMA_NAME = TABLE_NAME = COLUMN_NAME = ''; CURSOR_NAME = '';
The error values that are accessible after
SIGNAL
executes are the
SQLSTATE
value raised by the
SIGNAL
statement and the
MESSAGE_TEXT
and
MYSQL_ERRNO
items. These values are
available from the C API:
mysql_sqlstate()
returns
the SQLSTATE
value.
mysql_errno()
returns the
MYSQL_ERRNO
value.
mysql_error()
returns the
MESSAGE_TEXT
value.
At the SQL level, the output from SHOW
WARNINGS
and SHOW
ERRORS
indicates the MYSQL_ERRNO
and MESSAGE_TEXT
values in the
Code
and Message
columns.
To retrieve information from the diagnostics area, use the
GET DIAGNOSTICS
statement (see
Section 13.6.7.3, “GET DIAGNOSTICS Statement”). For information about the
diagnostics area, see Section 13.6.7.7, “The MySQL Diagnostics Area”.
Signals have different effects on statement execution
depending on the signal class. The class determines how severe
an error is. MySQL ignores the value of the
sql_mode
system variable; in
particular, strict SQL mode does not matter. MySQL also
ignores IGNORE
: The intent of
SIGNAL
is to raise a
user-generated error explicitly, so a signal is never ignored.
In the following descriptions, “unhandled” means
that no handler for the signaled SQLSTATE
value has been defined with
DECLARE ...
HANDLER
.
Class = '00'
(success)
Illegal. SQLSTATE
values that begin
with '00'
indicate success and are not
valid for SIGNAL
.
Class = '01'
(warning)
The value of the
warning_count
system
variable goes up. SHOW
WARNINGS
shows the signal.
SQLWARNING
handlers catch the signal.
Warnings cannot be returned from stored functions because
the RETURN
statement that
causes the function to return clears the diagnostic area.
The statement thus clears any warnings that may have been
present there (and resets
warning_count
to 0).
Class = '02'
(not found)
NOT FOUND
handlers catch the signal.
There is no effect on cursors. If the signal is unhandled
in a stored function, statements end.
Class > '02'
(exception)
SQLEXCEPTION
handlers catch the signal.
If the signal is unhandled in a stored function,
statements end.
Class = '40'
Treated as an ordinary exception.
A stored program may include handlers to be invoked when certain conditions occur within the program. The applicability of each handler depends on its location within the program definition and on the condition or conditions that it handles:
A handler declared in a
BEGIN ...
END
block is in scope only for the SQL statements
following the handler declarations in the block. If the
handler itself raises a condition, it cannot handle that
condition, nor can any other handlers declared in the block.
In the following example, handlers H1
and
H2
are in scope for conditions raised by
statements stmt1
and
stmt2
. But neither
H1
nor H2
are in scope
for conditions raised in the body of H1
or H2
.
BEGIN -- outer block DECLARE EXIT HANDLER FOR ...; -- handler H1 DECLARE EXIT HANDLER FOR ...; -- handler H2stmt1
;stmt2
; END;
A handler is in scope only for the block in which it is
declared, and cannot be activated for conditions occurring
outside that block. In the following example, handler
H1
is in scope for
stmt1
in the inner block, but not
for stmt2
in the outer block:
BEGIN -- outer block BEGIN -- inner block DECLARE EXIT HANDLER FOR ...; -- handler H1stmt1
; END;stmt2
; END;
A handler can be specific or general. A specific handler is
for a MySQL error code, SQLSTATE
value,
or condition name. A general handler is for a condition in
the SQLWARNING
,
SQLEXCEPTION
, or NOT
FOUND
class. Condition specificity is related to
condition precedence, as described later.
Multiple handlers can be declared in different scopes and with
different specificities. For example, there might be a specific
MySQL error code handler in an outer block, and a general
SQLWARNING
handler in an inner block. Or
there might be handlers for a specific MySQL error code and the
general SQLWARNING
class in the same block.
Whether a handler is activated depends not only on its own scope
and condition value, but on what other handlers are present.
When a condition occurs in a stored program, the server searches
for applicable handlers in the current scope (current
BEGIN ...
END
block). If there are no applicable handlers, the
search continues outward with the handlers in each successive
containing scope (block). When the server finds one or more
applicable handlers at a given scope, it chooses among them
based on condition precedence:
A MySQL error code handler takes precedence over an
SQLSTATE
value handler.
An SQLSTATE
value handler takes
precedence over general SQLWARNING
,
SQLEXCEPTION
, or NOT
FOUND
handlers.
An SQLEXCEPTION
handler takes precedence
over an SQLWARNING
handler.
It is possible to have several applicable handlers with the same precedence. For example, a statement could generate multiple warnings with different error codes, for each of which an error-specific handler exists. In this case, the choice of which handler the server activates is nondeterministic, and may change depending on the circumstances under which the condition occurs.
One implication of the handler selection rules is that if multiple applicable handlers occur in different scopes, handlers with the most local scope take precedence over handlers in outer scopes, even over those for more specific conditions.
If there is no appropriate handler when a condition occurs, the action taken depends on the class of the condition:
For SQLEXCEPTION
conditions, the stored
program terminates at the statement that raised the
condition, as if there were an EXIT
handler. If the program was called by another stored
program, the calling program handles the condition using the
handler selection rules applied to its own handlers.
For SQLWARNING
conditions, the program
continues executing, as if there were a
CONTINUE
handler.
For NOT FOUND
conditions, if the
condition was raised normally, the action is
CONTINUE
. If it was raised by
SIGNAL
or
RESIGNAL
, the action is
EXIT
.
The following examples demonstrate how MySQL applies the handler selection rules.
This procedure contains two handlers, one for the specific
SQLSTATE
value ('42S02'
)
that occurs for attempts to drop a nonexistent table, and one
for the general SQLEXCEPTION
class:
CREATE PROCEDURE p1() BEGIN DECLARE CONTINUE HANDLER FOR SQLSTATE '42S02' SELECT 'SQLSTATE handler was activated' AS msg; DECLARE CONTINUE HANDLER FOR SQLEXCEPTION SELECT 'SQLEXCEPTION handler was activated' AS msg; DROP TABLE test.t; END;
Both handlers are declared in the same block and have the same
scope. However, SQLSTATE
handlers take
precedence over SQLEXCEPTION
handlers, so if
the table t
is nonexistent, the
DROP TABLE
statement raises a
condition that activates the SQLSTATE
handler:
mysql> CALL p1();
+--------------------------------+
| msg |
+--------------------------------+
| SQLSTATE handler was activated |
+--------------------------------+
This procedure contains the same two handlers. But this time,
the DROP TABLE
statement and
SQLEXCEPTION
handler are in an inner block
relative to the SQLSTATE
handler:
CREATE PROCEDURE p2() BEGIN -- outer block DECLARE CONTINUE HANDLER FOR SQLSTATE '42S02' SELECT 'SQLSTATE handler was activated' AS msg; BEGIN -- inner block DECLARE CONTINUE HANDLER FOR SQLEXCEPTION SELECT 'SQLEXCEPTION handler was activated' AS msg; DROP TABLE test.t; -- occurs within inner block END; END;
In this case, the handler that is more local to where the
condition occurs takes precedence. The
SQLEXCEPTION
handler activates, even though
it is more general than the SQLSTATE
handler:
mysql> CALL p2();
+------------------------------------+
| msg |
+------------------------------------+
| SQLEXCEPTION handler was activated |
+------------------------------------+
In this procedure, one of the handlers is declared in a block
inner to the scope of the DROP
TABLE
statement:
CREATE PROCEDURE p3() BEGIN -- outer block DECLARE CONTINUE HANDLER FOR SQLEXCEPTION SELECT 'SQLEXCEPTION handler was activated' AS msg; BEGIN -- inner block DECLARE CONTINUE HANDLER FOR SQLSTATE '42S02' SELECT 'SQLSTATE handler was activated' AS msg; END; DROP TABLE test.t; -- occurs within outer block END;
Only the SQLEXCEPTION
handler applies because
the other one is not in scope for the condition raised by the
DROP TABLE
:
mysql> CALL p3();
+------------------------------------+
| msg |
+------------------------------------+
| SQLEXCEPTION handler was activated |
+------------------------------------+
In this procedure, both handlers are declared in a block inner
to the scope of the DROP TABLE
statement:
CREATE PROCEDURE p4() BEGIN -- outer block BEGIN -- inner block DECLARE CONTINUE HANDLER FOR SQLEXCEPTION SELECT 'SQLEXCEPTION handler was activated' AS msg; DECLARE CONTINUE HANDLER FOR SQLSTATE '42S02' SELECT 'SQLSTATE handler was activated' AS msg; END; DROP TABLE test.t; -- occurs within outer block END;
Neither handler applies because they are not in scope for the
DROP TABLE
. The condition raised
by the statement goes unhandled and terminates the procedure
with an error:
mysql> CALL p4();
ERROR 1051 (42S02): Unknown table 'test.t'
SQL statements produce diagnostic information that populates the
diagnostics area. Standard SQL has a diagnostics area stack,
containing a diagnostics area for each nested execution context.
Standard SQL also supports
GET STACKED
DIAGNOSTICS
syntax for referring to the second
diagnostics area during condition handler execution. MySQL
supports the STACKED
keyword as of MySQL 5.7.
Before that, MySQL does not support STACKED
;
there is a single diagnostics area containing information from
the most recent statement that wrote to it.
The following discussion describes the structure of the diagnostics area in MySQL, the information items recognized by MySQL, how statements clear and set the diagnostics area, and how diagnostics areas are pushed to and popped from the stack.
The diagnostics area contains two kinds of information:
Statement information, such as the number of conditions that occurred or the affected-rows count.
Condition information, such as the error code and message. If a statement raises multiple conditions, this part of the diagnostics area has a condition area for each one. If a statement raises no conditions, this part of the diagnostics area is empty.
For a statement that produces three conditions, the diagnostics area contains statement and condition information like this:
Statement information: row count ... other statement information items ... Condition area list: Condition area 1: error code for condition 1 error message for condition 1 ... other condition information items ... Condition area 2: error code for condition 2: error message for condition 2 ... other condition information items ... Condition area 3: error code for condition 3 error message for condition 3 ... other condition information items ...
The diagnostics area contains statement and condition
information items. Numeric items are integers. The character
set for character items is UTF-8. No item can be
NULL
. If a statement or condition item is
not set by a statement that populates the diagnostics area,
its value is 0 or the empty string, depending on the item data
type.
The statement information part of the diagnostics area contains these items:
NUMBER
: An integer indicating the
number of condition areas that have information.
ROW_COUNT
: An integer indicating the
number of rows affected by the statement.
ROW_COUNT
has the same value as the
ROW_COUNT()
function (see
Section 12.15, “Information Functions”).
The condition information part of the diagnostics area
contains a condition area for each condition. Condition areas
are numbered from 1 to the value of the
NUMBER
statement condition item. If
NUMBER
is 0, there are no condition areas.
Each condition area contains the items in the following list.
All items are standard SQL except
MYSQL_ERRNO
, which is a MySQL extension.
The definitions apply for conditions generated other than by a
signal (that is, by a SIGNAL
or
RESIGNAL
statement). For
nonsignal conditions, MySQL populates only those condition
items not described as always empty. The effects of signals on
the condition area are described later.
CLASS_ORIGIN
: A string containing the
class of the RETURNED_SQLSTATE
value.
If the RETURNED_SQLSTATE
value begins
with a class value defined in SQL standards document ISO
9075-2 (section 24.1, SQLSTATE),
CLASS_ORIGIN
is 'ISO
9075'
. Otherwise,
CLASS_ORIGIN
is
'MySQL'
.
SUBCLASS_ORIGIN
: A string containing
the subclass of the RETURNED_SQLSTATE
value. If CLASS_ORIGIN
is 'ISO
9075'
or RETURNED_SQLSTATE
ends with '000'
,
SUBCLASS_ORIGIN
is 'ISO
9075'
. Otherwise,
SUBCLASS_ORIGIN
is
'MySQL'
.
RETURNED_SQLSTATE
: A string that
indicates the SQLSTATE
value for the
condition.
MESSAGE_TEXT
: A string that indicates
the error message for the condition.
MYSQL_ERRNO
: An integer that indicates
the MySQL error code for the condition.
CONSTRAINT_CATALOG
,
CONSTRAINT_SCHEMA
,
CONSTRAINT_NAME
: Strings that indicate
the catalog, schema, and name for a violated constraint.
They are always empty.
CATALOG_NAME
,
SCHEMA_NAME
,
TABLE_NAME
,
COLUMN_NAME
: Strings that indicate the
catalog, schema, table, and column related to the
condition. They are always empty.
CURSOR_NAME
: A string that indicates
the cursor name. This is always empty.
For the RETURNED_SQLSTATE
,
MESSAGE_TEXT
, and
MYSQL_ERRNO
values for particular errors,
see Section B.3.1, “Server Error Message Reference”.
If a SIGNAL
(or
RESIGNAL
) statement populates
the diagnostics area, its SET
clause can
assign to any condition information item except
RETURNED_SQLSTATE
any value that is legal
for the item data type. SIGNAL
also sets the RETURNED_SQLSTATE
value, but
not directly in its SET
clause. That value
comes from the SIGNAL
statement
SQLSTATE
argument.
SIGNAL
also sets statement
information items. It sets NUMBER
to 1. It
sets ROW_COUNT
to −1 for errors and 0
otherwise.
Nondiagnostic SQL statements populate the diagnostics area
automatically, and its contents can be set explicitly with the
SIGNAL
and
RESIGNAL
statements. The
diagnostics area can be examined with GET
DIAGNOSTICS
to extract specific items, or with
SHOW WARNINGS
or
SHOW ERRORS
to see conditions
or errors.
SQL statements clear and set the diagnostics area as follows:
When the server starts executing a statement after parsing it, it clears the diagnostics area for nondiagnostic statements. Diagnostic statements do not clear the diagnostics area. These statements are diagnostic:
If a statement raises a condition, the diagnostics area is
cleared of conditions that belong to earlier statements.
The exception is that conditions raised by
GET DIAGNOSTICS
and
RESIGNAL
are added to the
diagnostics area without clearing it.
Thus, even a statement that does not normally clear the diagnostics area when it begins executing clears it if the statement raises a condition.
The following example shows the effect of various statements
on the diagnostics area, using SHOW
WARNINGS
to display information about conditions
stored there.
This DROP TABLE
statement
clears the diagnostics area and populates it when the
condition occurs:
mysql>DROP TABLE IF EXISTS test.no_such_table;
Query OK, 0 rows affected, 1 warning (0.01 sec) mysql>SHOW WARNINGS;
+-------+------+------------------------------------+ | Level | Code | Message | +-------+------+------------------------------------+ | Note | 1051 | Unknown table 'test.no_such_table' | +-------+------+------------------------------------+ 1 row in set (0.00 sec)
This
SET
statement generates an error, so it clears and populates the
diagnostics area:
mysql>SET @x = @@x;
ERROR 1193 (HY000): Unknown system variable 'x' mysql>SHOW WARNINGS;
+-------+------+-----------------------------+ | Level | Code | Message | +-------+------+-----------------------------+ | Error | 1193 | Unknown system variable 'x' | +-------+------+-----------------------------+ 1 row in set (0.00 sec)
The previous
SET
statement produced a single condition, so 1 is the only valid
condition number for GET
DIAGNOSTICS
at this point. The following statement
uses a condition number of 2, which produces a warning that is
added to the diagnostics area without clearing it:
mysql>GET DIAGNOSTICS CONDITION 2 @p = MESSAGE_TEXT;
Query OK, 0 rows affected, 1 warning (0.00 sec) mysql>SHOW WARNINGS;
+-------+------+------------------------------+ | Level | Code | Message | +-------+------+------------------------------+ | Error | 1193 | Unknown system variable 'xx' | | Error | 1753 | Invalid condition number | +-------+------+------------------------------+ 2 rows in set (0.00 sec)
Now there are two conditions in the diagnostics area, so the
same GET DIAGNOSTICS
statement
succeeds:
mysql>GET DIAGNOSTICS CONDITION 2 @p = MESSAGE_TEXT;
Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.00 sec) mysql>SELECT @p;
+--------------------------+ | @p | +--------------------------+ | Invalid condition number | +--------------------------+ 1 row in set (0.01 sec)
When a push to the diagnostics area stack occurs, the first (current) diagnostics area becomes the second (stacked) diagnostics area and a new current diagnostics area is created as a copy of it. Diagnostics areas are pushed to and popped from the stack under the following circumstances:
Execution of a stored program
A push occurs before the program executes and a pop occurs
afterward. If the stored program ends while handlers are
executing, there can be more than one diagnostics area to
pop; this occurs due to an exception for which there are
no appropriate handlers or due to
RETURN
in the handler.
Any warning or error conditions in the popped diagnostics areas then are added to the current diagnostics area, except that, for triggers, only errors are added. When the stored program ends, the caller sees these conditions in its current diagonstics area.
Execution of a condition handler within a stored program
When a push occurs as a result of condition handler
activation, the stacked diagnostics area is the area that
was current within the stored program prior to the push.
The new now-current diagnostics area is the handler's
current diagnostics area.
GET
[CURRENT] DIAGNOSTICS
and
GET
STACKED DIAGNOSTICS
can be used within the
handler to access the contents of the current (handler)
and stacked (stored program) diagnostics areas. Initially,
they return the same result, but statements executing
within the handler modify the current diagnostics area,
clearing and setting its contents according to the normal
rules (see How the Diagnostics Area is Cleared and Populated).
The stacked diagnostics area cannot be modified by
statements executing within the handler except
RESIGNAL
.
If the handler executes successfully, the current (handler) diagnostics area is popped and the stacked (stored program) diagnostics area again becomes the current diagnostics area. Conditions added to the handler diagnostics area during handler execution are added to the current diagnostics area.
Execution of RESIGNAL
The RESIGNAL
statement
passes on the error condition information that is
available during execution of a condition handler within a
compound statement inside a stored program.
RESIGNAL
may change some or
all information before passing it on, modifying the
diagnostics stack as described in
Section 13.6.7.4, “RESIGNAL Statement”.
Certain system variables control or are related to some aspects of the diagnostics area:
max_error_count
controls
the number of condition areas in the diagnostics area. If
more conditions than this occur, MySQL silently discards
information for the excess conditions. (Conditions added
by RESIGNAL
are always
added, with older conditions being discarded as necessary
to make room.)
warning_count
indicates
the number of conditions that occurred. This includes
errors, warnings, and notes. Normally,
NUMBER
and
warning_count
are the
same. However, as the number of conditions generated
exceeds max_error_count
,
the value of
warning_count
continues
to rise whereas NUMBER
remains capped
at max_error_count
because no additional conditions are stored in the
diagnostics area.
error_count
indicates the
number of errors that occurred. This value includes
“not found” and exception conditions, but
excludes warnings and notes. Like
warning_count
, its value
can exceed
max_error_count
.
If the sql_notes
system
variable is set to 0, notes are not stored and do not
increment warning_count
.
Example: If max_error_count
is 10, the diagnostics area can contain a maximum of 10
condition areas. Suppose that a statement raises 20
conditions, 12 of which are errors. In that case, the
diagnostics area contains the first 10 conditions,
NUMBER
is 10,
warning_count
is 20, and
error_count
is 12.
Changes to the value of
max_error_count
have no
effect until the next attempt to modify the diagnostics area.
If the diagnostics area contains 10 condition areas and
max_error_count
is set to 5,
that has no immediate effect on the size or content of the
diagnostics area.
If a stored procedure exits with an unhandled exception,
modified values of OUT
and
INOUT
parameters are not propogated back to
the caller.
If an exception is handled by a CONTINUE
or
EXIT
handler that contains a
RESIGNAL
statement, execution of
RESIGNAL
pops the Diagnostics
Area stack, thus signalling the exception (that is, the
information that existed before entry into the handler). If the
exception is an error, the values of OUT
and
INOUT
parameters are not propogated back to
the caller.
SIGNAL
,
RESIGNAL
, and
GET DIAGNOSTICS
are not
permissible as prepared statements. For example, this statement
is invalid:
PREPARE stmt1 FROM 'SIGNAL SQLSTATE "02000"';
SQLSTATE
values in class
'04'
are not treated specially. They are
handled the same as other exceptions.
In standard SQL, the first condition relates to the
SQLSTATE
value returned for the previous SQL
statement. In MySQL, this is not guaranteed, so to get the main
error, you cannot do this:
GET DIAGNOSTICS CONDITION 1 @errno = MYSQL_ERRNO;
Instead, do this:
GET DIAGNOSTICS @cno = NUMBER; GET DIAGNOSTICS CONDITION @cno @errno = MYSQL_ERRNO;
MySQL account information is stored in the tables of the
mysql
system database. This database and the
access control system are discussed extensively in
Chapter 5, MySQL Server Administration, which you should consult
for additional details.
Some MySQL releases introduce changes to the grant tables to add new privileges or features. To make sure that you can take advantage of any new capabilities, update your grant tables to the current structure whenever you upgrade MySQL. See Section 2.11, “Upgrading MySQL”.
When the read_only
system
variable is enabled, account-management statements require the
SUPER
privilege, in addition to any
other required privileges. This is because they modify tables in
the mysql
system database.
ALTER USER [IF EXISTS]user
[auth_option
] [,user
[auth_option
]] ... [REQUIRE {NONE |tls_option
[[AND]tls_option
] ...}] [WITHresource_option
[resource_option
] ...] [password_option
|lock_option
] ... ALTER USER [IF EXISTS] USER() IDENTIFIED BY 'auth_string
'user
: (see Section 6.2.4, “Specifying Account Names”)auth_option
: { IDENTIFIED BY 'auth_string
' | IDENTIFIED WITHauth_plugin
| IDENTIFIED WITHauth_plugin
BY 'auth_string
' | IDENTIFIED WITHauth_plugin
AS 'auth_string
' }tls_option
: { SSL | X509 | CIPHER 'cipher
' | ISSUER 'issuer
' | SUBJECT 'subject
' }resource_option
: { MAX_QUERIES_PER_HOURcount
| MAX_UPDATES_PER_HOURcount
| MAX_CONNECTIONS_PER_HOURcount
| MAX_USER_CONNECTIONScount
}password_option
: { PASSWORD EXPIRE | PASSWORD EXPIRE DEFAULT | PASSWORD EXPIRE NEVER | PASSWORD EXPIRE INTERVALN
DAY }lock_option
: { ACCOUNT LOCK | ACCOUNT UNLOCK }
The ALTER USER
statement modifies
MySQL accounts. It enables authentication, SSL/TLS,
resource-limit, and password-management properties to be
modified for existing accounts. It can also be used to lock and
unlock accounts.
To use ALTER USER
, you must have
the global CREATE USER
privilege
or the UPDATE
privilege for the
mysql
system database. When the
read_only
system variable is
enabled, ALTER USER
additionally
requires the SUPER
privilege.
By default, an error occurs if you try to modify a user that
does not exist. If the IF EXISTS
clause is
given, the statement produces a warning for each named user that
does not exist, rather than an error.
Under some circumstances, ALTER
USER
may be recorded in server logs or on the client
side in a history file such as
~/.mysql_history
, which means that
cleartext passwords may be read by anyone having read access
to that information. For information about the conditions
under which this occurs for the server logs and how to control
it, see Section 6.1.2.3, “Passwords and Logging”. For similar
information about client-side logging, see
Section 4.5.1.3, “mysql Client Logging”.
There are several aspects to the ALTER
USER
statement, described under the following topics:
For each affected account, ALTER
USER
modifies the corresponding row in the
mysql.user
system table to reflect the
properties specified in the statement. Unspecified properties
retain their current values.
Each account name uses the format described in
Section 6.2.4, “Specifying Account Names”. The host name part of the
account name, if omitted, defaults to '%'
.
It is also possible to specify
CURRENT_USER
or
CURRENT_USER()
to refer to the
account associated with the current session.
For one syntax only, the account may be specified with the
USER()
function:
ALTER USER USER() IDENTIFIED BY 'auth_string
';
This syntax enables changing your own password without naming your account literally.
For ALTER USER
syntax that
permits an auth_option
value to
follow a user
value,
auth_option
indicates how the
account authenticates by specifying an account authentication
plugin, credentials (for example, a password), or both. Each
auth_option
value applies
only to the account named immediately
preceding it.
Following the user
specifications,
the statement may include options for SSL/TLS, resource-limit,
password-management, and locking properties. All such options
are global to the statement and apply to
all accounts named in the statement.
Example: Change an account's password and expire it. As a result, the user must connect with the named password and choose a new one at the next connection:
ALTER USER 'jeffrey'@'localhost'
IDENTIFIED BY 'new_password
' PASSWORD EXPIRE;
Example: Modify an account to use the
sha256_password
authentication plugin and
the given password. Require that a new password be chosen
every 180 days:
ALTER USER 'jeffrey'@'localhost'
IDENTIFIED WITH sha256_password BY 'new_password
'
PASSWORD EXPIRE INTERVAL 180 DAY;
Example: Lock or unlock an account:
ALTER USER 'jeffrey'@'localhost' ACCOUNT LOCK; ALTER USER 'jeffrey'@'localhost' ACCOUNT UNLOCK;
Example: Require an account to connect using SSL and establish a limit of 20 connections per hour:
ALTER USER 'jeffrey'@'localhost' REQUIRE SSL WITH MAX_CONNECTIONS_PER_HOUR 20;
Example: Alter multiple accounts, specifying some per-account properties and some global properties:
ALTER USER
'jeffrey'@'localhost' IDENTIFIED BY 'new_password
',
'jeanne'@'localhost'
REQUIRE SSL WITH MAX_USER_CONNECTIONS 2;
The IDENTIFIED BY
value following
jeffrey
applies only to its immediately
preceding account, so it changes the password to
'
only for jeffrey_new_password
'jeffrey
. For
jeanne
, there is no per-account value (thus
leaving the password unchanged).
The remaining properties apply globally to all accounts named in the statement, so for both accounts:
Connections are required to use SSL.
The account can be used for a maximum of two simultaneous connections.
In the absence of a particular type of option, the account remains unchanged in that respect. For example, with no locking option, the locking state of the account is not changed.
An account name may be followed by an
auth_option
authentication option
that specifies the account authentication plugin, credentials,
or both:
auth_plugin
names an
authentication plugin. The plugin name can be a quoted
string literal or an unquoted name. Plugin names are
stored in the plugin
column of the
mysql.user
system table.
For auth_option
syntax that
does not specify an authentication plugin, the default
plugin is indicated by the value of the
default_authentication_plugin
system variable. For descriptions of each plugin, see
Section 6.4.1, “Authentication Plugins”.
Credentials are stored in the
mysql.user
system table. An
'
value specifies account credentials, either as a cleartext
(unencrypted) string or hashed in the format expected by
the authentication plugin associated with the account,
respectively:
auth_string
'
For syntax that uses BY
'
,
the string is cleartext and is passed to the
authentication plugin for possible hashing. The result
returned by the plugin is stored in the
auth_string
'mysql.user
table. A plugin may use
the value as specified, in which case no hashing
occurs.
For syntax that uses AS
'
,
the string is assumed to be already in the format the
authentication plugin requires, and is stored as is in
the auth_string
'mysql.user
table. If a plugin
requires a hashed value, the value must be already
hashed in a format appropriate for the plugin, or the
value will not be usable by the plugin and correct
authentication of client connections will not occur.
If an authentication plugin performs no hashing of the
authentication string, the BY
'
and
auth_string
'AS
'
clauses have the same effect: The authentication
string is stored as is in the
auth_string
'mysql.user
system table.
ALTER USER
permits these
auth_option
syntaxes:
IDENTIFIED BY
'
auth_string
'
Sets the account authentication plugin to the default
plugin, passes the cleartext
'
value to the plugin for possible hashing, and stores the
result in the account row in the
auth_string
'mysql.user
system table.
IDENTIFIED WITH
auth_plugin
Sets the account authentication plugin to
auth_plugin
, clears the
credentials to the empty string (the credentials are
associated with the old authentication plugin, not the new
one), and stores the result in the account row in the
mysql.user
system table.
In addition, the password is marked expired. The user must choose a new one when next connecting.
IDENTIFIED WITH
auth_plugin
BY
'auth_string
'
Sets the account authentication plugin to
auth_plugin
, passes the
cleartext
'
value to the plugin for possible hashing, and stores the
result in the account row in the
auth_string
'mysql.user
system table.
IDENTIFIED WITH
auth_plugin
AS
'auth_string
'
Sets the account authentication plugin to
auth_plugin
and stores the
'
value as is in the auth_string
'mysql.user
account
row. If the plugin requires a hashed string, the string is
assumed to be already hashed in the format the plugin
requires.
Example: Specify the password as cleartext; the default plugin is used:
ALTER USER 'jeffrey'@'localhost'
IDENTIFIED BY 'password
';
Example: Specify the authentication plugin, along with a cleartext password value:
ALTER USER 'jeffrey'@'localhost'
IDENTIFIED WITH mysql_native_password
BY 'password
';
Example: Specify the authentication plugin, along with a hashed password value:
ALTER USER 'jeffrey'@'localhost' IDENTIFIED WITH mysql_native_password AS '*6C8989366EAF75BB670AD8EA7A7FC1176A95CEF4';
For additional information about setting passwords and authentication plugins, see Section 6.2.10, “Assigning Account Passwords”, and Section 6.2.13, “Pluggable Authentication”.
MySQL can check X.509 certificate attributes in addition to the usual authentication that is based on the user name and credentials. For background information on the use of SSL/TLS with MySQL, see Section 6.3, “Using Encrypted Connections”.
To specify SSL/TLS-related options for a MySQL account, use a
REQUIRE
clause that specifies one or more
tls_option
values.
Order of REQUIRE
options does not matter,
but no option can be specified twice. The
AND
keyword is optional between
REQUIRE
options.
ALTER USER
permits these
tls_option
values:
NONE
Indicates that all accounts named by the statement have no SSL or X.509 requirements. Unencrypted connections are permitted if the user name and password are valid. Encrypted connections can be used, at the client's option, if the client has the proper certificate and key files.
ALTER USER 'jeffrey'@'localhost' REQUIRE NONE;
Clients attempt to establish a secure connection by
default. For clients that have REQUIRE
NONE
, the connection attempt falls back to an
unencrypted connection if a secure connection cannot be
established. To require an encrypted connection, a client
need specify only the
--ssl-mode=REQUIRED
option; the connection attempt fails if a secure
connection cannot be established.
SSL
Tells the server to permit only encrypted connections for all accounts named by the statement.
ALTER USER 'jeffrey'@'localhost' REQUIRE SSL;
Clients attempt to establish a secure connection by
default. For accounts that have REQUIRE
SSL
, the connection attempt fails if a secure
connection cannot be established.
X509
For all accounts named by the statement, requires that
clients present a valid certificate, but the exact
certificate, issuer, and subject do not matter. The only
requirement is that it should be possible to verify its
signature with one of the CA certificates. Use of X.509
certificates always implies encryption, so the
SSL
option is unnecessary in this case.
ALTER USER 'jeffrey'@'localhost' REQUIRE X509;
For accounts with REQUIRE X509
, clients
must specify the --ssl-key
and --ssl-cert
options to
connect. (It is recommended but not required that
--ssl-ca
also be specified
so that the public certificate provided by the server can
be verified.) This is true for ISSUER
and SUBJECT
as well because those
REQUIRE
options imply the requirements
of X509
.
ISSUER
'
issuer
'
For all accounts named by the statement, requires that
clients present a valid X.509 certificate issued by CA
'
. If
a client presents a certificate that is valid but has a
different issuer, the server rejects the connection. Use
of X.509 certificates always implies encryption, so the
issuer
'SSL
option is unnecessary in this case.
ALTER USER 'jeffrey'@'localhost' REQUIRE ISSUER '/C=SE/ST=Stockholm/L=Stockholm/ O=MySQL/CN=CA/[email protected]';
Because ISSUER
implies the requirements
of X509
, clients must specify the
--ssl-key
and
--ssl-cert
options to
connect. (It is recommended but not required that
--ssl-ca
also be specified
so that the public certificate provided by the server can
be verified.)
SUBJECT
'
subject
'
For all accounts named by the statement, requires that
clients present a valid X.509 certificate containing the
subject subject
. If a client
presents a certificate that is valid but has a different
subject, the server rejects the connection. Use of X.509
certificates always implies encryption, so the
SSL
option is unnecessary in this case.
ALTER USER 'jeffrey'@'localhost' REQUIRE SUBJECT '/C=SE/ST=Stockholm/L=Stockholm/ O=MySQL demo client certificate/ CN=client/[email protected]';
MySQL does a simple string comparison of the
'
value to the value in the certificate, so lettercase and
component ordering must be given exactly as present in the
certificate.
subject
'
Because SUBJECT
implies the
requirements of X509
, clients must
specify the --ssl-key
and
--ssl-cert
options to
connect. (It is recommended but not required that
--ssl-ca
also be specified
so that the public certificate provided by the server can
be verified.)
CIPHER
'
cipher
'
For all accounts named by the statement, requires a specific cipher method for encrypting connections. This option is needed to ensure that ciphers and key lengths of sufficient strength are used. Encryption can be weak if old algorithms using short encryption keys are used.
ALTER USER 'jeffrey'@'localhost' REQUIRE CIPHER 'EDH-RSA-DES-CBC3-SHA';
The SUBJECT
, ISSUER
, and
CIPHER
options can be combined in the
REQUIRE
clause:
ALTER USER 'jeffrey'@'localhost' REQUIRE SUBJECT '/C=SE/ST=Stockholm/L=Stockholm/ O=MySQL demo client certificate/ CN=client/[email protected]' AND ISSUER '/C=SE/ST=Stockholm/L=Stockholm/ O=MySQL/CN=CA/[email protected]' AND CIPHER 'EDH-RSA-DES-CBC3-SHA';
It is possible to place limits on use of server resources by
an account, as discussed in Section 6.2.16, “Setting Account Resource Limits”.
To do so, use a WITH
clause that specifies
one or more resource_option
values.
Order of WITH
options does not matter,
except that if a given resource limit is specified multiple
times, the last instance takes precedence.
ALTER USER
permits these
resource_option
values:
MAX_QUERIES_PER_HOUR
,
count
MAX_UPDATES_PER_HOUR
,
count
MAX_CONNECTIONS_PER_HOUR
count
For all accounts named by the statement, these options
restrict how many queries, updates, and connections to the
server are permitted to each account during any given
one-hour period. (Queries for which results are served
from the query cache do not count against the
MAX_QUERIES_PER_HOUR
limit.) If
count
is 0
(the default), this means that there is no limitation for
the account.
MAX_USER_CONNECTIONS
count
For all accounts named by the statement, restricts the
maximum number of simultaneous connections to the server
by each account. A nonzero
count
specifies the limit for
the account explicitly. If
count
is 0
(the default), the server determines the number of
simultaneous connections for the account from the global
value of the
max_user_connections
system variable. If
max_user_connections
is
also zero, there is no limit for the account.
Example:
ALTER USER 'jeffrey'@'localhost' WITH MAX_QUERIES_PER_HOUR 500 MAX_UPDATES_PER_HOUR 100;
ALTER USER
supports several
password_option
values for password
expiration management, to either expire an account password
manually or establish its password expiration policy. Policy
options do not expire the password. Instead, they determine
how the server applies automatic expiration to the account
based on account password age. For a given account, its
password age is assessed from the date and time of the most
recent password change.
This section describes the syntax for password-management options. For information about establishing policy for password management, see Section 6.2.11, “Password Management”.
If multiple password-management options are specified, the last one takes precedence.
These options apply only to accounts that use an authentication plugin that stores credentials internally to MySQL. For accounts that use a plugin that performs authentication against a credentials system that is external to MySQL, password management must be handled externally against that system as well. For more information about internal credentials storage, see Section 6.2.11, “Password Management”.
A client session operates in restricted mode if the account password was expired manually or if the password age is considered greater than its permitted lifetime per the automatic expiration policy. In restricted mode, operations performed within the session result in an error until the user establishes a new account password. For information about restricted mode, see Section 6.2.12, “Server Handling of Expired Passwords”.
Although it is possible to “reset” an expired password by setting it to its current value, it is preferable, as a matter of good policy, to choose a different password.
ALTER USER
permits these
password_option
values for
controlling password expiration:
PASSWORD EXPIRE
Immediately marks the password expired for all accounts named by the statement.
ALTER USER 'jeffrey'@'localhost' PASSWORD EXPIRE;
PASSWORD EXPIRE DEFAULT
Sets all accounts named by the statement so that the
global expiration policy applies, as specified by the
default_password_lifetime
system variable.
ALTER USER 'jeffrey'@'localhost' PASSWORD EXPIRE DEFAULT;
PASSWORD EXPIRE NEVER
This expiration option overrides the global policy for all accounts named by the statement. For each, it disables password expiration so that the password never expires.
ALTER USER 'jeffrey'@'localhost' PASSWORD EXPIRE NEVER;
PASSWORD EXPIRE INTERVAL
N
DAY
This expiration option overrides the global policy for all
accounts named by the statement. For each, it sets the
password lifetime to N
days.
The following statement requires the password to be
changed every 180 days:
ALTER USER 'jeffrey'@'localhost' PASSWORD EXPIRE INTERVAL 180 DAY;
MySQL supports account locking and unlocking using the
ACCOUNT LOCK
and ACCOUNT
UNLOCK
options, which specify the locking state for
an account. For additional discussion, see
Section 6.2.15, “Account Locking”.
If multiple account-locking options are specified, the last one takes precedence.
CREATE USER [IF NOT EXISTS]user
[auth_option
] [,user
[auth_option
]] ... [REQUIRE {NONE |tls_option
[[AND]tls_option
] ...}] [WITHresource_option
[resource_option
] ...] [password_option
|lock_option
] ...user
: (see Section 6.2.4, “Specifying Account Names”)auth_option
: { IDENTIFIED BY 'auth_string
' | IDENTIFIED WITHauth_plugin
| IDENTIFIED WITHauth_plugin
BY 'auth_string
' | IDENTIFIED WITHauth_plugin
AS 'auth_string
' | IDENTIFIED BY PASSWORD 'auth_string
' }tls_option
: { SSL | X509 | CIPHER 'cipher
' | ISSUER 'issuer
' | SUBJECT 'subject
' }resource_option
: { MAX_QUERIES_PER_HOURcount
| MAX_UPDATES_PER_HOURcount
| MAX_CONNECTIONS_PER_HOURcount
| MAX_USER_CONNECTIONScount
}password_option
: { PASSWORD EXPIRE | PASSWORD EXPIRE DEFAULT | PASSWORD EXPIRE NEVER | PASSWORD EXPIRE INTERVALN
DAY }lock_option
: { ACCOUNT LOCK | ACCOUNT UNLOCK }
The CREATE USER
statement creates
new MySQL accounts. It enables authentication, SSL/TLS,
resource-limit, and password-management properties to be
established for new accounts, and controls whether accounts are
initially locked or unlocked.
To use CREATE USER
, you must have
the global CREATE USER
privilege,
or the INSERT
privilege for the
mysql
system database. When the
read_only
system variable is
enabled, CREATE USER
additionally
requires the SUPER
privilege.
An error occurs if you try to create an account that already
exists. If the IF NOT EXISTS
clause is given,
the statement produces a warning for each named account that
already exists, rather than an error.
Under some circumstances, CREATE
USER
may be recorded in server logs or on the client
side in a history file such as
~/.mysql_history
, which means that
cleartext passwords may be read by anyone having read access
to that information. For information about the conditions
under which this occurs for the server logs and how to control
it, see Section 6.1.2.3, “Passwords and Logging”. For similar
information about client-side logging, see
Section 4.5.1.3, “mysql Client Logging”.
There are several aspects to the CREATE
USER
statement, described under the following topics:
For each account, CREATE USER
creates a new row in the mysql.user
system
table. The account row reflects the properties specified in
the statement. Unspecified properties are set to their default
values:
Authentication: The authentication plugin defined by the
default_authentication_plugin
system variable, and empty credentials
SSL/TLS: NONE
Resource limits: Unlimited
Password management: PASSWORD EXPIRE
DEFAULT
Account locking: ACCOUNT UNLOCK
An account when first created has no privileges. To assign
privileges, use the GRANT
statement.
Each account name uses the format described in Section 6.2.4, “Specifying Account Names”. For example:
CREATE USER 'jeffrey'@'localhost' IDENTIFIED BY 'password
';
The host name part of the account name, if omitted, defaults
to '%'
.
Each user
value naming an account
may be followed by an optional
auth_option
value that indicates
how the account authenticates. These values enable account
authentication plugins and credentials (for example, a
password) to be specified. Each
auth_option
value applies
only to the account named immediately
preceding it.
Following the user
specifications,
the statement may include options for SSL/TLS, resource-limit,
password-management, and locking properties. All such options
are global to the statement and apply to
all accounts named in the statement.
Example: Create an account that uses the default authentication plugin and the given password. Mark the password expired so that the user must choose a new one at the first connection to the server:
CREATE USER 'jeffrey'@'localhost'
IDENTIFIED BY 'new_password
' PASSWORD EXPIRE;
Example: Create an account that uses the
sha256_password
authentication plugin and
the given password. Require that a new password be chosen
every 180 days:
CREATE USER 'jeffrey'@'localhost'
IDENTIFIED WITH sha256_password BY 'new_password
'
PASSWORD EXPIRE INTERVAL 180 DAY;
Example: Create multiple accounts, specifying some per-account properties and some global properties:
CREATE USER 'jeffrey'@'localhost' IDENTIFIED WITH mysql_native_password BY 'new_password1
', 'jeanne'@'localhost' IDENTIFIED WITH sha256_password BY 'new_password2
' REQUIRE X509 WITH MAX_QUERIES_PER_HOUR 60 ACCOUNT LOCK;
Each auth_option
value
(IDENTIFIED WITH ... BY
in this case)
applies only to the account named immediately preceding it, so
each account uses the immediately following authentication
plugin and password.
The remaining properties apply globally to all accounts named in the statement, so for both accounts:
Connections must be made using a valid X.509 certificate.
Up to 60 queries per hour are permitted.
The account is locked initially, so effectively it is a placeholder and cannot be used until an administrator unlocks it.
An account name may be followed by an
auth_option
authentication option
that specifies the account authentication plugin, credentials,
or both:
auth_plugin
names an
authentication plugin. The plugin name can be a quoted
string literal or an unquoted name. Plugin names are
stored in the plugin
column of the
mysql.user
system table.
For auth_option
syntax that
does not specify an authentication plugin, the default
plugin is indicated by the value of the
default_authentication_plugin
system variable. For descriptions of each plugin, see
Section 6.4.1, “Authentication Plugins”.
Credentials are stored in the
mysql.user
system table. An
'
value specifies account credentials, either as a cleartext
(unencrypted) string or hashed in the format expected by
the authentication plugin associated with the account,
respectively:
auth_string
'
For syntax that uses BY
'
,
the string is cleartext and is passed to the
authentication plugin for possible hashing. The result
returned by the plugin is stored in the
auth_string
'mysql.user
table. A plugin may use
the value as specified, in which case no hashing
occurs.
For syntax that uses AS
'
,
the string is assumed to be already in the format the
authentication plugin requires, and is stored as is in
the auth_string
'mysql.user
table. If a plugin
requires a hashed value, the value must be already
hashed in a format appropriate for the plugin, or the
value will not be usable by the plugin and correct
authentication of client connections will not occur.
If an authentication plugin performs no hashing of the
authentication string, the BY
'
and
auth_string
'AS
'
clauses have the same effect: The authentication
string is stored as is in the
auth_string
'mysql.user
system table.
CREATE USER
permits these
auth_option
syntaxes:
IDENTIFIED BY
'
auth_string
'
Sets the account authentication plugin to the default
plugin, passes the cleartext
'
value to the plugin for possible hashing, and stores the
result in the account row in the
auth_string
'mysql.user
system table.
IDENTIFIED WITH
auth_plugin
Sets the account authentication plugin to
auth_plugin
, clears the
credentials to the empty string, and stores the result in
the account row in the mysql.user
system table.
IDENTIFIED WITH
auth_plugin
BY
'auth_string
'
Sets the account authentication plugin to
auth_plugin
, passes the
cleartext
'
value to the plugin for possible hashing, and stores the
result in the account row in the
auth_string
'mysql.user
system table.
IDENTIFIED WITH
auth_plugin
AS
'auth_string
'
Sets the account authentication plugin to
auth_plugin
and stores the
'
value as is in the auth_string
'mysql.user
account
row. If the plugin requires a hashed string, the string is
assumed to be already hashed in the format the plugin
requires.
IDENTIFIED BY PASSWORD
'
auth_string
'
Sets the account authentication plugin to the default
plugin and stores the
'
value as is in the auth_string
'mysql.user
account
row. If the plugin requires a hashed string, the string is
assumed to be already hashed in the format the plugin
requires.
IDENTIFIED BY PASSWORD
syntax is
deprecated and will be removed in a future MySQL
release.
Example: Specify the password as cleartext; the default plugin is used:
CREATE USER 'jeffrey'@'localhost'
IDENTIFIED BY 'password
';
Example: Specify the authentication plugin, along with a cleartext password value:
CREATE USER 'jeffrey'@'localhost'
IDENTIFIED WITH mysql_native_password BY 'password
';
In each case, the password value stored in the account row is
the cleartext value
'
after
it has been hashed by the authentication plugin associated
with the account.
password
'
For additional information about setting passwords and authentication plugins, see Section 6.2.10, “Assigning Account Passwords”, and Section 6.2.13, “Pluggable Authentication”.
MySQL can check X.509 certificate attributes in addition to the usual authentication that is based on the user name and credentials. For background information on the use of SSL/TLS with MySQL, see Section 6.3, “Using Encrypted Connections”.
To specify SSL/TLS-related options for a MySQL account, use a
REQUIRE
clause that specifies one or more
tls_option
values.
Order of REQUIRE
options does not matter,
but no option can be specified twice. The
AND
keyword is optional between
REQUIRE
options.
CREATE USER
permits these
tls_option
values:
NONE
Indicates that all accounts named by the statement have no SSL or X.509 requirements. Unencrypted connections are permitted if the user name and password are valid. Encrypted connections can be used, at the client's option, if the client has the proper certificate and key files.
CREATE USER 'jeffrey'@'localhost' REQUIRE NONE;
Clients attempt to establish a secure connection by
default. For clients that have REQUIRE
NONE
, the connection attempt falls back to an
unencrypted connection if a secure connection cannot be
established. To require an encrypted connection, a client
need specify only the
--ssl-mode=REQUIRED
option; the connection attempt fails if a secure
connection cannot be established.
NONE
is the default if no SSL-related
REQUIRE
options are specified.
SSL
Tells the server to permit only encrypted connections for all accounts named by the statement.
CREATE USER 'jeffrey'@'localhost' REQUIRE SSL;
Clients attempt to establish a secure connection by
default. For accounts that have REQUIRE
SSL
, the connection attempt fails if a secure
connection cannot be established.
X509
For all accounts named by the statement, requires that
clients present a valid certificate, but the exact
certificate, issuer, and subject do not matter. The only
requirement is that it should be possible to verify its
signature with one of the CA certificates. Use of X.509
certificates always implies encryption, so the
SSL
option is unnecessary in this case.
CREATE USER 'jeffrey'@'localhost' REQUIRE X509;
For accounts with REQUIRE X509
, clients
must specify the --ssl-key
and --ssl-cert
options to
connect. (It is recommended but not required that
--ssl-ca
also be specified
so that the public certificate provided by the server can
be verified.) This is true for ISSUER
and SUBJECT
as well because those
REQUIRE
options imply the requirements
of X509
.
ISSUER
'
issuer
'
For all accounts named by the statement, requires that
clients present a valid X.509 certificate issued by CA
'
. If
a client presents a certificate that is valid but has a
different issuer, the server rejects the connection. Use
of X.509 certificates always implies encryption, so the
issuer
'SSL
option is unnecessary in this case.
CREATE USER 'jeffrey'@'localhost' REQUIRE ISSUER '/C=SE/ST=Stockholm/L=Stockholm/ O=MySQL/CN=CA/[email protected]';
Because ISSUER
implies the requirements
of X509
, clients must specify the
--ssl-key
and
--ssl-cert
options to
connect. (It is recommended but not required that
--ssl-ca
also be specified
so that the public certificate provided by the server can
be verified.)
SUBJECT
'
subject
'
For all accounts named by the statement, requires that
clients present a valid X.509 certificate containing the
subject subject
. If a client
presents a certificate that is valid but has a different
subject, the server rejects the connection. Use of X.509
certificates always implies encryption, so the
SSL
option is unnecessary in this case.
CREATE USER 'jeffrey'@'localhost' REQUIRE SUBJECT '/C=SE/ST=Stockholm/L=Stockholm/ O=MySQL demo client certificate/ CN=client/[email protected]';
MySQL does a simple string comparison of the
'
value to the value in the certificate, so lettercase and
component ordering must be given exactly as present in the
certificate.
subject
'
Because SUBJECT
implies the
requirements of X509
, clients must
specify the --ssl-key
and
--ssl-cert
options to
connect. (It is recommended but not required that
--ssl-ca
also be specified
so that the public certificate provided by the server can
be verified.)
CIPHER
'
cipher
'
For all accounts named by the statement, requires a specific cipher method for encrypting connections. This option is needed to ensure that ciphers and key lengths of sufficient strength are used. Encryption can be weak if old algorithms using short encryption keys are used.
CREATE USER 'jeffrey'@'localhost' REQUIRE CIPHER 'EDH-RSA-DES-CBC3-SHA';
The SUBJECT
, ISSUER
, and
CIPHER
options can be combined in the
REQUIRE
clause:
CREATE USER 'jeffrey'@'localhost' REQUIRE SUBJECT '/C=SE/ST=Stockholm/L=Stockholm/ O=MySQL demo client certificate/ CN=client/[email protected]' AND ISSUER '/C=SE/ST=Stockholm/L=Stockholm/ O=MySQL/CN=CA/[email protected]' AND CIPHER 'EDH-RSA-DES-CBC3-SHA';
It is possible to place limits on use of server resources by
an account, as discussed in Section 6.2.16, “Setting Account Resource Limits”.
To do so, use a WITH
clause that specifies
one or more resource_option
values.
Order of WITH
options does not matter,
except that if a given resource limit is specified multiple
times, the last instance takes precedence.
CREATE USER
permits these
resource_option
values:
MAX_QUERIES_PER_HOUR
,
count
MAX_UPDATES_PER_HOUR
,
count
MAX_CONNECTIONS_PER_HOUR
count
For all accounts named by the statement, these options
restrict how many queries, updates, and connections to the
server are permitted to each account during any given
one-hour period. (Queries for which results are served
from the query cache do not count against the
MAX_QUERIES_PER_HOUR
limit.) If
count
is 0
(the default), this means that there is no limitation for
the account.
MAX_USER_CONNECTIONS
count
For all accounts named by the statement, restricts the
maximum number of simultaneous connections to the server
by each account. A nonzero
count
specifies the limit for
the account explicitly. If
count
is 0
(the default), the server determines the number of
simultaneous connections for the account from the global
value of the
max_user_connections
system variable. If
max_user_connections
is
also zero, there is no limit for the account.
Example:
CREATE USER 'jeffrey'@'localhost' WITH MAX_QUERIES_PER_HOUR 500 MAX_UPDATES_PER_HOUR 100;
Account passwords have an age, assessed from the date and time of the most recent password change.
CREATE USER
supports several
password_option
values for password
expiration management, to either expire an account password
manually or establish its password expiration policy. Policy
options do not expire the password. Instead, they determine
how the server applies automatic expiration to the account
based on account password age. For a given account, its
password age is assessed from the date and time of the most
recent password change.
This section describes the syntax for password-management options. For information about establishing policy for password management, see Section 6.2.11, “Password Management”.
If multiple password-management options are specified, the last one takes precedence.
These options apply only to accounts that use an authentication plugin that stores credentials internally to MySQL. For accounts that use a plugin that performs authentication against a credentials system that is external to MySQL, password management must be handled externally against that system as well. For more information about internal credentials storage, see Section 6.2.11, “Password Management”.
A client session operates in restricted mode if the account password was expired manually or if the password age is considered greater than its permitted lifetime per the automatic expiration policy. In restricted mode, operations performed within the session result in an error until the user establishes a new account password. For information about restricted mode, see Section 6.2.12, “Server Handling of Expired Passwords”.
CREATE USER
permits these
password_option
values for
controlling password expiration:
PASSWORD EXPIRE
Immediately marks the password expired for all accounts named by the statement.
CREATE USER 'jeffrey'@'localhost' PASSWORD EXPIRE;
PASSWORD EXPIRE DEFAULT
Sets all accounts named by the statement so that the
global expiration policy applies, as specified by the
default_password_lifetime
system variable.
CREATE USER 'jeffrey'@'localhost' PASSWORD EXPIRE DEFAULT;
PASSWORD EXPIRE NEVER
This expiration option overrides the global policy for all accounts named by the statement. For each, it disables password expiration so that the password never expires.
CREATE USER 'jeffrey'@'localhost' PASSWORD EXPIRE NEVER;
PASSWORD EXPIRE INTERVAL
N
DAY
This expiration option overrides the global policy for all
accounts named by the statement. For each, it sets the
password lifetime to N
days.
The following statement requires the password to be
changed every 180 days:
CREATE USER 'jeffrey'@'localhost' PASSWORD EXPIRE INTERVAL 180 DAY;
MySQL supports account locking and unlocking using the
ACCOUNT LOCK
and ACCOUNT
UNLOCK
options, which specify the locking state for
an account. For additional discussion, see
Section 6.2.15, “Account Locking”.
If multiple account-locking options are specified, the last one takes precedence.
DROP USER [IF EXISTS]user
[,user
] ...
The DROP USER
statement removes
one or more MySQL accounts and their privileges. It removes
privilege rows for the account from all grant tables.
To use DROP USER
, you must have
the global CREATE USER
privilege,
or the DELETE
privilege for the
mysql
system database. When the
read_only
system variable is
enabled, DROP USER
additionally
requires the SUPER
privilege.
An error occurs if you try to drop an account that does not
exist. If the IF EXISTS
clause is given, the
statement produces a warning for each named user that does not
exist, rather than an error.
Each account name uses the format described in Section 6.2.4, “Specifying Account Names”. For example:
DROP USER 'jeffrey'@'localhost';
The host name part of the account name, if omitted, defaults to
'%'
.
DROP USER
does not
automatically close any open user sessions. Rather, in the
event that a user with an open session is dropped, the
statement does not take effect until that user's session is
closed. Once the session is closed, the user is dropped, and
that user's next attempt to log in will fail. This
is by design.
DROP USER
does not automatically
drop or invalidate databases or objects within them that the old
user created. This includes stored programs or views for which
the DEFINER
attribute names the dropped user.
Attempts to access such objects may produce an error if they
execute in definer security context. (For information about
security context, see
Section 23.6, “Stored Object Access Control”.)
GRANTpriv_type
[(column_list
)] [,priv_type
[(column_list
)]] ... ON [object_type
]priv_level
TOuser
[auth_option
] [,user
[auth_option
]] ... [REQUIRE {NONE |tls_option
[[AND]tls_option
] ...}] [WITH {GRANT OPTION |resource_option
} ...] GRANT PROXY ONuser
TOuser
[,user
] ... [WITH GRANT OPTION]object_type
: { TABLE | FUNCTION | PROCEDURE }priv_level
: { * | *.* |db_name
.* |db_name.tbl_name
|tbl_name
|db_name
.routine_name
}user
: (see Section 6.2.4, “Specifying Account Names”)auth_option
: { IDENTIFIED BY 'auth_string
' | IDENTIFIED WITHauth_plugin
| IDENTIFIED WITHauth_plugin
BY 'auth_string
' | IDENTIFIED WITHauth_plugin
AS 'auth_string
' | IDENTIFIED BY PASSWORD 'auth_string
' }tls_option
: { SSL | X509 | CIPHER 'cipher
' | ISSUER 'issuer
' | SUBJECT 'subject
' }resource_option
: { | MAX_QUERIES_PER_HOURcount
| MAX_UPDATES_PER_HOURcount
| MAX_CONNECTIONS_PER_HOURcount
| MAX_USER_CONNECTIONScount
}
The GRANT
statement grants
privileges to MySQL user accounts. There are several aspects to
the GRANT
statement, described
under the following topics:
The GRANT
statement grants
privileges to MySQL user accounts.
To use GRANT
, you must have the
GRANT OPTION
privilege, and you
must have the privileges that you are granting. When the
read_only
system variable is
enabled, GRANT
additionally
requires the SUPER
privilege.
The REVOKE
statement is related
to GRANT
and enables
administrators to remove account privileges. See
Section 13.7.1.6, “REVOKE Statement”.
Each account name uses the format described in Section 6.2.4, “Specifying Account Names”. For example:
GRANT ALL ON db1.* TO 'jeffrey'@'localhost';
The host name part of the account, if omitted, defaults to
'%'
.
Normally, a database administrator first uses
CREATE USER
to create an
account and define its nonprivilege characteristics such as
its password, whether it uses secure connections, and limits
on access to server resources, then uses
GRANT
to define its privileges.
ALTER USER
may be used to
change the nonprivilege characteristics of existing accounts.
For example:
CREATE USER 'jeffrey'@'localhost' IDENTIFIED BY 'password
';
GRANT ALL ON db1.* TO 'jeffrey'@'localhost';
GRANT SELECT ON db2.invoice TO 'jeffrey'@'localhost';
ALTER USER 'jeffrey'@'localhost' WITH MAX_QUERIES_PER_HOUR 90;
Examples shown here include no IDENTIFIED
clause. It is assumed that you establish passwords with
CREATE USER
at
account-creation time to avoid creating insecure accounts.
If an account named in a
GRANT
statement does not
already exist, GRANT
may
create it under the conditions described later in the
discussion of the
NO_AUTO_CREATE_USER
SQL
mode. It is also possible to use
GRANT
to specify nonprivilege
account characteristics such as whether it uses secure
connections and limits on access to server resources.
However, use of GRANT
to
create accounts or define nonprivilege characteristics is
deprecated as of MySQL 5.7.6. Instead, perform these tasks
using CREATE USER
or
ALTER USER
.
From the mysql program,
GRANT
responds with
Query OK, 0 rows affected
when executed
successfully. To determine what privileges result from the
operation, use SHOW GRANTS
. See
Section 13.7.5.21, “SHOW GRANTS Statement”.
Under some circumstances,
GRANT
may be recorded in
server logs or on the client side in a history file such as
~/.mysql_history
, which means that
cleartext passwords may be read by anyone having read access
to that information. For information about the conditions
under which this occurs for the server logs and how to
control it, see Section 6.1.2.3, “Passwords and Logging”. For
similar information about client-side logging, see
Section 4.5.1.3, “mysql Client Logging”.
GRANT
supports host names up to
60 characters long. User names can be up to 32 characters.
Database, table, column, and routine names can be up to 64
characters.
Do not attempt to change the permissible length
for user names by altering the mysql.user
system table. Doing so results in unpredictable behavior
which may even make it impossible for users to log in to the
MySQL server. Never alter the structure of tables
in the mysql
system database in any
manner except by means of the procedure described in
Section 2.11, “Upgrading MySQL”.
Several objects within GRANT
statements are subject to quoting, although quoting is
optional in many cases: Account, database, table, column, and
routine names. For example, if a
user_name
or
host_name
value in an account name
is legal as an unquoted identifier, you need not quote it.
However, quotation marks are necessary to specify a
user_name
string containing special
characters (such as -
), or a
host_name
string containing special
characters or wildcard characters such as %
(for example, 'test-user'@'%.com'
). Quote
the user name and host name separately.
To specify quoted values:
Quote database, table, column, and routine names as identifiers.
Quote user names and host names as identifiers or as strings.
Quote passwords as strings.
For string-quoting and identifier-quoting guidelines, see Section 9.1.1, “String Literals”, and Section 9.2, “Schema Object Names”.
The _
and %
wildcards
are permitted when specifying database names in
GRANT
statements that grant
privileges at the database level (GRANT ... ON
). This means,
for example, that to use a db_name
.*_
character as
part of a database name, specify it as \_
in the GRANT
statement, to
prevent the user from being able to access additional
databases matching the wildcard pattern (for example,
GRANT ... ON `foo\_bar`.* TO ...
).
When a database name not is used to grant privileges at the
database level, but as a qualifier for granting privileges to
some other object such as a table or routine (for example,
GRANT ... ON
),
wildcard characters are treated as normal characters.
db_name
.tbl_name
The following table summarizes the permissible
priv_type
privilege types that can
be specified for the GRANT
and
REVOKE
statements, and the
levels at which each privilege can be granted. For additional
information about each privilege, see
Section 6.2.2, “Privileges Provided by MySQL”.
Table 13.8 Permissible Privileges for GRANT and REVOKE
Privilege | Meaning and Grantable Levels |
---|---|
ALL [PRIVILEGES] |
Grant all privileges at specified access level except
GRANT OPTION and
PROXY . |
ALTER |
Enable use of ALTER TABLE . Levels:
Global, database, table. |
ALTER ROUTINE |
Enable stored routines to be altered or dropped. Levels: Global, database, routine. |
CREATE |
Enable database and table creation. Levels: Global, database, table. |
CREATE ROUTINE |
Enable stored routine creation. Levels: Global, database. |
CREATE TABLESPACE |
Enable tablespaces and log file groups to be created, altered, or dropped. Level: Global. |
CREATE TEMPORARY TABLES |
Enable use of CREATE
TEMPORARY TABLE . Levels: Global, database. |
CREATE USER |
Enable use of CREATE USER ,
DROP USER ,
RENAME USER , and
REVOKE ALL
PRIVILEGES . Level: Global. |
CREATE VIEW |
Enable views to be created or altered. Levels: Global, database, table. |
DELETE |
Enable use of DELETE . Level: Global,
database, table. |
DROP |
Enable databases, tables, and views to be dropped. Levels: Global, database, table. |
EVENT |
Enable use of events for the Event Scheduler. Levels: Global, database. |
EXECUTE |
Enable the user to execute stored routines. Levels: Global, database, routine. |
FILE |
Enable the user to cause the server to read or write files. Level: Global. |
GRANT OPTION |
Enable privileges to be granted to or removed from other accounts. Levels: Global, database, table, routine, proxy. |
INDEX |
Enable indexes to be created or dropped. Levels: Global, database, table. |
INSERT |
Enable use of INSERT . Levels: Global,
database, table, column. |
LOCK TABLES |
Enable use of LOCK TABLES on tables for
which you have the SELECT
privilege. Levels: Global, database. |
PROCESS |
Enable the user to see all processes with SHOW
PROCESSLIST . Level: Global. |
PROXY |
Enable user proxying. Level: From user to user. |
REFERENCES |
Enable foreign key creation. Levels: Global, database, table, column. |
RELOAD |
Enable use of FLUSH operations. Level:
Global. |
REPLICATION CLIENT |
Enable the user to ask where master or slave servers are. Level: Global. |
REPLICATION SLAVE |
Enable replication slaves to read binary log events from the master. Level: Global. |
SELECT |
Enable use of SELECT . Levels: Global,
database, table, column. |
SHOW DATABASES |
Enable SHOW DATABASES to show all
databases. Level: Global. |
SHOW VIEW |
Enable use of SHOW CREATE VIEW . Levels:
Global, database, table. |
SHUTDOWN |
Enable use of mysqladmin shutdown. Level: Global. |
SUPER |
Enable use of other administrative operations such as
CHANGE MASTER TO ,
KILL ,
PURGE BINARY LOGS ,
SET
GLOBAL , and mysqladmin
debug command. Level: Global. |
TRIGGER |
Enable trigger operations. Levels: Global, database, table. |
UPDATE |
Enable use of UPDATE . Levels: Global,
database, table, column. |
USAGE |
Synonym for “no privileges” |
A trigger is associated with a table. To create or drop a
trigger, you must have the
TRIGGER
privilege for the
table, not the trigger.
In GRANT
statements, the
ALL
[PRIVILEGES]
or PROXY
privilege must be named by itself and cannot be specified
along with other privileges.
ALL
[PRIVILEGES]
stands for all privileges available for
the level at which privileges are to be granted except for the
GRANT OPTION
and
PROXY
privileges.
USAGE
can be specified to
create a user that has no privileges, or to specify the
REQUIRE
or WITH
clauses
for an account without changing its existing privileges.
(However, use of GRANT
to
define nonprivilege characteristics is deprecated.
MySQL account information is stored in the tables of the
mysql
system database. For additional
details, consult Section 6.2, “Access Control and Account Management”, which
discusses the mysql
system database and the
access control system extensively.
If the grant tables hold privilege rows that contain
mixed-case database or table names and the
lower_case_table_names
system
variable is set to a nonzero value,
REVOKE
cannot be used to revoke
these privileges. It will be necessary to manipulate the grant
tables directly. (GRANT
will
not create such rows when
lower_case_table_names
is
set, but such rows might have been created prior to setting
that variable.)
Privileges can be granted at several levels, depending on the
syntax used for the ON
clause. For
REVOKE
, the same
ON
syntax specifies which privileges to
remove.
For the global, database, table, and routine levels,
GRANT ALL
assigns only the privileges that exist at the level you are
granting. For example, GRANT ALL ON
is a
database-level statement, so it does not grant any global-only
privileges such as db_name
.*FILE
.
Granting ALL
does not assign
the GRANT OPTION
or
PROXY
privilege.
The object_type
clause, if present,
should be specified as TABLE
,
FUNCTION
, or PROCEDURE
when the following object is a table, a stored function, or a
stored procedure.
The privileges that a user holds for a database, table,
column, or routine are formed additively as the logical
OR
of the account privileges at
each of the privilege levels, including the global level. It
is not possible to deny a privilege granted at a higher level
by absence of that privilege at a lower level. For example,
this statement grants the
SELECT
and
INSERT
privileges globally:
GRANT SELECT, INSERT ON *.* TO u1;
The globally granted privileges apply to all databases, tables, and columns, even though not granted at any of those lower levels.
Details of the privilege-checking procedure are presented in Section 6.2.6, “Access Control, Stage 2: Request Verification”.
If you are using table, column, or routine privileges for even one user, the server examines table, column, and routine privileges for all users and this slows down MySQL a bit. Similarly, if you limit the number of queries, updates, or connections for any users, the server must monitor these values.
MySQL enables you to grant privileges on databases or tables
that do not exist. For tables, the privileges to be granted
must include the CREATE
privilege. This behavior is by design,
and is intended to enable the database administrator to
prepare user accounts and privileges for databases or tables
that are to be created at a later time.
MySQL does not automatically revoke any privileges when you drop a database or table. However, if you drop a routine, any routine-level privileges granted for that routine are revoked.
A user
value in a
GRANT
statement indicates a
MySQL account to which the statement applies. To accommodate
granting rights to users from arbitrary hosts, MySQL supports
specifying the user
value in the
form
'
.
user_name
'@'host_name
'
You can specify wildcards in the host name. For example,
'
applies to user_name
'@'%.example.com'user_name
for any host
in the example.com
domain, and
'
applies to user_name
'@'198.51.100.%'user_name
for any host
in the 198.51.100
class C subnet.
The simple form
'
is a
synonym for
user_name
''
.
user_name
'@'%'
MySQL does not support wildcards in user
names. To refer to an anonymous user, specify an
account with an empty user name with the
GRANT
statement:
GRANT ALL ON test.* TO ''@'localhost' ...;
In this case, any user who connects from the local host with the correct password for the anonymous user will be permitted access, with the privileges associated with the anonymous-user account.
For additional information about user name and host name values in account names, see Section 6.2.4, “Specifying Account Names”.
If you permit local anonymous users to connect to the MySQL
server, you should also grant privileges to all local users
as
'
.
Otherwise, the anonymous user account for
user_name
'@'localhost'localhost
in the
mysql.user
system table is used when
named users try to log in to the MySQL server from the local
machine. For details, see
Section 6.2.5, “Access Control, Stage 1: Connection Verification”.
To determine whether this issue applies to you, execute the following query, which lists any anonymous users:
SELECT Host, User FROM mysql.user WHERE User='';
To avoid the problem just described, delete the local anonymous user account using this statement:
DROP USER ''@'localhost';
For GRANT
syntax that permits
an auth_option
value to follow a
user
value,
auth_option
begins with
IDENTIFIED
and indicates how the account
authenticates by specifying an account authentication plugin,
credentials (for example, a password), or both. Syntax of the
auth_option
clause is the same as
for the CREATE USER
statement.
For details, see Section 13.7.1.2, “CREATE USER Statement”.
Use of GRANT
to define
account authentication characteristics is deprecated as of
MySQL 5.7.6. Instead, establish or change authentication
characteristics using CREATE
USER
or ALTER USER
.
This GRANT
capability will be
removed in a future MySQL release.
When IDENTIFIED
is present and you have the
global grant privilege (GRANT
OPTION
), any password specified becomes the new
password for the account, even if the account exists and
already has a password. Without IDENTIFIED
,
the account password remains unchanged.
Global privileges are administrative or apply to all databases
on a given server. To assign global privileges, use
ON *.*
syntax:
GRANT ALL ON *.* TO 'someuser'@'somehost'; GRANT SELECT, INSERT ON *.* TO 'someuser'@'somehost';
The CREATE TABLESPACE
,
CREATE USER
,
FILE
,
PROCESS
,
RELOAD
,
REPLICATION CLIENT
,
REPLICATION SLAVE
,
SHOW DATABASES
,
SHUTDOWN
, and
SUPER
privileges are
administrative and can only be granted globally.
Other privileges can be granted globally or at more specific levels.
GRANT OPTION
granted at the
global level for any global privilege applies to all global
privileges.
MySQL stores global privileges in the
mysql.user
system table.
Database privileges apply to all objects in a given database.
To assign database-level privileges, use ON
syntax:
db_name
.*
GRANT ALL ON mydb.* TO 'someuser'@'somehost'; GRANT SELECT, INSERT ON mydb.* TO 'someuser'@'somehost';
If you use ON *
syntax (rather than
ON *.*
), privileges are assigned at the
database level for the default database. An error occurs if
there is no default database.
The CREATE
,
DROP
,
EVENT
,
GRANT OPTION
,
LOCK TABLES
, and
REFERENCES
privileges can be
specified at the database level. Table or routine privileges
also can be specified at the database level, in which case
they apply to all tables or routines in the database.
MySQL stores database privileges in the
mysql.db
system table.
Table privileges apply to all columns in a given table. To
assign table-level privileges, use ON
syntax:
db_name.tbl_name
GRANT ALL ON mydb.mytbl TO 'someuser'@'somehost'; GRANT SELECT, INSERT ON mydb.mytbl TO 'someuser'@'somehost';
If you specify tbl_name
rather than
db_name.tbl_name
, the statement
applies to tbl_name
in the default
database. An error occurs if there is no default database.
The permissible priv_type
values at
the table level are ALTER
,
CREATE VIEW
,
CREATE
,
DELETE
,
DROP
,
GRANT OPTION
,
INDEX
,
INSERT
,
REFERENCES
,
SELECT
,
SHOW VIEW
,
TRIGGER
, and
UPDATE
.
Table-level privileges apply to base tables and views. They do
not apply to tables created with CREATE
TEMPORARY TABLE
, even if the table names match. For
information about TEMPORARY
table
privileges, see Section 13.1.18.3, “CREATE TEMPORARY TABLE Statement”.
MySQL stores table privileges in the
mysql.tables_priv
system table.
Column privileges apply to single columns in a given table. Each privilege to be granted at the column level must be followed by the column or columns, enclosed within parentheses.
GRANT SELECT (col1), INSERT (col1, col2) ON mydb.mytbl TO 'someuser'@'somehost';
The permissible priv_type
values
for a column (that is, when you use a
column_list
clause) are
INSERT
,
REFERENCES
,
SELECT
, and
UPDATE
.
MySQL stores column privileges in the
mysql.columns_priv
system table.
The ALTER ROUTINE
,
CREATE ROUTINE
,
EXECUTE
, and
GRANT OPTION
privileges apply
to stored routines (procedures and functions). They can be
granted at the global and database levels. Except for
CREATE ROUTINE
, these
privileges can be granted at the routine level for individual
routines.
GRANT CREATE ROUTINE ON mydb.* TO 'someuser'@'somehost'; GRANT EXECUTE ON PROCEDURE mydb.myproc TO 'someuser'@'somehost';
The permissible priv_type
values at
the routine level are ALTER
ROUTINE
, EXECUTE
, and
GRANT OPTION
.
CREATE ROUTINE
is not a
routine-level privilege because you must have the privilege at
the global or database level to create a routine in the first
place.
MySQL stores routine-level privileges in the
mysql.procs_priv
system table.
The PROXY
privilege enables one
user to be a proxy for another. The proxy user impersonates or
takes the identity of the proxied user; that is, it assumes
the privileges of the proxied user.
GRANT PROXY ON 'localuser'@'localhost' TO 'externaluser'@'somehost';
When PROXY
is granted, it must
be the only privilege named in the
GRANT
statement, the
REQUIRE
clause cannot be given, and the
only permitted WITH
option is WITH
GRANT OPTION
.
Proxying requires that the proxy user authenticate through a
plugin that returns the name of the proxied user to the server
when the proxy user connects, and that the proxy user have the
PROXY
privilege for the proxied user. For
details and examples, see Section 6.2.14, “Proxy Users”.
MySQL stores proxy privileges in the
mysql.proxies_priv
system table.
If an account named in a GRANT
statement does not exist, the action taken depends on the
NO_AUTO_CREATE_USER
SQL
mode:
If NO_AUTO_CREATE_USER
is not enabled, GRANT
creates the account. This is very
insecure unless you specify a nonempty password
using IDENTIFIED BY
.
If NO_AUTO_CREATE_USER
is enabled, GRANT
fails and
does not create the account, unless you specify a nonempty
password using IDENTIFIED BY
or name an
authentication plugin using IDENTIFIED
WITH
.
If the account already exists, IDENTIFIED
WITH
is prohibited because it is intended only for
use when creating new accounts.
MySQL can check X.509 certificate attributes in addition to the usual authentication that is based on the user name and credentials. For background information on the use of SSL with MySQL, see Section 6.3, “Using Encrypted Connections”.
The optional REQUIRE
clause specifies
SSL-related options for a MySQL account. The syntax is the
same as for the CREATE USER
statement. For details, see Section 13.7.1.2, “CREATE USER Statement”.
Use of GRANT
to define
account SSL characteristics is deprecated as of MySQL 5.7.6.
Instead, establish or change SSL characteristics using
CREATE USER
or
ALTER USER
. This
GRANT
capability will be
removed in a future MySQL release.
The optional WITH
clause is used for these
purposes:
To enable a user to grant privileges to other users
To specify resource limits for a user
The WITH GRANT OPTION
clause gives the user
the ability to give to other users any privileges the user has
at the specified privilege level.
To grant the GRANT OPTION
privilege to an account without otherwise changing its
privileges, do this:
GRANT USAGE ON *.* TO 'someuser'@'somehost' WITH GRANT OPTION;
Be careful to whom you give the GRANT
OPTION
privilege because two users with different
privileges may be able to combine privileges!
You cannot grant another user a privilege which you yourself
do not have; the GRANT OPTION
privilege enables you to assign only those privileges which
you yourself possess.
Be aware that when you grant a user the
GRANT OPTION
privilege at a
particular privilege level, any privileges the user possesses
(or may be given in the future) at that level can also be
granted by that user to other users. Suppose that you grant a
user the INSERT
privilege on a
database. If you then grant the
SELECT
privilege on the
database and specify WITH GRANT OPTION
,
that user can give to other users not only the
SELECT
privilege, but also
INSERT
. If you then grant the
UPDATE
privilege to the user on
the database, the user can grant
INSERT
,
SELECT
, and
UPDATE
.
For a nonadministrative user, you should not grant the
ALTER
privilege globally or for
the mysql
system database. If you do that,
the user can try to subvert the privilege system by renaming
tables!
For additional information about security risks associated with particular privileges, see Section 6.2.2, “Privileges Provided by MySQL”.
It is possible to place limits on use of server resources by
an account, as discussed in Section 6.2.16, “Setting Account Resource Limits”.
To do so, use a WITH
clause that specifies
one or more resource_option
values.
Limits not specified retain their current values. The syntax
is the same as for the CREATE
USER
statement. For details, see
Section 13.7.1.2, “CREATE USER Statement”.
Use of GRANT
to define
account resource limits is deprecated as of MySQL 5.7.6.
Instead, establish or change resource limits using
CREATE USER
or
ALTER USER
. This
GRANT
capability will be
removed in a future MySQL release.
The biggest differences between the MySQL and standard SQL
versions of GRANT
are:
MySQL associates privileges with the combination of a host name and user name and not with only a user name.
Standard SQL does not have global or database-level privileges, nor does it support all the privilege types that MySQL supports.
MySQL does not support the standard SQL
UNDER
privilege.
Standard SQL privileges are structured in a hierarchical
manner. If you remove a user, all privileges the user has
been granted are revoked. This is also true in MySQL if
you use DROP USER
. See
Section 13.7.1.3, “DROP USER Statement”.
In standard SQL, when you drop a table, all privileges for
the table are revoked. In standard SQL, when you revoke a
privilege, all privileges that were granted based on that
privilege are also revoked. In MySQL, privileges can be
dropped with DROP USER
or
REVOKE
statements.
In MySQL, it is possible to have the
INSERT
privilege for only
some of the columns in a table. In this case, you can
still execute INSERT
statements on the table, provided that you insert values
only for those columns for which you have the
INSERT
privilege. The
omitted columns are set to their implicit default values
if strict SQL mode is not enabled. In strict mode, the
statement is rejected if any of the omitted columns have
no default value. (Standard SQL requires you to have the
INSERT
privilege on all
columns.) For information about strict SQL mode and
implicit default values, see Section 5.1.10, “Server SQL Modes”,
and Section 11.6, “Data Type Default Values”.
RENAME USERold_user
TOnew_user
[,old_user
TOnew_user
] ...
The RENAME USER
statement renames
existing MySQL accounts. An error occurs for old accounts that
do not exist or new accounts that already exist.
To use RENAME USER
, you must have
the global CREATE USER
privilege,
or the UPDATE
privilege for the
mysql
system database. When the
read_only
system variable is
enabled, RENAME USER
additionally
requires the SUPER
privilege.
Each account name uses the format described in Section 6.2.4, “Specifying Account Names”. For example:
RENAME USER 'jeffrey'@'localhost' TO 'jeff'@'127.0.0.1';
The host name part of the account name, if omitted, defaults to
'%'
.
RENAME USER
causes the privileges
held by the old user to be those held by the new user. However,
RENAME USER
does not
automatically drop or invalidate databases or objects within
them that the old user created. This includes stored programs or
views for which the DEFINER
attribute names
the old user. Attempts to access such objects may produce an
error if they execute in definer security context. (For
information about security context, see
Section 23.6, “Stored Object Access Control”.)
The privilege changes take effect as indicated in Section 6.2.9, “When Privilege Changes Take Effect”.
REVOKEpriv_type
[(column_list
)] [,priv_type
[(column_list
)]] ... ON [object_type
]priv_level
FROMuser
[,user
] ... REVOKE ALL [PRIVILEGES], GRANT OPTION FROMuser
[,user
] ... REVOKE PROXY ONuser
FROMuser
[,user
] ...
The REVOKE
statement enables
system administrators to revoke privileges from MySQL accounts.
For details on the levels at which privileges exist, the
permissible priv_type
,
priv_level
, and
object_type
values, and the syntax
for specifying users and passwords, see Section 13.7.1.4, “GRANT Statement”.
When the read_only
system
variable is enabled, REVOKE
requires the SUPER
privilege in
addition to any other required privileges described in the
following discussion.
Each account name uses the format described in Section 6.2.4, “Specifying Account Names”. For example:
REVOKE INSERT ON *.* FROM 'jeffrey'@'localhost';
The host name part of the account name, if omitted, defaults to
'%'
.
To use the first REVOKE
syntax,
you must have the GRANT OPTION
privilege, and you must have the privileges that you are
revoking.
To revoke all privileges, use the second syntax, which drops all global, database, table, column, and routine privileges for the named user or users:
REVOKE ALL PRIVILEGES, GRANT OPTION FROMuser
[,user
] ...
To use this REVOKE
syntax, you
must have the global CREATE USER
privilege, or the UPDATE
privilege for the mysql
system database.
User accounts from which privileges are to be revoked must exist, but the privileges to be revoked need not be currently granted to them.
REVOKE
removes privileges, but
does not remove rows from the mysql.user
system table. To remove a user account entirely, use
DROP USER
. See
Section 13.7.1.3, “DROP USER Statement”.
If the grant tables hold privilege rows that contain mixed-case
database or table names and the
lower_case_table_names
system
variable is set to a nonzero value,
REVOKE
cannot be used to revoke
these privileges. It will be necessary to manipulate the grant
tables directly. (GRANT
will not
create such rows when
lower_case_table_names
is set,
but such rows might have been created prior to setting the
variable.)
When successfully executed from the mysql
program, REVOKE
responds with
Query OK, 0 rows affected
. To determine what
privileges remain after the operation, use
SHOW GRANTS
. See
Section 13.7.5.21, “SHOW GRANTS Statement”.
SET PASSWORD [FORuser
] =password_option
password_option
: { 'auth_string
' | PASSWORD('auth_string
') }
The SET PASSWORD
statement
assigns a password to a MySQL user account.
'
represents a cleartext (unencrypted) password.
auth_string
'
SET PASSWORD
... =
PASSWORD('
syntax is deprecated as of MySQL 5.7.6 and will be removed
in a future MySQL release.
auth_string
')
SET PASSWORD
... = '
syntax is not deprecated, but auth_string
'ALTER
USER
is the preferred statement for account
alterations, including assigning passwords. For example:
ALTER USERuser
IDENTIFIED BY 'auth_string
';
Under some circumstances, SET
PASSWORD
may be recorded in server logs or on the
client side in a history file such as
~/.mysql_history
, which means that
cleartext passwords may be read by anyone having read access
to that information. For information about the conditions
under which this occurs for the server logs and how to control
it, see Section 6.1.2.3, “Passwords and Logging”. For similar
information about client-side logging, see
Section 4.5.1.3, “mysql Client Logging”.
SET PASSWORD
can be used with or
without a FOR
clause that explicitly names a
user account:
With a FOR
clause, the
statement sets the password for the named account, which
must exist:
user
SET PASSWORD FOR 'jeffrey'@'localhost' = 'auth_string
';
With no FOR
clause, the
statement sets the password for the current user:
user
SET PASSWORD = 'auth_string
';
Any client who connects to the server using a nonanonymous
account can change the password for that account. (In
particular, you can change your own password.) To see which
account the server authenticated you as, invoke the
CURRENT_USER()
function:
SELECT CURRENT_USER();
If a FOR
clause is given, the account name uses the format described in
Section 6.2.4, “Specifying Account Names”. For example:
user
SET PASSWORD FOR 'bob'@'%.example.org' = 'auth_string
';
The host name part of the account name, if omitted, defaults to
'%'
.
Setting the password for a named account (with a
FOR
clause) requires the
UPDATE
privilege for the
mysql
system database. Setting the password
for yourself (for a nonanonymous account with no
FOR
clause) requires no special privileges.
When the read_only
system
variable is enabled, SET PASSWORD
requires the SUPER
privilege in
addition to any other required privileges.
The password can be specified in these ways:
Use a string without
PASSWORD()
SET PASSWORD FOR 'jeffrey'@'localhost' = 'password
';
SET PASSWORD
interprets the
string as a cleartext string, passes it to the
authentication plugin associated with the account, and
stores the result returned by the plugin in the account row
in the mysql.user
system table. (The
plugin is given the opportunity to hash the value into the
encryption format it expects. The plugin may use the value
as specified, in which case no hashing occurs.)
Use the PASSWORD()
function
(deprecated as of MySQL 5.7.6)
SET PASSWORD FOR 'jeffrey'@'localhost' = PASSWORD('password
');
The PASSWORD()
argument is
the cleartext (unencrypted) password.
PASSWORD()
hashes the
password and returns the encrypted password string for
storage in the account row in the
mysql.user
system table.
The PASSWORD()
function
hashes the password using the hashing method determined by
the value of the
old_passwords
system
variable value. Be sure that
old_passwords
has the value
corresponding to the hashing method expected by the
authentication plugin associated with the account. For
example, if the account uses the
mysql_native_password
plugin, the
old_passwords
value must be
0:
SET old_passwords = 0;
SET PASSWORD FOR 'jeffrey'@'localhost' = PASSWORD('password
');
If the old_passwords
value
differs from that required by the authentication plugin, the
hashed password value returned by
PASSWORD()
will not by usable
by the plugin and correct authentication of client
connections will not occur.
The following table shows, for each password hashing method, the
permitted value of old_passwords
and which
authentication plugins use the hashing method.
Password Hashing Method | old_passwords Value | Associated Authentication Plugin |
---|---|---|
MySQL 4.1 native hashing | 0 | mysql_native_password |
SHA-256 hashing | 2 | sha256_password |
For additional information about setting passwords and authentication plugins, see Section 6.2.10, “Assigning Account Passwords”, and Section 6.2.13, “Pluggable Authentication”.
ANALYZE [NO_WRITE_TO_BINLOG | LOCAL] TABLEtbl_name
[,tbl_name
] ...
ANALYZE TABLE
performs a key
distribution analysis and stores the distribution for the named
table or tables. For MyISAM
tables, this
statement is equivalent to using myisamchk
--analyze.
This statement requires SELECT
and INSERT
privileges for the
table.
ANALYZE TABLE
works with
InnoDB
, NDB
, and
MyISAM
tables. It does not work with views.
ANALYZE TABLE
is supported for
partitioned tables, and you can use ALTER TABLE ...
ANALYZE PARTITION
to analyze one or more partitions;
for more information, see Section 13.1.8, “ALTER TABLE Statement”, and
Section 22.3.4, “Maintenance of Partitions”.
During the analysis, the table is locked with a read lock for
InnoDB
and MyISAM
.
ANALYZE TABLE
removes the table
from the table definition cache, which requires a flush lock. If
there are long running statements or transactions still using
the table, subsequent statements and transactions must wait for
those operations to finish before the flush lock is released.
Because ANALYZE TABLE
itself
typically finishes quickly, it may not be apparent that delayed
transactions or statements involving the same table are due to
the remaining flush lock.
By default, the server writes ANALYZE
TABLE
statements to the binary log so that they
replicate to replication slaves. To suppress logging, specify
the optional NO_WRITE_TO_BINLOG
keyword or
its alias LOCAL
.
ANALYZE TABLE
returns a result
set with the columns shown in the following table.
Column | Value |
---|---|
Table |
The table name |
Op |
Always analyze |
Msg_type |
status , error ,
info , note , or
warning |
Msg_text |
An informational message |
If the table has not changed since the last key distribution analysis, the table is not analyzed again.
MySQL uses the stored key distribution to decide the table join order for joins on something other than a constant. In addition, key distributions can be used when deciding which indexes to use for a specific table within a query.
To check the stored key distribution cardinality, use the
SHOW INDEX
statement or the
INFORMATION_SCHEMA
STATISTICS
table. See
Section 13.7.5.22, “SHOW INDEX Statement”, and
Section 24.24, “The INFORMATION_SCHEMA STATISTICS Table”.
For InnoDB
tables,
ANALYZE TABLE
determines index
cardinality by performing random dives on each of the index
trees and updating index cardinality estimates accordingly.
Because these are only estimates, repeated runs of
ANALYZE TABLE
could produce
different numbers. This makes ANALYZE
TABLE
fast on InnoDB
tables but
not 100% accurate because it does not take all rows into
account.
You can make the
statistics collected by
ANALYZE TABLE
more precise and
more stable by enabling
innodb_stats_persistent
, as
explained in Section 14.8.11.1, “Configuring Persistent Optimizer Statistics Parameters”. When
innodb_stats_persistent
is
enabled, it is important to run ANALYZE
TABLE
after major changes to index column data, as
statistics are not recalculated periodically (such as after a
server restart).
If innodb_stats_persistent
is
enabled, you can change the number of random dives by
modifying the
innodb_stats_persistent_sample_pages
system variable. If
innodb_stats_persistent
is
disabled, modify
innodb_stats_transient_sample_pages
instead.
For more information about key distribution analysis in
InnoDB
, see
Section 14.8.11.1, “Configuring Persistent Optimizer Statistics Parameters”, and
Section 14.8.11.3, “Estimating ANALYZE TABLE Complexity for InnoDB Tables”.
MySQL uses index cardinality estimates in join optimization.
If a join is not optimized in the right way, try running
ANALYZE TABLE
. In the few cases
that ANALYZE TABLE
does not
produce values good enough for your particular tables, you can
use FORCE INDEX
with your queries to force
the use of a particular index, or set the
max_seeks_for_key
system
variable to ensure that MySQL prefers index lookups over table
scans. See Section B.4.5, “Optimizer-Related Issues”.
ANALYZE TABLE
clears table statistics from
the
INFORMATION_SCHEMA.INNODB_TABLESTATS
table and sets the STATS_INITIALIZED
column
to Uninitialized
. Statistics are collected
again the next time the table is accessed.
CHECK TABLEtbl_name
[,tbl_name
] ... [option
] ...option
: { FOR UPGRADE | QUICK | FAST | MEDIUM | EXTENDED | CHANGED }
CHECK TABLE
checks a table or
tables for errors. For MyISAM
tables, the key
statistics are updated as well. CHECK
TABLE
can also check views for problems, such as
tables that are referenced in the view definition that no longer
exist.
To check a table, you must have some privilege for it.
CHECK TABLE
works for
InnoDB
,
MyISAM
,
ARCHIVE
, and
CSV
tables.
Before running CHECK TABLE
on
InnoDB
tables, see
CHECK TABLE Usage Notes for InnoDB Tables.
CHECK TABLE
is supported for
partitioned tables, and you can use ALTER TABLE ...
CHECK PARTITION
to check one or more partitions; for
more information, see Section 13.1.8, “ALTER TABLE Statement”, and
Section 22.3.4, “Maintenance of Partitions”.
CHECK TABLE
ignores virtual
generated columns that are not indexed.
CHECK TABLE
returns a result
set with the columns shown in the following table.
Column | Value |
---|---|
Table |
The table name |
Op |
Always check |
Msg_type |
status , error ,
info , note , or
warning |
Msg_text |
An informational message |
The statement might produce many rows of information for each
checked table. The last row has a Msg_type
value of status
and the
Msg_text
normally should be
OK
. For a MyISAM
table,
if you don't get OK
or Table is
already up to date
, you should normally run a repair
of the table. See Section 7.6, “MyISAM Table Maintenance and Crash Recovery”.
Table is already up to date
means that the
storage engine for the table indicated that there was no need
to check the table.
The FOR UPGRADE
option checks whether the
named tables are compatible with the current version of MySQL.
With FOR UPGRADE
, the server checks each
table to determine whether there have been any incompatible
changes in any of the table's data types or indexes since the
table was created. If not, the check succeeds. Otherwise, if
there is a possible incompatibility, the server runs a full
check on the table (which might take some time). If the full
check succeeds, the server marks the table's
.frm
file with the current MySQL version
number. Marking the .frm
file ensures
that further checks for the table with the same version of the
server will be fast.
Incompatibilities might occur because the storage format for a data type has changed or because its sort order has changed. Our aim is to avoid these changes, but occasionally they are necessary to correct problems that would be worse than an incompatibility between releases.
FOR UPGRADE
discovers these
incompatibilities:
The indexing order for end-space in
TEXT
columns for
InnoDB
and MyISAM
tables changed between MySQL 4.1 and 5.0.
The storage method of the new
DECIMAL
data type changed
between MySQL 5.0.3 and 5.0.5.
If your table was created by a different version of the
MySQL server than the one you are currently running,
FOR UPGRADE
indicates that the table
has an .frm
file with an incompatible
version. In this case, the result set returned by
CHECK TABLE
contains a line
with a Msg_type
value of
error
and a Msg_text
value of Table upgrade required. Please do
"REPAIR TABLE `
tbl_name
`" to
fix it!
Changes are sometimes made to character sets or collations that require table indexes to be rebuilt. For details about such changes, see Section 2.11.3, “Changes in MySQL 5.7”. For information about rebuilding tables, see Section 2.11.12, “Rebuilding or Repairing Tables or Indexes”.
The YEAR(2)
data type is
deprecated and support for it is removed in MySQL 5.7.5.
For tables containing
YEAR(2)
columns,
CHECK TABLE
recommends
REPAIR TABLE
, which
converts 2-digit YEAR(2)
columns to 4-digit YEAR
columns.
As of MySQL 5.7.2, trigger creation time is maintained. If
run against a table that has triggers,
CHECK TABLE
... FOR UPGRADE
displays this warning for each
trigger created before MySQL 5.7.2:
Triggerdb_name
.tbl_name
.trigger_name
does not have CREATED attribute.
The warning is informational only. No change is made to the trigger.
As of MySQL 5.7.7, a table is reported as needing a
rebuild if it contains old temporal columns in pre-5.6.4
format (TIME
,
DATETIME
, and
TIMESTAMP
columns without
support for fractional seconds precision) and the
avoid_temporal_upgrade
system variable is disabled. This helps the MySQL upgrade
procedure detect and upgrade tables containing old
temporal columns. If
avoid_temporal_upgrade
is
enabled, FOR UPGRADE
ignores the old
temporal columns present in the table; consequently, the
upgrade procedure does not upgrade them.
To check for tables that contain such temporal columns and
need a rebuild, disable
avoid_temporal_upgrade
before executing
CHECK TABLE
... FOR UPGRADE
.
Warnings are issued for tables that use nonnative partitioning because nonnative partitioning is deprecated in MySQL 5.7 and removed in MySQL 8.0. See Chapter 22, Partitioning.
The following table shows the other check options that can be given. These options are passed to the storage engine, which may use or ignore them.
Type | Meaning |
---|---|
QUICK |
Do not scan the rows to check for incorrect links. Applies to
InnoDB and MyISAM
tables and views. |
FAST |
Check only tables that have not been closed properly. Ignored for
InnoDB ; applies only to
MyISAM tables and views. |
CHANGED |
Check only tables that have been changed since the last check or that
have not been closed properly. Ignored for
InnoDB ; applies only to
MyISAM tables and views. |
MEDIUM |
Scan rows to verify that deleted links are valid. This also calculates a
key checksum for the rows and verifies this with a
calculated checksum for the keys. Ignored for
InnoDB ; applies only to
MyISAM tables and views. |
EXTENDED |
Do a full key lookup for all keys for each row. This ensures that the
table is 100% consistent, but takes a long time. Ignored
for InnoDB ; applies only to
MyISAM tables and views. |
If none of the options QUICK
,
MEDIUM
, or EXTENDED
are
specified, the default check type for dynamic-format
MyISAM
tables is MEDIUM
.
This has the same result as running myisamchk
--medium-check tbl_name
on the table. The default check type also is
MEDIUM
for static-format
MyISAM
tables, unless
CHANGED
or FAST
is
specified. In that case, the default is
QUICK
. The row scan is skipped for
CHANGED
and FAST
because
the rows are very seldom corrupted.
You can combine check options, as in the following example that does a quick check on the table to determine whether it was closed properly:
CHECK TABLE test_table FAST QUICK;
If CHECK TABLE
finds no
problems with a table that is marked as
“corrupted” or “not closed
properly”, CHECK TABLE
may remove the mark.
If a table is corrupted, the problem is most likely in the indexes and not in the data part. All of the preceding check types check the indexes thoroughly and should thus find most errors.
To check a table that you assume is okay, use no check options
or the QUICK
option. The latter should be
used when you are in a hurry and can take the very small risk
that QUICK
does not find an error in the
data file. (In most cases, under normal usage, MySQL should
find any error in the data file. If this happens, the table is
marked as “corrupted” and cannot be used until it
is repaired.)
FAST
and CHANGED
are
mostly intended to be used from a script (for example, to be
executed from cron) to check tables
periodically. In most cases, FAST
is to be
preferred over CHANGED
. (The only case when
it is not preferred is when you suspect that you have found a
bug in the MyISAM
code.)
EXTENDED
is to be used only after you have
run a normal check but still get errors from a table when
MySQL tries to update a row or find a row by key. This is very
unlikely if a normal check has succeeded.
Use of CHECK
TABLE ... EXTENDED
might influence execution plans
generated by the query optimizer.
Some problems reported by CHECK
TABLE
cannot be corrected automatically:
Found row where the auto_increment column has the
value 0
.
This means that you have a row in the table where the
AUTO_INCREMENT
index column contains
the value 0. (It is possible to create a row where the
AUTO_INCREMENT
column is 0 by
explicitly setting the column to 0 with an
UPDATE
statement.)
This is not an error in itself, but could cause trouble if
you decide to dump the table and restore it or do an
ALTER TABLE
on the table.
In this case, the AUTO_INCREMENT
column
changes value according to the rules of
AUTO_INCREMENT
columns, which could
cause problems such as a duplicate-key error.
To get rid of the warning, execute an
UPDATE
statement to set the
column to some value other than 0.
The following notes apply to
InnoDB
tables:
If CHECK TABLE
encounters a
corrupt page, the server exits to prevent error
propagation (Bug #10132). If the corruption occurs in a
secondary index but table data is readable, running
CHECK TABLE
can still cause
a server exit.
If CHECK TABLE
encounters a
corrupted DB_TRX_ID
or
DB_ROLL_PTR
field in a clustered index,
CHECK TABLE
can cause
InnoDB
to access an invalid undo log
record, resulting in an
MVCC-related server exit.
If CHECK TABLE
encounters
errors in InnoDB
tables or indexes, it
reports an error, and usually marks the index and
sometimes marks the table as corrupted, preventing further
use of the index or table. Such errors include an
incorrect number of entries in a secondary index or
incorrect links.
If CHECK TABLE
finds an
incorrect number of entries in a secondary index, it
reports an error but does not cause a server exit or
prevent access to the file.
CHECK TABLE
surveys the
index page structure, then surveys each key entry. It does
not validate the key pointer to a clustered record or
follow the path for BLOB
pointers.
When an InnoDB
table is stored in its
own
.ibd
file, the first 3
pages of the
.ibd
file contain header information
rather than table or index data. The
CHECK TABLE
statement does
not detect inconsistencies that affect only the header
data. To verify the entire contents of an
InnoDB
.ibd
file,
use the innochecksum command.
When running CHECK TABLE
on
large InnoDB
tables, other threads may
be blocked during CHECK
TABLE
execution. To avoid timeouts, the
semaphore wait threshold (600 seconds) is extended by 2
hours (7200 seconds) for CHECK
TABLE
operations. If InnoDB
detects semaphore waits of 240 seconds or more, it starts
printing InnoDB
monitor output to the
error log. If a lock request extends beyond the semaphore
wait threshold, InnoDB
aborts the
process. To avoid the possibility of a semaphore wait
timeout entirely, run
CHECK TABLE
QUICK
instead of CHECK
TABLE
.
CHECK TABLE
functionality
for InnoDB
SPATIAL
indexes includes an R-tree validity check and a check to
ensure that the R-tree row count matches the clustered
index.
CHECK TABLE
supports
secondary indexes on virtual generated columns, which are
supported by InnoDB
.
The following notes apply to
MyISAM
tables:
CHECK TABLE
updates key
statistics for MyISAM
tables.
If CHECK TABLE
output does
not return OK
or Table is
already up to date
, you should normally run a
repair of the table. See
Section 7.6, “MyISAM Table Maintenance and Crash Recovery”.
If none of the CHECK TABLE
options QUICK
,
MEDIUM
, or EXTENDED
are specified, the default check type for dynamic-format
MyISAM
tables is
MEDIUM
. This has the same result as
running myisamchk --medium-check
tbl_name
on the
table. The default check type also is
MEDIUM
for static-format
MyISAM
tables, unless
CHANGED
or FAST
is
specified. In that case, the default is
QUICK
. The row scan is skipped for
CHANGED
and FAST
because the rows are very seldom corrupted.
CHECKSUM TABLEtbl_name
[,tbl_name
] ... [QUICK | EXTENDED]
CHECKSUM TABLE
reports a
checksum for the contents
of a table. You can use this statement to verify that the
contents are the same before and after a backup, rollback, or
other operation that is intended to put the data back to a known
state.
This statement requires the
SELECT
privilege for the table.
This statement is not supported for views. If you run
CHECKSUM TABLE
against a view,
the Checksum
value is always
NULL
, and a warning is returned.
For a nonexistent table, CHECKSUM
TABLE
returns NULL
and generates a
warning.
During the checksum operation, the table is locked with a read
lock for InnoDB
and
MyISAM
.
By default, the entire table is read row by row and the
checksum is calculated. For large tables, this could take a
long time, thus you would only perform this operation
occasionally. This row-by-row calculation is what you get with
the EXTENDED
clause, with
InnoDB
and all other storage engines other
than MyISAM
, and with
MyISAM
tables not created with the
CHECKSUM=1
clause.
For MyISAM
tables created with the
CHECKSUM=1
clause,
CHECKSUM TABLE
or
CHECKSUM TABLE
... QUICK
returns the “live” table
checksum that can be returned very fast. If the table does not
meet all these conditions, the QUICK
method
returns NULL
. The QUICK
method is not supported with InnoDB
tables.
See Section 13.1.18, “CREATE TABLE Statement” for the syntax of the
CHECKSUM
clause.
The checksum value depends on the table row format. If the row
format changes, the checksum also changes. For example, the
storage format for temporal types such as
TIME
,
DATETIME
, and
TIMESTAMP
changed in MySQL 5.6
prior to MySQL 5.6.5, so if a 5.5 table is upgraded to MySQL
5.6, the checksum value may change.
If the checksums for two tables are different, then it is
almost certain that the tables are different in some way.
However, because the hashing function used by
CHECKSUM TABLE
is not
guaranteed to be collision-free, there is a slight chance
that two tables which are not identical can produce the same
checksum.
OPTIMIZE [NO_WRITE_TO_BINLOG | LOCAL] TABLEtbl_name
[,tbl_name
] ...
OPTIMIZE TABLE
reorganizes the
physical storage of table data and associated index data, to
reduce storage space and improve I/O efficiency when accessing
the table. The exact changes made to each table depend on the
storage engine used
by that table.
Use OPTIMIZE TABLE
in these
cases, depending on the type of table:
After doing substantial insert, update, or delete operations
on an InnoDB
table that has its own
.ibd file because it
was created with the
innodb_file_per_table
option enabled. The table and indexes are reorganized, and
disk space can be reclaimed for use by the operating system.
After doing substantial insert, update, or delete operations
on columns that are part of a FULLTEXT
index in an InnoDB
table. Set the
configuration option
innodb_optimize_fulltext_only=1
first. To keep the index maintenance period to a reasonable
time, set the
innodb_ft_num_word_optimize
option to specify how many words to update in the search
index, and run a sequence of OPTIMIZE
TABLE
statements until the search index is fully
updated.
After deleting a large part of a MyISAM
or ARCHIVE
table, or making many changes
to a MyISAM
or ARCHIVE
table with variable-length rows (tables that have
VARCHAR
,
VARBINARY
,
BLOB
, or
TEXT
columns). Deleted rows
are maintained in a linked list and subsequent
INSERT
operations reuse old
row positions. You can use OPTIMIZE
TABLE
to reclaim the unused space and to
defragment the data file. After extensive changes to a
table, this statement may also improve performance of
statements that use the table, sometimes significantly.
This statement requires SELECT
and INSERT
privileges for the
table.
OPTIMIZE TABLE
works for
InnoDB
,
MyISAM
, and
ARCHIVE
tables.
OPTIMIZE TABLE
is also supported
for dynamic columns of in-memory
NDB
tables. It does not work for
fixed-width columns of in-memory tables, nor does it work for
Disk Data tables. The performance of OPTIMIZE
on NDB Cluster tables can be tuned using
--ndb-optimization-delay
, which
controls the length of time to wait between processing batches
of rows by OPTIMIZE TABLE
. For
more information, see
Previous NDB Cluster Issues Resolved in NDB Cluster 7.3.
For NDB Cluster tables, OPTIMIZE
TABLE
can be interrupted by (for example) killing the
SQL thread performing the OPTIMIZE
operation.
By default, OPTIMIZE TABLE
does
not work for tables created using any other
storage engine and returns a result indicating this lack of
support. You can make OPTIMIZE
TABLE
work for other storage engines by starting
mysqld with the
--skip-new
option. In this case,
OPTIMIZE TABLE
is just mapped to
ALTER TABLE
.
This statement does not work with views.
OPTIMIZE TABLE
is supported for
partitioned tables. For information about using this statement
with partitioned tables and table partitions, see
Section 22.3.4, “Maintenance of Partitions”.
By default, the server writes OPTIMIZE
TABLE
statements to the binary log so that they
replicate to replication slaves. To suppress logging, specify
the optional NO_WRITE_TO_BINLOG
keyword or
its alias LOCAL
.
OPTIMIZE TABLE
returns a result
set with the columns shown in the following table.
Column | Value |
---|---|
Table |
The table name |
Op |
Always optimize |
Msg_type |
status , error ,
info , note , or
warning |
Msg_text |
An informational message |
OPTIMIZE TABLE
table catches
and throws any errors that occur while copying table
statistics from the old file to the newly created file. For
example. if the user ID of the owner of the
.frm
, .MYD
, or
.MYI
file is different from the user ID
of the mysqld process,
OPTIMIZE TABLE
generates a
"cannot change ownership of the file" error unless
mysqld is started by the
root
user.
For InnoDB
tables,
OPTIMIZE TABLE
is mapped to
ALTER TABLE ...
FORCE
, which rebuilds the table to update index
statistics and free unused space in the clustered index. This
is displayed in the output of OPTIMIZE
TABLE
when you run it on an
InnoDB
table, as shown here:
mysql> OPTIMIZE TABLE foo; +----------+----------+----------+-------------------------------------------------------------------+ | Table | Op | Msg_type | Msg_text | +----------+----------+----------+-------------------------------------------------------------------+ | test.foo | optimize | note | Table does not support optimize, doing recreate + analyze instead | | test.foo | optimize | status | OK | +----------+----------+----------+-------------------------------------------------------------------+
OPTIMIZE TABLE
uses
online DDL for
regular and partitioned InnoDB
tables,
which reduces downtime for concurrent DML operations. The
table rebuild triggered by OPTIMIZE
TABLE
and performed under the cover by
ALTER TABLE ...
FORCE
is completed in place. An exclusive table lock
is only taken briefly during the prepare phase and the commit
phase of the operation. During the prepare phase, metadata is
updated and an intermediate table is created. During the
commit phase, table metadata changes are committed.
OPTIMIZE TABLE
rebuilds the
table using the table copy method under the following
conditions:
When the old_alter_table
system variable is enabled.
When the server is started with the
--skip-new
option.
OPTIMIZE TABLE
using
online DDL is not
supported for InnoDB
tables that contain
FULLTEXT
indexes. The table copy method is
used instead.
InnoDB
stores data using a page-allocation
method and does not suffer from fragmentation in the same way
that legacy storage engines (such as
MyISAM
) will. When considering whether or
not to run optimize, consider the workload of transactions
that your server will process:
Some level of fragmentation is expected.
InnoDB
only fills
pages 93% full, to
leave room for updates without having to split pages.
Delete operations might leave gaps that leave pages less filled than desired, which could make it worthwhile to optimize the table.
Updates to rows usually rewrite the data within the same page, depending on the data type and row format, when sufficient space is available. See Section 14.9.1.5, “How Compression Works for InnoDB Tables” and Section 14.11, “InnoDB Row Formats”.
High-concurrency workloads might leave gaps in indexes
over time, as InnoDB
retains multiple
versions of the same data due through its
MVCC mechanism. See
Section 14.3, “InnoDB Multi-Versioning”.
For MyISAM
tables,
OPTIMIZE TABLE
works as
follows:
If the table has deleted or split rows, repair the table.
If the index pages are not sorted, sort them.
If the table's statistics are not up to date (and the repair could not be accomplished by sorting the index), update them.
OPTIMIZE TABLE
is performed
online for regular and partitioned InnoDB
tables. Otherwise, MySQL locks
the table during the time OPTIMIZE
TABLE
is running.
OPTIMIZE TABLE
does not sort
R-tree indexes, such as spatial indexes on
POINT
columns. (Bug #23578)
REPAIR [NO_WRITE_TO_BINLOG | LOCAL] TABLEtbl_name
[,tbl_name
] ... [QUICK] [EXTENDED] [USE_FRM]
REPAIR TABLE
repairs a possibly
corrupted table, for certain storage engines only.
This statement requires SELECT
and INSERT
privileges for the
table.
Although normally you should never have to run
REPAIR TABLE
, if disaster
strikes, this statement is very likely to get back all your data
from a MyISAM
table. If your tables become
corrupted often, try to find the reason for it, to eliminate the
need to use REPAIR TABLE
. See
Section B.4.3.3, “What to Do If MySQL Keeps Crashing”, and
Section 15.2.4, “MyISAM Table Problems”.
REPAIR TABLE
checks the table to
see whether an upgrade is required. If so, it performs the
upgrade, following the same rules as
CHECK TABLE ... FOR
UPGRADE
. See Section 13.7.2.2, “CHECK TABLE Statement”, for more
information.
Make a backup of a table before performing a table repair operation; under some circumstances the operation might cause data loss. Possible causes include but are not limited to file system errors. See Chapter 7, Backup and Recovery.
If the server crashes during a REPAIR
TABLE
operation, it is essential after
restarting it that you immediately execute another
REPAIR TABLE
statement for
the table before performing any other operations on it. In
the worst case, you might have a new clean index file
without information about the data file, and then the next
operation you perform could overwrite the data file. This
is an unlikely but possible scenario that underscores the
value of making a backup first.
In the event that a table on the master becomes corrupted
and you run REPAIR TABLE
on
it, any resulting changes to the original table are
not propagated to slaves.
REPAIR TABLE
works for
MyISAM
,
ARCHIVE
, and
CSV
tables. For
MyISAM
tables, it has the same
effect as myisamchk --recover
tbl_name
by default. This
statement does not work with views.
REPAIR TABLE
is supported for
partitioned tables. However, the USE_FRM
option cannot be used with this statement on a partitioned
table.
You can use ALTER TABLE ... REPAIR
PARTITION
to repair one or more partitions; for more
information, see Section 13.1.8, “ALTER TABLE Statement”, and
Section 22.3.4, “Maintenance of Partitions”.
NO_WRITE_TO_BINLOG
or
LOCAL
By default, the server writes REPAIR
TABLE
statements to the binary log so that they
replicate to replication slaves. To suppress logging,
specify the optional NO_WRITE_TO_BINLOG
keyword or its alias LOCAL
.
QUICK
If you use the QUICK
option,
REPAIR TABLE
tries to
repair only the index file, and not the data file. This
type of repair is like that done by myisamchk
--recover --quick.
EXTENDED
If you use the EXTENDED
option, MySQL
creates the index row by row instead of creating one index
at a time with sorting. This type of repair is like that
done by myisamchk --safe-recover.
USE_FRM
The USE_FRM
option is available for use
if the .MYI
index file is missing or
if its header is corrupted. This option tells MySQL not to
trust the information in the .MYI
file header and to re-create it using information from the
.frm
file. This kind of repair cannot
be done with myisamchk.
Use the USE_FRM
option
only if you cannot use regular
REPAIR
modes. Telling the server to
ignore the .MYI
file makes
important table metadata stored in the
.MYI
unavailable to the repair
process, which can have deleterious consequences:
The current AUTO_INCREMENT
value
is lost.
The link to deleted records in the table is lost, which means that free space for deleted records will remain unoccupied thereafter.
The .MYI
header indicates
whether the table is compressed. If the server
ignores this information, it cannot tell that a
table is compressed and repair can cause change or
loss of table contents. This means that
USE_FRM
should not be used with
compressed tables. That should not be necessary,
anyway: Compressed tables are read only, so they
should not become corrupt.
If you use USE_FRM
for a table that
was created by a different version of the MySQL server
than the one you are currently running,
REPAIR TABLE
does not
attempt to repair the table. In this case, the result
set returned by REPAIR
TABLE
contains a line with a
Msg_type
value of
error
and a
Msg_text
value of Failed
repairing incompatible .FRM file
.
If USE_FRM
is used,
REPAIR TABLE
does not
check the table to see whether an upgrade is required.
REPAIR TABLE
returns a result
set with the columns shown in the following table.
Column | Value |
---|---|
Table |
The table name |
Op |
Always repair |
Msg_type |
status , error ,
info , note , or
warning |
Msg_text |
An informational message |
The REPAIR TABLE
statement
might produce many rows of information for each repaired
table. The last row has a Msg_type
value of
status
and Msg_test
normally should be OK
. For a
MyISAM
table, if you do not get
OK
, you should try repairing it with
myisamchk --safe-recover.
(REPAIR TABLE
does not
implement all the options of myisamchk.
With myisamchk --safe-recover, you can also
use options that REPAIR TABLE
does not support, such as
--max-record-length
.)
REPAIR TABLE
table catches and
throws any errors that occur while copying table statistics
from the old corrupted file to the newly created file. For
example. if the user ID of the owner of the
.frm
, .MYD
, or
.MYI
file is different from the user ID
of the mysqld process,
REPAIR TABLE
generates a
"cannot change ownership of the file" error unless
mysqld is started by the
root
user.
REPAIR TABLE
upgrades a table
if it contains old temporal columns in pre-5.6.4 format
(TIME
,
DATETIME
, and
TIMESTAMP
columns without
support for fractional seconds precision) and the
avoid_temporal_upgrade
system
variable is disabled. If
avoid_temporal_upgrade
is
enabled, REPAIR TABLE
ignores
the old temporal columns present in the table and does not
upgrade them.
To upgrade tables that contain such temporal columns, disable
avoid_temporal_upgrade
before
executing REPAIR TABLE
.
You may be able to increase REPAIR
TABLE
performance by setting certain system
variables. See Section 8.6.3, “Optimizing REPAIR TABLE Statements”.
CREATE [AGGREGATE] FUNCTIONfunction_name
RETURNS {STRING|INTEGER|REAL|DECIMAL} SONAMEshared_library_name
A user-defined function (UDF) is a way to extend MySQL with a
new function that works like a native (built-in) MySQL function
such as ABS()
or
CONCAT()
.
function_name
is the name that should
be used in SQL statements to invoke the function. The
RETURNS
clause indicates the type of the
function's return value. DECIMAL
is a legal value after RETURNS
, but currently
DECIMAL
functions return string
values and should be written like STRING
functions.
shared_library_name
is the base name
of the shared library file that contains the code that
implements the function. The file must be located in the plugin
directory. This directory is given by the value of the
plugin_dir
system variable. For
more information, see Section 5.6.1, “Installing and Uninstalling User-Defined Functions”.
To create a function, you must have the
INSERT
privilege for the
mysql
system database. This is necessary
because CREATE FUNCTION
adds a
row to the mysql.func
system table that
records the function's name, type, and shared library name.
An active function is one that has been loaded with
CREATE FUNCTION
and not removed
with DROP FUNCTION
. All active
functions are reloaded each time the server starts, unless you
start mysqld with the
--skip-grant-tables
option. In
this case, UDF initialization is skipped and UDFs are
unavailable.
For instructions on writing user-defined functions, see Section 28.4.2, “Adding a User-Defined Function”. For the UDF mechanism to work, functions must be written in C or C++ (or another language that can use C calling conventions), your operating system must support dynamic loading and you must have compiled mysqld dynamically (not statically).
An AGGREGATE
function works exactly like a
native MySQL aggregate (summary) function such as
SUM
or
COUNT()
.
To upgrade the shared library associated with a UDF, issue a
DROP FUNCTION
statement,
upgrade the shared library, and then issue a
CREATE FUNCTION
statement. If
you upgrade the shared library first and then use
DROP FUNCTION
, the server may
crash.
DROP FUNCTION function_name
This statement drops the user-defined function (UDF) named
function_name
.
To drop a function, you must have the
DELETE
privilege for the
mysql
system database. This is because
DROP FUNCTION
removes a row from
the mysql.func
system table that records the
function's name, type, and shared library name.
To upgrade the shared library associated with a UDF, issue a
DROP FUNCTION
statement,
upgrade the shared library, and then issue a
CREATE FUNCTION
statement. If
you upgrade the shared library first and then use
DROP FUNCTION
, the server may
crash.
DROP FUNCTION
is also used to
drop stored functions (see Section 13.1.27, “DROP PROCEDURE and DROP FUNCTION Statements”).
INSTALL PLUGINplugin_name
SONAME 'shared_library_name
'
This statement installs a server plugin. It requires the
INSERT
privilege for the
mysql.plugin
system table.
plugin_name
is the name of the plugin
as defined in the plugin descriptor structure contained in the
library file (see Section 28.2.4.2, “Plugin Data Structures”).
Plugin names are not case-sensitive. For maximal compatibility,
plugin names should be limited to ASCII letters, digits, and
underscore because they are used in C source files, shell
command lines, M4 and Bourne shell scripts, and SQL
environments.
shared_library_name
is the name of
the shared library that contains the plugin code. The name
includes the file name extension (for example,
libmyplugin.so
,
libmyplugin.dll
, or
libmyplugin.dylib
).
The shared library must be located in the plugin directory (the
directory named by the
plugin_dir
system variable).
The library must be in the plugin directory itself, not in a
subdirectory. By default,
plugin_dir
is the
plugin
directory under the directory named
by the pkglibdir
configuration variable, but
it can be changed by setting the value of
plugin_dir
at server startup.
For example, set its value in a my.cnf
file:
[mysqld]
plugin_dir=/path/to/plugin/directory
If the value of plugin_dir
is a
relative path name, it is taken to be relative to the MySQL base
directory (the value of the
basedir
system variable).
INSTALL PLUGIN
loads and
initializes the plugin code to make the plugin available for
use. A plugin is initialized by executing its initialization
function, which handles any setup that the plugin must perform
before it can be used. When the server shuts down, it executes
the deinitialization function for each plugin that is loaded so
that the plugin has a chance to perform any final cleanup.
INSTALL PLUGIN
also registers the
plugin by adding a line that indicates the plugin name and
library file name to the mysql.plugin
system
table. At server startup, the server loads and initializes any
plugin that is listed in mysql.plugin
. This
means that a plugin is installed with
INSTALL PLUGIN
only once, not
every time the server starts. Plugin loading at startup does not
occur if the server is started with the
--skip-grant-tables
option.
A plugin library can contain multiple plugins. For each of them
to be installed, use a separate INSTALL
PLUGIN
statement. Each statement names a different
plugin, but all of them specify the same library name.
INSTALL PLUGIN
causes the server
to read option (my.cnf
) files just as
during server startup. This enables the plugin to pick up any
relevant options from those files. It is possible to add plugin
options to an option file even before loading a plugin (if the
loose
prefix is used). It is also possible to
uninstall a plugin, edit my.cnf
, and
install the plugin again. Restarting the plugin this way enables
it to the new option values without a server restart.
For options that control individual plugin loading at server
startup, see Section 5.5.1, “Installing and Uninstalling Plugins”. If you need to
load plugins for a single server startup when the
--skip-grant-tables
option is
given (which tells the server not to read system tables), use
the --plugin-load
option. See
Section 5.1.6, “Server Command Options”.
To remove a plugin, use the UNINSTALL
PLUGIN
statement.
For additional information about plugin loading, see Section 5.5.1, “Installing and Uninstalling Plugins”.
To see what plugins are installed, use the
SHOW PLUGINS
statement or query
the INFORMATION_SCHEMA
the
PLUGINS
table.
If you recompile a plugin library and need to reinstall it, you can use either of the following methods:
Use UNINSTALL PLUGIN
to
uninstall all plugins in the library, install the new plugin
library file in the plugin directory, and then use
INSTALL PLUGIN
to install all
plugins in the library. This procedure has the advantage
that it can be used without stopping the server. However, if
the plugin library contains many plugins, you must issue
many INSTALL PLUGIN
and
UNINSTALL PLUGIN
statements.
Stop the server, install the new plugin library file in the plugin directory, and restart the server.
UNINSTALL PLUGIN plugin_name
This statement removes an installed server plugin. It requires
the DELETE
privilege for the
mysql.plugin
system table.
UNINSTALL PLUGIN
is the
complement of INSTALL PLUGIN
.
plugin_name
must be the name of some
plugin that is listed in the mysql.plugin
table. The server executes the plugin's deinitialization
function and removes the row for the plugin from the
mysql.plugin
system table, so that subsequent
server restarts will not load and initialize the plugin.
UNINSTALL PLUGIN
does not remove
the plugin's shared library file.
You cannot uninstall a plugin if any table that uses it is open.
Plugin removal has implications for the use of associated
tables. For example, if a full-text parser plugin is associated
with a FULLTEXT
index on the table,
uninstalling the plugin makes the table unusable. Any attempt to
access the table results in an error. The table cannot even be
opened, so you cannot drop an index for which the plugin is
used. This means that uninstalling a plugin is something to do
with care unless you do not care about the table contents. If
you are uninstalling a plugin with no intention of reinstalling
it later and you care about the table contents, you should dump
the table with mysqldump and remove the
WITH PARSER
clause from the dumped
CREATE TABLE
statement so that
you can reload the table later. If you do not care about the
table, DROP TABLE
can be used
even if any plugins associated with the table are missing.
For additional information about plugin loading, see Section 5.5.1, “Installing and Uninstalling Plugins”.
The SET
statement has several forms. Descriptions for those forms that are
not associated with a specific server capability appear in
subsections of this section:
SET
enables you to
assign values to variables that affect the operation of the
server or clients. See Section 13.7.4.1, “SET Syntax for Variable Assignment”.
var_name
=
value
SET CHARACTER SET
and
SET NAMES
assign values to
character set and collation variables associated with the
current connection to the server. See
Section 13.7.4.2, “SET CHARACTER SET Statement”, and
Section 13.7.4.3, “SET NAMES Statement”.
Descriptions for the other forms appear elsewhere, grouped with other statements related to the capability they help implement:
SET PASSWORD
assigns account
passwords. See Section 13.7.1.7, “SET PASSWORD Statement”.
SET
TRANSACTION ISOLATION LEVEL
sets the isolation level
for transaction processing. See
Section 13.3.6, “SET TRANSACTION Statement”.
SETvariable
=expr
[,variable
=expr
] ...variable
: {user_var_name
|param_name
|local_var_name
| {GLOBAL | @@GLOBAL.}system_var_name
| [SESSION | @@SESSION. | @@]system_var_name
}
SET
syntax for variable assignment enables you to assign values to
different types of variables that affect the operation of the
server or clients:
User-defined variables. See Section 9.4, “User-Defined Variables”.
Stored procedure and function parameters, and stored program local variables. See Section 13.6.4, “Variables in Stored Programs”.
System variables. See Section 5.1.7, “Server System Variables”. System variables also can be set at server startup, as described in Section 5.1.8, “Using System Variables”.
A SET
statement that assigns variable values is not written to the
binary log, so in replication scenarios it affects only the host
on which you execute it. To affect all replication hosts,
execute the statement on each host.
The following sections describe
SET
syntax for setting variables. They use the
=
assignment operator, but the
:=
assignment operator is also permitted for this purpose.
User-defined variables are created locally within a session and exist only within the context of that session; see Section 9.4, “User-Defined Variables”.
A user-defined variable is written as
@
and is
assigned an expression value as follows:
var_name
SET @var_name
=expr
;
Examples:
SET @name = 43; SET @total_tax = (SELECT SUM(tax) FROM taxable_transactions);
As demonstrated by those statements,
expr
can range from simple (a
literal value) to more complex (the value returned by a scalar
subquery).
The Performance Schema
user_variables_by_thread
table
contains information about user-defined variables. See
Section 25.12.10, “Performance Schema User-Defined Variable Tables”.
SET
applies to parameters and local variables in the context of
the stored object within which they are defined. The following
procedure uses the increment
procedure
parameter and counter
local variable:
CREATE PROCEDURE p(increment INT) BEGIN DECLARE counter INT DEFAULT 0; WHILE counter < 10 DO -- ... do work ... SET counter = counter + increment; END WHILE; END;
The MySQL server maintains system variables that configure its
operation. A system variable can have a global value that
affects server operation as a whole, a session value that
affects the current session, or both. Many system variables
are dynamic and can be changed at runtime using the
SET
statement to affect operation of the current server instance.
(To make a global system variable setting permanent so that it
applies across server restarts, you should also set it in an
option file.)
If you change a session system variable, the value remains in effect within your session until you change the variable to a different value or the session ends. The change has no effect on other sessions.
If you change a global system variable, the value is remembered and used to initialize the session value for new sessions until you change the variable to a different value or the server exits. The change is visible to any client that accesses the global value. However, the change affects the corresponding session value only for clients that connect after the change. The global variable change does not affect the session value for any current client sessions (not even the session within which the global value change occurs).
Setting a global system variable value always requires special privileges. Setting a session system variable value normally requires no special privileges and can be done by any user, although there are exceptions. For more information, see Section 5.1.8.1, “System Variable Privileges”.
The following discussion describes the syntax options for setting system variables:
To assign a value to a global system variable, precede the
variable name by the GLOBAL
keyword or
the @@GLOBAL.
qualifier:
SET GLOBAL max_connections = 1000; SET @@GLOBAL.max_connections = 1000;
To assign a value to a session system variable, precede
the variable name by the SESSION
or
LOCAL
keyword, by the
@@SESSION.
,
@@LOCAL.
, or @@
qualifier, or by no keyword or no modifier at all:
SET SESSION sql_mode = 'TRADITIONAL'; SET LOCAL sql_mode = 'TRADITIONAL'; SET @@SESSION.sql_mode = 'TRADITIONAL'; SET @@LOCAL.sql_mode = 'TRADITIONAL'; SET @@sql_mode = 'TRADITIONAL'; SET sql_mode = 'TRADITIONAL';
A client can change its own session variables, but not those of any other client.
To set a global system variable value to the compiled-in MySQL
default value or a session system variable to the current
corresponding global value, set the variable to the value
DEFAULT
. For example, the following two
statements are identical in setting the session value of
max_join_size
to the current
global value:
SET @@SESSION.max_join_size = DEFAULT; SET @@SESSION.max_join_size = @@GLOBAL.max_join_size;
To display system variable names and values:
Use the SHOW VARIABLES
statement; see Section 13.7.5.39, “SHOW VARIABLES Statement”.
Several Performance Schema tables provide system variable information. See Section 25.12.13, “Performance Schema System Variable Tables”.
If any variable assignment in a
SET
statement fails, the entire statement fails and no variables
are changed.
SET
produces an error under the circumstances described here. Most
of the examples show
SET
statements that use keyword syntax (for example,
GLOBAL
or SESSION
), but
the principles are also true for statements that use the
corresponding modifiers (for example,
@@GLOBAL.
or
@@SESSION.
).
Use of
SET
(any variant) to set a read-only variable:
mysql> SET GLOBAL version = 'abc';
ERROR 1238 (HY000): Variable 'version' is a read only variable
Use of GLOBAL
to set a variable that
has only a session value:
mysql> SET GLOBAL sql_log_bin = ON;
ERROR 1231 (42000): Variable 'sql_log_bin' can't be
set to the value of 'ON'
Use of SESSION
to set a variable that
has only a global value:
mysql> SET SESSION max_connections = 1000;
ERROR 1229 (HY000): Variable 'max_connections' is a
GLOBAL variable and should be set with SET GLOBAL
Omission of GLOBAL
to set a variable
that has only a global value:
mysql> SET max_connections = 1000;
ERROR 1229 (HY000): Variable 'max_connections' is a
GLOBAL variable and should be set with SET GLOBAL
The @@GLOBAL.
,
@@SESSION.
, and @@
modifiers apply only to system variables. An error occurs
for attempts to apply them to user-defined variables,
stored procedure or function parameters, or stored program
local variables.
Not all system variables can be set to
DEFAULT
. In such cases, assigning
DEFAULT
results in an error.
An error occurs for attempts to assign
DEFAULT
to user-defined variables,
stored procedure or function parameters, or stored program
local variables.
A SET
statement can contain multiple variable assignments, separated
by commas. This statement assigns a value to a user-defined
variable and a system variable:
SET @x = 1, SESSION sql_mode = '';
If you set multiple system variables in a single statement,
the most recent GLOBAL
or
SESSION
keyword in the statement is used
for following assignments that have no keyword specified.
Examples of multiple-variable assignment:
SET GLOBAL sort_buffer_size = 1000000, SESSION sort_buffer_size = 1000000; SET @@GLOBAL.sort_buffer_size = 1000000, @@LOCAL.sort_buffer_size = 1000000; SET GLOBAL max_connections = 1000, sort_buffer_size = 1000000;
The @@GLOBAL.
,
@@SESSION.
, and @@
modifiers apply only to the immediately following system
variable, not any remaining system variables. This statement
sets the sort_buffer_size
global value to 50000 and the session value to 1000000:
SET @@GLOBAL.sort_buffer_size = 50000, sort_buffer_size = 1000000;
To refer to the value of a system variable in expressions, use
one of the @@
-modifiers. For example, you
can retrieve system variable values in a
SELECT
statement like this:
SELECT @@GLOBAL.sql_mode, @@SESSION.sql_mode, @@sql_mode;
A reference to a system variable in an expression as
@@
(with var_name
@@
rather than
@@GLOBAL.
or
@@SESSION.
) returns the session value if
it exists and the global value otherwise. This differs from
SET @@
, which always
refers to the session value.
var_name
=
expr
SET {CHARACTER SET | CHARSET}
{'charset_name
' | DEFAULT}
This statement maps all strings sent between the server and the
current client with the given mapping. SET CHARACTER
SET
sets three session system variables:
character_set_client
and
character_set_results
are set
to the given character set, and
character_set_connection
to the
value of
character_set_database
. See
Section 10.4, “Connection Character Sets and Collations”.
charset_name
may be quoted or
unquoted.
The default character set mapping can be restored by using the
value DEFAULT
. The default depends on the
server configuration.
Some character sets cannot be used as the client character set.
Attempting to use them with SET CHARACTER
SET
produces an error. See
Impermissible Client Character Sets.
SET NAMES {'charset_name
' [COLLATE 'collation_name
'] | DEFAULT}
This statement sets the three session system variables
character_set_client
,
character_set_connection
, and
character_set_results
to the
given character set. Setting
character_set_connection
to
charset_name
also sets
collation_connection
to the
default collation for charset_name
. See
Section 10.4, “Connection Character Sets and Collations”.
The optional COLLATE
clause may be used to
specify a collation explicitly. If given, the collation must one
of the permitted collations for
charset_name
.
charset_name
and
collation_name
may be quoted or
unquoted.
The default mapping can be restored by using a value of
DEFAULT
. The default depends on the server
configuration.
Some character sets cannot be used as the client character set.
Attempting to use them with SET
NAMES
produces an error. See
Impermissible Client Character Sets.
SHOW
has many forms that provide
information about databases, tables, columns, or status
information about the server. This section describes those
following:
SHOW {BINARY | MASTER} LOGS SHOW BINLOG EVENTS [IN 'log_name
'] [FROMpos
] [LIMIT [offset
,]row_count
] SHOW CHARACTER SET [like_or_where
] SHOW COLLATION [like_or_where
] SHOW [FULL] COLUMNS FROMtbl_name
[FROMdb_name
] [like_or_where
] SHOW CREATE DATABASEdb_name
SHOW CREATE EVENTevent_name
SHOW CREATE FUNCTIONfunc_name
SHOW CREATE PROCEDUREproc_name
SHOW CREATE TABLEtbl_name
SHOW CREATE TRIGGERtrigger_name
SHOW CREATE VIEWview_name
SHOW DATABASES [like_or_where
] SHOW ENGINEengine_name
{STATUS | MUTEX} SHOW [STORAGE] ENGINES SHOW ERRORS [LIMIT [offset
,]row_count
] SHOW EVENTS SHOW FUNCTION CODEfunc_name
SHOW FUNCTION STATUS [like_or_where
] SHOW GRANTS FORuser
SHOW INDEX FROMtbl_name
[FROMdb_name
] SHOW MASTER STATUS SHOW OPEN TABLES [FROMdb_name
] [like_or_where
] SHOW PLUGINS SHOW PROCEDURE CODEproc_name
SHOW PROCEDURE STATUS [like_or_where
] SHOW PRIVILEGES SHOW [FULL] PROCESSLIST SHOW PROFILE [types
] [FOR QUERYn
] [OFFSETn
] [LIMITn
] SHOW PROFILES SHOW RELAYLOG EVENTS [IN 'log_name
'] [FROMpos
] [LIMIT [offset
,]row_count
] SHOW SLAVE HOSTS SHOW SLAVE STATUS [FOR CHANNELchannel
] SHOW [GLOBAL | SESSION] STATUS [like_or_where
] SHOW TABLE STATUS [FROMdb_name
] [like_or_where
] SHOW [FULL] TABLES [FROMdb_name
] [like_or_where
] SHOW TRIGGERS [FROMdb_name
] [like_or_where
] SHOW [GLOBAL | SESSION] VARIABLES [like_or_where
] SHOW WARNINGS [LIMIT [offset
,]row_count
]like_or_where
: LIKE 'pattern
' | WHEREexpr
If the syntax for a given SHOW
statement includes a LIKE
'
part,
pattern
''
is a
string that can contain the SQL pattern
'%
and
_
wildcard characters. The pattern is useful
for restricting statement output to matching values.
Several SHOW
statements also accept
a WHERE
clause that provides more flexibility
in specifying which rows to display. See
Section 24.35, “Extensions to SHOW Statements”.
Many MySQL APIs (such as PHP) enable you to treat the result
returned from a SHOW
statement as
you would a result set from a
SELECT
; see
Chapter 27, Connectors and APIs, or your API documentation for
more information. In addition, you can work in SQL with results
from queries on tables in the
INFORMATION_SCHEMA
database, which you cannot
easily do with results from SHOW
statements. See Chapter 24, INFORMATION_SCHEMA Tables.
SHOW BINARY LOGS SHOW MASTER LOGS
Lists the binary log files on the server. This statement is used
as part of the procedure described in
Section 13.4.1.1, “PURGE BINARY LOGS Statement”, that shows how to determine
which logs can be purged. A user with the
SUPER
or
REPLICATION CLIENT
privilege may
execute this statement.
mysql> SHOW BINARY LOGS;
+---------------+-----------+
| Log_name | File_size |
+---------------+-----------+
| binlog.000015 | 724935 |
| binlog.000016 | 733481 |
+---------------+-----------+
SHOW MASTER
LOGS
is equivalent to SHOW BINARY
LOGS
.
SHOW BINLOG EVENTS [IN 'log_name
'] [FROMpos
] [LIMIT [offset
,]row_count
]
Shows the events in the binary log. If you do not specify
'
, the
first binary log is displayed. log_name
'SHOW BINLOG
EVENTS
requires the REPLICATION
SLAVE
privilege.
The LIMIT
clause has the same syntax as for
the SELECT
statement. See
Section 13.2.9, “SELECT Statement”.
Issuing a SHOW BINLOG EVENTS
with no LIMIT
clause could start a very
time- and resource-consuming process because the server
returns to the client the complete contents of the binary log
(which includes all statements executed by the server that
modify data). As an alternative to SHOW
BINLOG EVENTS
, use the
mysqlbinlog utility to save the binary log
to a text file for later examination and analysis. See
Section 4.6.7, “mysqlbinlog — Utility for Processing Binary Log Files”.
SHOW BINLOG EVENTS
displays the
following fields for each event in the binary log:
Log_name
The name of the file that is being listed.
Pos
The position at which the event occurs.
Event_type
An identifier that describes the event type.
Server_id
The server ID of the server on which the event originated.
End_log_pos
The position at which the next event begins, which is equal
to Pos
plus the size of the event.
Info
More detailed information about the event type. The format of this information depends on the event type.
Some events relating to the setting of user and system
variables are not included in the output from
SHOW BINLOG EVENTS
. To get
complete coverage of events within a binary log, use
mysqlbinlog.
SHOW BINLOG EVENTS
does
not work with relay log files. You can
use SHOW RELAYLOG EVENTS
for
this purpose.
SHOW CHARACTER SET [LIKE 'pattern
' | WHEREexpr
]
The SHOW CHARACTER SET
statement
shows all available character sets. The
LIKE
clause, if present, indicates
which character set names to match. The WHERE
clause can be given to select rows using more general
conditions, as discussed in Section 24.35, “Extensions to SHOW Statements”. For
example:
mysql> SHOW CHARACTER SET LIKE 'latin%';
+---------+-----------------------------+-------------------+--------+
| Charset | Description | Default collation | Maxlen |
+---------+-----------------------------+-------------------+--------+
| latin1 | cp1252 West European | latin1_swedish_ci | 1 |
| latin2 | ISO 8859-2 Central European | latin2_general_ci | 1 |
| latin5 | ISO 8859-9 Turkish | latin5_turkish_ci | 1 |
| latin7 | ISO 8859-13 Baltic | latin7_general_ci | 1 |
+---------+-----------------------------+-------------------+--------+
SHOW CHARACTER SET
output has
these columns:
Charset
The character set name.
Description
A description of the character set.
Default collation
The default collation for the character set.
Maxlen
The maximum number of bytes required to store one character.
The filename
character set is for internal
use only; consequently, SHOW CHARACTER
SET
does not display it.
Character set information is also available from the
INFORMATION_SCHEMA
CHARACTER_SETS
table. See
Section 24.2, “The INFORMATION_SCHEMA CHARACTER_SETS Table”.
SHOW COLLATION [LIKE 'pattern
' | WHEREexpr
]
This statement lists collations supported by the server. By
default, the output from SHOW
COLLATION
includes all available collations. The
LIKE
clause, if present, indicates
which collation names to match. The WHERE
clause can be given to select rows using more general
conditions, as discussed in Section 24.35, “Extensions to SHOW Statements”. For
example:
mysql> SHOW COLLATION WHERE Charset = 'latin1';
+-------------------+---------+----+---------+----------+---------+
| Collation | Charset | Id | Default | Compiled | Sortlen |
+-------------------+---------+----+---------+----------+---------+
| latin1_german1_ci | latin1 | 5 | | Yes | 1 |
| latin1_swedish_ci | latin1 | 8 | Yes | Yes | 1 |
| latin1_danish_ci | latin1 | 15 | | Yes | 1 |
| latin1_german2_ci | latin1 | 31 | | Yes | 2 |
| latin1_bin | latin1 | 47 | | Yes | 1 |
| latin1_general_ci | latin1 | 48 | | Yes | 1 |
| latin1_general_cs | latin1 | 49 | | Yes | 1 |
| latin1_spanish_ci | latin1 | 94 | | Yes | 1 |
+-------------------+---------+----+---------+----------+---------+
SHOW COLLATION
output has these
columns:
Collation
The collation name.
Charset
The name of the character set with which the collation is associated.
Id
The collation ID.
Default
Whether the collation is the default for its character set.
Compiled
Whether the character set is compiled into the server.
Sortlen
This is related to the amount of memory required to sort strings expressed in the character set.
To see the default collation for each character set, use the
following statement. Default
is a reserved
word, so to use it as an identifier, it must be quoted as such:
mysql> SHOW COLLATION WHERE `Default` = 'Yes';
+---------------------+----------+----+---------+----------+---------+
| Collation | Charset | Id | Default | Compiled | Sortlen |
+---------------------+----------+----+---------+----------+---------+
| big5_chinese_ci | big5 | 1 | Yes | Yes | 1 |
| dec8_swedish_ci | dec8 | 3 | Yes | Yes | 1 |
| cp850_general_ci | cp850 | 4 | Yes | Yes | 1 |
| hp8_english_ci | hp8 | 6 | Yes | Yes | 1 |
| koi8r_general_ci | koi8r | 7 | Yes | Yes | 1 |
| latin1_swedish_ci | latin1 | 8 | Yes | Yes | 1 |
...
Collation information is also available from the
INFORMATION_SCHEMA
COLLATIONS
table. See
Section 24.3, “The INFORMATION_SCHEMA COLLATIONS Table”.
SHOW [FULL] {COLUMNS | FIELDS} {FROM | IN}tbl_name
[{FROM | IN}db_name
] [LIKE 'pattern
' | WHEREexpr
]
SHOW COLUMNS
displays information
about the columns in a given table. It also works for views.
SHOW COLUMNS
displays information
only for those columns for which you have some privilege.
mysql> SHOW COLUMNS FROM City;
+-------------+----------+------+-----+---------+----------------+
| Field | Type | Null | Key | Default | Extra |
+-------------+----------+------+-----+---------+----------------+
| ID | int(11) | NO | PRI | NULL | auto_increment |
| Name | char(35) | NO | | | |
| CountryCode | char(3) | NO | MUL | | |
| District | char(20) | NO | | | |
| Population | int(11) | NO | | 0 | |
+-------------+----------+------+-----+---------+----------------+
An alternative to
syntax is
tbl_name
FROM db_name
db_name.tbl_name
. These two
statements are equivalent:
SHOW COLUMNS FROM mytable FROM mydb; SHOW COLUMNS FROM mydb.mytable;
The optional FULL
keyword causes the output
to include the column collation and comments, as well as the
privileges you have for each column.
The LIKE
clause, if present,
indicates which column names to match. The
WHERE
clause can be given to select rows
using more general conditions, as discussed in
Section 24.35, “Extensions to SHOW Statements”.
The data types may differ from what you expect them to be based
on a CREATE TABLE
statement
because MySQL sometimes changes data types when you create or
alter a table. The conditions under which this occurs are
described in Section 13.1.18.7, “Silent Column Specification Changes”.
SHOW COLUMNS
displays the
following values for each table column:
Field
The column name.
Type
The column data type.
Collation
The collation for nonbinary string columns, or
NULL
for other columns. This value is
displayed only if you use the FULL
keyword.
Null
The column nullability. The value is YES
if NULL
values can be stored in the
column, NO
if not.
Key
Whether the column is indexed:
If Key
is empty, the column either is
not indexed or is indexed only as a secondary column in
a multiple-column, nonunique index.
If Key
is PRI
, the
column is a PRIMARY KEY
or is one of
the columns in a multiple-column PRIMARY
KEY
.
If Key
is UNI
, the
column is the first column of a
UNIQUE
index. (A
UNIQUE
index permits multiple
NULL
values, but you can tell whether
the column permits NULL
by checking
the Null
field.)
If Key
is MUL
, the
column is the first column of a nonunique index in which
multiple occurrences of a given value are permitted
within the column.
If more than one of the Key
values
applies to a given column of a table, Key
displays the one with the highest priority, in the order
PRI
, UNI
,
MUL
.
A UNIQUE
index may be displayed as
PRI
if it cannot contain
NULL
values and there is no
PRIMARY KEY
in the table. A
UNIQUE
index may display as
MUL
if several columns form a composite
UNIQUE
index; although the combination of
the columns is unique, each column can still hold multiple
occurrences of a given value.
Default
The default value for the column. This is
NULL
if the column has an explicit
default of NULL
, or if the column
definition includes no DEFAULT
clause.
Extra
Any additional information that is available about a given column. The value is nonempty in these cases:
Privileges
The privileges you have for the column. This value is
displayed only if you use the FULL
keyword.
Comment
Any comment included in the column definition. This value is
displayed only if you use the FULL
keyword.
Table column information is also available from the
INFORMATION_SCHEMA
COLUMNS
table. See
Section 24.5, “The INFORMATION_SCHEMA COLUMNS Table”.
You can list a table's columns with the mysqlshow
db_name
tbl_name
command.
The DESCRIBE
statement provides
information similar to SHOW
COLUMNS
. See Section 13.8.1, “DESCRIBE Statement”.
The SHOW CREATE TABLE
,
SHOW TABLE STATUS
, and
SHOW INDEX
statements also
provide information about tables. See Section 13.7.5, “SHOW Statements”.
SHOW CREATE {DATABASE | SCHEMA} [IF NOT EXISTS] db_name
Shows the CREATE DATABASE
statement that creates the named database. If the
SHOW
statement includes an IF NOT
EXISTS
clause, the output too includes such a clause.
SHOW
CREATE SCHEMA
is a synonym for
SHOW CREATE DATABASE
.
mysql>SHOW CREATE DATABASE test\G
*************************** 1. row *************************** Database: test Create Database: CREATE DATABASE `test` /*!40100 DEFAULT CHARACTER SET latin1 */ mysql>SHOW CREATE SCHEMA test\G
*************************** 1. row *************************** Database: test Create Database: CREATE DATABASE `test` /*!40100 DEFAULT CHARACTER SET latin1 */
SHOW CREATE DATABASE
quotes table
and column names according to the value of the
sql_quote_show_create
option.
See Section 5.1.7, “Server System Variables”.
SHOW CREATE EVENT event_name
This statement displays the CREATE
EVENT
statement needed to re-create a given event. It
requires the EVENT
privilege for
the database from which the event is to be shown. For example
(using the same event e_daily
defined and
then altered in Section 13.7.5.18, “SHOW EVENTS Statement”):
mysql> SHOW CREATE EVENT myschema.e_daily\G
*************************** 1. row ***************************
Event: e_daily
sql_mode: ONLY_FULL_GROUP_BY,STRICT_TRANS_TABLES,
NO_ZERO_IN_DATE,NO_ZERO_DATE,
ERROR_FOR_DIVISION_BY_ZERO,
NO_AUTO_CREATE_USER,NO_ENGINE_SUBSTITUTION
time_zone: SYSTEM
Create Event: CREATE DEFINER=`jon`@`ghidora` EVENT `e_daily`
ON SCHEDULE EVERY 1 DAY
STARTS CURRENT_TIMESTAMP + INTERVAL 6 HOUR
ON COMPLETION NOT PRESERVE
ENABLE
COMMENT 'Saves total number of sessions then
clears the table each day'
DO BEGIN
INSERT INTO site_activity.totals (time, total)
SELECT CURRENT_TIMESTAMP, COUNT(*)
FROM site_activity.sessions;
DELETE FROM site_activity.sessions;
END
character_set_client: utf8
collation_connection: utf8_general_ci
Database Collation: latin1_swedish_ci
character_set_client
is the session value of
the character_set_client
system
variable when the event was created.
collation_connection
is the session value of
the collation_connection
system
variable when the event was created. Database
Collation
is the collation of the database with which
the event is associated.
The output reflects the current status of the event
(ENABLE
) rather than the status with which it
was created.
SHOW CREATE FUNCTION func_name
This statement is similar to SHOW CREATE
PROCEDURE
but for stored functions. See
Section 13.7.5.9, “SHOW CREATE PROCEDURE Statement”.
SHOW CREATE PROCEDURE proc_name
This statement is a MySQL extension. It returns the exact string
that can be used to re-create the named stored procedure. A
similar statement, SHOW CREATE
FUNCTION
, displays information about stored functions
(see Section 13.7.5.8, “SHOW CREATE FUNCTION Statement”).
To use either statement, you must be the user named in the
routine DEFINER
clause or have
SELECT
access to the
mysql.proc
table. If you do not have
privileges for the routine itself, the value displayed for the
Create Procedure
or Create
Function
field will be NULL
.
mysql>SHOW CREATE PROCEDURE test.simpleproc\G
*************************** 1. row *************************** Procedure: simpleproc sql_mode: ONLY_FULL_GROUP_BY,STRICT_TRANS_TABLES, NO_ZERO_IN_DATE,NO_ZERO_DATE, ERROR_FOR_DIVISION_BY_ZERO, NO_AUTO_CREATE_USER,NO_ENGINE_SUBSTITUTION Create Procedure: CREATE PROCEDURE `simpleproc`(OUT param1 INT) BEGIN SELECT COUNT(*) INTO param1 FROM t; END character_set_client: utf8 collation_connection: utf8_general_ci Database Collation: latin1_swedish_ci mysql>SHOW CREATE FUNCTION test.hello\G
*************************** 1. row *************************** Function: hello sql_mode: ONLY_FULL_GROUP_BY,STRICT_TRANS_TABLES, NO_ZERO_IN_DATE,NO_ZERO_DATE, ERROR_FOR_DIVISION_BY_ZERO, NO_AUTO_CREATE_USER,NO_ENGINE_SUBSTITUTION Create Function: CREATE FUNCTION `hello`(s CHAR(20)) RETURNS char(50) CHARSET latin1 RETURN CONCAT('Hello, ',s,'!') character_set_client: utf8 collation_connection: utf8_general_ci Database Collation: latin1_swedish_ci
character_set_client
is the session value of
the character_set_client
system
variable when the routine was created.
collation_connection
is the session value of
the collation_connection
system
variable when the routine was created. Database
Collation
is the collation of the database with which
the routine is associated.
SHOW CREATE TABLE tbl_name
Shows the CREATE TABLE
statement
that creates the named table. To use this statement, you must
have some privilege for the table. This statement also works
with views.
mysql> SHOW CREATE TABLE t\G
*************************** 1. row ***************************
Table: t
Create Table: CREATE TABLE `t` (
`id` int(11) NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT,
`s` char(60) DEFAULT NULL,
PRIMARY KEY (`id`)
) ENGINE=InnoDB DEFAULT CHARSET=latin1
SHOW CREATE TABLE
quotes table
and column names according to the value of the
sql_quote_show_create
option.
See Section 5.1.7, “Server System Variables”.
For information about how CREATE
TABLE
statements are stored by MySQL, see
Section 13.1.18.1, “CREATE TABLE Statement Retention”.
SHOW CREATE TRIGGER trigger_name
This statement shows the CREATE
TRIGGER
statement that creates the named trigger. This
statement requires the TRIGGER
privilege for the table associated with the trigger.
mysql> SHOW CREATE TRIGGER ins_sum\G
*************************** 1. row ***************************
Trigger: ins_sum
sql_mode: ONLY_FULL_GROUP_BY,STRICT_TRANS_TABLES,
NO_ZERO_IN_DATE,NO_ZERO_DATE,
ERROR_FOR_DIVISION_BY_ZERO,
NO_AUTO_CREATE_USER,NO_ENGINE_SUBSTITUTION
SQL Original Statement: CREATE DEFINER=`me`@`localhost` TRIGGER ins_sum
BEFORE INSERT ON account
FOR EACH ROW SET @sum = @sum + NEW.amount
character_set_client: utf8
collation_connection: utf8_general_ci
Database Collation: latin1_swedish_ci
Created: 2018-08-08 10:10:07.90
SHOW CREATE TRIGGER
output has
these columns:
Trigger
: The trigger name.
sql_mode
: The SQL mode in effect when the
trigger executes.
SQL Original Statement
: The
CREATE TRIGGER
statement that
defines the trigger.
character_set_client
: The session value
of the character_set_client
system variable when the trigger was created.
collation_connection
: The session value
of the collation_connection
system variable when the trigger was created.
Database Collation
: The collation of the
database with which the trigger is associated.
Created
: The date and time when the
trigger was created. This is a
TIMESTAMP(2)
value (with a fractional
part in hundredths of seconds) for triggers created in MySQL
5.7.2 or later, NULL
for triggers created
prior to 5.7.2.
Trigger information is also available from the
INFORMATION_SCHEMA
TRIGGERS
table. See
Section 24.29, “The INFORMATION_SCHEMA TRIGGERS Table”.
SHOW CREATE USER user
This statement shows the CREATE
USER
statement that creates the named user. An error
occurs if the user does not exist. The statement requires the
SELECT
privilege for the
mysql
system database, except to display
information for the current user.
To name the account, use the format described in
Section 6.2.4, “Specifying Account Names”. The host name part of the
account name, if omitted, defaults to '%'
. It
is also possible to specify
CURRENT_USER
or
CURRENT_USER()
to refer to the
account associated with the current session.
mysql> SHOW CREATE USER 'root'@'localhost'\G
*************************** 1. row ***************************
CREATE USER for root@localhost: CREATE USER 'root'@'localhost'
IDENTIFIED WITH 'mysql_native_password'
AS '*2470C0C06DEE42FD1618BB99005ADCA2EC9D1E19'
REQUIRE NONE PASSWORD EXPIRE DEFAULT ACCOUNT UNLOCK
The output format is affected by the setting of the
log_builtin_as_identified_by_password
system variable.
To display the privileges granted to an account, use the
SHOW GRANTS
statement. See
Section 13.7.5.21, “SHOW GRANTS Statement”.
SHOW CREATE VIEW view_name
This statement shows the CREATE
VIEW
statement that creates the named view.
mysql> SHOW CREATE VIEW v\G
*************************** 1. row ***************************
View: v
Create View: CREATE ALGORITHM=UNDEFINED
DEFINER=`bob`@`localhost`
SQL SECURITY DEFINER VIEW
`v` AS select 1 AS `a`,2 AS `b`
character_set_client: utf8
collation_connection: utf8_general_ci
character_set_client
is the session value of
the character_set_client
system
variable when the view was created.
collation_connection
is the session value of
the collation_connection
system
variable when the view was created.
Use of SHOW CREATE VIEW
requires
the SHOW VIEW
privilege, and the
SELECT
privilege for the view in
question.
View information is also available from the
INFORMATION_SCHEMA
VIEWS
table. See
Section 24.31, “The INFORMATION_SCHEMA VIEWS Table”.
MySQL lets you use different
sql_mode
settings to tell the
server the type of SQL syntax to support. For example, you might
use the ANSI
SQL mode to
ensure MySQL correctly interprets the standard SQL concatenation
operator, the double bar (||
), in your
queries. If you then create a view that concatenates items, you
might worry that changing the
sql_mode
setting to a value
different from ANSI
could
cause the view to become invalid. But this is not the case. No
matter how you write out a view definition, MySQL always stores
it the same way, in a canonical form. Here is an example that
shows how the server changes a double bar concatenation operator
to a CONCAT()
function:
mysql>SET sql_mode = 'ANSI';
Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.00 sec) mysql>CREATE VIEW test.v AS SELECT 'a' || 'b' as col1;
Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.01 sec) mysql>SHOW CREATE VIEW test.v\G
*************************** 1. row *************************** View: v Create View: CREATE VIEW "v" AS select concat('a','b') AS "col1" ... 1 row in set (0.00 sec)
The advantage of storing a view definition in canonical form is
that changes made later to the value of
sql_mode
will not affect the
results from the view. However an additional consequence is that
comments prior to SELECT
are
stripped from the definition by the server.
SHOW {DATABASES | SCHEMAS} [LIKE 'pattern
' | WHEREexpr
]
SHOW DATABASES
lists the
databases on the MySQL server host.
SHOW
SCHEMAS
is a synonym for SHOW
DATABASES
. The LIKE
clause, if present, indicates which database names to match. The
WHERE
clause can be given to select rows
using more general conditions, as discussed in
Section 24.35, “Extensions to SHOW Statements”.
You see only those databases for which you have some kind of
privilege, unless you have the global SHOW
DATABASES
privilege. You can also get this list using
the mysqlshow command.
If the server was started with the
--skip-show-database
option, you
cannot use this statement at all unless you have the
SHOW DATABASES
privilege.
MySQL implements databases as directories in the data directory, so this statement simply lists directories in that location. However, the output may include names of directories that do not correspond to actual databases.
Database information is also available from the
INFORMATION_SCHEMA
SCHEMATA
table. See
Section 24.22, “The INFORMATION_SCHEMA SCHEMATA Table”.
Because a global privilege is considered a privilege for all
databases, any global privilege enables a
user to see all database names with SHOW
DATABASES
or by examining the
INFORMATION_SCHEMA
SCHEMATA
table.
SHOW ENGINE engine_name
{STATUS | MUTEX}
SHOW ENGINE
displays operational
information about a storage engine. It requires the
PROCESS
privilege. The statement
has these variants:
SHOW ENGINE INNODB STATUS SHOW ENGINE INNODB MUTEX SHOW ENGINE PERFORMANCE_SCHEMA STATUS
SHOW ENGINE INNODB
STATUS
displays extensive information from the
standard InnoDB
Monitor about the state of
the InnoDB
storage engine. For information
about the standard monitor and other InnoDB
Monitors that provide information about
InnoDB
processing, see
Section 14.18, “InnoDB Monitors”.
SHOW ENGINE INNODB
MUTEX
displays InnoDB
mutex and
rw-lock statistics.
InnoDB
mutexes and rwlocks can also be
monitored using Performance
Schema tables. See
Section 14.17.2, “Monitoring InnoDB Mutex Waits Using Performance Schema”.
SHOW ENGINE INNODB
MUTEX
output was removed in MySQL 5.7.2. It was
revised and reintroduced in MySQL 5.7.8.
In MySQL 5.7.8, mutex statistics collection is configured dynamically using the following options:
To enable the collection of mutex statistics, run:
SET GLOBAL innodb_monitor_enable='latch';
To reset mutex statistics, run:
SET GLOBAL innodb_monitor_reset='latch';
To disable the collection of mutex statistics, run:
SET GLOBAL innodb_monitor_disable='latch';
Collection of mutex statistics for
SHOW ENGINE INNODB
MUTEX
can also be enabled by setting
innodb_monitor_enable='all'
, or
disabled by setting
innodb_monitor_disable='all'
.
SHOW ENGINE INNODB
MUTEX
output has these columns:
Type
Always InnoDB
.
Name
Prior to MySQL 5.7.8, the Name
field
reports the source file where the mutex is implemented, and
the line number in the file where the mutex is created. The
line number is specific to your version of MySQL. As of
MySQL 5.7.8, only the mutex name is reported. File name and
line number are still reported for rwlocks.
Status
The mutex status.
Prior to MySQL 5.7.8, the Status
field
displays several values if
WITH_DEBUG
was defined at
MySQL compilation time. If
WITH_DEBUG
was not defined,
the statement displays only the os_waits
value. In the latter case (without
WITH_DEBUG
), the information
on which the output is based is insufficient to distinguish
regular mutexes and mutexes that protect rwlocks (which
permit multiple readers or a single writer). Consequently,
the output may appear to contain multiple rows for the same
mutex. Pre-MySQL 5.7.8 Status
field
values include:
count
indicates how many times the
mutex was requested.
spin_waits
indicates how many times
the spinlock had to run.
spin_rounds
indicates the number of
spinlock rounds. (spin_rounds
divided
by spin_waits
provides the average
round count.)
os_waits
indicates the number of
operating system waits. This occurs when the spinlock
did not work (the mutex was not locked during the
spinlock and it was necessary to yield to the operating
system and wait).
os_yields
indicates the number of
times a thread trying to lock a mutex gave up its
timeslice and yielded to the operating system (on the
presumption that permitting other threads to run will
free the mutex so that it can be locked).
os_wait_times
indicates the amount of
time (in ms) spent in operating system waits. In MySQL
5.7 timing is disabled and this value is
always 0.
As of MySQL 5.7.8, the Status
field
reports the number of spins, waits, and calls. Statistics
for low-level operating system mutexes, which are
implemented outside of InnoDB
, are not
reported.
spins
indicates the number of spins.
waits
indicates the number of mutex
waits.
calls
indicates how many times the
mutex was requested.
SHOW ENGINE INNODB MUTEX
skips the
mutexes and
rw-locks of
buffer pool blocks, as
the amount of output can be overwhelming on systems with a large
buffer pool. (There is one mutex and one rw-lock in each 16K
buffer pool block, and there are 65,536 blocks per gigabyte.)
SHOW ENGINE INNODB MUTEX
also does not list
any mutexes or rw-locks that have never been waited on
(os_waits=0
). Thus, SHOW ENGINE
INNODB MUTEX
only displays information about mutexes
and rw-locks outside of the buffer pool that have caused at
least one OS-level wait.
Use SHOW ENGINE
PERFORMANCE_SCHEMA STATUS
to inspect the internal
operation of the Performance Schema code:
mysql> SHOW ENGINE PERFORMANCE_SCHEMA STATUS\G
...
*************************** 3. row ***************************
Type: performance_schema
Name: events_waits_history.size
Status: 76
*************************** 4. row ***************************
Type: performance_schema
Name: events_waits_history.count
Status: 10000
*************************** 5. row ***************************
Type: performance_schema
Name: events_waits_history.memory
Status: 760000
...
*************************** 57. row ***************************
Type: performance_schema
Name: performance_schema.memory
Status: 26459600
...
This statement is intended to help the DBA understand the effects that different Performance Schema options have on memory requirements.
Name
values consist of two parts, which name
an internal buffer and a buffer attribute, respectively.
Interpret buffer names as follows:
An internal buffer that is not exposed as a table is named
within parentheses. Examples:
(pfs_cond_class).size
,
(pfs_mutex_class).memory
.
An internal buffer that is exposed as a table in the
performance_schema
database is named
after the table, without parentheses. Examples:
events_waits_history.size
,
mutex_instances.count
.
A value that applies to the Performance Schema as a whole
begins with performance_schema
. Example:
performance_schema.memory
.
Buffer attributes have these meanings:
size
is the size of the internal record
used by the implementation, such as the size of a row in a
table. size
values cannot be changed.
count
is the number of internal records,
such as the number of rows in a table.
count
values can be changed using
Performance Schema configuration options.
For a table,
is the product of tbl_name
.memorysize
and
count
. For the Performance Schema as a
whole, performance_schema.memory
is the
sum of all the memory used (the sum of all other
memory
values).
In some cases, there is a direct relationship between a
Performance Schema configuration parameter and a SHOW
ENGINE
value. For example,
events_waits_history_long.count
corresponds
to
performance_schema_events_waits_history_long_size
.
In other cases, the relationship is more complex. For example,
events_waits_history.count
corresponds to
performance_schema_events_waits_history_size
(the number of rows per thread) multiplied by
performance_schema_max_thread_instances
( the number of threads).
SHOW ENGINE NDB STATUS.
If the server has the NDB
storage
engine enabled, SHOW ENGINE NDB STATUS
displays cluster status information such as the number of
connected data nodes, the cluster connectstring, and cluster
binary log epochs, as well as counts of various Cluster API
objects created by the MySQL Server when connected to the
cluster. Sample output from this statement is shown here:
mysql> SHOW ENGINE NDB STATUS;
+------------+-----------------------+--------------------------------------------------+
| Type | Name | Status |
+------------+-----------------------+--------------------------------------------------+
| ndbcluster | connection | cluster_node_id=7,
connected_host=198.51.100.103, connected_port=1186, number_of_data_nodes=4,
number_of_ready_data_nodes=3, connect_count=0 |
| ndbcluster | NdbTransaction | created=6, free=0, sizeof=212 |
| ndbcluster | NdbOperation | created=8, free=8, sizeof=660 |
| ndbcluster | NdbIndexScanOperation | created=1, free=1, sizeof=744 |
| ndbcluster | NdbIndexOperation | created=0, free=0, sizeof=664 |
| ndbcluster | NdbRecAttr | created=1285, free=1285, sizeof=60 |
| ndbcluster | NdbApiSignal | created=16, free=16, sizeof=136 |
| ndbcluster | NdbLabel | created=0, free=0, sizeof=196 |
| ndbcluster | NdbBranch | created=0, free=0, sizeof=24 |
| ndbcluster | NdbSubroutine | created=0, free=0, sizeof=68 |
| ndbcluster | NdbCall | created=0, free=0, sizeof=16 |
| ndbcluster | NdbBlob | created=1, free=1, sizeof=264 |
| ndbcluster | NdbReceiver | created=4, free=0, sizeof=68 |
| ndbcluster | binlog | latest_epoch=155467, latest_trans_epoch=148126,
latest_received_binlog_epoch=0, latest_handled_binlog_epoch=0,
latest_applied_binlog_epoch=0 |
+------------+-----------------------+--------------------------------------------------+
The Status
column in each of these rows
provides information about the MySQL server's connection to
the cluster and about the cluster binary log's status,
respectively. The Status
information is in
the form of comma-delimited set of name/value pairs.
The connection
row's
Status
column contains the name/value pairs
described in the following table.
Name | Value |
---|---|
cluster_node_id |
The node ID of the MySQL server in the cluster |
connected_host |
The host name or IP address of the cluster management server to which the MySQL server is connected |
connected_port |
The port used by the MySQL server to connect to the management server
(connected_host ) |
number_of_data_nodes |
The number of data nodes configured for the cluster (that is, the number
of [ndbd] sections in the cluster
config.ini file) |
number_of_ready_data_nodes |
The number of data nodes in the cluster that are actually running |
connect_count |
The number of times this mysqld has connected or reconnected to cluster data nodes |
The binlog
row's
Status
column contains information relating
to NDB Cluster Replication. The name/value pairs it contains are
described in the following table.
Name | Value |
---|---|
latest_epoch |
The most recent epoch most recently run on this MySQL server (that is, the sequence number of the most recent transaction run on the server) |
latest_trans_epoch |
The most recent epoch processed by the cluster's data nodes |
latest_received_binlog_epoch |
The most recent epoch received by the binary log thread |
latest_handled_binlog_epoch |
The most recent epoch processed by the binary log thread (for writing to the binary log) |
latest_applied_binlog_epoch |
The most recent epoch actually written to the binary log |
See Section 21.6, “NDB Cluster Replication”, for more information.
The remaining rows from the output of SHOW ENGINE NDB
STATUS
which are most likely to prove useful in
monitoring the cluster are listed here by
Name
:
NdbTransaction
: The number and size of
NdbTransaction
objects that have been
created. An NdbTransaction
is created
each time a table schema operation (such as
CREATE TABLE
or
ALTER TABLE
) is performed on
an NDB
table.
NdbOperation
: The number and size of
NdbOperation
objects that have been
created.
NdbIndexScanOperation
: The number and
size of NdbIndexScanOperation
objects
that have been created.
NdbIndexOperation
: The number and size of
NdbIndexOperation
objects that have been
created.
NdbRecAttr
: The number and size of
NdbRecAttr
objects that have been
created. In general, one of these is created each time a
data manipulation statement is performed by an SQL node.
NdbBlob
: The number and size of
NdbBlob
objects that have been created.
An NdbBlob
is created for each new
operation involving a BLOB
column in an NDB
table.
NdbReceiver
: The number and size of any
NdbReceiver
object that have been
created. The number in the created
column
is the same as the number of data nodes in the cluster to
which the MySQL server has connected.
SHOW ENGINE NDB STATUS
returns an empty
result if no operations involving
NDB
tables have been performed
during the current session by the MySQL client accessing the
SQL node on which this statement is run.
SHOW [STORAGE] ENGINES
SHOW ENGINES
displays status
information about the server's storage engines. This is
particularly useful for checking whether a storage engine is
supported, or to see what the default engine is.
For information about MySQL storage engines, see Chapter 14, The InnoDB Storage Engine, and Chapter 15, Alternative Storage Engines.
mysql> SHOW ENGINES\G
*************************** 1. row ***************************
Engine: InnoDB
Support: DEFAULT
Comment: Supports transactions, row-level locking, and foreign keys
Transactions: YES
XA: YES
Savepoints: YES
*************************** 2. row ***************************
Engine: MRG_MYISAM
Support: YES
Comment: Collection of identical MyISAM tables
Transactions: NO
XA: NO
Savepoints: NO
*************************** 3. row ***************************
Engine: MEMORY
Support: YES
Comment: Hash based, stored in memory, useful for temporary tables
Transactions: NO
XA: NO
Savepoints: NO
*************************** 4. row ***************************
Engine: BLACKHOLE
Support: YES
Comment: /dev/null storage engine (anything you write to it disappears)
Transactions: NO
XA: NO
Savepoints: NO
*************************** 5. row ***************************
Engine: MyISAM
Support: YES
Comment: MyISAM storage engine
Transactions: NO
XA: NO
Savepoints: NO
*************************** 6. row ***************************
Engine: CSV
Support: YES
Comment: CSV storage engine
Transactions: NO
XA: NO
Savepoints: NO
*************************** 7. row ***************************
Engine: ARCHIVE
Support: YES
Comment: Archive storage engine
Transactions: NO
XA: NO
Savepoints: NO
*************************** 8. row ***************************
Engine: PERFORMANCE_SCHEMA
Support: YES
Comment: Performance Schema
Transactions: NO
XA: NO
Savepoints: NO
*************************** 9. row ***************************
Engine: FEDERATED
Support: YES
Comment: Federated MySQL storage engine
Transactions: NO
XA: NO
Savepoints: NO
The output from SHOW ENGINES
may
vary according to the MySQL version used and other factors.
SHOW ENGINES
output has these
columns:
Engine
The name of the storage engine.
Support
The server's level of support for the storage engine, as shown in the following table.
Value | Meaning |
---|---|
YES |
The engine is supported and is active |
DEFAULT |
Like YES , plus this is the default engine |
NO |
The engine is not supported |
DISABLED |
The engine is supported but has been disabled |
A value of NO
means that the server was
compiled without support for the engine, so it cannot be
enabled at runtime.
A value of DISABLED
occurs either because
the server was started with an option that disables the
engine, or because not all options required to enable it
were given. In the latter case, the error log should contain
a reason indicating why the option is disabled. See
Section 5.4.2, “The Error Log”.
You might also see DISABLED
for a storage
engine if the server was compiled to support it, but was
started with a
--skip-
option. For the engine_name
NDB
storage
engine, DISABLED
means the server was
compiled with support for NDB Cluster, but was not started
with the --ndbcluster
option.
All MySQL servers support MyISAM
tables.
It is not possible to disable MyISAM
.
Comment
A brief description of the storage engine.
Transactions
Whether the storage engine supports transactions.
XA
Whether the storage engine supports XA transactions.
Savepoints
Whether the storage engine supports savepoints.
Storage engine information is also available from the
INFORMATION_SCHEMA
ENGINES
table. See
Section 24.7, “The INFORMATION_SCHEMA ENGINES Table”.
SHOW ERRORS [LIMIT [offset
,]row_count
] SHOW COUNT(*) ERRORS
SHOW ERRORS
is a diagnostic
statement that is similar to SHOW
WARNINGS
, except that it displays information only for
errors, rather than for errors, warnings, and notes.
The LIMIT
clause has the same syntax as for
the SELECT
statement. See
Section 13.2.9, “SELECT Statement”.
The SHOW COUNT(*)
ERRORS
statement displays the number of errors. You
can also retrieve this number from the
error_count
variable:
SHOW COUNT(*) ERRORS; SELECT @@error_count;
SHOW ERRORS
and
error_count
apply only to
errors, not warnings or notes. In other respects, they are
similar to SHOW WARNINGS
and
warning_count
. In particular,
SHOW ERRORS
cannot display
information for more than
max_error_count
messages, and
error_count
can exceed the
value of max_error_count
if the
number of errors exceeds
max_error_count
.
For more information, see Section 13.7.5.40, “SHOW WARNINGS Statement”.
SHOW EVENTS [{FROM | IN}schema_name
] [LIKE 'pattern
' | WHEREexpr
]
This statement displays information about Event Manager events,
which are discussed in Section 23.4, “Using the Event Scheduler”. It
requires the EVENT
privilege for
the database from which the events are to be shown.
In its simplest form, SHOW EVENTS
lists all of the events in the current schema:
mysql>SELECT CURRENT_USER(), SCHEMA();
+----------------+----------+ | CURRENT_USER() | SCHEMA() | +----------------+----------+ | jon@ghidora | myschema | +----------------+----------+ 1 row in set (0.00 sec) mysql>SHOW EVENTS\G
*************************** 1. row *************************** Db: myschema Name: e_daily Definer: jon@ghidora Time zone: SYSTEM Type: RECURRING Execute at: NULL Interval value: 1 Interval field: DAY Starts: 2018-08-08 11:06:34 Ends: NULL Status: ENABLED Originator: 1 character_set_client: utf8 collation_connection: utf8_general_ci Database Collation: latin1_swedish_ci
To see events for a specific schema, use the
FROM
clause. For example, to see events for
the test
schema, use the following statement:
SHOW EVENTS FROM test;
The LIKE
clause, if present,
indicates which event names to match. The
WHERE
clause can be given to select rows
using more general conditions, as discussed in
Section 24.35, “Extensions to SHOW Statements”.
SHOW EVENTS
output has these
columns:
Db
The name of the schema (database) to which the event belongs.
Name
The name of the event.
Definer
The account of the user who created the event, in
'
format.
user_name
'@'host_name
'
Time zone
The event time zone, which is the time zone used for
scheduling the event and that is in effect within the event
as it executes. The default value is
SYSTEM
.
Type
The event repetition type, either ONE
TIME
(transient) or RECURRING
(repeating).
Execute At
For a one-time event, this is the
DATETIME
value specified in
the AT
clause of the
CREATE EVENT
statement used
to create the event, or of the last
ALTER EVENT
statement that
modified the event. The value shown in this column reflects
the addition or subtraction of any
INTERVAL
value included in the event's
AT
clause. For example, if an event is
created using ON SCHEDULE AT CURRENT_TIMESTAMP +
'1:6' DAY_HOUR
, and the event was created at
2018-02-09 14:05:30, the value shown in this column would be
'2018-02-10 20:05:30'
. If the event's
timing is determined by an EVERY
clause
instead of an AT
clause (that is, if the
event is recurring), the value of this column is
NULL
.
Interval Value
For a recurring event, the number of intervals to wait
between event executions. For a transient event, the value
of this column is always NULL
.
Interval Field
The time units used for the interval which a recurring event
waits before repeating. For a transient event, the value of
this column is always NULL
.
Starts
The start date and time for a recurring event. This is
displayed as a DATETIME
value, and is NULL
if no start date and
time are defined for the event. For a transient event, this
column is always NULL
. For a recurring
event whose definition includes a STARTS
clause, this column contains the corresponding
DATETIME
value. As with the
Execute At
column, this value resolves
any expressions used. If there is no
STARTS
clause affecting the timing of the
event, this column is NULL
Ends
For a recurring event whose definition includes a
ENDS
clause, this column contains the
corresponding DATETIME
value.
As with the Execute At
column, this value
resolves any expressions used. If there is no
ENDS
clause affecting the timing of the
event, this column is NULL
.
Status
The event status. One of ENABLED
,
DISABLED
, or
SLAVESIDE_DISABLED
.
SLAVESIDE_DISABLED
indicates that the
creation of the event occurred on another MySQL server
acting as a replication master and replicated to the current
MySQL server which is acting as a slave, but the event is
not presently being executed on the slave. For more
information, see
Section 16.4.1.16, “Replication of Invoked Features”. information.
Originator
The server ID of the MySQL server on which the event was
created; used in replication. This value may be updated by
ALTER EVENT
to the server ID
of the server on which that statement occurs, if executed on
a master server. The default value is 0.
character_set_client
The session value of the
character_set_client
system
variable when the event was created.
collation_connection
The session value of the
collation_connection
system
variable when the event was created.
Database Collation
The collation of the database with which the event is associated.
For more information about SLAVESIDE_DISABLED
and the Originator
column, see
Section 16.4.1.16, “Replication of Invoked Features”.
Times displayed by SHOW EVENTS
are given in the event time zone, as discussed in
Section 23.4.4, “Event Metadata”.
Event information is also available from the
INFORMATION_SCHEMA
EVENTS
table. See
Section 24.8, “The INFORMATION_SCHEMA EVENTS Table”.
The event action statement is not shown in the output of
SHOW EVENTS
. Use
SHOW CREATE EVENT
or the
INFORMATION_SCHEMA
EVENTS
table.
SHOW FUNCTION CODE func_name
This statement is similar to SHOW PROCEDURE
CODE
but for stored functions. See
Section 13.7.5.27, “SHOW PROCEDURE CODE Statement”.
SHOW FUNCTION STATUS [LIKE 'pattern
' | WHEREexpr
]
This statement is similar to SHOW PROCEDURE
STATUS
but for stored functions. See
Section 13.7.5.28, “SHOW PROCEDURE STATUS Statement”.
SHOW GRANTS [FOR user
]
This statement displays the privileges that are assigned to a
MySQL user account, in the form of
GRANT
statements that must be
executed to duplicate the privilege assignments.
To display nonprivilege information for MySQL accounts, use
the SHOW CREATE USER
statement.
See Section 13.7.5.12, “SHOW CREATE USER Statement”.
SHOW GRANTS
requires the
SELECT
privilege for the
mysql
system database, except to display
privileges for the current user.
To name the account for SHOW
GRANTS
, use the same format as for the
GRANT
statement (for example,
'jeffrey'@'localhost'
):
mysql> SHOW GRANTS FOR 'jeffrey'@'localhost';
+------------------------------------------------------------------+
| Grants for jeffrey@localhost |
+------------------------------------------------------------------+
| GRANT USAGE ON *.* TO `jeffrey`@`localhost` |
| GRANT SELECT, INSERT, UPDATE ON `db1`.* TO `jeffrey`@`localhost` |
+------------------------------------------------------------------+
The host part, if omitted, defaults to '%'
.
For additional information about specifying account names, see
Section 6.2.4, “Specifying Account Names”.
To display the privileges granted to the current user (the account you are using to connect to the server), you can use any of the following statements:
SHOW GRANTS; SHOW GRANTS FOR CURRENT_USER; SHOW GRANTS FOR CURRENT_USER();
If SHOW GRANTS FOR CURRENT_USER
(or any
equivalent syntax) is used in definer context, such as within a
stored procedure that executes with definer rather than invoker
privileges, the grants displayed are those of the definer and
not the invoker.
SHOW GRANTS
does not display
privileges that are available to the named account but are
granted to a different account. For example, if an anonymous
account exists, the named account might be able to use its
privileges, but SHOW GRANTS
does
not display them.
SHOW GRANTS
output does not include
IDENTIFIED BY PASSWORD
clauses. Use the
SHOW CREATE USER
statement
instead. See Section 13.7.5.12, “SHOW CREATE USER Statement”.
SHOW {INDEX | INDEXES | KEYS} {FROM | IN}tbl_name
[{FROM | IN}db_name
] [WHEREexpr
]
SHOW INDEX
returns table index
information. The format resembles that of the
SQLStatistics
call in ODBC. This statement
requires some privilege for any column in the table.
mysql> SHOW INDEX FROM City\G
*************************** 1. row ***************************
Table: city
Non_unique: 0
Key_name: PRIMARY
Seq_in_index: 1
Column_name: ID
Collation: A
Cardinality: 4188
Sub_part: NULL
Packed: NULL
Null:
Index_type: BTREE
Comment:
Index_comment:
*************************** 2. row ***************************
Table: city
Non_unique: 1
Key_name: CountryCode
Seq_in_index: 1
Column_name: CountryCode
Collation: A
Cardinality: 232
Sub_part: NULL
Packed: NULL
Null:
Index_type: BTREE
Comment:
Index_comment:
An alternative to
syntax is
tbl_name
FROM db_name
db_name
.tbl_name
.
These two statements are equivalent:
SHOW INDEX FROM mytable FROM mydb; SHOW INDEX FROM mydb.mytable;
The WHERE
clause can be given to select rows
using more general conditions, as discussed in
Section 24.35, “Extensions to SHOW Statements”.
SHOW INDEX
returns the following
fields:
Table
The name of the table.
Non_unique
0 if the index cannot contain duplicates, 1 if it can.
Key_name
The name of the index. If the index is the primary key, the
name is always PRIMARY
.
Seq_in_index
The column sequence number in the index, starting with 1.
Column_name
The name of the column.
Collation
How the column is sorted in the index. This can have values
A
(ascending) or NULL
(not sorted).
Cardinality
An estimate of the number of unique values in the index. To
update this number, run ANALYZE
TABLE
or (for MyISAM
tables)
myisamchk -a.
Cardinality
is counted based on
statistics stored as integers, so the value is not
necessarily exact even for small tables. The higher the
cardinality, the greater the chance that MySQL uses the
index when doing joins.
Sub_part
The index prefix. That is, the number of indexed characters
if the column is only partly indexed,
NULL
if the entire column is indexed.
Prefix limits are measured in bytes.
However, prefix lengths for index
specifications in CREATE
TABLE
, ALTER
TABLE
, and CREATE
INDEX
statements are interpreted as number of
characters for nonbinary string types
(CHAR
,
VARCHAR
,
TEXT
) and number of bytes
for binary string types
(BINARY
,
VARBINARY
,
BLOB
). Take this into
account when specifying a prefix length for a nonbinary
string column that uses a multibyte character set.
For additional information about index prefixes, see Section 8.3.4, “Column Indexes”, and Section 13.1.14, “CREATE INDEX Statement”.
Packed
Indicates how the key is packed. NULL
if
it is not.
Null
Contains YES
if the column may contain
NULL
values and ''
if
not.
Index_type
The index method used (BTREE
,
FULLTEXT
, HASH
,
RTREE
).
Comment
Information about the index not described in its own column,
such as disabled
if the index is
disabled.
Index_comment
Any comment provided for the index with a
COMMENT
attribute when the index was
created.
Information about table indexes is also available from the
INFORMATION_SCHEMA
STATISTICS
table. See
Section 24.24, “The INFORMATION_SCHEMA STATISTICS Table”.
You can list a table's indexes with the mysqlshow -k
db_name
tbl_name
command.
SHOW MASTER STATUS
This statement provides status information about the binary log
files of the master. It requires either the
SUPER
or
REPLICATION CLIENT
privilege.
Example:
mysql> SHOW MASTER STATUS\G
*************************** 1. row ***************************
File: master-bin.000002
Position: 1307
Binlog_Do_DB: test
Binlog_Ignore_DB: manual, mysql
Executed_Gtid_Set: 3E11FA47-71CA-11E1-9E33-C80AA9429562:1-5
1 row in set (0.00 sec)
When global transaction IDs are in use,
Executed_Gtid_Set
shows the set of GTIDs for
transactions that have been executed on the master. This is the
same as the value for the
gtid_executed
system variable
on this server, as well as the value for
Executed_Gtid_Set
in the output of
SHOW SLAVE STATUS
on this server.
SHOW OPEN TABLES [{FROM | IN}db_name
] [LIKE 'pattern
' | WHEREexpr
]
SHOW OPEN TABLES
lists the
non-TEMPORARY
tables that are currently open
in the table cache. See Section 8.4.3.1, “How MySQL Opens and Closes Tables”. The
FROM
clause, if present, restricts the tables
shown to those present in the db_name
database. The LIKE
clause, if
present, indicates which table names to match. The
WHERE
clause can be given to select rows
using more general conditions, as discussed in
Section 24.35, “Extensions to SHOW Statements”.
SHOW OPEN TABLES
output has these
columns:
Database
The database containing the table.
Table
The table name.
In_use
The number of table locks or lock requests there are for the
table. For example, if one client acquires a lock for a
table using LOCK TABLE t1 WRITE
,
In_use
will be 1. If another client
issues LOCK TABLE t1 WRITE
while the
table remains locked, the client will block waiting for the
lock, but the lock request causes In_use
to be 2. If the count is zero, the table is open but not
currently being used. In_use
is also
increased by the
HANDLER ...
OPEN
statement and decreased by
HANDLER ...
CLOSE
.
Name_locked
Whether the table name is locked. Name locking is used for operations such as dropping or renaming tables.
If you have no privileges for a table, it does not show up in
the output from SHOW OPEN TABLES
.
SHOW PLUGINS
SHOW PLUGINS
displays information
about server plugins.
Example of SHOW PLUGINS
output:
mysql> SHOW PLUGINS\G
*************************** 1. row ***************************
Name: binlog
Status: ACTIVE
Type: STORAGE ENGINE
Library: NULL
License: GPL
*************************** 2. row ***************************
Name: CSV
Status: ACTIVE
Type: STORAGE ENGINE
Library: NULL
License: GPL
*************************** 3. row ***************************
Name: MEMORY
Status: ACTIVE
Type: STORAGE ENGINE
Library: NULL
License: GPL
*************************** 4. row ***************************
Name: MyISAM
Status: ACTIVE
Type: STORAGE ENGINE
Library: NULL
License: GPL
...
SHOW PLUGINS
output has these
columns:
Name
The name used to refer to the plugin in statements such as
INSTALL PLUGIN
and
UNINSTALL PLUGIN
.
Status
The plugin status, one of ACTIVE
,
INACTIVE
, DISABLED
, or
DELETED
.
Type
The type of plugin, such as STORAGE
ENGINE
, INFORMATION_SCHEMA
, or
AUTHENTICATION
.
Library
The name of the plugin shared library file. This is the name
used to refer to the plugin file in statements such as
INSTALL PLUGIN
and
UNINSTALL PLUGIN
. This file
is located in the directory named by the
plugin_dir
system variable.
If the library name is NULL
, the plugin
is compiled in and cannot be uninstalled with
UNINSTALL PLUGIN
.
License
How the plugin is licensed (for example,
GPL
).
For plugins installed with INSTALL
PLUGIN
, the Name
and
Library
values are also registered in the
mysql.plugin
system table.
For information about plugin data structures that form the basis
of the information displayed by SHOW
PLUGINS
, see Section 28.2, “The MySQL Plugin API”.
Plugin information is also available from the
INFORMATION_SCHEMA
.PLUGINS
table. See
Section 24.17, “The INFORMATION_SCHEMA PLUGINS Table”.
SHOW PRIVILEGES
SHOW PRIVILEGES
shows the list of
system privileges that the MySQL server supports. The exact list
of privileges depends on the version of your server.
mysql> SHOW PRIVILEGES\G
*************************** 1. row ***************************
Privilege: Alter
Context: Tables
Comment: To alter the table
*************************** 2. row ***************************
Privilege: Alter routine
Context: Functions,Procedures
Comment: To alter or drop stored functions/procedures
*************************** 3. row ***************************
Privilege: Create
Context: Databases,Tables,Indexes
Comment: To create new databases and tables
*************************** 4. row ***************************
Privilege: Create routine
Context: Databases
Comment: To use CREATE FUNCTION/PROCEDURE
*************************** 5. row ***************************
Privilege: Create temporary tables
Context: Databases
Comment: To use CREATE TEMPORARY TABLE
...
Privileges belonging to a specific user are displayed by the
SHOW GRANTS
statement. See
Section 13.7.5.21, “SHOW GRANTS Statement”, for more information.
SHOW PROCEDURE CODE proc_name
This statement is a MySQL extension that is available only for
servers that have been built with debugging support. It displays
a representation of the internal implementation of the named
stored procedure. A similar statement, SHOW
FUNCTION CODE
, displays information about stored
functions (see Section 13.7.5.19, “SHOW FUNCTION CODE Statement”).
To use either statement, you must be the owner of the routine or
have SELECT
access to the
mysql.proc
table.
If the named routine is available, each statement produces a
result set. Each row in the result set corresponds to one
“instruction” in the routine. The first column is
Pos
, which is an ordinal number beginning
with 0. The second column is Instruction
,
which contains an SQL statement (usually changed from the
original source), or a directive which has meaning only to the
stored-routine handler.
mysql>DELIMITER //
mysql>CREATE PROCEDURE p1 ()
->BEGIN
->DECLARE fanta INT DEFAULT 55;
->DROP TABLE t2;
->LOOP
->INSERT INTO t3 VALUES (fanta);
->END LOOP;
->END//
Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.00 sec) mysql>SHOW PROCEDURE CODE p1//
+-----+----------------------------------------+ | Pos | Instruction | +-----+----------------------------------------+ | 0 | set fanta@0 55 | | 1 | stmt 9 "DROP TABLE t2" | | 2 | stmt 5 "INSERT INTO t3 VALUES (fanta)" | | 3 | jump 2 | +-----+----------------------------------------+ 4 rows in set (0.00 sec)
In this example, the nonexecutable BEGIN
and
END
statements have disappeared, and for the
DECLARE
statement,
only the executable part appears (the part where the default is
assigned). For each statement that is taken from source, there
is a code word variable_name
stmt
followed by a type (9
means DROP
, 5 means
INSERT
, and so on). The final row
contains an instruction jump 2
, meaning
GOTO instruction #2
.
SHOW PROCEDURE STATUS [LIKE 'pattern
' | WHEREexpr
]
This statement is a MySQL extension. It returns characteristics
of a stored procedure, such as the database, name, type,
creator, creation and modification dates, and character set
information. A similar statement, SHOW
FUNCTION STATUS
, displays information about stored
functions (see Section 13.7.5.20, “SHOW FUNCTION STATUS Statement”).
The LIKE
clause, if present,
indicates which procedure or function names to match. The
WHERE
clause can be given to select rows
using more general conditions, as discussed in
Section 24.35, “Extensions to SHOW Statements”.
mysql> SHOW PROCEDURE STATUS LIKE 'sp1'\G
*************************** 1. row ***************************
Db: test
Name: sp1
Type: PROCEDURE
Definer: testuser@localhost
Modified: 2018-08-08 13:54:11
Created: 2018-08-08 13:54:11
Security_type: DEFINER
Comment:
character_set_client: utf8
collation_connection: utf8_general_ci
Database Collation: latin1_swedish_ci
character_set_client
is the session value of
the character_set_client
system
variable when the routine was created.
collation_connection
is the session value of
the collation_connection
system
variable when the routine was created. Database
Collation
is the collation of the database with which
the routine is associated.
Stored routine information is also available from the
INFORMATION_SCHEMA
PARAMETERS
and
ROUTINES
tables. See
Section 24.15, “The INFORMATION_SCHEMA PARAMETERS Table”, and
Section 24.21, “The INFORMATION_SCHEMA ROUTINES Table”.
SHOW [FULL] PROCESSLIST
SHOW PROCESSLIST
shows which
threads are running. If you have the
PROCESS
privilege, you can see
all threads. Otherwise, you can see only your own threads (that
is, threads associated with the MySQL account that you are
using). If you do not use the FULL
keyword,
only the first 100 characters of each statement are shown in the
Info
field.
The SHOW PROCESSLIST
statement is
very useful if you get the “too many connections”
error message and want to find out what is going on. MySQL
reserves one extra connection to be used by accounts that have
the SUPER
privilege, to ensure
that administrators should always be able to connect and check
the system (assuming that you are not giving this privilege to
all your users).
Threads can be killed with the
KILL
statement. See
Section 13.7.6.4, “KILL Statement”.
Example of SHOW PROCESSLIST
output:
mysql> SHOW FULL PROCESSLIST\G *************************** 1. row *************************** Id: 1 User: system user Host: db: NULL Command: Connect Time: 1030455 State: Waiting for master to send event Info: NULL *************************** 2. row *************************** Id: 2 User: system user Host: db: NULL Command: Connect Time: 1004 State: Has read all relay log; waiting for the slave I/O thread to update it Info: NULL *************************** 3. row *************************** Id: 3112 User: replikator Host: artemis:2204 db: NULL Command: Binlog Dump Time: 2144 State: Has sent all binlog to slave; waiting for binlog to be updated Info: NULL *************************** 4. row *************************** Id: 3113 User: replikator Host: iconnect2:45781 db: NULL Command: Binlog Dump Time: 2086 State: Has sent all binlog to slave; waiting for binlog to be updated Info: NULL *************************** 5. row *************************** Id: 3123 User: stefan Host: localhost db: apollon Command: Query Time: 0 State: NULL Info: SHOW FULL PROCESSLIST 5 rows in set (0.00 sec)
SHOW PROCESSLIST
output has these
columns:
The connection identifier. This is the same type of value
displayed in the ID
column of the
INFORMATION_SCHEMA
PROCESSLIST
table, the
PROCESSLIST_ID
column of the Performance
Schema threads
table, and
returned by the
CONNECTION_ID()
function.
The MySQL user who issued the statement. A value of
system user
refers to a nonclient thread
spawned by the server to handle tasks internally. This could
be the I/O or SQL thread used on replication slaves or a
delayed-row handler. For system user
,
there is no host specified in the Host
column. unauthenticated user
refers to a
thread that has become associated with a client connection
but for which authentication of the client user has not yet
been done. event_scheduler
refers to the
thread that monitors scheduled events (see
Section 23.4, “Using the Event Scheduler”).
The host name of the client issuing the statement (except
for system user
, for which there is no
host). The host name for TCP/IP connections is reported in
format to make it easier to determine which client is doing
what.
host_name
:client_port
The default database, if one is selected; otherwise
NULL
.
The type of command the thread is executing. For
descriptions for thread commands, see
Section 8.14, “Examining Thread Information”. The value of this
column corresponds to the
COM_
commands of the client/server protocol and
xxx
Com_
status
variables. See Section 5.1.9, “Server Status Variables”.
xxx
The time in seconds that the thread has been in its current state. For a slave SQL thread, the value is the number of seconds between the timestamp of the last replicated event and the real time of the slave machine. See Section 16.2.2, “Replication Implementation Details”.
An action, event, or state that indicates what the thread is
doing. Descriptions for State
values can
be found at Section 8.14, “Examining Thread Information”.
Most states correspond to very quick operations. If a thread stays in a given state for many seconds, there might be a problem that needs to be investigated.
For the SHOW PROCESSLIST
statement, the value of State
is
NULL
.
The statement the thread is executing, or
NULL
if it is not executing any
statement. The statement might be the one sent to the
server, or an innermost statement if the statement executes
other statements. For example, if a CALL
statement executes a stored procedure that is executing a
SELECT
statement, the
Info
value shows the
SELECT
statement.
Process information is also available from the
mysqladmin processlist command, the
INFORMATION_SCHEMA
PROCESSLIST
table, and the
Performance Schema threads
table
(see Section 4.5.2, “mysqladmin — Client for Administering a MySQL Server”,
Section 24.18, “The INFORMATION_SCHEMA PROCESSLIST Table”, and
Section 25.12.16.3, “The threads Table”). In contrast to the
INFORMATION_SCHEMA
PROCESSLIST
table and
SHOW PROCESSLIST
statement, which
have negative performance consequences because they require a
mutex, access to threads
does not
require a mutex and has minimal impact on server performance.
The threads
table also shows
information about background threads, which the
PROCESSLIST
table and
SHOW PROCESSLIST
do not. This
means that threads
can be used to
monitor activity the other thread information sources cannot.
SHOW PROFILE [type
[,type
] ... ] [FOR QUERYn
] [LIMITrow_count
[OFFSEToffset
]]type
: { ALL | BLOCK IO | CONTEXT SWITCHES | CPU | IPC | MEMORY | PAGE FAULTS | SOURCE | SWAPS }
The SHOW PROFILE
and
SHOW PROFILES
statements display
profiling information that indicates resource usage for
statements executed during the course of the current session.
The SHOW PROFILE
and
SHOW PROFILES
statements are
deprecated and will be removed in a future MySQL release. Use
the Performance
Schema instead; see
Section 25.19.1, “Query Profiling Using Performance Schema”.
To control profiling, use the
profiling
session variable,
which has a default value of 0 (OFF
). Enable
profiling by setting profiling
to 1 or ON
:
mysql> SET profiling = 1;
SHOW PROFILES
displays a list of
the most recent statements sent to the server. The size of the
list is controlled by the
profiling_history_size
session
variable, which has a default value of 15. The maximum value is
100. Setting the value to 0 has the practical effect of
disabling profiling.
All statements are profiled except SHOW
PROFILE
and SHOW
PROFILES
, so you will find neither of those statements
in the profile list. Malformed statements are profiled. For
example, SHOW PROFILING
is an illegal
statement, and a syntax error occurs if you try to execute it,
but it will show up in the profiling list.
SHOW PROFILE
displays detailed
information about a single statement. Without the FOR
QUERY
clause, the output
pertains to the most recently executed statement. If
n
FOR QUERY
is
included, n
SHOW PROFILE
displays
information for statement n
. The
values of n
correspond to the
Query_ID
values displayed by
SHOW PROFILES
.
The LIMIT
clause may be
given to limit the output to
row_count
row_count
rows. If
LIMIT
is given, OFFSET
may be added to
begin the output offset
offset
rows into the
full set of rows.
By default, SHOW PROFILE
displays
Status
and Duration
columns. The Status
values are like the
State
values displayed by
SHOW PROCESSLIST
, although there
might be some minor differences in interpretion for the two
statements for some status values (see
Section 8.14, “Examining Thread Information”).
Optional type
values may be specified
to display specific additional types of information:
ALL
displays all information
BLOCK IO
displays counts for block input
and output operations
CONTEXT SWITCHES
displays counts for
voluntary and involuntary context switches
CPU
displays user and system CPU usage
times
IPC
displays counts for messages sent and
received
MEMORY
is not currently implemented
PAGE FAULTS
displays counts for major and
minor page faults
SOURCE
displays the names of functions
from the source code, together with the name and line number
of the file in which the function occurs
SWAPS
displays swap counts
Profiling is enabled per session. When a session ends, its profiling information is lost.
mysql>SELECT @@profiling;
+-------------+ | @@profiling | +-------------+ | 0 | +-------------+ 1 row in set (0.00 sec) mysql>SET profiling = 1;
Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.00 sec) mysql>DROP TABLE IF EXISTS t1;
Query OK, 0 rows affected, 1 warning (0.00 sec) mysql>CREATE TABLE T1 (id INT);
Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.01 sec) mysql>SHOW PROFILES;
+----------+----------+--------------------------+ | Query_ID | Duration | Query | +----------+----------+--------------------------+ | 0 | 0.000088 | SET PROFILING = 1 | | 1 | 0.000136 | DROP TABLE IF EXISTS t1 | | 2 | 0.011947 | CREATE TABLE t1 (id INT) | +----------+----------+--------------------------+ 3 rows in set (0.00 sec) mysql>SHOW PROFILE;
+----------------------+----------+ | Status | Duration | +----------------------+----------+ | checking permissions | 0.000040 | | creating table | 0.000056 | | After create | 0.011363 | | query end | 0.000375 | | freeing items | 0.000089 | | logging slow query | 0.000019 | | cleaning up | 0.000005 | +----------------------+----------+ 7 rows in set (0.00 sec) mysql>SHOW PROFILE FOR QUERY 1;
+--------------------+----------+ | Status | Duration | +--------------------+----------+ | query end | 0.000107 | | freeing items | 0.000008 | | logging slow query | 0.000015 | | cleaning up | 0.000006 | +--------------------+----------+ 4 rows in set (0.00 sec) mysql>SHOW PROFILE CPU FOR QUERY 2;
+----------------------+----------+----------+------------+ | Status | Duration | CPU_user | CPU_system | +----------------------+----------+----------+------------+ | checking permissions | 0.000040 | 0.000038 | 0.000002 | | creating table | 0.000056 | 0.000028 | 0.000028 | | After create | 0.011363 | 0.000217 | 0.001571 | | query end | 0.000375 | 0.000013 | 0.000028 | | freeing items | 0.000089 | 0.000010 | 0.000014 | | logging slow query | 0.000019 | 0.000009 | 0.000010 | | cleaning up | 0.000005 | 0.000003 | 0.000002 | +----------------------+----------+----------+------------+ 7 rows in set (0.00 sec)
Profiling is only partially functional on some architectures.
For values that depend on the getrusage()
system call, NULL
is returned on systems
such as Windows that do not support the call. In addition,
profiling is per process and not per thread. This means that
activity on threads within the server other than your own may
affect the timing information that you see.
Profiling information is also available from the
INFORMATION_SCHEMA
PROFILING
table. See
Section 24.19, “The INFORMATION_SCHEMA PROFILING Table”. For example, the following
queries are equivalent:
SHOW PROFILE FOR QUERY 2; SELECT STATE, FORMAT(DURATION, 6) AS DURATION FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.PROFILING WHERE QUERY_ID = 2 ORDER BY SEQ;
SHOW PROFILES
The SHOW PROFILES
statement,
together with SHOW PROFILE
,
displays profiling information that indicates resource usage for
statements executed during the course of the current session.
For more information, see Section 13.7.5.30, “SHOW PROFILE Statement”.
The SHOW PROFILE
and
SHOW PROFILES
statements are
deprecated and will be removed in a future MySQL release. Use
the Performance
Schema instead; see
Section 25.19.1, “Query Profiling Using Performance Schema”.
SHOW RELAYLOG EVENTS [IN 'log_name
'] [FROMpos
] [LIMIT [offset
,]row_count
] [channel_option
]channel_option
: FOR CHANNELchannel
Shows the events in the relay log of a replication slave. If you
do not specify
'
, the
first relay log is displayed. This statement has no effect on
the master. log_name
'SHOW RELAYLOG EVENTS
requires the REPLICATION SLAVE
privilege.
The LIMIT
clause has the same syntax as for
the SELECT
statement. See
Section 13.2.9, “SELECT Statement”.
Issuing a SHOW RELAYLOG EVENTS
with no LIMIT
clause could start a very
time- and resource-consuming process because the server
returns to the client the complete contents of the relay log
(including all statements modifying data that have been
received by the slave).
The optional FOR CHANNEL
clause enables you
to name which replication channel the statement applies to.
Providing a channel
FOR CHANNEL
clause applies the
statement to a specific replication channel. If no channel is
named and no extra channels exist, the statement applies to the
default channel.
channel
When using multiple replication channels, if a
SHOW RELAYLOG EVENTS
statement
does not have a channel defined using a FOR CHANNEL
clause an error is
generated. See Section 16.2.3, “Replication Channels” for more
information.
channel
SHOW RELAYLOG EVENTS
displays the
following fields for each event in the relay log:
Log_name
The name of the file that is being listed.
Pos
The position at which the event occurs.
Event_type
An identifier that describes the event type.
Server_id
The server ID of the server on which the event originated.
End_log_pos
The value of End_log_pos
for this event
in the master's binary log.
Info
More detailed information about the event type. The format of this information depends on the event type.
Some events relating to the setting of user and system
variables are not included in the output from
SHOW RELAYLOG EVENTS
. To get
complete coverage of events within a relay log, use
mysqlbinlog.
SHOW SLAVE HOSTS
Displays a list of replication slaves currently registered with the master.
SHOW SLAVE HOSTS
should be executed on a
server that acts as a replication master. SHOW SLAVE
HOSTS
requires the REPLICATION
SLAVE
privilege. The statement displays information
about servers that are or have been connected as replication
slaves, with each row of the result corresponding to one slave
server, as shown here:
mysql> SHOW SLAVE HOSTS
;
+------------+-----------+------+-----------+--------------------------------------+
| Server_id | Host | Port | Master_id | Slave_UUID |
+------------+-----------+------+-----------+--------------------------------------+
| 192168010 | iconnect2 | 3306 | 192168011 | 14cb6624-7f93-11e0-b2c0-c80aa9429562 |
| 1921680101 | athena | 3306 | 192168011 | 07af4990-f41f-11df-a566-7ac56fdaf645 |
+------------+-----------+------+-----------+--------------------------------------+
Server_id
: The unique server ID of the
slave server, as configured in the slave server's
option file, or on the command line with
--server-id=
.
value
Host
: The host name of the slave server
as specified on the slave with the
--report-host
option. This
can differ from the machine name as configured in the
operating system.
User
: The slave server user name as,
specified on the slave with the
--report-user
option.
Statement output includes this column only if the master
server is started with the
--show-slave-auth-info
option.
Password
: The slave server password as,
specified on the slave with the
--report-password
option.
Statement output includes this column only if the master
server is started with the
--show-slave-auth-info
option.
Port
: The port on the master to which the
slave server is listening, as specified on the slave with
the --report-port
option.
A zero in this column means that the slave port
(--report-port
) was not set.
Master_id
: The unique server ID of the
master server that the slave server is replicating from.
This is the server ID of the server on which SHOW
SLAVE HOSTS
is executed, so this same value is
listed for each row in the result.
Slave_UUID
: The globally unique ID of
this slave, as generated on the slave and found in the
slave's auto.cnf
file.
SHOW SLAVE STATUS [FOR CHANNEL channel
]
This statement provides status information on essential
parameters of the slave threads. It requires either the
SUPER
or
REPLICATION CLIENT
privilege.
If you issue this statement using the mysql
client, you can use a \G
statement terminator
rather than a semicolon to obtain a more readable vertical
layout:
mysql> SHOW SLAVE STATUS\G
*************************** 1. row ***************************
Slave_IO_State: Waiting for master to send event
Master_Host: localhost
Master_User: repl
Master_Port: 13000
Connect_Retry: 60
Master_Log_File: master-bin.000002
Read_Master_Log_Pos: 1307
Relay_Log_File: slave-relay-bin.000003
Relay_Log_Pos: 1508
Relay_Master_Log_File: master-bin.000002
Slave_IO_Running: Yes
Slave_SQL_Running: Yes
Replicate_Do_DB:
Replicate_Ignore_DB:
Replicate_Do_Table:
Replicate_Ignore_Table:
Replicate_Wild_Do_Table:
Replicate_Wild_Ignore_Table:
Last_Errno: 0
Last_Error:
Skip_Counter: 0
Exec_Master_Log_Pos: 1307
Relay_Log_Space: 1858
Until_Condition: None
Until_Log_File:
Until_Log_Pos: 0
Master_SSL_Allowed: No
Master_SSL_CA_File:
Master_SSL_CA_Path:
Master_SSL_Cert:
Master_SSL_Cipher:
Master_SSL_Key:
Seconds_Behind_Master: 0
Master_SSL_Verify_Server_Cert: No
Last_IO_Errno: 0
Last_IO_Error:
Last_SQL_Errno: 0
Last_SQL_Error:
Replicate_Ignore_Server_Ids:
Master_Server_Id: 1
Master_UUID: 3e11fa47-71ca-11e1-9e33-c80aa9429562
Master_Info_File: /var/mysqld.2/data/master.info
SQL_Delay: 0
SQL_Remaining_Delay: NULL
Slave_SQL_Running_State: Reading event from the relay log
Master_Retry_Count: 10
Master_Bind:
Last_IO_Error_Timestamp:
Last_SQL_Error_Timestamp:
Master_SSL_Crl:
Master_SSL_Crlpath:
Retrieved_Gtid_Set: 3e11fa47-71ca-11e1-9e33-c80aa9429562:1-5
Executed_Gtid_Set: 3e11fa47-71ca-11e1-9e33-c80aa9429562:1-5
Auto_Position: 1
Replicate_Rewrite_DB:
Channel_name:
Master_TLS_Version: TLSv1.2
The Performance Schema provides tables that expose replication
information. This is similar to the information available from
the SHOW SLAVE STATUS
statement,
but represented in table form. For details, see
Section 25.12.11, “Performance Schema Replication Tables”.
The following list describes the fields returned by
SHOW SLAVE STATUS
. For additional
information about interpreting their meanings, see
Section 16.1.7.1, “Checking Replication Status”.
Slave_IO_State
A copy of the State
field of the
SHOW PROCESSLIST
output for
the slave I/O thread. This tells you what the thread is
doing: trying to connect to the master, waiting for events
from the master, reconnecting to the master, and so on. For
a listing of possible states, see
Section 8.14.5, “Replication Slave I/O Thread States”.
Master_Host
The master host that the slave is connected to.
Master_User
The user name of the account used to connect to the master.
Master_Port
The port used to connect to the master.
Connect_Retry
The number of seconds between connect retries (default 60).
This can be set with the CHANGE MASTER
TO
statement.
Master_Log_File
The name of the master binary log file from which the I/O thread is currently reading.
Read_Master_Log_Pos
The position in the current master binary log file up to which the I/O thread has read.
Relay_Log_File
The name of the relay log file from which the SQL thread is currently reading and executing.
Relay_Log_Pos
The position in the current relay log file up to which the SQL thread has read and executed.
Relay_Master_Log_File
The name of the master binary log file containing the most recent event executed by the SQL thread.
Slave_IO_Running
Whether the I/O thread is started and has connected successfully to the master. Internally, the state of this thread is represented by one of the following three values:
MYSQL_SLAVE_NOT_RUN.
The slave I/O thread is not running. For this state,
Slave_IO_Running
is
No
.
MYSQL_SLAVE_RUN_NOT_CONNECT.
The slave I/O thread is running, but is not connected
to a replication master. For this state,
Slave_IO_Running
is
Connecting
.
MYSQL_SLAVE_RUN_CONNECT.
The slave I/O thread is running, and is connected to a
replication master. For this state,
Slave_IO_Running
is
Yes
.
The value of the
Slave_running
system
status variable corresponds with this value.
Slave_SQL_Running
Whether the SQL thread is started.
Replicate_Do_DB
,
Replicate_Ignore_DB
The lists of databases that were specified with the
--replicate-do-db
and
--replicate-ignore-db
options, if any.
Replicate_Do_Table
,
Replicate_Ignore_Table
,
Replicate_Wild_Do_Table
,
Replicate_Wild_Ignore_Table
The lists of tables that were specified with the
--replicate-do-table
,
--replicate-ignore-table
,
--replicate-wild-do-table
,
and
--replicate-wild-ignore-table
options, if any.
Last_Errno
, Last_Error
These columns are aliases for
Last_SQL_Errno
and
Last_SQL_Error
.
Issuing RESET MASTER
or
RESET SLAVE
resets the values
shown in these columns.
When the slave SQL thread receives an error, it reports
the error first, then stops the SQL thread. This means
that there is a small window of time during which
SHOW SLAVE STATUS
shows a
nonzero value for Last_SQL_Errno
even
though Slave_SQL_Running
still displays
Yes
.
Skip_Counter
The current value of the
sql_slave_skip_counter
system variable. See
Section 13.4.2.5, “SET GLOBAL sql_slave_skip_counter Statement”.
Exec_Master_Log_Pos
The position in the current master binary log file to which
the SQL thread has read and executed, marking the start of
the next transaction or event to be processed. You can use
this value with the CHANGE MASTER
TO
statement's
MASTER_LOG_POS
option when starting a new
slave from an existing slave, so that the new slave reads
from this point. The coordinates given by
(Relay_Master_Log_File
,
Exec_Master_Log_Pos
) in the master's
binary log correspond to the coordinates given by
(Relay_Log_File
,
Relay_Log_Pos
) in the relay log.
Inconsistencies in the sequence of transactions from the
relay log which have been executed can cause this value to
be a “low-water mark”. In other words,
transactions appearing before the position are guaranteed to
have committed, but transactions after the position may have
committed or not. If these gaps need to be corrected, use
START SLAVE
UNTIL SQL_AFTER_MTS_GAPS
. See
Section 16.4.1.32, “Replication and Transaction Inconsistencies”
for more information.
Relay_Log_Space
The total combined size of all existing relay log files.
Until_Condition
,
Until_Log_File
,
Until_Log_Pos
The values specified in the UNTIL
clause
of the START SLAVE
statement.
Until_Condition
has these values:
None
if no UNTIL
clause was specified
Master
if the slave is reading until
a given position in the master's binary log
Relay
if the slave is reading until a
given position in its relay log
SQL_BEFORE_GTIDS
if the slave SQL
thread is processing transactions until it has reached
the first transaction whose GTID is listed in the
gtid_set
.
SQL_AFTER_GTIDS
if the slave threads
are processing all transactions until the last
transaction in the gtid_set
has been
processed by both threads.
SQL_AFTER_MTS_GAPS
if a multithreaded slave's SQL threads are running until
no more gaps are found in the relay log.
Until_Log_File
and
Until_Log_Pos
indicate the log file name
and position that define the coordinates at which the SQL
thread stops executing.
For more information on UNTIL
clauses,
see Section 13.4.2.6, “START SLAVE Statement”.
Master_SSL_Allowed
,
Master_SSL_CA_File
,
Master_SSL_CA_Path
,
Master_SSL_Cert
,
Master_SSL_Cipher
,
Master_SSL_CRL_File
,
Master_SSL_CRL_Path
,
Master_SSL_Key
,
Master_SSL_Verify_Server_Cert
These fields show the SSL parameters used by the slave to connect to the master, if any.
Master_SSL_Allowed
has these values:
Yes
if an SSL connection to the
master is permitted
No
if an SSL connection to the master
is not permitted
Ignored
if an SSL connection is
permitted but the slave server does not have SSL support
enabled
The values of the other SSL-related fields correspond to the
values of the MASTER_SSL_CA
,
MASTER_SSL_CAPATH
,
MASTER_SSL_CERT
,
MASTER_SSL_CIPHER
,
MASTER_SSL_CRL
,
MASTER_SSL_CRLPATH
,
MASTER_SSL_KEY
, and
MASTER_SSL_VERIFY_SERVER_CERT
options to
the CHANGE MASTER TO
statement. See Section 13.4.2.1, “CHANGE MASTER TO Statement”.
Seconds_Behind_Master
This field is an indication of how “late” the slave is:
When the slave is actively processing updates, this field shows the difference between the current timestamp on the slave and the original timestamp logged on the master for the event currently being processed on the slave.
When no event is currently being processed on the slave, this value is 0.
In essence, this field measures the time difference in
seconds between the slave SQL thread and the slave I/O
thread. If the network connection between master and slave
is fast, the slave I/O thread is very close to the master,
so this field is a good approximation of how late the slave
SQL thread is compared to the master. If the network is
slow, this is not a good approximation;
the slave SQL thread may quite often be caught up with the
slow-reading slave I/O thread, so
Seconds_Behind_Master
often shows a value
of 0, even if the I/O thread is late compared to the master.
In other words, this column is useful only for
fast networks.
This time difference computation works even if the master
and slave do not have identical clock times, provided that
the difference, computed when the slave I/O thread starts,
remains constant from then on. Any changes—including
NTP updates—can lead to clock skews that can make
calculation of Seconds_Behind_Master
less
reliable.
In MySQL 5.7, this field is
NULL
(undefined or unknown) if the slave
SQL thread is not running, or if the SQL thread has consumed
all of the relay log and the slave I/O thread is not
running. (In older versions of MySQL, this field was
NULL
if the slave SQL thread or the slave
I/O thread was not running or was not connected to the
master.) If the I/O thread is running but the relay log is
exhausted, Seconds_Behind_Master
is set
to 0.
The value of Seconds_Behind_Master
is
based on the timestamps stored in events, which are
preserved through replication. This means that if a master
M1 is itself a slave of M0, any event from M1's binary log
that originates from M0's binary log has M0's timestamp for
that event. This enables MySQL to replicate
TIMESTAMP
successfully.
However, the problem for
Seconds_Behind_Master
is that if M1 also
receives direct updates from clients, the
Seconds_Behind_Master
value randomly
fluctuates because sometimes the last event from M1
originates from M0 and sometimes is the result of a direct
update on M1.
When using a multithreaded slave, you should keep in mind
that this value is based on
Exec_Master_Log_Pos
, and so may not
reflect the position of the most recently committed
transaction.
Last_IO_Errno
,
Last_IO_Error
The error number and error message of the most recent error
that caused the I/O thread to stop. An error number of 0 and
message of the empty string mean “no error.” If
the Last_IO_Error
value is not empty, the
error values also appear in the slave's error log.
I/O error information includes a timestamp showing when the
most recent I/O thread error occurred. This timestamp uses
the format YYMMDD hh:mm:ss
, and
appears in the Last_IO_Error_Timestamp
column.
Issuing RESET MASTER
or
RESET SLAVE
resets the values
shown in these columns.
Last_SQL_Errno
,
Last_SQL_Error
The error number and error message of the most recent error
that caused the SQL thread to stop. An error number of 0 and
message of the empty string mean “no error.” If
the Last_SQL_Error
value is not empty,
the error values also appear in the slave's error log.
If the slave is multithreaded, the SQL thread is the
coordinator for worker threads. In this case, the
Last_SQL_Error
field shows exactly what
the Last_Error_Message
column in the
Performance Schema
replication_applier_status_by_coordinator
table shows. The field value is modified to suggest that
there may be more failures in the other worker threads which
can be seen in the
replication_applier_status_by_worker
table that shows each worker thread's status. If that table
is not available, the slave error log can be used. The log
or the
replication_applier_status_by_worker
table should also be used to learn more about the failure
shown by SHOW SLAVE STATUS
or
the coordinator table.
SQL error information includes a timestamp showing when the
most recent SQL thread error occurred. This timestamp uses
the format YYMMDD hh:mm:ss
, and
appears in the Last_SQL_Error_Timestamp
column.
Issuing RESET MASTER
or
RESET SLAVE
resets the values
shown in these columns.
In MySQL 5.7, all error codes and messages
displayed in the Last_SQL_Errno
and
Last_SQL_Error
columns correspond to
error values listed in
Section B.3.1, “Server Error Message Reference”. This was not
always true in previous versions. (Bug #11760365, Bug
#52768)
Replicate_Ignore_Server_Ids
In MySQL 5.7, you set a slave to ignore events
from 0 or more masters using the
IGNORE_SERVER_IDS
option of the
CHANGE MASTER TO
statement.
By default this is blank, and is usually modified only when
using a circular or other multi-master replication setup.
The message shown for
Replicate_Ignore_Server_Ids
when not
blank consists of a comma-delimited list of one or more
numbers, indicating the server IDs to be ignored. For
example:
Replicate_Ignore_Server_Ids: 2, 6, 9
Ignored_server_ids
also shows the
server IDs to be ignored, but is a space-delimited list,
which is preceded by the total number of server IDs to be
ignored. For example, if a CHANGE
MASTER TO
statement containing the
IGNORE_SERVER_IDS = (2,6,9)
option has
been issued to tell a slave to ignore masters having the
server ID 2, 6, or 9, that information appears as shown
here:
Ignored_server_ids: 3, 2, 6, 9
The first number (in this case 3
) shows
the number of server IDs being ignored.
Replicate_Ignore_Server_Ids
filtering is
performed by the I/O thread, rather than by the SQL thread,
which means that events which are filtered out are not
written to the relay log. This differs from the filtering
actions taken by server options such
--replicate-do-table
, which
apply to the SQL thread.
Master_Server_Id
The server_id
value from
the master.
Master_UUID
The server_uuid
value from
the master.
Master_Info_File
The location of the master.info
file.
SQL_Delay
The number of seconds that the slave must lag the master.
SQL_Remaining_Delay
When Slave_SQL_Running_State
is
Waiting until MASTER_DELAY seconds after master
executed event
, this field contains the number of
delay seconds remaining. At other times, this field is
NULL
.
Slave_SQL_Running_State
The state of the SQL thread (analogous to
Slave_IO_State
). The value is identical
to the State
value of the SQL thread as
displayed by SHOW
PROCESSLIST
.
Section 8.14.6, “Replication Slave SQL Thread States”, provides a
listing of possible states
Master_Retry_Count
The number of times the slave can attempt to reconnect to
the master in the event of a lost connection. This value can
be set using the MASTER_RETRY_COUNT
option of the CHANGE MASTER
TO
statement (preferred) or the older
--master-retry-count
server
option (still supported for backward compatibility).
Master_Bind
The network interface that the slave is bound to, if any.
This is set using the MASTER_BIND
option
for the CHANGE MASTER TO
statement.
Last_IO_Error_Timestamp
A timestamp in YYMMDD hh:mm:ss
format that shows when the most recent I/O error took place.
Last_SQL_Error_Timestamp
A timestamp in YYMMDD hh:mm:ss
format that shows when the most recent SQL error occurred.
Retrieved_Gtid_Set
The set of global transaction IDs corresponding to all transactions received by this slave. Empty if GTIDs are not in use. See GTID Sets for more information.
This is the set of all GTIDs that exist or have existed in
the relay logs. Each GTID is added as soon as the
Gtid_log_event
is received. This can
cause partially transmitted transactions to have their GTIDs
included in the set.
When all relay logs are lost due to executing
RESET SLAVE
or
CHANGE MASTER TO
, or due to
the effects of the
--relay-log-recovery
option,
the set is cleared. When
relay_log_purge = 1
, the
newest relay log is always kept, and the set is not cleared.
Executed_Gtid_Set
The set of global transaction IDs written in the binary log.
This is the same as the value for the global
gtid_executed
system
variable on this server, as well as the value for
Executed_Gtid_Set
in the output of
SHOW MASTER STATUS
on this
server. Empty if GTIDs are not in use. See
GTID Sets for
more information.
Auto_Position
1 if autopositioning is in use; otherwise 0.
Replicate_Rewrite_DB
The Replicate_Rewrite_DB
value displays
any replication filtering rules that were specified. For
example, if the following replication filter rule was set:
CHANGE REPLICATION FILTER REPLICATE_REWRITE_DB=((db1,db2), (db3,db4));
the Replicate_Rewrite_DB
value displays:
Replicate_Rewrite_DB: (db1,db2),(db3,db4)
For more information, see Section 13.4.2.2, “CHANGE REPLICATION FILTER Statement”.
Channel_name
The replication channel which is being displayed. There is always a default replication channel, and more replication channels can be added. See Section 16.2.3, “Replication Channels” for more information.
Master_TLS_Version
The TLS version used on the master. For TLS version information, see Section 6.3.2, “Encrypted Connection TLS Protocols and Ciphers”. This column was added in MySQL 5.7.10.
SHOW [GLOBAL | SESSION] STATUS [LIKE 'pattern
' | WHEREexpr
]
As of MySQL 5.7.6, the value of the
show_compatibility_56
system
variable affects the information available from and privileges
required for the statement described here. For details, see
the description of that variable in
Section 5.1.7, “Server System Variables”.
SHOW STATUS
provides server
status information (see
Section 5.1.9, “Server Status Variables”). This statement does
not require any privilege. It requires only the ability to
connect to the server.
Status variable information is also available from these sources:
Performance Schema tables. See Section 25.12.14, “Performance Schema Status Variable Tables”.
The
GLOBAL_STATUS
and
SESSION_STATUS
tables. See Section 24.10, “The INFORMATION_SCHEMA GLOBAL_STATUS and SESSION_STATUS Tables”.
The mysqladmin extended-status command. See Section 4.5.2, “mysqladmin — Client for Administering a MySQL Server”.
For SHOW STATUS
, a
LIKE
clause, if present, indicates
which variable names to match. A WHERE
clause
can be given to select rows using more general conditions, as
discussed in Section 24.35, “Extensions to SHOW Statements”.
SHOW STATUS
accepts an optional
GLOBAL
or SESSION
variable
scope modifier:
With a GLOBAL
modifier, the statement
displays the global status values. A global status variable
may represent status for some aspect of the server itself
(for example, Aborted_connects
), or the
aggregated status over all connections to MySQL (for
example, Bytes_received
and
Bytes_sent
). If a variable has no global
value, the session value is displayed.
With a SESSION
modifier, the statement
displays the status variable values for the current
connection. If a variable has no session value, the global
value is displayed. LOCAL
is a synonym
for SESSION
.
If no modifier is present, the default is
SESSION
.
The scope for each status variable is listed at Section 5.1.9, “Server Status Variables”.
Each invocation of the SHOW
STATUS
statement uses an internal temporary table and
increments the global
Created_tmp_tables
value.
Partial output is shown here. The list of names and values may differ for your server. The meaning of each variable is given in Section 5.1.9, “Server Status Variables”.
mysql> SHOW STATUS;
+--------------------------+------------+
| Variable_name | Value |
+--------------------------+------------+
| Aborted_clients | 0 |
| Aborted_connects | 0 |
| Bytes_received | 155372598 |
| Bytes_sent | 1176560426 |
| Connections | 30023 |
| Created_tmp_disk_tables | 0 |
| Created_tmp_tables | 8340 |
| Created_tmp_files | 60 |
...
| Open_tables | 1 |
| Open_files | 2 |
| Open_streams | 0 |
| Opened_tables | 44600 |
| Questions | 2026873 |
...
| Table_locks_immediate | 1920382 |
| Table_locks_waited | 0 |
| Threads_cached | 0 |
| Threads_created | 30022 |
| Threads_connected | 1 |
| Threads_running | 1 |
| Uptime | 80380 |
+--------------------------+------------+
With a LIKE
clause, the statement
displays only rows for those variables with names that match the
pattern:
mysql> SHOW STATUS LIKE 'Key%';
+--------------------+----------+
| Variable_name | Value |
+--------------------+----------+
| Key_blocks_used | 14955 |
| Key_read_requests | 96854827 |
| Key_reads | 162040 |
| Key_write_requests | 7589728 |
| Key_writes | 3813196 |
+--------------------+----------+
SHOW TABLE STATUS [{FROM | IN}db_name
] [LIKE 'pattern
' | WHEREexpr
]
SHOW TABLE STATUS
works likes
SHOW TABLES
, but provides a lot
of information about each non-TEMPORARY
table. You can also get this list using the mysqlshow
--status db_name
command.
The LIKE
clause, if present,
indicates which table names to match. The
WHERE
clause can be given to select rows
using more general conditions, as discussed in
Section 24.35, “Extensions to SHOW Statements”.
This statement also displays information about views.
SHOW TABLE STATUS
output has
these columns:
Name
The name of the table.
Engine
The storage engine for the table. See Chapter 14, The InnoDB Storage Engine, and Chapter 15, Alternative Storage Engines.
For partitioned tables, Engine
shows the
name of the storage engine used by all partitions.
Version
The version number of the table's .frm
file.
Row_format
The row-storage format (Fixed
,
Dynamic
, Compressed
,
Redundant
, Compact
).
For MyISAM
tables,
Dynamic
corresponds to what
myisamchk -dvv reports as
Packed
. InnoDB
table
format is either Redundant
or
Compact
when using the
Antelope
file format, or
Compressed
or Dynamic
when using the Barracuda
file format.
Rows
The number of rows. Some storage engines, such as
MyISAM
, store the exact count. For other
storage engines, such as InnoDB
, this
value is an approximation, and may vary from the actual
value by as much as 40% to 50%. In such cases, use
SELECT COUNT(*)
to obtain an accurate
count.
The Rows
value is NULL
for INFORMATION_SCHEMA
tables.
For InnoDB
tables, the row
count is only a rough estimate used in SQL optimization.
(This is also true if the
InnoDB
table is partitioned.)
Avg_row_length
The average row length.
Refer to the notes at the end of this section for related information.
Data_length
For MyISAM
,
Data_length
is the length of the data
file, in bytes.
For InnoDB
,
Data_length
is the approximate amount of
space allocated for the clustered index, in bytes.
Specifically, it is the clustered index size, in pages,
multiplied by the InnoDB
page size.
Refer to the notes at the end of this section for information regarding other storage engines.
Max_data_length
For MyISAM
,
Max_data_length
is maximum length of the
data file. This is the total number of bytes of data that
can be stored in the table, given the data pointer size
used.
Unused for InnoDB
.
Refer to the notes at the end of this section for information regarding other storage engines.
Index_length
For MyISAM
,
Index_length
is the length of the index
file, in bytes.
For InnoDB
,
Index_length
is the approximate amount of
space allocated for non-clustered indexes, in bytes.
Specifically, it is the sum of non-clustered index sizes, in
pages, multiplied by the InnoDB
page
size.
Refer to the notes at the end of this section for information regarding other storage engines.
Data_free
The number of allocated but unused bytes.
InnoDB
tables report the free space of
the tablespace to which the table belongs. For a table
located in the shared tablespace, this is the free space of
the shared tablespace. If you are using multiple tablespaces
and the table has its own tablespace, the free space is for
only that table. Free space means the number of bytes in
completely free extents minus a safety margin. Even if free
space displays as 0, it may be possible to insert rows as
long as new extents need not be allocated.
For NDB Cluster, Data_free
shows the
space allocated on disk for, but not used by, a Disk Data
table or fragment on disk. (In-memory data resource usage is
reported by the Data_length
column.)
For partitioned tables, this value is only an estimate and
may not be absolutely correct. A more accurate method of
obtaining this information in such cases is to query the
INFORMATION_SCHEMA
PARTITIONS
table, as shown in
this example:
SELECT SUM(DATA_FREE) FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.PARTITIONS WHERE TABLE_SCHEMA = 'mydb' AND TABLE_NAME = 'mytable';
For more information, see Section 24.16, “The INFORMATION_SCHEMA PARTITIONS Table”.
Auto_increment
The next AUTO_INCREMENT
value.
Create_time
When the table was created.
Update_time
When the data file was last updated. For some storage
engines, this value is NULL
. For example,
InnoDB
stores multiple tables in its
system
tablespace and the data file timestamp does not
apply. Even with
file-per-table
mode with each InnoDB
table in a separate
.ibd
file,
change
buffering can delay the write to the data file, so
the file modification time is different from the time of the
last insert, update, or delete. For
MyISAM
, the data file timestamp is used;
however, on Windows the timestamp is not updated by updates,
so the value is inaccurate.
Update_time
displays a timestamp value
for the last UPDATE
,
INSERT
, or
DELETE
performed on
InnoDB
tables that are not partitioned.
For MVCC, the timestamp value reflects the
COMMIT
time, which is
considered the last update time. Timestamps are not
persisted when the server is restarted or when the table is
evicted from the InnoDB
data dictionary
cache.
The Update_time
column also shows this
information for partitioned InnoDB
tables.
Check_time
When the table was last checked. Not all storage engines
update this time, in which case, the value is always
NULL
.
For partitioned InnoDB
tables,
Check_time
is always
NULL
.
Collation
The table default collation. The output does not explicitly list the table default character set, but the collation name begins with the character set name.
Checksum
The live checksum value, if any.
Create_options
Extra options used with CREATE
TABLE
. The original options from when
CREATE TABLE
was executed are
retained and the options reported here may differ from the
active table settings and options.
Create_options
shows
partitioned
if the table is partitioned.
It also shows the ENCRYPTION
option
specified when creating or altering a file-per-table
tablespace.
Comment
The comment used when creating the table (or information as to why MySQL could not access the table information).
For InnoDB
tables,
SHOW TABLE STATUS
does not
give accurate statistics except for the physical size
reserved by the table. The row count is only a rough
estimate used in SQL optimization.
For NDB
tables, the output of
this statement shows appropriate values for the
Avg_row_length
and
Data_length
columns, with the exception
that BLOB
columns are not
taken into account.
For NDB
tables,
Data_length
includes data stored in main
memory only; the Max_data_length
and
Data_free
columns apply to Disk Data.
For NDB Cluster Disk Data tables,
Max_data_length
shows the space allocated
for the disk part of a Disk Data table or fragment.
(In-memory data resource usage is reported by the
Data_length
column.)
For MEMORY
tables, the
Data_length
,
Max_data_length
, and
Index_length
values approximate the
actual amount of allocated memory. The allocation algorithm
reserves memory in large amounts to reduce the number of
allocation operations.
For views, all columns displayed by
SHOW TABLE STATUS
are
NULL
except that Name
indicates the view name and Comment
says
VIEW
.
Table information is also available from the
INFORMATION_SCHEMA
TABLES
table. See
Section 24.25, “The INFORMATION_SCHEMA TABLES Table”.
SHOW [FULL] TABLES [{FROM | IN}db_name
] [LIKE 'pattern
' | WHEREexpr
]
SHOW TABLES
lists the
non-TEMPORARY
tables in a given database. You
can also get this list using the mysqlshow
db_name
command. The
LIKE
clause, if present, indicates
which table names to match. The WHERE
clause
can be given to select rows using more general conditions, as
discussed in Section 24.35, “Extensions to SHOW Statements”.
Matching performed by the LIKE
clause is
dependent on the setting of the
lower_case_table_names
system
variable.
This statement also lists any views in the database. The
optional FULL
modifier causes
SHOW TABLES
to display a second
output column with values of BASE TABLE
for a
table, VIEW
for a view, or SYSTEM
VIEW
for an INFORMATION_SCHEMA
table.
If you have no privileges for a base table or view, it does not
show up in the output from SHOW
TABLES
or mysqlshow db_name.
Table information is also available from the
INFORMATION_SCHEMA
TABLES
table. See
Section 24.25, “The INFORMATION_SCHEMA TABLES Table”.
SHOW TRIGGERS [{FROM | IN}db_name
] [LIKE 'pattern
' | WHEREexpr
]
SHOW TRIGGERS
lists the triggers
currently defined for tables in a database (the default database
unless a FROM
clause is given). This
statement returns results only for databases and tables for
which you have the TRIGGER
privilege. The LIKE
clause, if
present, indicates which table names (not trigger names) to
match and causes the statement to display triggers for those
tables. The WHERE
clause can be given to
select rows using more general conditions, as discussed in
Section 24.35, “Extensions to SHOW Statements”.
For the ins_sum
trigger defined in
Section 23.3, “Using Triggers”, the output of
SHOW TRIGGERS
is as shown here:
mysql> SHOW TRIGGERS LIKE 'acc%'\G
*************************** 1. row ***************************
Trigger: ins_sum
Event: INSERT
Table: account
Statement: SET @sum = @sum + NEW.amount
Timing: BEFORE
Created: 2018-08-08 10:10:12.61
sql_mode: ONLY_FULL_GROUP_BY,STRICT_TRANS_TABLES,
NO_ZERO_IN_DATE,NO_ZERO_DATE,
ERROR_FOR_DIVISION_BY_ZERO,
NO_AUTO_CREATE_USER,NO_ENGINE_SUBSTITUTION
Definer: me@localhost
character_set_client: utf8
collation_connection: utf8_general_ci
Database Collation: latin1_swedish_ci
SHOW TRIGGERS
output has these
columns:
Trigger
The name of the trigger.
Event
The trigger event. This is the type of operation on the
associated table for which the trigger activates. The value
is INSERT
(a row was inserted),
DELETE
(a row was deleted), or
UPDATE
(a row was modified).
Table
The table for which the trigger is defined.
Statement
The trigger body; that is, the statement executed when the trigger activates.
Timing
Whether the trigger activates before or after the triggering
event. The value is BEFORE
or
AFTER
.
Created
The date and time when the trigger was created. This is a
TIMESTAMP(2)
value (with a fractional
part in hundredths of seconds) for triggers created in MySQL
5.7.2 or later, NULL
for triggers created
prior to 5.7.2.
sql_mode
The SQL mode in effect when the trigger was created, and under which the trigger executes. For the permitted values, see Section 5.1.10, “Server SQL Modes”.
Definer
The account of the user who created the trigger, in
'
format.
user_name
'@'host_name
'
character_set_client
The session value of the
character_set_client
system
variable when the trigger was created.
collation_connection
The session value of the
collation_connection
system
variable when the trigger was created.
Database Collation
The collation of the database with which the trigger is associated.
Trigger information is also available from the
INFORMATION_SCHEMA
TRIGGERS
table. See
Section 24.29, “The INFORMATION_SCHEMA TRIGGERS Table”.
SHOW [GLOBAL | SESSION] VARIABLES [LIKE 'pattern
' | WHEREexpr
]
As of MySQL 5.7.6, the value of the
show_compatibility_56
system
variable affects the information available from and privileges
required for the statement described here. For details, see
the description of that variable in
Section 5.1.7, “Server System Variables”.
SHOW VARIABLES
shows the values
of MySQL system variables (see
Section 5.1.7, “Server System Variables”). This statement does
not require any privilege. It requires only the ability to
connect to the server.
System variable information is also available from these sources:
Performance Schema tables. See Section 25.12.13, “Performance Schema System Variable Tables”.
The
GLOBAL_VARIABLES
and
SESSION_VARIABLES
tables. See Section 24.11, “The INFORMATION_SCHEMA GLOBAL_VARIABLES and SESSION_VARIABLES Tables”.
The mysqladmin variables command. See Section 4.5.2, “mysqladmin — Client for Administering a MySQL Server”.
For SHOW VARIABLES
, a
LIKE
clause, if present, indicates
which variable names to match. A WHERE
clause
can be given to select rows using more general conditions, as
discussed in Section 24.35, “Extensions to SHOW Statements”.
SHOW VARIABLES
accepts an
optional GLOBAL
or SESSION
variable scope modifier:
With a GLOBAL
modifier, the statement
displays global system variable values. These are the values
used to initialize the corresponding session variables for
new connections to MySQL. If a variable has no global value,
no value is displayed.
With a SESSION
modifier, the statement
displays the system variable values that are in effect for
the current connection. If a variable has no session value,
the global value is displayed. LOCAL
is a
synonym for SESSION
.
If no modifier is present, the default is
SESSION
.
The scope for each system variable is listed at Section 5.1.7, “Server System Variables”.
SHOW VARIABLES
is subject to a
version-dependent display-width limit. For variables with very
long values that are not completely displayed, use
SELECT
as a workaround. For
example:
SELECT @@GLOBAL.innodb_data_file_path;
Most system variables can be set at server startup (read-only
variables such as
version_comment
are
exceptions). Many can be changed at runtime with the
SET
statement. See Section 5.1.8, “Using System Variables”, and
Section 13.7.4.1, “SET Syntax for Variable Assignment”.
Partial output is shown here. The list of names and values may differ for your server. Section 5.1.7, “Server System Variables”, describes the meaning of each variable, and Section 5.1.1, “Configuring the Server”, provides information about tuning them.
mysql> SHOW VARIABLES;
+-----------------------------------------+---------------------------+
| Variable_name | Value |
+-----------------------------------------+---------------------------+
| auto_increment_increment | 1 |
| auto_increment_offset | 1 |
| autocommit | ON |
| automatic_sp_privileges | ON |
| back_log | 50 |
| basedir | /home/jon/bin/mysql-5.5 |
| big_tables | OFF |
| binlog_cache_size | 32768 |
| binlog_direct_non_transactional_updates | OFF |
| binlog_format | STATEMENT |
| binlog_stmt_cache_size | 32768 |
| bulk_insert_buffer_size | 8388608 |
...
| max_allowed_packet | 4194304 |
| max_binlog_cache_size | 18446744073709547520 |
| max_binlog_size | 1073741824 |
| max_binlog_stmt_cache_size | 18446744073709547520 |
| max_connect_errors | 100 |
| max_connections | 151 |
| max_delayed_threads | 20 |
| max_error_count | 64 |
| max_heap_table_size | 16777216 |
| max_insert_delayed_threads | 20 |
| max_join_size | 18446744073709551615 |
...
| thread_handling | one-thread-per-connection |
| thread_stack | 262144 |
| time_format | %H:%i:%s |
| time_zone | SYSTEM |
| timestamp | 1316689732 |
| tmp_table_size | 16777216 |
| tmpdir | /tmp |
| transaction_alloc_block_size | 8192 |
| transaction_isolation | REPEATABLE-READ |
| transaction_prealloc_size | 4096 |
| transaction_read_only | OFF |
| tx_isolation | REPEATABLE-READ |
| tx_read_only | OFF |
| unique_checks | ON |
| updatable_views_with_limit | YES |
| version | 5.5.17-log |
| version_comment | Source distribution |
| version_compile_machine | x86_64 |
| version_compile_os | Linux |
| wait_timeout | 28800 |
| warning_count | 0 |
+-----------------------------------------+---------------------------+
With a LIKE
clause, the statement
displays only rows for those variables with names that match the
pattern. To obtain the row for a specific variable, use a
LIKE
clause as shown:
SHOW VARIABLES LIKE 'max_join_size'; SHOW SESSION VARIABLES LIKE 'max_join_size';
To get a list of variables whose name match a pattern, use the
%
wildcard character in a
LIKE
clause:
SHOW VARIABLES LIKE '%size%'; SHOW GLOBAL VARIABLES LIKE '%size%';
Wildcard characters can be used in any position within the
pattern to be matched. Strictly speaking, because
_
is a wildcard that matches any single
character, you should escape it as \_
to
match it literally. In practice, this is rarely necessary.
SHOW WARNINGS [LIMIT [offset
,]row_count
] SHOW COUNT(*) WARNINGS
SHOW WARNINGS
is a diagnostic
statement that displays information about the conditions
(errors, warnings, and notes) resulting from executing a
statement in the current session. Warnings are generated for DML
statements such as INSERT
,
UPDATE
, and
LOAD DATA
as well as DDL
statements such as CREATE TABLE
and ALTER TABLE
.
The LIMIT
clause has the same syntax as for
the SELECT
statement. See
Section 13.2.9, “SELECT Statement”.
SHOW WARNINGS
is also used
following EXPLAIN
, to display the
extended information generated by
EXPLAIN
. See
Section 8.8.3, “Extended EXPLAIN Output Format”.
SHOW WARNINGS
displays
information about the conditions resulting from execution of the
most recent nondiagnostic statement in the current session. If
the most recent statement resulted in an error during parsing,
SHOW WARNINGS
shows the resulting
conditions, regardless of statement type (diagnostic or
nondiagnostic).
The SHOW COUNT(*)
WARNINGS
diagnostic statement displays the total
number of errors, warnings, and notes. You can also retrieve
this number from the
warning_count
system variable:
SHOW COUNT(*) WARNINGS; SELECT @@warning_count;
A difference in these statements is that the first is a
diagnostic statement that does not clear the message list. The
second, because it is a SELECT
statement is considered nondiagnostic and does clear the message
list.
A related diagnostic statement, SHOW
ERRORS
, shows only error conditions (it excludes
warnings and notes), and
SHOW COUNT(*)
ERRORS
statement displays the total number of errors.
See Section 13.7.5.17, “SHOW ERRORS Statement”. GET
DIAGNOSTICS
can be used to examine information for
individual conditions. See Section 13.6.7.3, “GET DIAGNOSTICS Statement”.
Here is a simple example that shows data-conversion warnings for
INSERT
. The example assumes that
strict SQL mode is disabled. With strict mode enabled, the
warnings would become errors and terminate the
INSERT
.
mysql>CREATE TABLE t1 (a TINYINT NOT NULL, b CHAR(4));
Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.05 sec) mysql>INSERT INTO t1 VALUES(10,'mysql'), (NULL,'test'), (300,'xyz');
Query OK, 3 rows affected, 3 warnings (0.00 sec) Records: 3 Duplicates: 0 Warnings: 3 mysql>SHOW WARNINGS\G
*************************** 1. row *************************** Level: Warning Code: 1265 Message: Data truncated for column 'b' at row 1 *************************** 2. row *************************** Level: Warning Code: 1048 Message: Column 'a' cannot be null *************************** 3. row *************************** Level: Warning Code: 1264 Message: Out of range value for column 'a' at row 3 3 rows in set (0.00 sec)
The max_error_count
system
variable controls the maximum number of error, warning, and note
messages for which the server stores information, and thus the
number of messages that SHOW
WARNINGS
displays. To change the number of messages
the server can store, change the value of
max_error_count
. The default is
64.
max_error_count
controls only
how many messages are stored, not how many are counted. The
value of warning_count
is not
limited by max_error_count
,
even if the number of messages generated exceeds
max_error_count
. The following
example demonstrates this. The ALTER
TABLE
statement produces three warning messages
(strict SQL mode is disabled for the example to prevent an error
from occuring after a single conversion issue). Only one message
is stored and displayed because
max_error_count
has been set to
1, but all three are counted (as shown by the value of
warning_count
):
mysql>SHOW VARIABLES LIKE 'max_error_count';
+-----------------+-------+ | Variable_name | Value | +-----------------+-------+ | max_error_count | 64 | +-----------------+-------+ 1 row in set (0.00 sec) mysql>SET max_error_count=1, sql_mode = '';
Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.00 sec) mysql>ALTER TABLE t1 MODIFY b CHAR;
Query OK, 3 rows affected, 3 warnings (0.00 sec) Records: 3 Duplicates: 0 Warnings: 3 mysql>SHOW WARNINGS;
+---------+------+----------------------------------------+ | Level | Code | Message | +---------+------+----------------------------------------+ | Warning | 1263 | Data truncated for column 'b' at row 1 | +---------+------+----------------------------------------+ 1 row in set (0.00 sec) mysql>SELECT @@warning_count;
+-----------------+ | @@warning_count | +-----------------+ | 3 | +-----------------+ 1 row in set (0.01 sec)
To disable message storage, set
max_error_count
to 0. In this
case, warning_count
still
indicates how many warnings occurred, but messages are not
stored and cannot be displayed.
The sql_notes
system variable
controls whether note messages increment
warning_count
and whether the
server stores them. By default,
sql_notes
is 1, but if set to
0, notes do not increment
warning_count
and the server
does not store them:
mysql>SET sql_notes = 1;
mysql>DROP TABLE IF EXISTS test.no_such_table;
Query OK, 0 rows affected, 1 warning (0.00 sec) mysql>SHOW WARNINGS;
+-------+------+------------------------------------+ | Level | Code | Message | +-------+------+------------------------------------+ | Note | 1051 | Unknown table 'test.no_such_table' | +-------+------+------------------------------------+ 1 row in set (0.00 sec) mysql>SET sql_notes = 0;
mysql>DROP TABLE IF EXISTS test.no_such_table;
Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.00 sec) mysql>SHOW WARNINGS;
Empty set (0.00 sec)
The MySQL server sends to each client a count indicating the
total number of errors, warnings, and notes resulting from the
most recent statement executed by that client. From the C API,
this value can be obtained by calling
mysql_warning_count()
. See
Section 27.7.6.78, “mysql_warning_count()”.
In the mysql client, you can enable and
disable automatic warnings display using the
warnings
and nowarning
commands, respectively, or their shortcuts,
\W
and \w
(see
Section 4.5.1.2, “mysql Client Commands”). For example:
mysql>\W
Show warnings enabled. mysql>SELECT 1/0;
+------+ | 1/0 | +------+ | NULL | +------+ 1 row in set, 1 warning (0.03 sec) Warning (Code 1365): Division by 0 mysql>\w
Show warnings disabled.
BINLOG 'str
'
BINLOG
is an internal-use
statement. It is generated by the mysqlbinlog
program as the printable representation of certain events in
binary log files. (See Section 4.6.7, “mysqlbinlog — Utility for Processing Binary Log Files”.) The
'
value is a
base 64-encoded string the that server decodes to determine the
data change indicated by the corresponding event. This statement
requires the str
'SUPER
privilege.
This statement can execute only format description events and row events.
CACHE INDEX {tbl_index_list
[,tbl_index_list
] ... |tbl_name
PARTITION (partition_list
) } INkey_cache_name
tbl_index_list
:tbl_name
[{INDEX|KEY} (index_name
[,index_name
] ...)]partition_list
: {partition_name
[,partition_name
] ... | ALL }
The CACHE INDEX
statement assigns
table indexes to a specific key cache. It applies only to
MyISAM
tables, including partitioned
MyISAM
tables. After the indexes have been
assigned, they can be preloaded into the cache if desired with
LOAD INDEX INTO
CACHE
.
The following statement assigns indexes from the tables
t1
, t2
, and
t3
to the key cache named
hot_cache
:
mysql> CACHE INDEX t1, t2, t3 IN hot_cache;
+---------+--------------------+----------+----------+
| Table | Op | Msg_type | Msg_text |
+---------+--------------------+----------+----------+
| test.t1 | assign_to_keycache | status | OK |
| test.t2 | assign_to_keycache | status | OK |
| test.t3 | assign_to_keycache | status | OK |
+---------+--------------------+----------+----------+
The syntax of CACHE INDEX
enables
you to specify that only particular indexes from a table should
be assigned to the cache. However, the implementation assigns
all the table's indexes to the cache, so there is no reason to
specify anything other than the table name.
The key cache referred to in a CACHE
INDEX
statement can be created by setting its size
with a parameter setting statement or in the server parameter
settings. For example:
SET GLOBAL keycache1.key_buffer_size=128*1024;
Key cache parameters are accessed as members of a structured system variable. See Section 5.1.8.3, “Structured System Variables”.
A key cache must exist before you assign indexes to it, or an error occurs:
mysql> CACHE INDEX t1 IN non_existent_cache;
ERROR 1284 (HY000): Unknown key cache 'non_existent_cache'
By default, table indexes are assigned to the main (default) key cache created at the server startup. When a key cache is destroyed, all indexes assigned to it are reassigned to the default key cache.
Index assignment affects the server globally: If one client assigns an index to a given cache, this cache is used for all queries involving the index, no matter which client issues the queries.
CACHE INDEX
is supported for
partitioned MyISAM
tables. You can assign one
or more indexes for one, several, or all partitions to a given
key cache. For example, you can do the following:
CREATE TABLE pt (c1 INT, c2 VARCHAR(50), INDEX i(c1)) ENGINE=MyISAM PARTITION BY HASH(c1) PARTITIONS 4; SET GLOBAL kc_fast.key_buffer_size = 128 * 1024; SET GLOBAL kc_slow.key_buffer_size = 128 * 1024; CACHE INDEX pt PARTITION (p0) IN kc_fast; CACHE INDEX pt PARTITION (p1, p3) IN kc_slow;
The previous set of statements performs the following actions:
Creates a partitioned table with 4 partitions; these
partitions are automatically named p0
,
..., p3
; this table has an index named
i
on column c1
.
Creates 2 key caches named kc_fast
and
kc_slow
Assigns the index for partition p0
to the
kc_fast
key cache and the index for
partitions p1
and p3
to the kc_slow
key cache; the index for
the remaining partition (p2
) uses the
server's default key cache.
If you wish instead to assign the indexes for all partitions in
table pt
to a single key cache named
kc_all
, you can use either of the following
two statements:
CACHE INDEX pt PARTITION (ALL) IN kc_all; CACHE INDEX pt IN kc_all;
The two statements just shown are equivalent, and issuing either
one has exactly the same effect. In other words, if you wish to
assign indexes for all partitions of a partitioned table to the
same key cache, the PARTITION (ALL)
clause is
optional.
When assigning indexes for multiple partitions to a key cache, the partitions need not be contiguous, and you need not list their names in any particular order. Indexes for any partitions not explicitly assigned to a key cache automatically use the server default key cache.
Index preloading is also supported for partitioned
MyISAM
tables. For more information, see
Section 13.7.6.5, “LOAD INDEX INTO CACHE Statement”.
FLUSH [NO_WRITE_TO_BINLOG | LOCAL] {flush_option
[,flush_option
] ... |tables_option
}flush_option
: { BINARY LOGS | DES_KEY_FILE | ENGINE LOGS | ERROR LOGS | GENERAL LOGS | HOSTS | LOGS | PRIVILEGES | OPTIMIZER_COSTS | QUERY CACHE | RELAY LOGS [FOR CHANNELchannel
] | SLOW LOGS | STATUS | USER_RESOURCES }tables_option
: { TABLES | TABLEStbl_name
[,tbl_name
] ... | TABLES WITH READ LOCK | TABLEStbl_name
[,tbl_name
] ... WITH READ LOCK | TABLEStbl_name
[,tbl_name
] ... FOR EXPORT }
The FLUSH
statement has several
variant forms that clear or reload various internal caches,
flush tables, or acquire locks. To execute
FLUSH
, you must have the
RELOAD
privilege. Specific flush
options might require additional privileges, as described later.
It is not possible to issue
FLUSH
statements within stored
functions or triggers. However, you may use
FLUSH
in stored procedures, so
long as these are not called from stored functions or
triggers. See Section 23.8, “Restrictions on Stored Programs”.
By default, the server writes
FLUSH
statements to the binary
log so that they replicate to replication slaves. To suppress
logging, specify the optional
NO_WRITE_TO_BINLOG
keyword or its alias
LOCAL
.
FLUSH LOGS
,
FLUSH BINARY LOGS
,
FLUSH TABLES WITH READ LOCK
(with or without a table list), and
FLUSH
TABLES
are not written to the binary log in any case
because they would cause problems if replicated to a slave.
tbl_name
... FOR
EXPORT
The FLUSH
statement causes an
implicit commit. See Section 13.3.3, “Statements That Cause an Implicit Commit”.
The mysqladmin utility provides a
command-line interface to some flush operations, using commands
such as flush-hosts
,
flush-logs
,
flush-privileges
,
flush-status
, and
flush-tables
. See
Section 4.5.2, “mysqladmin — Client for Administering a MySQL Server”.
Sending a SIGHUP
signal to the server causes
several flush operations to occur that are similar to various
forms of the FLUSH
statement.
Signals can be sent by root
or the account
that owns the server process. They enable the applicable flush
operations to be performed without having to connect to the
server (which for these operations requires an account that has
the RELOAD
privilege). See
Section 4.10, “Unix Signal Handling in MySQL”.
The RESET
statement is similar to
FLUSH
. See
Section 13.7.6.6, “RESET Statement”, for information about using the
RESET
statement with replication.
The following list describes the permitted
FLUSH
statement
flush_option
values. For descriptions
of FLUSH
TABLES
variants, see
FLUSH TABLES Syntax.
Closes and reopens any binary log file to which the server is writing. If binary logging is enabled, the sequence number of the binary log file is incremented by one relative to the previous file.
Reloads the DES keys from the file that was specified with
the --des-key-file
option at
server startup time.
The DES_ENCRYPT()
and
DES_DECRYPT()
functions are
deprecated as of MySQL 5.7.6, will be removed in a future
MySQL release, and should no longer be used. Consequently,
--des-key-file
and
DES_KEY_FILE
also are deprecated and
will be removed.
Closes and reopens any flushable logs for installed storage
engines. This causes InnoDB
to flush its
logs to disk.
Closes and reopens any error log file to which the server is writing.
Closes and reopens any general query log file to which the server is writing.
Empties the host cache and the Performance Schema
host_cache
table that exposes
the cache contents, and unblocks any blocked hosts. See
Section 8.12.5.2, “DNS Lookup Optimization and the Host Cache”.
Flush the host cache if some of your hosts change IP address
or if the error message Host
'
occurs for connections from legitimate hosts. (See
Section B.4.2.5, “Host 'host_name' is blocked”.) When more than
host_name
' is blockedmax_connect_errors
errors
occur successively for a given host while connecting to the
MySQL server, MySQL assumes that something is wrong and
blocks the host from further connection requests. Flushing
the host cache enables further connection attempts from the
host. The default value of
max_connect_errors
is 100.
To avoid this error message, start the server with
max_connect_errors
set to a
large value.
Closes and reopens any log file to which the server is writing. If binary logging is enabled, the sequence number of the binary log file is incremented by one relative to the previous file. If relay logging is enabled, the sequence number of the relay log file is incremented by one relative to the previous file.
FLUSH LOGS
has no effect on
tables used for the general query log or for the slow query
log (see Section 5.4.1, “Selecting General Query Log and Slow Query Log Output Destinations”).
Rereads the cost model tables so that the optimizer starts using the current cost estimates stored in them. The server writes a warning to the error log for any unrecognized entries. (For information about these tables, see Section 8.9.5, “The Optimizer Cost Model”.) This operation affects only sessions that begin subsequent to the flush. Existing sessions continue to use the cost estimates that were current when they began.
Reloads the privileges from the grant tables in the
mysql
system database.
If the --skip-grant-tables
option was specified at server startup to disable the MySQL
privilege system, FLUSH
PRIVILEGES
provides a way to enable the privilege
system at runtime.
Frees memory cached by the server as a result of
GRANT
,
CREATE USER
,
CREATE SERVER
, and
INSTALL PLUGIN
statements.
This memory is not released by the corresponding
REVOKE
,
DROP USER
,
DROP SERVER
, and
UNINSTALL PLUGIN
statements,
so for a server that executes many instances of the
statements that cause caching, there will be an increase in
cached memory use unless it is freed with
FLUSH PRIVILEGES
.
Defragment the query cache to better utilize its memory.
FLUSH QUERY CACHE
does not
remove any queries from the cache, unlike
FLUSH TABLES
or
RESET QUERY CACHE
.
The query cache is deprecated as of MySQL 5.7.20, and is
removed in MySQL 8.0. Deprecation includes
FLUSH QUERY CACHE
.
FLUSH
RELAY LOGS [FOR CHANNEL
channel
]
Closes and reopens any relay log file to which the server is writing. If relay logging is enabled, the sequence number of the relay log file is incremented by one relative to the previous file.
The FOR CHANNEL
clause enables
you to name which replication channel the statement applies
to. Execute
channel
FLUSH
RELAY LOGS FOR CHANNEL
to flush the
relay log for a specific replication channel. If no channel
is named and no extra replication channels exist, the
statement applies to the default channel. If no channel is
named and multiple replication channels exist, the statement
applies to all replication channels, with the exception of
the channel
group_replication_applier
channel.
For more information, see
Section 16.2.3, “Replication Channels”.
Closes and reopens any slow query log file to which the server is writing.
The value of the
show_compatibility_56
system variable affects the operation of this option. For
details, see the description of that variable in
Section 5.1.7, “Server System Variables”.
This option adds the current thread's session status
variable values to the global values and resets the session
values to zero. Some global variables may be reset to zero
as well. It also resets the counters for key caches (default
and named) to zero and sets
Max_used_connections
to
the current number of open connections. This information may
be of use when debugging a query. See
Section 1.7, “How to Report Bugs or Problems”.
Resets all per-hour user resources to zero. This enables
clients that have reached their hourly connection, query, or
update limits to resume activity immediately.
FLUSH USER_RESOURCES
does not
apply to the limit on maximum simultaneous connections that
is controlled by the
max_user_connections
system
variable. See Section 6.2.16, “Setting Account Resource Limits”.
FLUSH TABLES
flushes tables, and,
depending on the variant used, acquires locks. Any
TABLES
variant used in a
FLUSH
statement must be the only
option used. FLUSH
TABLE
is a synonym for FLUSH
TABLES
.
The descriptions here that indicate tables are flushed by
closing them apply differently for InnoDB
,
which flushes table contents to disk but leaves them open.
This still permits table files to be copied while the tables
are open, as long as other activity does not modify them.
Closes all open tables, forces all tables in use to be
closed, and flushes the query cache and prepared statement
cache. FLUSH TABLES
also
removes all query results from the query cache, like the
RESET QUERY CACHE
statement. For
information about query caching and prepared statement
caching, see Section 8.10.3, “The MySQL Query Cache”. and
Section 8.10.4, “Caching of Prepared Statements and Stored Programs”.
FLUSH TABLES
is not permitted
when there is an active
LOCK TABLES ...
READ
. To flush and lock tables, use
FLUSH
TABLES
instead.
tbl_name
... WITH READ
LOCK
FLUSH
TABLES
tbl_name
[,
tbl_name
] ...
With a list of one or more comma-separated table names, this
statement is like FLUSH
TABLES
with no names except that the server
flushes only the named tables. If a named table does not
exist, no error occurs.
Closes all open tables and locks all tables for all
databases with a global read lock. This is a very convenient
way to get backups if you have a file system such as Veritas
or ZFS that can take snapshots in time. Use
UNLOCK
TABLES
to release the lock.
FLUSH TABLES WITH READ LOCK
acquires a global read lock rather than table locks, so it
is not subject to the same behavior as
LOCK TABLES
and
UNLOCK
TABLES
with respect to table locking and implicit
commits:
UNLOCK
TABLES
implicitly commits any active
transaction only if any tables currently have been
locked with LOCK TABLES
.
The commit does not occur for
UNLOCK
TABLES
following FLUSH
TABLES WITH READ LOCK
because the latter
statement does not acquire table locks.
Beginning a transaction causes table locks acquired with
LOCK TABLES
to be
released, as though you had executed
UNLOCK
TABLES
. Beginning a transaction does not
release a global read lock acquired with
FLUSH TABLES WITH READ
LOCK
.
Prior to MySQL 5.7.19, FLUSH TABLES
WITH READ LOCK
is not compatible with XA
transactions.
FLUSH TABLES WITH READ LOCK
does not prevent the server from inserting rows into the log
tables (see Section 5.4.1, “Selecting General Query Log and Slow Query Log Output Destinations”).
FLUSH
TABLES
tbl_name
[,
tbl_name
] ... WITH READ
LOCK
This statement flushes and acquires read locks for the named
tables. The statement first acquires exclusive metadata
locks for the tables, so it waits for transactions that have
those tables open to complete. Then the statement flushes
the tables from the table cache, reopens the tables,
acquires table locks (like
LOCK TABLES ...
READ
), and downgrades the metadata locks from
exclusive to shared. After the statement acquires locks and
downgrades the metadata locks, other sessions can read but
not modify the tables.
Because this statement acquires table locks, you must have
the LOCK TABLES
privilege for
each table, in addition to the
RELOAD
privilege that is
required to use any FLUSH
statement.
This statement applies only to existing base
(non-TEMPORARY)
tables. If a name refers
to a base table, that table is used. If it refers to a
TEMPORARY
table, it is ignored. If a name
applies to a view, an
ER_WRONG_OBJECT
error
occurs. Otherwise, an
ER_NO_SUCH_TABLE
error
occurs.
Use UNLOCK
TABLES
to release the locks,
LOCK TABLES
to release the
locks and acquire other locks, or
START
TRANSACTION
to release the locks and begin a new
transaction.
This FLUSH TABLES
variant
enables tables to be flushed and locked in a single
operation. It provides a workaround for the restriction that
FLUSH TABLES
is not permitted
when there is an active
LOCK TABLES ...
READ
.
This statement does not perform an implicit
UNLOCK
TABLES
, so an error results if you use the
statement while there is any active
LOCK TABLES
or use it a
second time without first releasing the locks acquired.
If a flushed table was opened with
HANDLER
, the handler is
implicitly flushed and loses its position.
FLUSH
TABLES
tbl_name
[,
tbl_name
] ... FOR
EXPORT
This FLUSH TABLES
variant
applies to InnoDB
tables. It ensures that
changes to the named tables have been flushed to disk so
that binary table copies can be made while the server is
running.
The statement works like this:
It acquires shared metadata locks for the named tables. The statement blocks as long as other sessions have active transactions that have modified those tables or hold table locks for them. When the locks have been acquired, the statement blocks transactions that attempt to update the tables, while permitting read-only operations to continue.
It checks whether all storage engines for the tables
support FOR EXPORT
. If any do not, an
ER_ILLEGAL_HA
error
occurs and the statement fails.
The statement notifies the storage engine for each table to make the table ready for export. The storage engine must ensure that any pending changes are written to disk.
The statement puts the session in lock-tables mode so
that the metadata locks acquired earlier are not
released when the FOR EXPORT
statement completes.
The
FLUSH
TABLES ... FOR EXPORT
statement requires that you
have the SELECT
privilege for
each table. Because this statement acquires table locks, you
must also have the LOCK
TABLES
privilege for each table, in addition to
the RELOAD
privilege that is
required to use any FLUSH
statement.
This statement applies only to existing base
(non-TEMPORARY
) tables. If a name refers
to a base table, that table is used. If it refers to a
TEMPORARY
table, it is ignored. If a name
applies to a view, an
ER_WRONG_OBJECT
error
occurs. Otherwise, an
ER_NO_SUCH_TABLE
error
occurs.
InnoDB
supports FOR
EXPORT
for tables that have their own
.ibd
file file (that is, tables created with the
innodb_file_per_table
setting enabled). InnoDB
ensures when
notified by the FOR EXPORT
statement that
any changes have been flushed to disk. This permits a binary
copy of table contents to be made while the FOR
EXPORT
statement is in effect because the
.ibd
file is transaction consistent and
can be copied while the server is running. FOR
EXPORT
does not apply to InnoDB
system tablespace files, or to InnoDB
tables that have FULLTEXT
indexes.
FLUSH
TABLES ...FOR EXPORT
is supported for partitioned
InnoDB
tables.
When notified by FOR EXPORT
,
InnoDB
writes to disk certain kinds of
data that is normally held in memory or in separate disk
buffers outside the tablespace files. For each table,
InnoDB
also produces a file named
in the same database directory as the table. The
table_name
.cfg.cfg
file contains metadata needed to
reimport the tablespace files later, into the same or
different server.
When the FOR EXPORT
statement completes,
InnoDB
will have flushed all
dirty pages to the
table data files. Any
change buffer
entries are merged prior to flushing. At this point, the
tables are locked and quiescent: The tables are in a
transactionally consistent state on disk and you can copy
the .ibd
tablespace files along with
the corresponding .cfg
files to get a
consistent snapshot of those tables.
For the procedure to reimport the copied table data into a MySQL instance, see Section 14.6.1.3, “Importing InnoDB Tables”.
After you are done with the tables, use
UNLOCK
TABLES
to release the locks,
LOCK TABLES
to release the
locks and acquire other locks, or
START
TRANSACTION
to release the locks and begin a new
transaction.
While any of these statements is in effect within the
session, attempts to use
FLUSH
TABLES ... FOR EXPORT
produce an error:
FLUSH TABLES ... WITH READ LOCK FLUSH TABLES ... FOR EXPORT LOCK TABLES ... READ LOCK TABLES ... WRITE
While
FLUSH
TABLES ... FOR EXPORT
is in effect within the
session, attempts to use any of these statements produce an
error:
FLUSH TABLES WITH READ LOCK FLUSH TABLES ... WITH READ LOCK FLUSH TABLES ... FOR EXPORT
KILL [CONNECTION | QUERY] processlist_id
Each connection to mysqld runs in a separate
thread. You can kill a thread with the KILL
statement.
processlist_id
Thread processlist identifiers can be determined from the
ID
column of the
INFORMATION_SCHEMA
PROCESSLIST
table, the
Id
column of SHOW
PROCESSLIST
output, and the
PROCESSLIST_ID
column of the Performance
Schema threads
table. The value for
the current thread is returned by the
CONNECTION_ID()
function.
KILL
permits an optional
CONNECTION
or QUERY
modifier:
KILL
CONNECTION
is the same as
KILL
with no modifier: It
terminates the connection associated with the given
processlist_id
, after terminating
any statement the connection is executing.
KILL QUERY
terminates the statement the connection is currently
executing, but leaves the connection itself intact.
The ability to see which threads are available to be killed
depends on the PROCESS
privilege:
The ability to kill threads and statements depends on the
SUPER
privilege:
You can also use the mysqladmin processlist and mysqladmin kill commands to examine and kill threads.
You cannot use KILL
with the
Embedded MySQL Server library because the embedded server
merely runs inside the threads of the host application. It
does not create any connection threads of its own.
When you use KILL
, a
thread-specific kill flag is set for the thread. In most cases,
it might take some time for the thread to die because the kill
flag is checked only at specific intervals:
During SELECT
operations, for
ORDER BY
and GROUP BY
loops, the flag is checked after reading a block of rows. If
the kill flag is set, the statement is aborted.
ALTER TABLE
operations that
make a table copy check the kill flag periodically for each
few copied rows read from the original table. If the kill
flag was set, the statement is aborted and the temporary
table is deleted.
The KILL
statement returns
without waiting for confirmation, but the kill flag check
aborts the operation within a reasonably small amount of
time. Aborting the operation to perform any necessary
cleanup also takes some time.
During UPDATE
or
DELETE
operations, the kill
flag is checked after each block read and after each updated
or deleted row. If the kill flag is set, the statement is
aborted. If you are not using transactions, the changes are
not rolled back.
GET_LOCK()
aborts and returns
NULL
.
If the thread is in the table lock handler (state:
Locked
), the table lock is quickly
aborted.
If the thread is waiting for free disk space in a write call, the write is aborted with a “disk full” error message.
Killing a REPAIR TABLE
or
OPTIMIZE TABLE
operation on a
MyISAM
table results in a table that is
corrupted and unusable. Any reads or writes to such a table
fail until you optimize or repair it again (without
interruption).
LOAD INDEX INTO CACHEtbl_index_list
[,tbl_index_list
] ...tbl_index_list
:tbl_name
[PARTITION (partition_list
)] [{INDEX|KEY} (index_name
[,index_name
] ...)] [IGNORE LEAVES]partition_list
: {partition_name
[,partition_name
] ... | ALL }
The LOAD INDEX INTO
CACHE
statement preloads a table index into the key
cache to which it has been assigned by an explicit
CACHE INDEX
statement, or into
the default key cache otherwise.
LOAD INDEX INTO
CACHE
applies only to MyISAM
tables, including partitioned MyISAM
tables.
In addition, indexes on partitioned tables can be preloaded for
one, several, or all partitions.
The IGNORE LEAVES
modifier causes only blocks
for the nonleaf nodes of the index to be preloaded.
IGNORE LEAVES
is also supported for
partitioned MyISAM
tables.
The following statement preloads nodes (index blocks) of indexes
for the tables t1
and t2
:
mysql> LOAD INDEX INTO CACHE t1, t2 IGNORE LEAVES;
+---------+--------------+----------+----------+
| Table | Op | Msg_type | Msg_text |
+---------+--------------+----------+----------+
| test.t1 | preload_keys | status | OK |
| test.t2 | preload_keys | status | OK |
+---------+--------------+----------+----------+
This statement preloads all index blocks from
t1
. It preloads only blocks for the nonleaf
nodes from t2
.
The syntax of LOAD
INDEX INTO CACHE
enables you to specify that only
particular indexes from a table should be preloaded. However,
the implementation preloads all the table's indexes into the
cache, so there is no reason to specify anything other than the
table name.
It is possible to preload indexes on specific partitions of
partitioned MyISAM
tables. For example, of
the following 2 statements, the first preloads indexes for
partition p0
of a partitioned table
pt
, while the second preloads the indexes for
partitions p1
and p3
of
the same table:
LOAD INDEX INTO CACHE pt PARTITION (p0); LOAD INDEX INTO CACHE pt PARTITION (p1, p3);
To preload the indexes for all partitions in table
pt
, you can use either of the following two
statements:
LOAD INDEX INTO CACHE pt PARTITION (ALL); LOAD INDEX INTO CACHE pt;
The two statements just shown are equivalent, and issuing either
one has exactly the same effect. In other words, if you wish to
preload indexes for all partitions of a partitioned table, the
PARTITION (ALL)
clause is optional.
When preloading indexes for multiple partitions, the partitions need not be contiguous, and you need not list their names in any particular order.
LOAD INDEX INTO
CACHE ... IGNORE LEAVES
fails unless all indexes in a
table have the same block size. To determine index block sizes
for a table, use myisamchk -dv and check the
Blocksize
column.
RESETreset_option
[,reset_option
] ...reset_option
: { MASTER | QUERY CACHE | SLAVE }
The RESET
statement is used to
clear the state of various server operations. You must have the
RELOAD
privilege to execute
RESET
.
RESET
acts as a stronger version
of the FLUSH
statement. See
Section 13.7.6.3, “FLUSH Statement”.
The RESET
statement causes an
implicit commit. See Section 13.3.3, “Statements That Cause an Implicit Commit”.
The following list describes the permitted
RESET
statement
reset_option
values:
RESET MASTER
Deletes all binary logs listed in the index file, resets the binary log index file to be empty, and creates a new binary log file.
RESET QUERY CACHE
Removes all query results from the query cache.
The query cache is deprecated as of MySQL 5.7.20, and is
removed in MySQL 8.0. Deprecation includes
RESET QUERY
CACHE
.
RESET SLAVE
Makes the slave forget its replication position in the master binary logs. Also resets the relay log by deleting any existing relay log files and beginning a new one.
SHUTDOWN
This statement stops the MySQL server. It requires the
SHUTDOWN
privilege.
SHUTDOWN
provides an SQL-level
interface to the same functionality available using the
mysqladmin shutdown command or the
mysql_shutdown()
C API function.
The
Com_shutdown
status variable tracks the number of
SHUTDOWN
statements. Because
status variables are initialized for each server startup and do
not persist across restarts, Com_shutdown
normally has a value of zero, but can be nonzero if
SHUTDOWN
statements were executed
but failed.
Another way to stop the server is to send it a
SIGTERM
signal, which can be done by
root
or the account that owns the server
process. SIGTERM
enables server shutdown to
be performed without having to connect to the server. See
Section 4.10, “Unix Signal Handling in MySQL”.
The DESCRIBE
and
EXPLAIN
statements are synonyms,
used either to obtain information about table structure or query
execution plans. For more information, see
Section 13.7.5.5, “SHOW COLUMNS Statement”, and Section 13.8.2, “EXPLAIN Statement”.
{EXPLAIN | DESCRIBE | DESC}tbl_name
[col_name
|wild
] {EXPLAIN | DESCRIBE | DESC} [explain_type
] {explainable_stmt
| FOR CONNECTIONconnection_id
}explain_type
: { EXTENDED | PARTITIONS | FORMAT =format_name
}format_name
: { TRADITIONAL | JSON }explainable_stmt
: { SELECT statement | DELETE statement | INSERT statement | REPLACE statement | UPDATE statement }
The DESCRIBE
and
EXPLAIN
statements are synonyms. In
practice, the DESCRIBE
keyword is
more often used to obtain information about table structure,
whereas EXPLAIN
is used to obtain a
query execution plan (that is, an explanation of how MySQL would
execute a query).
The following discussion uses the
DESCRIBE
and
EXPLAIN
keywords in accordance with
those uses, but the MySQL parser treats them as completely
synonymous.
DESCRIBE
provides information
about the columns in a table:
mysql> DESCRIBE City;
+------------+----------+------+-----+---------+----------------+
| Field | Type | Null | Key | Default | Extra |
+------------+----------+------+-----+---------+----------------+
| Id | int(11) | NO | PRI | NULL | auto_increment |
| Name | char(35) | NO | | | |
| Country | char(3) | NO | UNI | | |
| District | char(20) | YES | MUL | | |
| Population | int(11) | NO | | 0 | |
+------------+----------+------+-----+---------+----------------+
DESCRIBE
is a shortcut for
SHOW COLUMNS
. These statements
also display information for views. The description for
SHOW COLUMNS
provides more
information about the output columns. See
Section 13.7.5.5, “SHOW COLUMNS Statement”.
By default, DESCRIBE
displays
information about all columns in the table.
col_name
, if given, is the name of a
column in the table. In this case, the statement displays
information only for the named column.
wild
, if given, is a pattern string.
It can contain the SQL %
and
_
wildcard characters. In this case, the
statement displays output only for the columns with names
matching the string. There is no need to enclose the string
within quotation marks unless it contains spaces or other
special characters.
The DESCRIBE
statement is
provided for compatibility with Oracle.
The SHOW CREATE TABLE
,
SHOW TABLE STATUS
, and
SHOW INDEX
statements also
provide information about tables. See Section 13.7.5, “SHOW Statements”.
The EXPLAIN
statement provides
information about how MySQL executes statements:
EXPLAIN
works with
SELECT
,
DELETE
,
INSERT
,
REPLACE
, and
UPDATE
statements.
When EXPLAIN
is used with an
explainable statement, MySQL displays information from the
optimizer about the statement execution plan. That is, MySQL
explains how it would process the statement, including
information about how tables are joined and in which order.
For information about using
EXPLAIN
to obtain execution
plan information, see Section 8.8.2, “EXPLAIN Output Format”.
When EXPLAIN
is used with
FOR CONNECTION
rather
than an explainable statement, it displays the execution
plan for the statement executing in the named connection.
See Section 8.8.4, “Obtaining Execution Plan Information for a Named Connection”.
connection_id
For SELECT
statements,
EXPLAIN
produces additional
execution plan information that can be displayed using
SHOW WARNINGS
. See
Section 8.8.3, “Extended EXPLAIN Output Format”.
In older MySQL releases, extended information was produced
using EXPLAIN
EXTENDED
. That syntax is still recognized for
backward compatibility but extended output is now enabled
by default, so the EXTENDED
keyword is
superfluous and deprecated. Its use results in a warning,
and it is removed from
EXPLAIN
syntax in MySQL
8.0.
EXPLAIN
is useful for
examining queries involving partitioned tables. See
Section 22.3.5, “Obtaining Information About Partitions”.
In older MySQL releases, partition information was
produced using
EXPLAIN
PARTITIONS
. That syntax is still recognized for
backward compatibility but partition output is now enabled
by default, so the PARTITIONS
keyword
is superfluous and deprecated. Its use results in a
warning, and it is removed from
EXPLAIN
syntax in MySQL
8.0.
The FORMAT
option can be used to select
the output format. TRADITIONAL
presents
the output in tabular format. This is the default if no
FORMAT
option is present.
JSON
format displays the information in
JSON format.
EXPLAIN
requires the
SELECT
privilege for any tables
or views accessed, including any underlying tables of views. For
views, EXPLAIN
also requires the
SHOW VIEW
privilege.
With the help of EXPLAIN
, you can
see where you should add indexes to tables so that the statement
executes faster by using indexes to find rows. You can also use
EXPLAIN
to check whether the
optimizer joins the tables in an optimal order. To give a hint
to the optimizer to use a join order corresponding to the order
in which the tables are named in a
SELECT
statement, begin the
statement with SELECT STRAIGHT_JOIN
rather
than just SELECT
. (See
Section 13.2.9, “SELECT Statement”.)
The optimizer trace may sometimes provide information
complementary to that of EXPLAIN
.
However, the optimizer trace format and content are subject to
change between versions. For details, see
MySQL
Internals: Tracing the Optimizer.
If you have a problem with indexes not being used when you
believe that they should be, run ANALYZE
TABLE
to update table statistics, such as cardinality
of keys, that can affect the choices the optimizer makes. See
Section 13.7.2.1, “ANALYZE TABLE Statement”.
MySQL Workbench has a Visual Explain capability that provides a
visual representation of
EXPLAIN
output. See
Tutorial: Using Explain to Improve Query Performance.
HELP 'search_string
'
The HELP
statement returns online
information from the MySQL Reference Manual. Its proper operation
requires that the help tables in the mysql
database be initialized with help topic information (see
Section 5.1.13, “Server-Side Help Support”).
The HELP
statement searches the
help tables for the given search string and displays the result of
the search. The search string is not case-sensitive.
The search string can contain the wildcard characters
%
and _
. These have the same
meaning as for pattern-matching operations performed with the
LIKE
operator. For example,
HELP 'rep%'
returns a list of topics that begin
with rep
.
The HELP statement understands several types of search strings:
At the most general level, use contents
to
retrieve a list of the top-level help categories:
HELP 'contents'
For a list of topics in a given help category, such as
Data Types
, use the category name:
HELP 'data types'
For help on a specific help topic, such as the
ASCII()
function or the
CREATE TABLE
statement, use the
associated keyword or keywords:
HELP 'ascii' HELP 'create table'
In other words, the search string matches a category, many topics,
or a single topic. You cannot necessarily tell in advance whether
a given search string will return a list of items or the help
information for a single help topic. However, you can tell what
kind of response HELP
returned by
examining the number of rows and columns in the result set.
The following descriptions indicate the forms that the result set
can take. Output for the example statements is shown using the
familiar “tabular” or “vertical” format
that you see when using the mysql client, but
note that mysql itself reformats
HELP
result sets in a different
way.
Empty result set
No match could be found for the search string.
Result set containing a single row with three columns
This means that the search string yielded a hit for the help topic. The result has three columns:
name
: The topic name.
description
: Descriptive help text for
the topic.
example
: Usage example or examples.
This column might be blank.
Example: HELP 'replace'
Yields:
name: REPLACE description: Syntax: REPLACE(str,from_str,to_str) Returns the string str with all occurrences of the string from_str replaced by the string to_str. REPLACE() performs a case-sensitive match when searching for from_str. example: mysql> SELECT REPLACE('www.mysql.com', 'w', 'Ww'); -> 'WwWwWw.mysql.com'
Result set containing multiple rows with two columns
This means that the search string matched many help topics. The result set indicates the help topic names:
name
: The help topic name.
is_it_category
: Y
if
the name represents a help category, N
if it does not. If it does not, the
name
value when specified as the
argument to the HELP
statement should yield a single-row result set containing
a description for the named item.
Example: HELP 'status'
Yields:
+-----------------------+----------------+ | name | is_it_category | +-----------------------+----------------+ | SHOW | N | | SHOW ENGINE | N | | SHOW MASTER STATUS | N | | SHOW PROCEDURE STATUS | N | | SHOW SLAVE STATUS | N | | SHOW STATUS | N | | SHOW TABLE STATUS | N | +-----------------------+----------------+
Result set containing multiple rows with three columns
This means the search string matches a category. The result set contains category entries:
source_category_name
: The help category
name.
name
: The category or topic name
is_it_category
: Y
if
the name represents a help category, N
if it does not. If it does not, the
name
value when specified as the
argument to the HELP
statement should yield a single-row result set containing
a description for the named item.
Example: HELP 'functions'
Yields:
+----------------------+-------------------------+----------------+ | source_category_name | name | is_it_category | +----------------------+-------------------------+----------------+ | Functions | CREATE FUNCTION | N | | Functions | DROP FUNCTION | N | | Functions | Bit Functions | Y | | Functions | Comparison operators | Y | | Functions | Control flow functions | Y | | Functions | Date and Time Functions | Y | | Functions | Encryption Functions | Y | | Functions | Information Functions | Y | | Functions | Logical operators | Y | | Functions | Miscellaneous Functions | Y | | Functions | Numeric Functions | Y | | Functions | String Functions | Y | +----------------------+-------------------------+----------------+
USE db_name
The USE
statement tells MySQL to
use the named database as the default (current) database for
subsequent statements. This statement requires some privilege for
the database or some object within it.
The named database remains the default until the end of the
session or another USE
statement is
issued:
USE db1; SELECT COUNT(*) FROM mytable; # selects from db1.mytable USE db2; SELECT COUNT(*) FROM mytable; # selects from db2.mytable
The database name must be specified on a single line. Newlines in database names are not supported.
Making a particular database the default by means of the
USE
statement does not preclude
accessing tables in other databases. The following example
accesses the author
table from the
db1
database and the editor
table from the db2
database:
USE db1; SELECT author_name,editor_name FROM author,db2.editor WHERE author.editor_id = db2.editor.editor_id;