Table of Contents
ALTER DATABASE SyntaxALTER FUNCTION SyntaxALTER PROCEDURE SyntaxALTER TABLE SyntaxALTER VIEW SyntaxCREATE DATABASE SyntaxCREATE FUNCTION SyntaxCREATE INDEX SyntaxCREATE PROCEDURE and
CREATE FUNCTION SyntaxCREATE TABLE SyntaxCREATE TRIGGER SyntaxCREATE VIEW SyntaxDROP DATABASE SyntaxDROP FUNCTION SyntaxDROP INDEX SyntaxDROP PROCEDURE and
DROP FUNCTION SyntaxDROP TABLE SyntaxDROP TRIGGER SyntaxDROP VIEW SyntaxRENAME TABLE SyntaxThis chapter describes the syntax for the SQL statements supported by MySQL.
ALTER DATABASE SyntaxALTER FUNCTION SyntaxALTER PROCEDURE SyntaxALTER TABLE SyntaxALTER VIEW SyntaxCREATE DATABASE SyntaxCREATE FUNCTION SyntaxCREATE INDEX SyntaxCREATE PROCEDURE and
CREATE FUNCTION SyntaxCREATE TABLE SyntaxCREATE TRIGGER SyntaxCREATE VIEW SyntaxDROP DATABASE SyntaxDROP FUNCTION SyntaxDROP INDEX SyntaxDROP PROCEDURE and
DROP FUNCTION SyntaxDROP TABLE SyntaxDROP TRIGGER SyntaxDROP VIEW SyntaxRENAME TABLE SyntaxALTER {DATABASE | SCHEMA} [db_name]
alter_specification ...
alter_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 as of MySQL 5.0.2.
The CHARACTER SET clause changes the default
database character set. The COLLATE clause
changes the default database collation. Section 9.1, “Character Set Support”,
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 12.4.5.3, “SHOW CHARACTER SET Syntax”, and
Section 12.4.5.4, “SHOW COLLATION Syntax”, for more information.
The database name can be omitted, in which case the statement applies to the default database.
MySQL Enterprise In a production environment, alteration of a database is not a common occurrence and may indicate a security breach. Advisors provided as part of the MySQL Enterprise Monitor automatically alert you when data definition statements are issued. For more information, see http://www.mysql.com/products/enterprise/advisors.html.
ALTER FUNCTIONfunc_name[characteristic...]characteristic: { CONTAINS SQL | NO SQL | READS SQL DATA | MODIFIES SQL DATA } | SQL SECURITY { DEFINER | INVOKER } | COMMENT 'string'
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.
As of MySQL 5.0.3, 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 18.6, “Binary Logging of Stored Programs”.
ALTER PROCEDUREproc_name[characteristic...]characteristic: COMMENT 'string' | { 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.
As of MySQL 5.0.3, 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 18.2.2, “Stored Routines and MySQL Privileges”.
ALTER [IGNORE] TABLEtbl_namealter_specification[,alter_specification] ...alter_specification:table_options| ADD [COLUMN]col_namecolumn_definition[FIRST | AFTERcol_name] | ADD [COLUMN] (col_namecolumn_definition,...) | ADD {INDEX|KEY} [index_name] [index_type] (index_col_name,...) [index_type] | ADD [CONSTRAINT [symbol]] PRIMARY KEY [index_type] (index_col_name,...) [index_type] | ADD [CONSTRAINT [symbol]] UNIQUE [INDEX|KEY] [index_name] [index_type] (index_col_name,...) [index_type] | ADD [FULLTEXT|SPATIAL] [INDEX|KEY] [index_name] (index_col_name,...) [index_type] | ADD [CONSTRAINT [symbol]] FOREIGN KEY [index_name] (index_col_name,...)reference_definition| ALTER [COLUMN]col_name{SET DEFAULTliteral| DROP DEFAULT} | CHANGE [COLUMN]old_col_namenew_col_namecolumn_definition[FIRST|AFTERcol_name] | MODIFY [COLUMN]col_namecolumn_definition[FIRST | AFTERcol_name] | DROP [COLUMN]col_name| DROP PRIMARY KEY | DROP {INDEX|KEY}index_name| DROP FOREIGN KEYfk_symbol| DISABLE KEYS | ENABLE KEYS | RENAME [TO]new_tbl_name| ORDER BYcol_name[,col_name] ... | CONVERT TO CHARACTER SETcharset_name[COLLATEcollation_name] | [DEFAULT] CHARACTER SET [=]charset_name[COLLATE [=]collation_name] | DISCARD TABLESPACE | IMPORT TABLESPACEindex_col_name:col_name[(length)] [ASC | DESC]index_type: USING {BTREE | HASH | RTREE}table_options:table_option[[,]table_option] ... (seeCREATE TABLEoptions)
ALTER TABLE enables you to change
the structure of an existing 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 the comment for the table and type of the table.
The syntax for many of the allowable alterations is similar to
clauses of the CREATE TABLE
statement. See Section 12.1.10, “CREATE TABLE Syntax”, for more
information.
Some operations may result in warnings if attempted on a table for
which the storage engine does not support the operation. These
warnings can be displayed with SHOW
WARNINGS. See Section 12.4.5.37, “SHOW WARNINGS Syntax”.
If you use ALTER TABLE to change a
column specification but DESCRIBE
indicates that your
column was not changed, it is possible that MySQL ignored your
modification for one of the reasons described in
Section 12.1.10.1, “Silent Column Specification Changes”.
tbl_name
In most cases, ALTER TABLE works by
making a temporary copy of the original table. The alteration is
performed on the copy, and then the original table is deleted and
the new one is renamed. While ALTER
TABLE is executing, the original table is readable by
other sessions. Updates and writes to the table are stalled until
the new table is ready, and then are automatically redirected to
the new table without any failed updates. The temporary table is
created in the database directory of the new table. This can be
different from the database directory of the original table if
ALTER TABLE is renaming the table
to a different database.
If you use ALTER TABLE
without any
other options, MySQL simply renames any files that correspond to
the table tbl_name RENAME TO
new_tbl_nametbl_name. (You can also use
the RENAME TABLE statement to
rename tables. See Section 12.1.20, “RENAME TABLE Syntax”.) Any privileges
granted specifically for the renamed table are not migrated to the
new name. They must be changed manually.
If you use any option to ALTER
TABLE other than RENAME, MySQL always
creates a temporary table, even if the data wouldn't strictly need
to be copied (such as when you change the name of a column). For
MyISAM tables, you can speed up the index
re-creation operation (which is the slowest part of the alteration
process) by setting the
myisam_sort_buffer_size system
variable to a high value.
For information on troubleshooting ALTER
TABLE, see Section B.5.7.1, “Problems with ALTER TABLE”.
To use ALTER TABLE, you need
ALTER,
INSERT, and
CREATE privileges for the
table.
IGNORE is a MySQL extension to standard
SQL. It controls how ALTER
TABLE works if there are duplicates on unique keys
in the new table or if warnings occur when strict mode is
enabled. If IGNORE is not specified, the
copy is aborted and rolled back if duplicate-key errors occur.
If IGNORE is specified, only the first row
is used of rows with duplicates on a unique key, The other
conflicting rows are deleted. Incorrect values are truncated
to the closest matching acceptable value.
table_option signifies a table
option of the kind that can be used in the
CREATE TABLE statement, such as
ENGINE, AUTO_INCREMENT,
or AVG_ROW_LENGTH.
(Section 12.1.10, “CREATE TABLE Syntax”, lists all table options.)
However, ALTER TABLE ignores
the DATA DIRECTORY and INDEX
DIRECTORY table options.
For example, to convert a table to be an
InnoDB table, use this statement:
ALTER TABLE t1 ENGINE = InnoDB;
The outcome of attempting to change a table's storage engine
is affected by whether the desired storage engine is available
and the setting of the
NO_ENGINE_SUBSTITUTION SQL
mode, as described in Section 5.1.6, “Server SQL Modes”.
As of MySQL 5.0.23, 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 value of the AUTO_INCREMENT
counter to be used for new rows, do this:
ALTER TABLE t2 AUTO_INCREMENT = value;
You cannot reset the counter to a value less than or equal to
any that have already been used. For
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 plus one. For
InnoDB, you can use ALTER TABLE
... AUTO_INCREMENT =
as of MySQL 5.0.3,
but if the value is less than the current maximum
value in the column, no error occurs and the current sequence
value is not changed.
value
You can issue multiple ADD,
ALTER, DROP, and
CHANGE clauses in a single
ALTER TABLE statement,
separated by commas. This is a MySQL extension to standard
SQL, which allows 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;
CHANGE ,
col_nameDROP ,
and col_nameDROP INDEX are MySQL extensions to
standard SQL.
MODIFY is an Oracle extension to
ALTER TABLE.
The word COLUMN is optional and can be
omitted.
column_definition clauses use the
same syntax for ADD and
CHANGE as for CREATE
TABLE. See Section 12.1.10, “CREATE TABLE Syntax”.
You can rename a column using a CHANGE
clause.
To do so, specify the old and new column names and the
definition that the column currently has. For example, to
rename an old_col_name
new_col_name
column_definitionINTEGER column from
a to b, you can do this:
ALTER TABLE t1 CHANGE a b INTEGER;
If you want to change a column's type but not the name,
CHANGE syntax still requires an old and new
column name, even if they are the same. For example:
ALTER TABLE t1 CHANGE b b BIGINT NOT NULL;
You can also use MODIFY to change a
column's type without renaming it:
ALTER TABLE t1 MODIFY b BIGINT NOT NULL;
When you use CHANGE or
MODIFY,
column_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:
ALTER TABLE t1 MODIFY col1 BIGINT;
The resulting column will be defined as
BIGINT, but will not include the attributes
UNSIGNED DEFAULT 1 COMMENT 'my column'. To
retain them, the statement should be:
ALTER TABLE t1 MODIFY col1 BIGINT UNSIGNED DEFAULT 1 COMMENT 'my column';
When you change a data type 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 5.1.6, “Server SQL Modes”).
To add a column at a specific position within a table row, use
FIRST or AFTER
. The default is
to add the column last. You can also use
col_nameFIRST and AFTER in
CHANGE or MODIFY
operations to reorder columns within a table.
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 10.1.4, “Data Type Default Values”.
DROP INDEX removes an index.
This is a MySQL extension to standard SQL. See
Section 12.1.15, “DROP INDEX Syntax”. If you are unsure of the index
name, use SHOW INDEX FROM
.
tbl_name
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. 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.
If a table contains only one column, the column cannot be
dropped. If what you intend is to remove the table, use
DROP TABLE instead.
DROP PRIMARY KEY drops the primary key. If
there is no primary key, an error occurs.
If you add a UNIQUE INDEX or
PRIMARY KEY to a table, it is stored before
any nonunique index so that MySQL can detect duplicate keys as
early as possible.
Some storage engines allow you to specify an index type when
creating an index. The syntax for the
index_type specifier is
USING .
For details about type_nameUSING, see
Section 12.1.8, “CREATE INDEX Syntax”.
After an ALTER TABLE statement,
it may be necessary to run ANALYZE
TABLE to update index cardinality information. See
Section 12.4.5.18, “SHOW INDEX Syntax”.
ORDER BY enables you to create the new
table with the rows in a specific order. Note that the table
does not remain in this order after inserts and deletes. This
option is useful primarily when you know that you are mostly
to 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.
ORDER BY syntax allows for 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 allowed as sort criteria; arbitrary
expressions are not allowed.
ORDER BY does not make sense for
InnoDB tables that contain a user-defined
clustered index (PRIMARY KEY or
NOT NULL UNIQUE index).
InnoDB always orders table rows according
to such an index if one is present. The same is true for
BDB tables that contain a user-defined
PRIMARY KEY.
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.
This feature can be activated explicitly for a
MyISAM table. ALTER TABLE ...
DISABLE KEYS tells MySQL to stop updating nonunique
indexes. ALTER TABLE ... ENABLE KEYS then
should be used to re-create missing indexes. MySQL 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.
If ALTER TABLE for an
InnoDB table results in changes to column
values (for example, because a column is truncated),
InnoDB's FOREIGN KEY
constraint checks do not notice possible violations caused by
changing the values.
The FOREIGN KEY and
REFERENCES clauses are supported by the
InnoDB storage engine, which implements
ADD [CONSTRAINT [. See
Section 13.2.4.4, “symbol]]
FOREIGN KEY (...) REFERENCES ... (...)FOREIGN KEY Constraints”. For other
storage engines, the clauses are parsed but ignored. The
CHECK clause is parsed but ignored by all
storage engines. See Section 12.1.10, “CREATE TABLE Syntax”. 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 1.8.5, “MySQL Differences from Standard SQL”.
The inline REFERENCES specifications
where the references are defined as part of the column
specification are silently ignored by
InnoDB. InnoDB only accepts
REFERENCES clauses defined as part of a
separate FOREIGN KEY specification.
InnoDB supports the use of
ALTER TABLE to drop foreign
keys:
ALTER TABLEtbl_nameDROP FOREIGN KEYfk_symbol;
For more information, see
Section 13.2.4.4, “FOREIGN KEY Constraints”.
You cannot add a foreign key and drop a foreign key in
separate clauses of a single ALTER
TABLE statement. You must use separate statements.
For an InnoDB table that is created with
its own tablespace in an .ibd file, that
file can be discarded and imported. To discard the
.ibd file, use this statement:
ALTER TABLE tbl_name DISCARD TABLESPACE;
This deletes the current .ibd file, so be
sure that you have a backup first. Attempting to access the
table while the tablespace file is discarded results in an
error.
To import the backup .ibd file back into
the table, copy it into the database directory, and then issue
this statement:
ALTER TABLE tbl_name IMPORT TABLESPACE;
The tablespace file must have been created on the server into which it is imported later.
Pending INSERT DELAYED
statements are lost if a table is write locked and
ALTER TABLE is used to modify
the table structure.
If you want 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_nameCONVERT TO CHARACTER SETcharset_name;
For a column that has a data type of
VARCHAR or one of the
TEXT types, CONVERT TO
CHARACTER SET will change 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 3
bytes, for a maximum possible length of 3 × 65,535 =
196,605 bytes. That length will not fit in a
TEXT column's length bytes, so
MySQL will convert 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, the database character set is
used.
The CONVERT TO operation converts column
values between the 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_nameDEFAULT 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).
With the mysql_info() C API
function, you can find out how many rows were copied, and (when
IGNORE is used) how many rows were deleted due
to duplication of unique key values. See
Section 20.8.3.35, “mysql_info()”.
Here are some examples that show uses of
ALTER TABLE. Begin with a table
t1 that is 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);
Note that we indexed c (as a PRIMARY
KEY) because AUTO_INCREMENT columns
must be indexed, and also that we declare c as
NOT NULL because primary key columns cannot be
NULL.
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
valueALTER TABLE or by using the
AUTO_INCREMENT=
table option. See Section 5.1.3, “Server System Variables”.
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 t1; ALTER TABLE t2 RENAME t1;
ALTER
[ALGORITHM = {UNDEFINED | MERGE | TEMPTABLE}]
[DEFINER = { user | CURRENT_USER }]
[SQL SECURITY { DEFINER | INVOKER }]
VIEW view_name [(column_list)]
AS select_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 and the effect is the same as for
CREATE OR REPLACE
VIEW. See Section 12.1.12, “CREATE VIEW Syntax”. This statement
requires the CREATE VIEW and
DROP privileges for the view, and
some privilege for each column referred to in the
SELECT statement. As of MySQL
5.0.52, ALTER VIEW is allowed only
to the original definer or users with the
SUPER privilege.
This statement was added in MySQL 5.0.1. The
DEFINER and SQL SECURITY
clauses may be used as of MySQL 5.0.16 to specify the security
context to be used when checking access privileges at view
invocation time. For details, see Section 12.1.12, “CREATE VIEW Syntax”.
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 as of MySQL 5.0.2.
An error occurs if the database exists and you did not specify
IF NOT EXISTS.
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.
Section 9.1, “Character Set Support”, 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 allowable database
names are given in Section 8.2, “Schema Object 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.
You can also use the mysqladmin program to create databases. See Section 4.5.2, “mysqladmin — Client for Administering a MySQL Server”.
The CREATE FUNCTION statement is
used to create stored functions and user-defined functions (UDFs):
For information about creating stored functions, see
Section 12.1.9, “CREATE PROCEDURE and
CREATE FUNCTION Syntax”.
For information about creating user-defined functions, see
Section 12.4.3.1, “CREATE FUNCTION Syntax”.
CREATE [UNIQUE|FULLTEXT|SPATIAL] INDEXindex_name[index_type] ONtbl_name(index_col_name,...) [index_type]index_col_name:col_name[(length)] [ASC | DESC]index_type: USING {BTREE | HASH | RTREE}
CREATE INDEX is mapped to an
ALTER TABLE statement to create
indexes. See Section 12.1.4, “ALTER TABLE Syntax”.
CREATE INDEX cannot be used to
create a PRIMARY KEY; use
ALTER TABLE instead. For more
information about indexes, see Section 7.4.4, “How MySQL Uses Indexes”.
Normally, you create all indexes on a table at the time the table
itself is created with CREATE
TABLE. See Section 12.1.10, “CREATE TABLE Syntax”.
CREATE INDEX enables you to add
indexes to existing tables.
A column list of the form (col1,col2,...)
creates a multiple-column index. Index values are formed by
concatenating the values of the given 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 columns.
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.
For spatial columns, prefix values can be given as described later in this section.
The statement shown here creates an index using the first 10
characters of the name column:
CREATE INDEX part_of_name ON customer (name(10));
If names in the column usually differ in the first 10 characters,
this index should not be much slower than 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.
Prefix support and lengths of prefixes (where supported) are
storage engine dependent. For example, a prefix can be up to 1000
bytes long for MyISAM tables, and 767 bytes for
InnoDB tables. The
NDBCLUSTER storage engine does not support
prefixes (see
Section 17.1.5.6, “Unsupported or Missing Features in MySQL Cluster”).
Prefix limits are measured in bytes, whereas the prefix length
in CREATE INDEX statements is
interpreted as number of characters for nonbinary data types
(CHAR,
VARCHAR,
TEXT). Take this into account
when specifying a prefix length for a column that uses a
multi-byte character set.
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. This constraint does not apply to NULL
values except for the BDB storage engine. For
other engines, a UNIQUE index allows 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.
MySQL Enterprise Lack of proper indexes can greatly reduce performance. Subscribe to the MySQL Enterprise Monitor for notification of inefficient use of indexes. For more information, see http://www.mysql.com/products/enterprise/advisors.html.
FULLTEXT indexes are supported only for
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 11.9, “Full-Text Search Functions”, for details of operation.
The MyISAM, InnoDB,
NDB, BDB, and
ARCHIVE storage engines support spatial columns
such as (POINT and GEOMETRY.
(Section 11.16, “Spatial Extensions”, describes the spatial data
types.) However, support for spatial column indexing varies among
engines. Spatial and nonspatial indexes are available according to
the following rules.
Spatial indexes (created using SPATIAL INDEX):
Available only for MyISAM tables.
Specifying a SPATIAL INDEX for other
storage engines results in an error.
Indexed columns must be NOT NULL.
In MySQL 5.0, the full width of each column is
indexed by default, but column prefix lengths are allowed.
However, as of MySQL 5.0.40, the length is not displayed in
SHOW CREATE TABLE output.
mysqldump uses that statement. As of that
version, if a table with SPATIAL indexes
containing prefixed columns is dumped and reloaded, the index
is created with no prefixes. (The full column width of each
column is indexed.)
Nonspatial indexes (created with INDEX,
UNIQUE, or PRIMARY KEY):
Allowed 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.
In MySQL 5.0:
An index_col_name specification can end
with ASC or DESC. These
keywords are allowed 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.
Some storage engines allow you to specify an index type when creating an index. The allowable index type values supported by different storage engines are shown in the following table. Where multiple index types are listed, the first one is the default when no index type specifier is given.
| Storage Engine | Allowable Index Types |
MyISAM | BTREE, RTREE |
InnoDB | BTREE |
MEMORY/HEAP | HASH, BTREE |
NDB | HASH, BTREE (see note in text) |
BTREE indexes are implemented by the
NDBCLUSTER storage engine as T-tree
indexes.
For indexes on NDBCLUSTER table
columns, the USING clause can be specified
only for a unique index or primary key. In such cases, the
USING HASH clause prevents the creation of an
implicit ordered index. Without USING HASH, a
statement defining a unique index or primary key automatically
results in the creation of a HASH index in
addition to the ordered index, both of which index the same set
of columns.
The RTREE index type is allowable only for
SPATIAL indexes.
If you specify an index type that is not legal 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.
Examples:
CREATE TABLE lookup (id INT) ENGINE = MEMORY; CREATE INDEX id_index USING BTREE ON lookup (id);
TYPE is
recognized as a synonym for type_nameUSING
. However,
type_nameUSING is the preferred form.
Before MySQL 5.0.60, the index_type
option can be given only before the ON
clause. Use of the
option in this position is deprecated as of 5.0.60; support for it
is to be dropped in a future MySQL release. As of 5.0.60, the
option should be given following the index column list. If an
tbl_nameindex_type option is given in both the
earlier and later positions, the final option applies.
CREATE
[DEFINER = { user | CURRENT_USER }]
PROCEDURE sp_name ([proc_parameter[,...]])
[characteristic ...] routine_body
CREATE
[DEFINER = { user | CURRENT_USER }]
FUNCTION sp_name ([func_parameter[,...]])
RETURNS type
[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 21.2, “Adding New Functions to MySQL”. A UDF can be regarded as an
external stored function. Stored functions share their namespace
with UDFs. See Section 8.2.3, “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 12.2.1, “CALL Syntax”). To invoke a stored function, refer to it
in an expression. The function returns a value during expression
evaluation.
As of MySQL 5.0.3, CREATE PROCEDURE
and CREATE FUNCTION require the
CREATE ROUTINE privilege. They
might also require the SUPER
privilege, depending on the DEFINER value, as
described later in this section. If binary logging is enabled,
CREATE FUNCTION might require the
SUPER privilege, as described in
Section 18.6, “Binary Logging of Stored Programs”.
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 18.2.2, “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 allowable 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 IN or
INOUT parameter.
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 allows the
; delimiter used in the procedure body to be
passed through to the server rather than being interpreted by
mysql itself. See
Section 18.1, “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
valueRETURN 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, except that the COLLATE
attribute cannot be used.
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 12.7, “MySQL Compound-Statement Syntax”.
MySQL allows routines to contain DDL statements, such as
CREATE and DROP. MySQL also
allows 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
allow them.
Statements that return a result set can be used within a stored
procedcure but not within a stored function. This prohibition
includes SELECT statements that do
not have an INTO
clause and other
statements such as var_listSHOW,
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).
Before MySQL 5.0.10, stored functions created with
CREATE FUNCTION must not contain
references to tables, with limited exceptions. They may include
some SET
statements that contain table references, for example
SET a:= (SELECT MAX(id) FROM t), and
SELECT statements that fetch
values directly into variables, for example SELECT i
INTO var1 FROM t.
USE statements within stored
routines are disallowed. When a routine is invoked, an implicit
USE is
performed (and undone when the routine terminates). This 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 allowed in stored routines, see Section D.1, “Restrictions on Stored Routines and Triggers”.
For information about invoking stored procedures from within
programs written in a language that has a MySQL interface, see
Section 12.2.1, “CALL Syntax”.
MySQL stores the sql_mode system
variable setting that is in effect at the time a routine is
created, and always executes the routine with this setting in
force, regardless of the server SQL mode in effect when
the routine is invoked.
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. Prior to MySQL
5.0.44, the DETERMINISTIC characteristic is
accepted, but not used by the optimizer.
If binary logging is enabled, the DETERMINISTIC
characteristic affects which routine definitions MySQL accepts.
See Section 18.6, “Binary Logging of Stored Programs”.
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 allowed 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. As of MySQL 5.0.3, 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. The DEFINER
clause was added in MySQL 5.0.20.
If a user value is given for the
DEFINER clause, it should be a MySQL account
specified as
'
(the same format used in the user_name'@'host_name'GRANT
statement), CURRENT_USER, or
CURRENT_USER(). The default
DEFINER value is the user who executes the
CREATE PROCEDURE or
CREATE FUNCTION or statement. This
is the same as specifying DEFINER =
CURRENT_USER explicitly.
If you specify the DEFINER clause, these rules
determine the legal DEFINER user values:
If you do not have the SUPER
privilege, the only legal user
value is your own account, either specified literally or by
using CURRENT_USER. You cannot
set the definer to some other account.
If you have the SUPER
privilege, you can specify any syntactically legal account
name. If the account does not actually exist, a warning is
generated.
Although it is possible to create a routine with a nonexistent
DEFINER account, an error occurs at routine
execution time if the SQL SECURITY value is
DEFINER but the definer account does not
exist.
For more information about stored routine security, see Section 18.5, “Access Control for Stored Programs and Views”.
Within a stored routine that is defined with the SQL
SECURITY DEFINER characteristic,
CURRENT_USER returns the routine's
DEFINER value. For information about user
auditing within stored routines, see
Section 5.5.8, “Auditing MySQL Account Activity”.
Consider the following procedure, which displays a count of the
number of MySQL accounts listed in the
mysql.user 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.
As of MySQL 5.0.18, the 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 there is a CHARACTER
SET attribute in the declaration, the specified
character set and its default collation are used. If there is
no such attribute, as of MySQL 5.0.25, the database character
set and collation that are in effect at the time the server
loads the routine into the routine cache are used. (These are
given by the values of the
character_set_database and
collation_database system
variables.) If the database character set or collation change
while the routine is in the cache, routine execution is
unaffected by the change until the next time the server
reloads the routine into the cache. The
COLLATE attribute is not supported. (This
includes use of BINARY, which in this
context specifies the binary collation of the character set.)
Before MySQL 5.0.18, parameters, return values, and local
variables are treated as items in expressions, and are subject to
automatic (silent) conversion and truncation. Stored functions
ignore the sql_mode setting.
CREATE [TEMPORARY] TABLE [IF NOT EXISTS]tbl_name(create_definition,...) [table_options]
Or:
CREATE [TEMPORARY] TABLE [IF NOT EXISTS]tbl_name[(create_definition,...)] [table_options]select_statement
Or:
CREATE [TEMPORARY] TABLE [IF NOT EXISTS]tbl_name{ LIKEold_tbl_name| (LIKEold_tbl_name) }
create_definition:col_namecolumn_definition| [CONSTRAINT [symbol]] PRIMARY KEY [index_type] (index_col_name,...) [index_type] | {INDEX|KEY} [index_name] [index_type] (index_col_name,...) [index_type] | [CONSTRAINT [symbol]] UNIQUE [INDEX|KEY] [index_name] [index_type] (index_col_name,...) [index_type] | {FULLTEXT|SPATIAL} [INDEX|KEY] [index_name] (index_col_name,...) [index_type] | [CONSTRAINT [symbol]] FOREIGN KEY [index_name] (index_col_name,...)reference_definition| CHECK (expr)column_definition:data_type[NOT NULL | NULL] [DEFAULTdefault_value] [AUTO_INCREMENT] [UNIQUE [KEY] | [PRIMARY] KEY] [COMMENT 'string'] [reference_definition]data_type: BIT[(length)] | TINYINT[(length)] [UNSIGNED] [ZEROFILL] | SMALLINT[(length)] [UNSIGNED] [ZEROFILL] | MEDIUMINT[(length)] [UNSIGNED] [ZEROFILL] | INT[(length)] [UNSIGNED] [ZEROFILL] | INTEGER[(length)] [UNSIGNED] [ZEROFILL] | BIGINT[(length)] [UNSIGNED] [ZEROFILL] | REAL[(length,decimals)] [UNSIGNED] [ZEROFILL] | DOUBLE[(length,decimals)] [UNSIGNED] [ZEROFILL] | FLOAT[(length,decimals)] [UNSIGNED] [ZEROFILL] | DECIMAL[(length[,decimals])] [UNSIGNED] [ZEROFILL] | NUMERIC[(length[,decimals])] [UNSIGNED] [ZEROFILL] | DATE | TIME | TIMESTAMP | DATETIME | YEAR | CHAR[(length)] [CHARACTER SETcharset_name] [COLLATEcollation_name] | VARCHAR(length) [CHARACTER SETcharset_name] [COLLATEcollation_name] | BINARY[(length)] | VARBINARY(length) | TINYBLOB | BLOB | MEDIUMBLOB | LONGBLOB | TINYTEXT [BINARY] [CHARACTER SETcharset_name] [COLLATEcollation_name] | TEXT [BINARY] [CHARACTER SETcharset_name] [COLLATEcollation_name] | MEDIUMTEXT [BINARY] [CHARACTER SETcharset_name] [COLLATEcollation_name] | LONGTEXT [BINARY] [CHARACTER SETcharset_name] [COLLATEcollation_name] | ENUM(value1,value2,value3,...) [CHARACTER SETcharset_name] [COLLATEcollation_name] | SET(value1,value2,value3,...) [CHARACTER SETcharset_name] [COLLATEcollation_name] |spatial_typeindex_col_name:col_name[(length)] [ASC | DESC]index_type: USING {BTREE | HASH | RTREE}reference_definition: REFERENCEStbl_name(index_col_name,...) [MATCH FULL | MATCH PARTIAL | MATCH SIMPLE] [ON DELETEreference_option] [ON UPDATEreference_option]reference_option: RESTRICT | CASCADE | SET NULL | NO ACTIONtable_options:table_option[[,]table_option] ...table_option: {ENGINE|TYPE} [=]engine_name| AUTO_INCREMENT [=]value| AVG_ROW_LENGTH [=]value| [DEFAULT] CHARACTER SET [=]charset_name| CHECKSUM [=] {0 | 1} | [DEFAULT] COLLATE [=]collation_name| COMMENT [=] 'string' | CONNECTION [=] 'connect_string' | DATA DIRECTORY [=] 'absolute path to directory' | DELAY_KEY_WRITE [=] {0 | 1} | INDEX DIRECTORY [=] 'absolute path to directory' | INSERT_METHOD [=] { NO | FIRST | LAST } | MAX_ROWS [=]value| MIN_ROWS [=]value| PACK_KEYS [=] {0 | 1 | DEFAULT} | PASSWORD [=] 'string' | ROW_FORMAT [=] {DEFAULT|DYNAMIC|FIXED|COMPRESSED|REDUNDANT|COMPACT} | UNION [=] (tbl_name[,tbl_name]...)select_statement:[IGNORE | REPLACE] [AS] SELECT ... (Some legal select statement)
CREATE TABLE creates a table with
the given name. You must have the
CREATE privilege for the table.
Rules for allowable table names are given in Section 8.2, “Schema Object Names”. By default, the table is created in the default database. An error occurs if the table exists, if there is no default database, or if the database does not exist.
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`.
You can use the TEMPORARY keyword when creating
a table. A TEMPORARY table is visible only to
the current connection, and is dropped automatically when the
connection is closed. This means that two different connections
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.) To create temporary tables, you must
have the CREATE TEMPORARY TABLES
privilege.
CREATE TABLE does not
automatically commit the current active transaction if you use
the TEMPORARY keyword.
The keywords IF NOT EXISTS prevent 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.
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. In the case
of 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 13, Storage Engines, describes what files each storage engine creates to represent tables.
data_type represents the data type in a
column definition. spatial_type
represents a spatial data type. The data type syntax shown is
representative only. 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 10, Data Types, and
Section 11.16, “Spatial Extensions”.
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 or
TEXT types.
If neither NULL nor NOT
NULL is specified, the column is treated as though
NULL had been specified.
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 11.13, “Information Functions”, and
Section 20.8.3.37, “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 5.1.6, “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 and BDB
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_nameWHEREauto_colIS NULL
For information about InnoDB and
AUTO_INCREMENT, see
Section 13.2.4.3, “AUTO_INCREMENT Handling in InnoDB”.
Character data types (CHAR,
VARCHAR,
TEXT) can include
CHARACTER SET and
COLLATE attributes to specify the character
set and collation for the column. For details, see
Section 9.1, “Character Set Support”. CHARSET is a
synonym for CHARACTER SET. Example:
CREATE TABLE t (c CHAR(20) CHARACTER SET utf8 COLLATE utf8_bin);
MySQL 5.0 interprets length specifications in
character column definitions in characters. (Versions before
MySQL 4.1 interpreted them in bytes.) Lengths for
BINARY and
VARBINARY are in bytes.
The DEFAULT clause specifies a default
value for a column. With one exception, the default value must
be a constant; it cannot be a function or an expression. This
means, for example, that you cannot set the default for a date
column to be the value of a function such as
NOW() or
CURRENT_DATE. The exception is
that you can specify
CURRENT_TIMESTAMP as the
default for a TIMESTAMP column.
See Section 10.3.1.1, “TIMESTAMP Properties”.
If a column definition includes no explicit
DEFAULT value, MySQL determines the default
value as described in Section 10.1.4, “Data Type Default Values”.
BLOB and
TEXT columns cannot be assigned
a default value.
CREATE TABLE fails if a
date-valued default is not correct according to the
NO_ZERO_IN_DATE SQL mode,
even if strict SQL mode is not enabled. For example,
c1 DATE DEFAULT '2010-00-00' causes
CREATE TABLE to fail with
Invalid default value for 'c1'.
A comment for a column can be specified with the
COMMENT option, up to 255 characters long.
The comment is displayed by the SHOW
CREATE TABLE and
SHOW FULL
COLUMNS statements.
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.
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. This constraint does not apply to
NULL values except for the
BDB storage engine. For other engines, a
UNIQUE index allows multiple
NULL values for columns that can contain
NULL.
A PRIMARY KEY is 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. 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, having a long
PRIMARY KEY wastes a lot of space. (See
Section 13.2.10, “InnoDB Table and Index Structures”.)
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.
index_col_name, ...)
If a PRIMARY KEY or
UNIQUE index consists of only one column
that has an integer type, you can also refer to the column as
_rowid in
SELECT statements.
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 12.4.5.18, “tbl_nameSHOW INDEX Syntax”.
Some storage engines allow 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;
For details about USING, see
Section 12.1.8, “CREATE INDEX Syntax”.
For more information about indexes, see Section 7.4.4, “How MySQL Uses Indexes”.
In MySQL 5.0, only the MyISAM,
InnoDB, BDB, 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.
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. See Section 7.4.2, “Column Indexes”.
Only the MyISAM, BDB,
and InnoDB storage engines support indexing
on BLOB and
TEXT columns. For example:
CREATE TABLE test (blob_col BLOB, INDEX(blob_col(10)));
Prefixes can be up to 1000 bytes long (767 bytes for
InnoDB tables). Note that prefix limits are
measured in bytes, whereas the prefix length in
CREATE TABLE statements is
interpreted as number of characters for nonbinary data types
(CHAR,
VARCHAR,
TEXT). Take this into account
when specifying a prefix length for a column that uses a
multi-byte character set.
An index_col_name specification can
end with ASC or DESC.
These keywords are allowed 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.
When you use ORDER BY or GROUP
BY on a TEXT or
BLOB column in a
SELECT, the server sorts values
using only the initial number of bytes indicated by the
max_sort_length system
variable. See Section 10.4.3, “The BLOB and
TEXT Types”.
You can create special FULLTEXT indexes,
which are used for full-text searches. Only the
MyISAM storage engine supports
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 11.9, “Full-Text Search Functions”, for details of operation.
You can create SPATIAL indexes on spatial
data types. Spatial types are supported only for
MyISAM tables and indexed columns must be
declared as NOT NULL. See
Section 11.16, “Spatial Extensions”.
InnoDB tables support checking of foreign
key constraints. See Section 13.2, “The InnoDB Storage Engine”. Note that the
FOREIGN KEY syntax in
InnoDB is more restrictive than the syntax
presented for the CREATE TABLE
statement at the beginning of this section: The columns of the
referenced table must always be explicitly named.
InnoDB supports both ON
DELETE and ON UPDATE actions on
foreign keys. For the precise syntax, see
Section 13.2.4.4, “FOREIGN KEY Constraints”.
For other storage engines, MySQL Server parses and ignores the
FOREIGN KEY and
REFERENCES syntax in
CREATE TABLE statements. The
CHECK clause is parsed but ignored by all
storage engines. See Section 1.8.5.4, “Foreign Keys”.
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 allow a foreign key to be all or
partially NULL. In that case, the (child
table) row containing such a foreign key is allowed 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 and InnoDB require
that the referenced columns be indexed for performance.
However, the system does not enforce a requirement that the
referenced columns be UNIQUE or be
declared 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 UNIQUE
and NOT NULL keys.
Furthermore, InnoDB does not recognize or
support “inline REFERENCES
specifications” (as defined in the SQL standard)
where the references are defined as part of the column
specification. InnoDB accepts
REFERENCES clauses only when specified as
part of a separate FOREIGN KEY
specification. For other storage engines, MySQL Server
parses and ignores foreign key specifications.
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 D.7.2, “The Maximum Number of Columns Per Table”.
The ENGINE table option specifies the storage
engine for the table. TYPE is a synonym, but
ENGINE is the preferred option name.
The ENGINE table option takes the storage
engine names shown in the following table.
| Storage Engine | Description |
ARCHIVE | The archiving storage engine. See
Section 13.8, “The ARCHIVE Storage Engine”. |
BDB | Transaction-safe tables with page locking. Also known as
BerkeleyDB. See
Section 13.5, “The BDB (BerkeleyDB) Storage
Engine”. |
CSV | Tables that store rows in comma-separated values format. See
Section 13.9, “The CSV Storage Engine”. |
EXAMPLE | An example engine. See Section 13.6, “The EXAMPLE Storage Engine”. |
FEDERATED | Storage engine that accesses remote tables. See
Section 13.7, “The FEDERATED Storage Engine”. |
HEAP | This is a synonym for MEMORY. |
ISAM (OBSOLETE) | Not available in MySQL 5.0. If you are upgrading to MySQL
5.0 from a previous version, you should
convert any existing ISAM tables to
MyISAM before
performing the upgrade. |
InnoDB | Transaction-safe tables with row locking and foreign keys. See
Section 13.2, “The InnoDB Storage Engine”. |
MEMORY | The data for this storage engine is stored only in memory. See
Section 13.4, “The MEMORY (HEAP) Storage Engine”. |
MERGE | A collection of MyISAM tables used as one table. Also
known as MRG_MyISAM. See
Section 13.3, “The MERGE Storage Engine”. |
MyISAM | The binary portable storage engine that is the default storage engine
used by MySQL. See
Section 13.1, “The MyISAM Storage Engine”. |
NDBCLUSTER | Clustered, fault-tolerant, memory-based tables. Also known as
NDB. See
Chapter 17, MySQL Cluster. |
If a storage engine is specified that is not available, MySQL uses
the default engine instead. Normally, this is
MyISAM. For example, if a table definition
includes the ENGINE=BDB option but the MySQL
server does not support BDB tables, the table
is created as a MyISAM table. This makes it
possible to have a replication setup where you have transactional
tables on the master but tables created on the slave are
nontransactional (to get more speed). In MySQL 5.0, a
warning occurs if the storage engine specification is not honored.
Engine substitution can be controlled by the setting of the
NO_ENGINE_SUBSTITUTION SQL mode,
as described in Section 5.1.6, “Server SQL Modes”.
The other 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.
AUTO_INCREMENT
The initial AUTO_INCREMENT value for the
table. In MySQL 5.0, this works for
MyISAM and MEMORY
tables. It is also supported for InnoDB as
of MySQL 5.0.3. 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 =
NAUTO_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
table files is 256TB of data by default (4GB before MySQL
5.0.6). (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, which was added in MySQL 4.1.2. (See
Section 5.1.3, “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 allows table
sizes up to 65,536TB.
[DEFAULT] CHARACTER SET
Specify 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
Specify a default collation for the table.
COMMENT
A comment for the table, up to 60 characters long.
CONNECTION
The connection string for a FEDERATED
table. This option is available as of MySQL 5.0.13; before
that, use a COMMENT option for the
connection string.
DATA DIRECTORY, INDEX
DIRECTORY
By using DATA
DIRECTORY=' or
directory'INDEX
DIRECTORY=' you
can specify where the directory'MyISAM storage engine
should put a table's data file and index file. The directory
must be the full path name to the directory, not a relative
path.
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 7.6.1.2, “Using Symbolic Links for 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. As of MySQL 5.0.48, 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.
Beginning with MySQL 5.0.60, you cannot use path names that
contain the MySQL data directory with DATA
DIRECTORY or INDEX DIRECTORY.
(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 5.1.3, “Server System Variables”.
(MyISAM only.)
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 13.3, “The MERGE Storage Engine”.
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.
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
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 how the rows should be stored. 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 13.1.3, “MyISAM Table Storage Formats”.
Starting with MySQL 5.0.3, for InnoDB
tables, rows are stored in compact format
(ROW_FORMAT=COMPACT) by default. The
noncompact format used in older versions of MySQL can still be
requested by specifying
ROW_FORMAT=REDUNDANT.
When executing a CREATE TABLE
statement, if you specify a row format which 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 this 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.
RAID_TYPE
RAID support has been removed as of MySQL
5.0. For information on RAID, see
CREATE TABLE Syntax.
UNION is used when you want to
access a collection of identical MyISAM
tables as one. This works only with MERGE
tables. See Section 13.3, “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.
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 allows 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.
You can create one table from another by adding a
SELECT statement at the end of the
CREATE TABLE statement:
CREATE TABLEnew_tblSELECT * 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. 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.
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;
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 ... 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 generated column:
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 table already exists, MySQL handles the statement as follows:
The table definition given in the CREATE
TABLE part is ignored. No error occurs, even if the
definition does not match that of the existing table.
If there is a mismatch between the number of columns in the
table and the number of columns produced by the
SELECT part, the selected
values are assigned to the rightmost columns. For example, if
the table contains n columns and
the SELECT produces
m columns, where
m <
n, the selected values are assigned
to the m rightmost columns in the
table. Each of the initial n
– m columns is assigned its
default value, either that specified explicitly in the column
definition or the implicit column data type default if the
definition contains no default. If the
SELECT part produces too many
columns (m >
n), an error occurs.
If strict SQL mode is enabled and any of these initial columns do not have an explicit default value, the statement fails with an error.
The following example illustrates IF NOT EXISTS
handling:
mysql>CREATE TABLE t1 (i1 INT DEFAULT 0, i2 INT, i3 INT, i4 INT);Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.05 sec) mysql>CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS t1 (c1 CHAR(10)) SELECT 1, 2;Query OK, 1 row affected, 1 warning (0.01 sec) Records: 1 Duplicates: 0 Warnings: 0 mysql>SELECT * FROM t1;+------+------+------+------+ | i1 | i2 | i3 | i4 | +------+------+------+------+ | 0 | NULL | 1 | 2 | +------+------+------+------+ 1 row in set (0.00 sec)
Use 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_tblLIKEorig_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.
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 precede the SELECT by
IGNORE or
REPLACE to indicate how to handle
rows that duplicate unique key values. With
IGNORE, new 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.
To ensure that the binary log can be used to re-create the
original tables, MySQL does not allow concurrent inserts during
CREATE TABLE ...
SELECT.
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.
Some silent column specification changes include modifications to attribute or index specifications:
TIMESTAMP display sizes are
discarded.
Also note that TIMESTAMP
columns are NOT NULL by default.
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 10.7, “Using Data Types from Other Database Engines”.
If you include a USING clause to specify
an index type that is not legal 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.
Possible data type changes are given in the following list. If a version number is given, the change occurs only up to the versions listed. After that, an error occurs if a column cannot be created using the specified data type.
Before MySQL 5.0.3, VARCHAR
columns with a length less than four are changed to
CHAR.
Before MySQL 5.0.3, if any column in a table has a variable
length, the entire row becomes variable-length as a result.
Therefore, if a table contains any variable-length columns
(VARCHAR,
TEXT, or
BLOB), all
CHAR columns longer than
three characters are changed to
VARCHAR columns. This does
not affect how you use the columns in any way; in MySQL,
VARCHAR is just a different
way to store characters. MySQL performs this conversion
because it saves space and makes table operations faster.
See Chapter 13, Storage Engines.
Before MySQL 5.0.3, a CHAR or
VARCHAR column with a length
specification greater than 255 is converted to the smallest
TEXT type that can hold
values of the given length. For example,
VARCHAR(500) is converted to
TEXT, and
VARCHAR(200000) is converted to
MEDIUMTEXT. Similar
conversions occur for BINARY
and VARBINARY, except that
they are converted to a BLOB
type.
Note that these conversions result in a change in behavior with regard to treatment of trailing spaces.
As of MySQL 5.0.3, a CHAR or
BINARY column with a length
specification greater than 255 is not silently converted.
Instead, an error occurs. From MySQL 5.0.6 on, silent
conversion of VARCHAR and
VARBINARY columns with a
length specification greater than 65535 does not occur if
strict SQL mode is enabled. Instead, an error occurs.
Before MySQL 5.0.10, for a specification of
DECIMAL(,
if M,D)M is not larger than
D, it is adjusted upward. For
example, DECIMAL(10,10) becomes
DECIMAL(11,10). As of MySQL 5.0.10,
DECIMAL(10,10) is created as specified.
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 13.1.3.3, “Compressed Table Characteristics”.
CREATE
[DEFINER = { user | CURRENT_USER }]
TRIGGER trigger_name trigger_time trigger_event
ON tbl_name FOR EACH ROW trigger_body
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.
CREATE TRIGGER was added in MySQL
5.0.2.
MySQL Enterprise For expert advice on creating triggers, subscribe to the MySQL Enterprise Monitor. For more information, see http://www.mysql.com/products/enterprise/advisors.html.
In MySQL 5.0 CREATE
TRIGGER requires the
SUPER privilege.
The DEFINER clause determines the security
context to be used when checking access privileges at trigger
activation time. It was added in MySQL 5.0.17. See later in this
section for more information.
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.
trigger_event indicates the kind of
statement that activates the trigger. The
trigger_event can be one of the
following:
INSERT: The trigger is
activated whenever a new row is inserted into the table; for
example, through INSERT,
LOAD DATA, and
REPLACE statements.
UPDATE: The trigger is
activated whenever a row is modified; for example, through
UPDATE statements.
DELETE: The trigger is
activated whenever a row is deleted from the table; for
example, through DELETE and
REPLACE statements. However,
DROP TABLE and
TRUNCATE TABLE statements on
the table do not activate this trigger,
because they do not use DELETE.
See Section 12.2.10, “TRUNCATE TABLE Syntax”.
It is important to understand that 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 is activated by not
only 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 will activate 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.
There cannot be two triggers for a given table that have the same
trigger action time and event. For example, you cannot have two
BEFORE UPDATE triggers for a table. But you can
have a BEFORE UPDATE and a BEFORE
INSERT trigger, or a BEFORE UPDATE
and an AFTER UPDATE trigger.
trigger_body is the statement to
execute when the trigger activates. If you want to execute
multiple statements, use the
BEGIN ... END
compound statement construct. This also enables you to use the
same statements that are allowable within stored routines. See
Section 12.7.1, “BEGIN ... END
Compound Statement Syntax”. Some statements are not allowed in
triggers; see Section D.1, “Restrictions on Stored Routines and Triggers”.
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_nameNEW. refers
to the column of a new row to be inserted or an existing row after
it is updated.
col_name
MySQL stores the sql_mode system
variable setting that is in effect at the time a trigger is
created, and always executes the trigger with this setting in
force, regardless of the current server SQL
mode.
Currently, cascaded foreign key actions do not activate triggers.
The DEFINER clause specifies the MySQL account
to be used when checking access privileges at trigger activation
time. If a user value is given, it
should be a MySQL account specified as
'
(the same format used in the user_name'@'host_name'GRANT
statement), CURRENT_USER, or
CURRENT_USER(). The default
DEFINER value is the user who executes the
CREATE TRIGGER statement. This is
the same as specifying DEFINER = CURRENT_USER
explicitly.
If you specify the DEFINER clause, these rules
determine the legal DEFINER user values:
If you do not have the SUPER
privilege, the only legal user
value is your own account, either specified literally or by
using CURRENT_USER. You cannot
set the definer to some other account.
If you have the SUPER
privilege, you can specify any syntactically legal account
name. If the account does not actually exist, a warning is
generated.
Although it is possible to create a trigger with a nonexistent
DEFINER account, it is not a good idea for
such triggers to be activated until the account actually does
exist. Otherwise, the behavior with respect to privilege
checking is undefined.
Note: Because MySQL currently requires the
SUPER privilege for the use of
CREATE TRIGGER, only the second of
the preceding rules applies. (MySQL 5.1.6 implements the
TRIGGER privilege and requires that
privilege for trigger creation, so at that point both rules come
into play and SUPER is required
only for specifying a DEFINER value other than
your own account.)
From MySQL 5.0.17 on, 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
SUPER privilege.
At trigger activation time, privileges are checked against the
DEFINER user. This user must have these
privileges:
The SUPER privilege.
The SELECT privilege for
the subject table if references to table columns occur via
OLD.
or
col_nameNEW.
in the trigger definition.
col_name
The UPDATE privilege for
the subject table if table columns are targets of
SET NEW. assignments in
the trigger definition.
col_name =
value
Whatever other privileges normally are required for the statements executed by the trigger.
Before MySQL 5.0.17, DEFINER is not available
and MySQL checks trigger privileges like this:
At CREATE TRIGGER time, the
user who issues the statement must have the
SUPER privilege.
At trigger activation time, privileges are checked against the user whose actions cause the trigger to be activated. This user must have whatever privileges normally are required for the statements executed by the trigger.
For more information about trigger security, see Section 18.5, “Access Control for Stored Programs and Views”.
Within a trigger, the
CURRENT_USER() function returns the
account used to check privileges at trigger activation time.
Consistent with the privilege-checking rules just given,
CURRENT_USER() returns the
DEFINER user from MySQL 5.0.17 on. Before
5.0.17, CURRENT_USER() returns the
user whose actions caused the trigger to be activated. For
information about user auditing within triggers, see
Section 5.5.8, “Auditing MySQL Account Activity”.
If you use LOCK TABLES to lock a
table that has triggers, the tables used within the trigger are
also locked, as described in
Section 12.3.5.2, “LOCK TABLES and Triggers”.
Before MySQL 5.0.10, triggers cannot contain direct references
to tables by name. Beginning with MySQL 5.0.10, you can write
triggers such as the one named testref shown
in this example:
CREATE TABLE test1(a1 INT);
CREATE TABLE test2(a2 INT);
CREATE TABLE test3(a3 INT NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT PRIMARY KEY);
CREATE TABLE test4(
a4 INT NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT PRIMARY KEY,
b4 INT DEFAULT 0
);
delimiter |
CREATE TRIGGER testref BEFORE INSERT ON test1
FOR EACH ROW BEGIN
INSERT INTO test2 SET a2 = NEW.a1;
DELETE FROM test3 WHERE a3 = NEW.a1;
UPDATE test4 SET b4 = b4 + 1 WHERE a4 = NEW.a1;
END;
|
delimiter ;
INSERT INTO test3 (a3) VALUES
(NULL), (NULL), (NULL), (NULL), (NULL),
(NULL), (NULL), (NULL), (NULL), (NULL);
INSERT INTO test4 (a4) VALUES
(0), (0), (0), (0), (0), (0), (0), (0), (0), (0);
Suppose that you insert the following values into table
test1 as shown here:
mysql>INSERT INTO test1 VALUES->(1), (3), (1), (7), (1), (8), (4), (4);Query OK, 8 rows affected (0.01 sec) Records: 8 Duplicates: 0 Warnings: 0
As a result, the data in the four tables will be as follows:
mysql>SELECT * FROM test1;+------+ | a1 | +------+ | 1 | | 3 | | 1 | | 7 | | 1 | | 8 | | 4 | | 4 | +------+ 8 rows in set (0.00 sec) mysql>SELECT * FROM test2;+------+ | a2 | +------+ | 1 | | 3 | | 1 | | 7 | | 1 | | 8 | | 4 | | 4 | +------+ 8 rows in set (0.00 sec) mysql>SELECT * FROM test3;+----+ | a3 | +----+ | 2 | | 5 | | 6 | | 9 | | 10 | +----+ 5 rows in set (0.00 sec) mysql>SELECT * FROM test4;+----+------+ | a4 | b4 | +----+------+ | 1 | 3 | | 2 | 0 | | 3 | 1 | | 4 | 2 | | 5 | 0 | | 6 | 0 | | 7 | 1 | | 8 | 1 | | 9 | 0 | | 10 | 0 | +----+------+ 10 rows in set (0.00 sec)
CREATE
[OR REPLACE]
[ALGORITHM = {UNDEFINED | MERGE | TEMPTABLE}]
[DEFINER = { user | CURRENT_USER }]
[SQL SECURITY { DEFINER | INVOKER }]
VIEW view_name [(column_list)]
AS select_statement
[WITH [CASCADED | LOCAL] CHECK OPTION]
The CREATE VIEW statement creates a
new view, or replaces an existing one if the OR
REPLACE clause is given. This statement was added in
MySQL 5.0.1. 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 is the same as ALTER
VIEW.
The select_statement is a
SELECT statement that provides the
definition of the view. (When you select from the view, you select
in effect using the SELECT
statement.) select_statement can select
from base tables or other views.
The view definition is “frozen” at creation time, so
changes to the underlying tables afterward do not affect the view
definition. 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.
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. CREATE VIEW might also
require the SUPER privilege,
depending on the DEFINER value, as described
later in this section.
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, specify the name as
db_name.view_name when you create it:
mysql> CREATE VIEW test.v AS SELECT * FROM t;
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. They can also
be expressions that use functions, constant values, operators, and
so forth.
Views must have unique column names with no duplicates, just like
base tables. 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,
the optional column_list clause can be
given 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.
Prior to MySQL 5.0.72, when you modify an existing view, the
server saves a backup of the current view definition under the
view database directory, in a subdirectory named
arc. The backup file for a view
v is named v.frm-00001.
If you alter the view again, the next backup is named
v.frm-00002. The three latest view backup
definitions are stored.
Backed up view definitions are not preserved by mysqldump, or any other such programs, but you can retain them using a file copy operation. However, they are not needed for anything but to provide you with a backup of your previous view definition.
It is safe to remove these backup definitions, but only while
mysqld is not running. If you delete the
arc subdirectory or its files while
mysqld is running, an error occurs the next
time you try to alter the view:
mysql> ALTER VIEW v AS SELECT * FROM t; ERROR 6 (HY000): Error on delete of '.\test\arc/v.frm-0004' (Errcode: 2)
Unqualified table or view names in the
SELECT statement are 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 proper database name.
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. 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
contain a subquery in the FROM clause.
The SELECT statement cannot
refer to system or user variables.
Within a stored program, the definition 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.
However, after a view has been created, it is possible to drop
a table or view that the definition refers to. In this case,
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.
Any tables named in the view definition must exist at definition time.
You cannot associate a trigger with a view.
As of MySQL 5.0.52, 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 allowed 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.
If you create a view and then change the query processing environment by changing system variables, that may affect the results that you get from the view:
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. These clauses were addded in MySQL 5.0.13,
but have no effect until MySQL 5.0.16. The legal SQL
SECURITY characteristic values are
DEFINER and INVOKER. These
indicate that the required privileges must be held by the user who
defined or invoked the view, respectively. The default
SQL SECURITY value is
DEFINER.
If a user value is given for the
DEFINER clause, it should be a MySQL account
specified as
'
(the same format used in the user_name'@'host_name'GRANT
statement), CURRENT_USER, or
CURRENT_USER(). The default
DEFINER value is the user who executes the
CREATE VIEW statement. This is the
same as specifying DEFINER = CURRENT_USER
explicitly.
If you specify the DEFINER clause, these rules
determine the legal DEFINER user values:
If you do not have the SUPER
privilege, the only legal user
value is your own account, either specified literally or by
using CURRENT_USER. You cannot
set the definer to some other account.
If you have the SUPER
privilege, you can specify any syntactically legal account
name. If the account does not actually exist, a warning is
generated.
Although it is possible to create a view with a nonexistent
DEFINER account, an error occurs when the
view is referenced if the SQL SECURITY
value is DEFINER but the definer account
does not exist.
For more information about view security, see Section 18.5, “Access Control for Stored Programs and Views”.
Within a view definition,
CURRENT_USER returns the view's
DEFINER value by default as of MySQL 5.0.24.
For older versions, and 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 5.5.8, “Auditing MySQL Account Activity”.
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.
As of MySQL 5.0.16 (when the DEFINER and
SQL SECURITY clauses were implemented), view
privileges are checked 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.
Prior to MySQL 5.0.16 (before the DEFINER and
SQL SECURITY clauses were implemented),
privileges required for objects used in a view are checked at view
creation time.
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.
If you invoke a view that was created before MySQL 5.0.13, it is
treated as though it was created with a SQL SECURITY
DEFINER characteristic and with a
DEFINER value that is the same as your account.
However, because the actual definer is unknown, MySQL issues a
warning. To eliminate the warning, it is sufficient to re-create
the view so that the view definition includes a
DEFINER clause.
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. The default algorithm is
UNDEFINED if no ALGORITHM
clause is present. For more information, see
Section 18.4.2, “View Processing Algorithms”.
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.
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. The
WITH CHECK OPTION clause was implemented in
MySQL 5.0.2.
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 18.4.3, “Updatable and Insertable Views”.
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 as of MySQL 5.0.2.
When a database is dropped, user privileges on the database are
not automatically dropped. See
Section 12.4.1.3, “GRANT Syntax”.
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 |
.db | .frm | .ibd | .ndb |
All subdirectories with names that consist of two hex digits
00-ff. These are
subdirectories used for RAID tables. (These
directories are not removed as of MySQL 5.0, when support for
RAID tables was removed. You should convert
any existing RAID tables and remove these
directories manually before upgrading to MySQL 5.0. See
Section 2.19.1.2, “Upgrading from MySQL 4.1 to 5.0”.)
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.
You can also drop databases with mysqladmin. See Section 4.5.2, “mysqladmin — Client for Administering a MySQL Server”.
The DROP FUNCTION statement is used
to drop stored functions and user-defined functions (UDFs):
For information about dropping stored functions, see
Section 12.1.16, “DROP PROCEDURE and
DROP FUNCTION Syntax”.
For information about dropping user-defined functions, see
Section 12.4.3.2, “DROP FUNCTION Syntax”.
DROP INDEXindex_nameONtbl_name
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 12.1.4, “ALTER TABLE Syntax”.
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. As of
MySQL 5.0.3, 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 18.2.2, “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 PROCEDURE IF EXISTS and DROP
FUNCTION IF EXISTS are not written to the binary log
(and thus not replicated) if the stored procedure or function
named in the DROP statement does not exist on
the master. This is a known issue, which is resolved in MySQL
5.1 and later. (Bug#13684)
DROP FUNCTION is also used to drop
user-defined functions (see Section 12.4.3.2, “DROP FUNCTION Syntax”).
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. All table data and the table definition
are removed, so be
careful with this statement! If any of the tables named
in the argument list do not exist, MySQL returns an error
indicating by name which nonexisting tables it was unable to drop,
but it also drops all of the tables in the list that do exist.
When a table is dropped, user privileges on the table are
not automatically dropped. See
Section 12.4.1.3, “GRANT Syntax”.
Use IF EXISTS to prevent an error from
occurring for tables that do not exist. A NOTE
is generated for each nonexistent table when using IF
EXISTS. See Section 12.4.5.37, “SHOW WARNINGS Syntax”.
RESTRICT and CASCADE are
allowed to make porting easier. In MySQL 5.0, they do
nothing.
DROP TABLE automatically commits
the current active transaction, unless you use the
TEMPORARY keyword.
The TEMPORARY keyword has the following
effects:
The statement drops only TEMPORARY tables.
The statement does not end an ongoing transaction.
No access rights are checked. (A TEMPORARY
table is visible only to the session that created it, so no
check is necessary.)
Using TEMPORARY is a good way to ensure that
you do not accidentally drop a non-TEMPORARY
table.
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
was added in MySQL 5.0.2. Its use requires the
SUPER privilege.
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 12.4.5.37, “SHOW WARNINGS Syntax”. The IF EXISTS
clause was added in MySQL 5.0.32.
Triggers for a table are also dropped if you drop the table.
Prior to MySQL 5.0.10, the table name was required instead of
the schema name
().
When upgrading from a previous version of MySQL 5.0 to MySQL
5.0.10 or newer, you must drop all triggers before
upgrading and re-create them afterwards, or else
table_name.trigger_nameDROP TRIGGER does not work after
the upgrade. See
Section 2.19.1.2, “Upgrading from MySQL 4.1 to 5.0”, for a
suggested upgrade procedure.
In addition, triggers created in MySQL 5.0.16 or later cannot be dropped following a downgrade to MySQL 5.0.15 or earlier. If you wish to perform such a downgrade, you must also in this case drop all triggers prior to the downgrade, and then re-create them afterwards.
(For more information about these two issues, see Bug#15921 and Bug#18588.)
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 of the views named in the argument
list do not exist, MySQL returns an error indicating by name which
nonexisting views it was unable to drop, but it also drops all of
the views in the list that do exist.
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 12.4.5.37, “SHOW WARNINGS Syntax”.
RESTRICT and CASCADE, if
given, are parsed and ignored.
This statement was added in MySQL 5.0.1.
RENAME TABLEtbl_nameTOnew_tbl_name[,tbl_name2TOnew_tbl_name2] ...
This statement renames one or more tables.
The rename operation is done atomically, which means that no other
session can access any of the tables while the rename is running.
For example, if you have an existing table
old_table, you can create another table
new_table that has the same structure but is
empty, and then replace the existing table with the empty one as
follows (assuming that backup_table does not
already exist):
CREATE TABLE new_table (...); RENAME TABLE old_table TO backup_table, new_table TO old_table;
If the statement renames more than one table, renaming operations
are done from left to right. If you want to swap two table names,
you can do so like this (assuming that
tmp_table does not already exist):
RENAME TABLE old_table TO tmp_table,
new_table TO old_table,
tmp_table TO new_table;
As long as two databases are on the same file system, you can use
RENAME TABLE to move a table from
one database to another:
RENAME TABLEcurrent_db.tbl_nameTOother_db.tbl_name;
Beginning with MySQL 5.0.2, if there are any triggers associated
with a table which is moved to a different database using
RENAME TABLE, then the statement
fails with the error Trigger in wrong
schema.
As of MySQL 5.0.14, RENAME TABLE
also works for views, as long as you do not try to rename a view
into a different database.
Any privileges granted specifically for the renamed table or view are not migrated to the new name. They must be changed manually.
When you execute RENAME, you cannot have any
locked tables or active transactions. You must also have the
ALTER and
DROP privileges on the original
table, and the CREATE and
INSERT privileges on the new table.
If MySQL encounters any errors in a multiple-table rename, it does a reverse rename for all renamed tables to return everything to its original state.
You cannot use RENAME to rename a
TEMPORARY table. However, you can use
ALTER TABLE instead:
mysql> ALTER TABLE orig_name RENAME new_name;
CALLsp_name([parameter[,...]]) CALLsp_name[()]
The CALL statement invokes a stored
procedure that was defined previously with
CREATE PROCEDURE.
As of MySQL 5.0.30, 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.
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 | +------------+------------+ | 5.0.25-log | 11 | +------------+------------+
In prepared CALL statements used
with PREPARE and
EXECUTE, placeholder support is
available in MySQL 5.0 for IN
parameters, but not for OUT or
INOUT parameters. To work around this
limitation for OUT and INOUT
parameters, to forgo the use of placeholders: Refer to user
variables in the CALL statement
itself and do not specify them in the
EXECUTE statement:
mysql>SET @increment = 10;mysql>PREPARE s FROM 'CALL p(@version, @increment)';mysql>EXECUTE s;mysql>SELECT @version, @increment;+-----------------+------------+ | @version | @increment | +-----------------+------------+ | 6.0.7-alpha-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).
To process the result of a CALL
statement executed via
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 20.8.12, “C API Support for Multiple Statement Execution”.
For programs written in a language that provides a MySQL
interface, there is no native method for directly retrieving the
results of OUT or INOUT
parameters from CALL statements. To
get the parameter values, pass user-defined variables to the
procedure in the CALL statement and
then execute a SELECT statement to
produce a result set containing the variable values. To handle an
INOUT parameter, execute a statement prior to
the CALL that sets the
corresponding user variable to the value to be passed to the
procedure.
The following example illustrates the technique (without error
checking) for the stored procedure p described
earlier that has an OUT parameter and an
INOUT parameter:
mysql_query(mysql, "SET @increment = 10"); mysql_query(mysql, "CALL p(@version, @increment)"); mysql_query(mysql, "SELECT @version, @increment"); result = mysql_store_result(mysql); row = mysql_fetch_row(result); mysql_free_result(result);
After the preceding code executes, row[0] and
row[1] contain the values of
@version and @increment,
respectively.
Single-table syntax:
DELETE [LOW_PRIORITY] [QUICK] [IGNORE] FROMtbl_name[WHEREwhere_condition] [ORDER BY ...] [LIMITrow_count]
Multiple-table syntax:
DELETE [LOW_PRIORITY] [QUICK] [IGNORE]
tbl_name[.*] [, tbl_name[.*]] ...
FROM table_references
[WHERE where_condition]
Or:
DELETE [LOW_PRIORITY] [QUICK] [IGNORE]
FROM tbl_name[.*] [, tbl_name[.*]] ...
USING table_references
[WHERE where_condition]
For the single-table syntax, the
DELETE statement deletes rows from
tbl_name and returns a count of the
number of deleted rows. This count can be obtained by calling the
ROW_COUNT() function (see
Section 11.13, “Information Functions”). The
WHERE clause, if given, specifies the
conditions that identify which rows to delete. With no
WHERE clause, all rows are deleted. 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.
For the multiple-table syntax,
DELETE deletes from each
tbl_name the rows that satisfy the
conditions. In this case, ORDER BY and
LIMIT cannot be used.
where_condition is an expression that
evaluates to true for each row to be deleted. It is specified as
described in Section 12.2.8, “SELECT Syntax”.
Currently, you cannot delete from a table and select from the same table in a subquery.
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.
As stated, a DELETE statement with
no WHERE clause deletes all rows. A faster way
to do this, when you do not need to know the number of deleted
rows, is to use TRUNCATE TABLE.
However, within a transaction or if you have a lock on the table,
TRUNCATE TABLE cannot be used
whereas DELETE can. See
Section 12.2.10, “TRUNCATE TABLE Syntax”, and
Section 12.3.5, “LOCK TABLES and
UNLOCK
TABLES Syntax”.
If you delete the row containing the maximum value for an
AUTO_INCREMENT column, the value is reused
later for a BDB table, but not for a
MyISAM or InnoDB table. If
you delete all rows in the table with DELETE FROM
(without a
tbl_nameWHERE 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 13.2.4.3, “AUTO_INCREMENT Handling in InnoDB”.
For MyISAM and BDB 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 LOW_PRIORITY, 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 keyword, the storage engine does not
merge index leaves during delete, which may speed up some
kinds of delete operations.
The IGNORE keyword causes MySQL to ignore
all 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.
The speed of delete operations may also be affected by factors
discussed in Section 7.2.21, “Speed of DELETE Statements”.
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 12.4.2.5, “OPTIMIZE TABLE Syntax”, 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:
Create a table that contains an indexed
AUTO_INCREMENT column.
Insert many rows into the table. Each insert results in an index value that is added to the high end of the index.
Delete a block of rows at the low end of the column range
using DELETE QUICK.
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.
The MySQL-specific LIMIT
option to
row_countDELETE tells the server the maximum
number of rows to be deleted before control is returned to the
client. This can be used to ensure that a given
DELETE statement does not take too
much time. You can simply repeat the
DELETE statement until the number
of affected rows is less than the LIMIT value.
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 may also be useful in some cases 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 12.1.20, “RENAME TABLE Syntax”.
You can specify multiple tables in a
DELETE statement to delete rows
from one or more tables depending on the particular condition in
the WHERE clause. However, you cannot use
ORDER BY or LIMIT in a
multiple-table DELETE. The
table_references clause lists the
tables involved in the join. Its syntax is described in
Section 12.2.8.1, “JOIN Syntax”.
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 allowed 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 allows .* 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 ...
If table aliases are used, they should be declared in the
table_references part of the statement.
Elsewhere in the statement, aliases references are allowed but
should not be declared.
Cross-database deletes are supported for multiple-table deletes,
but you should be aware that in the list of tables from which to
delete rows, aliases will have a default database unless one is
specified explicitly. For example, if the default database is
test, the following statement does not work
because the unqualified alias a1 has a default
database of test:
DELETE a1, a2 FROM db1.t1 AS a1 INNER JOIN db2.t2 AS a2 WHERE a1.id=a2.id;
To correctly match the alias, you must explicitly qualify it with the database of the table being aliased:
DELETE db1.a1, db2.a2 FROM db1.t1 AS a1 INNER JOIN db2.t2 AS a2 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().
HANDLERtbl_nameOPEN [ [AS]alias] HANDLERtbl_nameREADindex_name{ = | <= | >= | < | > } (value1,value2,...) [ WHEREwhere_condition] [LIMIT ... ] HANDLERtbl_nameREADindex_name{ FIRST | NEXT | PREV | LAST } [ WHEREwhere_condition] [LIMIT ... ] HANDLERtbl_nameREAD { FIRST | NEXT } [ WHEREwhere_condition] [LIMIT ... ] HANDLERtbl_nameCLOSE
The HANDLER statement provides
direct access to table storage engine interfaces. It is available
for MyISAM and InnoDB
tables.
The HANDLER ... OPEN statement opens a table,
making it accessible via 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.
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_nameMyISAM 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 12.2.8, “SELECT Syntax”.
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 table does not have to be locked between two handler requests.
The handler interface does not have to provide a
consistent look of the data (for example, dirty reads are
allowed), so the storage engine can use optimizations that
SELECT does not normally
allow.
For applications that use a low-level
ISAM-like interface,
HANDLER makes it much easier to
port them to MySQL.
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.
INSERT [LOW_PRIORITY | DELAYED | HIGH_PRIORITY] [IGNORE]
[INTO] tbl_name [(col_name,...)]
{VALUES | VALUE} ({expr | DEFAULT},...),(...),...
[ ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE
col_name=expr
[, col_name=expr] ... ]
Or:
INSERT [LOW_PRIORITY | DELAYED | HIGH_PRIORITY] [IGNORE]
[INTO] tbl_name
SET col_name={expr | DEFAULT}, ...
[ ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE
col_name=expr
[, col_name=expr] ... ]
Or:
INSERT [LOW_PRIORITY | HIGH_PRIORITY] [IGNORE]
[INTO] tbl_name [(col_name,...)]
SELECT ...
[ ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE
col_name=expr
[, col_name=expr] ... ]
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
... SELECT is discussed further in
Section 12.2.5.1, “INSERT ...
SELECT Syntax”.
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 are used to replace the old rows
rather than being discarded. See Section 12.2.7, “REPLACE Syntax”.
tbl_name is the table into which rows
should be inserted. The columns for which the statement provides
values can be specified as follows:
You can provide a comma-separated list of 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
The SET clause indicates the column names
explicitly.
Column values can be given in several ways:
If you are not running in strict SQL mode, 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 10.1.4, “Data Type Default Values”. See also Section 1.8.6.2, “Constraints on Invalid Data”.
If you want an INSERT statement
to generate an error unless you explicitly specify values for
all columns that do not have a default value, you should use
strict mode. See Section 5.1.6, “Server SQL Modes”.
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 would have to write out the list of column
names corresponding to each value in the
VALUES list.
You can also use
DEFAULT(
as a more general form that can be used in expressions to
produce a given column's default value.
col_name)
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();
In strict mode, an error occurs if any column doesn't have a default value. Otherwise, MySQL uses the implicit default value for any column that does not have an explicitly defined default.
You can specify an expression expr
to provide a column value. This might involve type conversion
if the type of the expression does not match the type of the
column, and conversion of a given value can result in
different inserted values depending on the data type. For
example, inserting the string '1999.0e-2'
into an INT,
FLOAT,
DECIMAL(10,6), or
YEAR column results in the
values 1999, 19.9921,
19.992100, and 1999
being inserted, respectively. The reason the value stored in
the INT and
YEAR columns is
1999 is that the string-to-integer
conversion looks only at as much of the initial part of the
string as may be considered a valid integer or year. For the
floating-point and fixed-point columns, the
string-to-floating-point conversion considers the entire
string a valid floating-point 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);
One exception involves columns that contain
AUTO_INCREMENT values. Because the
AUTO_INCREMENT value is 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 column values, each 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);
The values list for each row must be enclosed within parentheses. The following statement is illegal because the number of values in the list does not match the number of column names:
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, and either may be used
whether there is a single values list or multiple lists.
The affected-rows value for an
INSERT can be obtained using the
ROW_COUNT() function (see
Section 11.13, “Information Functions”), or the
mysql_affected_rows() C API
function (see Section 20.8.3.1, “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: 100 Duplicates: 0 Warnings: 0
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.
If you are using the C API, the information string can be obtained
by invoking the mysql_info()
function. See Section 20.8.3.35, “mysql_info()”.
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 SQL
LAST_INSERT_ID() function. From
within the C API, use the
mysql_insert_id() function.
However, you should note that the two functions do not always
behave identically. The behavior of
INSERT statements with respect to
AUTO_INCREMENT columns is discussed further in
Section 11.13, “Information Functions”, and
Section 20.8.3.37, “mysql_insert_id()”.
The INSERT statement supports the
following modifiers:
If you use the DELAYED keyword, the server
puts the row or rows to be inserted into a buffer, and the
client issuing the INSERT
DELAYED statement can then continue immediately. If
the table is in use, the server holds the rows. When the table
is free, the server begins inserting rows, checking
periodically to see whether there are any new read requests
for the table. If there are, the delayed row queue is
suspended until the table becomes free again. See
Section 12.2.5.2, “INSERT DELAYED Syntax”.
DELAYED is ignored with
INSERT ...
SELECT or
INSERT
... ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE.
Beginning with MySQL 5.0.42, DELAYED is
also disregarded for an INSERT
that uses functions accessing tables or triggers, or that is
called from a function or a trigger.
If you use the LOW_PRIORITY keyword,
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
(or even forever) in a read-heavy environment. (This is in
contrast to INSERT DELAYED,
which lets the client continue at once. Note that
LOW_PRIORITY should normally not be used
with MyISAM tables because doing so
disables concurrent inserts. See
Section 7.3.3, “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 7.3.3, “Concurrent Inserts”.
LOW_PRIORITY and
HIGH_PRIORITY affect only storage engines
that use only table-level locking (such as
MyISAM, MEMORY, and
MERGE).
If you use the IGNORE keyword, errors that
occur while executing the
INSERT statement are treated as
warnings instead. 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 still is not inserted, but no error is issued. 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.
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 is performed. The affected-rows value per row is 1 if
the row is inserted as a new row and 2 if an existing row is
updated. See Section 12.2.5.3, “INSERT ... ON
DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE Syntax”.
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).
INSERT [LOW_PRIORITY | HIGH_PRIORITY] [IGNORE]
[INTO] tbl_name [(col_name,...)]
SELECT ...
[ ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE col_name=expr, ... ]
With INSERT ...
SELECT, you can quickly insert many rows into a table
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 a
INSERT ...
SELECT statements:
Specify IGNORE to ignore rows that would
cause duplicate-key violations.
DELAYED is ignored with
INSERT ...
SELECT.
The target table of the
INSERT statement may appear
in the FROM clause of the
SELECT part of the query.
(This was not possible in some older versions of MySQL.)
However, you cannot insert into a table and select from the
same table in a subquery.
When selecting from and inserting into a table at the same
time, MySQL creates a temporary table to hold the rows from
the SELECT and then inserts
those rows into the target table. However, it remains true
that 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 B.5.7.2, “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 allow concurrent inserts for
INSERT ...
SELECT statements.
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.
In the values part of ON DUPLICATE KEY
UPDATE, you can refer to columns in other tables, as
long as you do not use GROUP BY in the
SELECT part. One side effect is
that you must qualify nonunique column names in the values part.
The order in which rows are returned by a
SELECT statement with no
ORDER BY clause is not determined. 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; this can lead to inconsistencies between
them. To prevent this from occurring, you should always write
INSERT ... SELECT statements that are to be
replicated as INSERT ... SELECT ... ORDER BY
. The choice of
columncolumn does not matter as long as the
same order for returning the rows is enforced on both the master
and the slave. See also
Section 16.4.1.9, “Replication and LIMIT”.
INSERT DELAYED ...
The DELAYED option for the
INSERT statement is a MySQL
extension to standard SQL that is very useful if you have
clients that cannot or need not wait for the
INSERT to complete. This is a
common situation when you use MySQL for logging and you also
periodically run SELECT and
UPDATE statements that take a
long time to complete.
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.
Another major benefit of using INSERT
DELAYED is that inserts from many clients are bundled
together and written in one block. This is much faster than
performing many separate inserts.
Note that INSERT DELAYED is
slower than a normal INSERT if
the table is not otherwise in use. There is also the additional
overhead for the server to handle a separate thread for each
table for which there are delayed rows. This means that you
should use INSERT DELAYED only
when you are really sure that you need it.
The queued rows are held only in memory until they are inserted
into the table. This means that if you terminate
mysqld forcibly (for example, with
kill -9) or if mysqld dies
unexpectedly, any queued rows that have not been
written to disk are lost.
There are some constraints on the use of
DELAYED:
INSERT DELAYED works only
with MyISAM, MEMORY,
and ARCHIVE tables. For engines that do
not support DELAYED, an error occurs.
An error occurs for INSERT
DELAYED if used with a table that has been locked
with LOCK TABLES because the insert must
be handled by a separate thread, not by the session that
holds the lock.
For MyISAM tables, if there are no free
blocks in the middle of the data file, concurrent
SELECT and
INSERT statements are
supported. Under these circumstances, you very seldom need
to use INSERT DELAYED with
MyISAM.
INSERT DELAYED should be used
only for INSERT statements
that specify value lists. The server ignores
DELAYED for
INSERT ...
SELECT or
INSERT
... ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE statements.
Because the INSERT DELAYED
statement returns immediately, before the rows are inserted,
you cannot use
LAST_INSERT_ID() to get the
AUTO_INCREMENT value that the statement
might generate.
DELAYED rows are not visible to
SELECT statements until they
actually have been inserted.
INSERT DELAYED is treated as
a normal INSERT if the
statement inserts multiple rows and binary logging is
enabled.
DELAYED is ignored on slave replication
servers, so that INSERT
DELAYED is treated as a normal
INSERT on slaves. This is
because DELAYED could cause the slave to
have different data than the master.
Pending INSERT DELAYED
statements are lost if a table is write locked and
ALTER TABLE is used to modify
the table structure.
INSERT DELAYED is not
supported for views.
The following describes in detail what happens when you use the
DELAYED option to
INSERT or
REPLACE. In this description, the
“thread” is the thread that received an
INSERT DELAYED statement and
“handler” is the thread that handles all
INSERT DELAYED statements for a
particular table.
When a thread executes a DELAYED
statement for a table, a handler thread is created to
process all DELAYED statements for the
table, if no such handler already exists.
The thread checks whether the handler has previously
acquired a DELAYED lock; if not, it tells
the handler thread to do so. The DELAYED
lock can be obtained even if other threads have a
READ or WRITE lock on
the table. However, the handler waits for all
ALTER TABLE locks or
FLUSH
TABLES statements to finish, to ensure that the
table structure is up to date.
The thread executes the
INSERT statement, but instead
of writing the row to the table, it puts a copy of the final
row into a queue that is managed by the handler thread. Any
syntax errors are noticed by the thread and reported to the
client program.
The client cannot obtain from the server the number of
duplicate rows or the AUTO_INCREMENT
value for the resulting row, because the
INSERT returns before the
insert operation has been completed. (If you use the C API,
the mysql_info() function
does not return anything meaningful, for the same reason.)
The binary log is updated by the handler thread when the row is inserted into the table. In case of multiple-row inserts, the binary log is updated when the first row is inserted.
Each time that
delayed_insert_limit rows
are written, the handler checks whether any
SELECT statements are still
pending. If so, it allows these to execute before
continuing.
When the handler has no more rows in its queue, the table is
unlocked. If no new INSERT
DELAYED statements are received within
delayed_insert_timeout
seconds, the handler terminates.
If more than
delayed_queue_size rows are
pending in a specific handler queue, the thread requesting
INSERT DELAYED waits until
there is room in the queue. This is done to ensure that
mysqld does not use all memory for the
delayed memory queue.
The handler thread shows up in the MySQL process list with
delayed_insert in the
Command column. It is killed if you
execute a FLUSH
TABLES statement or kill it with KILL
. However,
before exiting, it first stores all queued rows into the
table. During this time it does not accept any new
thread_idINSERT statements from other
threads. If you execute an INSERT
DELAYED statement after this, a new handler thread
is created.
Note that this means that INSERT
DELAYED statements have higher priority than
normal INSERT statements if
there is an INSERT DELAYED
handler running. Other update statements have to wait until
the INSERT DELAYED queue is
empty, someone terminates the handler thread (with
KILL
), or someone
executes a thread_idFLUSH
TABLES.
The following status variables provide information about
INSERT DELAYED statements.
| Status Variable | Meaning |
Delayed_insert_threads | Number of handler threads |
Delayed_writes | Number of rows written with INSERT
DELAYED |
Not_flushed_delayed_rows | Number of rows waiting to be written |
You can view these variables by issuing a
SHOW STATUS statement or by
executing a mysqladmin extended-status
command.
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 is performed. For example, if column
a is declared as UNIQUE
and contains the value 1, the following two
statements have identical effect:
INSERT INTO table (a,b,c) VALUES (1,2,3) ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE c=c+1; UPDATE table SET c=c+1 WHERE a=1;
With ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE, the
affected-rows value per row is 1 if the row is inserted as a new
row and 2 if an existing row is updated.
If column b is also unique, the
INSERT is equivalent to this
UPDATE statement instead:
UPDATE table 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 clause
on tables with multiple unique indexes.
The ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE clause can
contain multiple column assignments, separated by commas.
You can use the
VALUES(
function in the col_name)UPDATE clause to
refer to column values from the
INSERT portion of the
INSERT ... UPDATE statement. In other words,
VALUES(
in the col_name)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 INSERT ... UPDATE statements and
returns NULL otherwise. Example:
INSERT INTO table (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 table (a,b,c) VALUES (1,2,3) ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE c=3; INSERT INTO table (a,b,c) VALUES (4,5,6) ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE c=9;
If a table contains an AUTO_INCREMENT column
and INSERT ... UPDATE inserts a row, the
LAST_INSERT_ID() function returns
the AUTO_INCREMENT value. If the statement
updates a row instead,
LAST_INSERT_ID() is not
meaningful. However, you can work around this by using
LAST_INSERT_ID(.
Suppose that expr)id is the
AUTO_INCREMENT column. To make
LAST_INSERT_ID() meaningful for
updates, insert rows as follows:
INSERT INTO table (a,b,c) VALUES (1,2,3) ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE id=LAST_INSERT_ID(id), c=3;
The DELAYED option is ignored when you use
ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE.
LOAD DATA [LOW_PRIORITY | CONCURRENT] [LOCAL] INFILE 'file_name' [REPLACE | IGNORE] INTO TABLEtbl_name[CHARACTER SETcharset_name] [{FIELDS | COLUMNS} [TERMINATED BY 'string'] [[OPTIONALLY] ENCLOSED BY 'char'] [ESCAPED BY 'char'] ] [LINES [STARTING BY 'string'] [TERMINATED BY 'string'] ] [IGNOREnumberLINES] [(col_name_or_user_var,...)] [SETcol_name=expr,...]
The LOAD DATA
INFILE statement reads rows from a text file into a
table at a very high speed. The file name must be given as a
literal string.
LOAD DATA
INFILE is the complement of
SELECT ... INTO
OUTFILE. (See Section 12.2.8, “SELECT Syntax”.) To write data
from a table to a file, use
SELECT ... INTO
OUTFILE. To read the file back into a table, use
LOAD DATA
INFILE. The syntax of the FIELDS and
LINES clauses is the same for both statements.
Both clauses are optional, but FIELDS must
precede LINES if both are specified.
For more information about the efficiency of
INSERT versus
LOAD DATA
INFILE and speeding up
LOAD DATA
INFILE, see Section 7.2.19, “Speed of INSERT Statements”.
The character set indicated by the
character_set_database system
variable is used 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, which is available as of
MySQL 5.0.38. A character set of binary
specifies “no conversion.”
LOAD DATA
INFILE 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 with
mysqldump or mysql so that
output is written in the character set to be used when the file is
loaded with LOAD DATA
INFILE.
Note that it is currently not possible to load data files that use
the ucs2 character set.
As of MySQL 5.0.19, the
character_set_filesystem system
variable controls the interpretation of the file name.
You can also load data files by using the
mysqlimport utility; it operates by sending a
LOAD DATA
INFILE statement to the server. The
--local option causes
mysqlimport to read data files from the client
host. You can specify the
--compress option to get
better performance over slow networks if the client and server
support the compressed protocol. See
Section 4.5.5, “mysqlimport — A Data Import Program”.
If you use LOW_PRIORITY, 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 CONCURRENT 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. Using this
option affects the performance of LOAD
DATA a bit, even if no other thread is using the table
at the same time.
CONCURRENT is not replicated. See
Section 16.4.1.10, “Replication and LOAD Operations”, for more information.
The LOCAL keyword, if specified, is interpreted
with respect to the client end of the connection:
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.
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.
Note that, 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;
Windows path names are specified using forward slashes rather than backslashes. If you do use backslashes, you must double them.
For security reasons, when reading text files located on the
server, the files must either reside in the database directory or
be readable by all. Also, to use
LOAD DATA
INFILE on server files, you must have the
FILE privilege. See
Section 5.4.1, “Privileges Provided by MySQL”. For
non-LOCAL load operations, if the
secure_file_priv system variable
is set to a nonempty directory name, the file to be loaded must be
located in that directory.
Using LOCAL is a bit slower than letting the
server access the files directly, because the contents of the file
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.
With LOCAL, the default duplicate-key handling
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. IGNORE is
explained further later in this section.
LOCAL works only if your server and your client
both have been enabled to allow it. For example, if
mysqld was started with
--local-infile=0,
LOCAL does not work. See
Section 5.3.5, “Security Issues with LOAD
DATA LOCAL”.
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
Note that 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.
The REPLACE and
IGNORE keywords 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 12.2.7, “REPLACE Syntax”.
If you specify IGNORE, input rows that
duplicate an existing row on a unique key value are skipped.
If you do not specify either option, the behavior depends on
whether the LOCAL keyword 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.
If you want to ignore foreign key constraints during the load
operation, you can issue a SET foreign_key_checks =
0 statement before executing LOAD
DATA.
If you use LOAD DATA
INFILE on an empty MyISAM table, all
nonunique indexes are created in a separate batch (as for
REPAIR TABLE). Normally, this makes
LOAD DATA
INFILE 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 7.2.19, “Speed of INSERT Statements”.
For both the LOAD DATA
INFILE 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.
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, so 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
INFILE to act as follows when reading input:
Look for line boundaries at newlines.
Do not skip over 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.
If you have generated the text file on a Windows system, you
might have to use LINES TERMINATED BY '\r\n'
to read the file properly, 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 lines you want to read in have a common prefix that you
want to ignore, you can use LINES STARTING BY
' to skip over
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 over 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
INFILE 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
INFILE 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 back in, the correct statement would be:
LOAD DATA INFILE 'data.txt' INTO TABLE table2 FIELDS TERMINATED BY ',';
If instead you tried to read in the file with the statement shown
following, it wouldn't work because it instructs
LOAD DATA
INFILE 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
INFILE 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 keywords.
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
Note that occurrences of the ENCLOSED BY
character within a field value are escaped by prefixing them with
the ESCAPED BY character. Also note that if you
specify an empty ESCAPED BY value, it is
possible to inadvertently generate output that cannot be read
properly by LOAD DATA
INFILE. 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.
\0
| An ASCII NUL (0x00) character |
\b
| A backspace character |
\n
| A newline (linefeed) character |
\r
| A carriage return character |
\t
| A tab character. |
\Z
| ASCII 26 (Control-Z) |
\N
| NULL |
For more information about
“\”-escape syntax, see
Section 8.1.1, “Strings”.
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
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. Note that
fixed-size format does not work if you are using a multi-byte
character set.
Before MySQL 5.0.6, fixed-row format used the display width
of the column. For example, INT(4) was
read or written using a field with a width of 4. However, if
the column contained wider values, they were dumped to their
full width, leading to the possibility of a
“ragged” field holding values of different
widths. Using a field wide enough to hold all values in the
field prevents this problem. However, data files written
before this change was made might not be reloaded correctly
with LOAD DATA
INFILE for MySQL 5.0.6 and up. This change also
affects data files read by mysqlimport
and written by mysqldump --tab, which use
LOAD DATA
INFILE and
SELECT ... INTO
OUTFILE.
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. Note that 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 10.1.4, “Data Type Default Values”.
Some cases are not supported by
LOAD DATA
INFILE:
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 INFILE 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
INFILE to stop reading a field or line too early.
This happens because
LOAD DATA
INFILE 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
INFILE 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 (col1,col2,...);
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.
Before MySQL 5.0.3, the column list must contain only names of
columns in the table being loaded, and the SET
clause is not supported. As of MySQL 5.0.3, the column list can
contain either column names or user variables. With user
variables, the SET clause enables you to
perform 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 10.1.4, “Data Type Default Values”.
An empty field value is interpreted differently than if the field value is missing:
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 10.3, “Date and Time 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.
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 allow 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
INFILE 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 using
binary notation (for example, b'011010'). To
work around this, specify the values as regular integers and use
the SET clause to convert them so that MySQL
performs a numeric type conversion and loads them into the
BIT column properly:
shell>cat /tmp/bit_test.txt2 127 shell>mysql testmysql>LOAD DATA INFILE '/tmp/bit_test.txt'->INTO TABLE bit_test (@var1) SET b= CAST(@var1 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)
When the LOAD DATA
INFILE statement finishes, it returns an information
string in the following format:
Records: 1 Deleted: 0 Skipped: 0 Warnings: 0
If you are using the C API, you can get information about the
statement by calling the
mysql_info() function. See
Section 20.8.3.35, “mysql_info()”.
Warnings occur under the same circumstances as when values are
inserted via the INSERT statement
(see Section 12.2.5, “INSERT Syntax”), except that
LOAD DATA
INFILE also generates warnings when there are too few or
too many fields in the input row. The warnings are not stored
anywhere; the number of warnings can be used only as an indication
of whether everything went well.
You can use SHOW WARNINGS to get a
list of the first max_error_count
warnings as information about what went wrong. See
Section 12.4.5.37, “SHOW WARNINGS Syntax”.
REPLACE [LOW_PRIORITY | DELAYED]
[INTO] tbl_name [(col_name,...)]
{VALUES | VALUE} ({expr | DEFAULT},...),(...),...
Or:
REPLACE [LOW_PRIORITY | DELAYED]
[INTO] tbl_name
SET col_name={expr | DEFAULT}, ...
Or:
REPLACE [LOW_PRIORITY | DELAYED]
[INTO] tbl_name [(col_name,...)]
SELECT ...
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 12.2.5, “INSERT Syntax”.
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 12.2.5.3, “INSERT ... ON
DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE Syntax”.
Note that unless the table has a PRIMARY KEY or
UNIQUE index, using a
REPLACE statement makes no sense.
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.
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.
Currently, 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
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 ...]
[FROM table_references
[WHERE where_condition]
[GROUP BY {col_name | expr | position}
[ASC | DESC], ... [WITH ROLLUP]]
[HAVING where_condition]
[ORDER BY {col_name | expr | position}
[ASC | DESC], ...]
[LIMIT {[offset,] row_count | row_count OFFSET offset}]
[PROCEDURE procedure_name(argument_list)]
[INTO OUTFILE 'file_name' export_options
| INTO DUMPFILE 'file_name'
| INTO var_name [, var_name]]
[FOR UPDATE | LOCK IN SHARE MODE]]
SELECT is used to retrieve rows
selected from one or more tables, and can include
UNION statements and subqueries.
See Section 12.2.8.3, “UNION Syntax”, and Section 12.2.9, “Subquery Syntax”.
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 12.2.8.1, “JOIN Syntax”.
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 clause, you can use any of the
functions and operators that MySQL supports, except for
aggregate (summary) functions. See
Chapter 11, 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 allowed 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 exception is that the
INTO clause can appear either as shown in the
syntax description or immediately following the
select_expr list.
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_nameGROUP 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. 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 allowable 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.5.5.4, “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 12.2.8.1, “table_referencesJOIN Syntax”. For
each table specified, you can optionally specify an alias.
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 12.2.8.2, “Index Hint Syntax”.
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 5.1.3, “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 8.2.1, “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_nametbl_name alias_name:
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.
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;
MySQL extends the GROUP BY clause so that
you can also specify ASC and
DESC after columns named in the clause:
SELECT a, COUNT(b) FROM test_table GROUP BY a DESC;
MySQL extends the use of GROUP BY to allow
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 11.15, “Functions and Modifiers for Use with GROUP BY Clauses”.
GROUP BY allows a WITH
ROLLUP modifier. See
Section 11.15.2, “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.)
A HAVING clause can refer to any column or
alias named in a select_expr in the
SELECT list or in outer
subqueries, and to aggregate functions. However, the SQL
standard requires that HAVING must
reference only columns in the GROUP BY
clause or columns used in aggregate functions. To accommodate
both standard SQL and the MySQL-specific behavior of being
able to refer columns in the
SELECT list, MySQL 5.0.2 and up
allows HAVING to refer to columns in the
SELECT list, columns in the
GROUP BY clause, columns in outer
subqueries, and to aggregate functions.
For example, the following statement works in MySQL 5.0.2 but produces an error for earlier versions:
mysql> SELECT COUNT(*) FROM t GROUP BY col1 HAVING col1 = 2;
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_nameFROMtbl_nameHAVINGcol_name> 0;
Write this instead:
SELECTcol_nameFROMtbl_nameWHEREcol_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 allows 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 allows 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 (except when
using prepared statements).
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_countLIMIT 0,
.
row_count
For prepared statements, you can use placeholders (supported
as of MySQL version 5.0.7). 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 21.3.1, “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.
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 destroyed. As of MySQL 5.0.19, the
character_set_filesystem
system variable controls the interpretation of the file name.
The SELECT ... INTO
OUTFILE statement is intended primarily to let you
very quickly dump a table to a text file on the server
machine. If you want to create the resulting file on some
client host other than the server host, you cannot use
SELECT ... INTO
OUTFILE. In that case, you should instead use a
command such as mysql -e "SELECT ..." >
to generate the
file on the client host.
file_name
SELECT ... INTO
OUTFILE is the complement of
LOAD DATA
INFILE. Column values are dumped using the
binary character set. In effect, there is
no character set conversion. If a table contains columns in
several character sets, the output data file will as well and
you may not be able 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
INFILE statement. See Section 12.2.6, “LOAD DATA INFILE
Syntax”,
for information about the FIELDS and
LINES clauses, including their default
values and allowable values.
FIELDS ESCAPED BY controls how to write
special characters. If the FIELDS ESCAPED
BY character is not empty, it is used 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 does not have to 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 if
you want to store a BLOB value
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.
The INTO clause can name a list of one or
more variables, which can be user-defined variables, or
parameters or local variables within a stored function or
procedure body (see Section 12.7.3.3, “SELECT ... INTO
Statement”).
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.
The SELECT syntax description
at the beginning this section shows the
INTO clause near the end of the statement.
It is also possible to use INTO immediately
following the select_expr list.
An INTO clause should not be used in a
nested SELECT because such a
SELECT must return its result
to the outer context.
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
allows other transactions to read the examined rows but not to
update or delete them. See
Section 13.2.8.3, “SELECT ... FOR UPDATE
and SELECT ... LOCK IN
SHARE MODE Locking Reads”.
Following the SELECT keyword, you
can use a number of options that affect the operation of the
statement. HIGH_PRIORITY,
STRAIGHT_JOIN, and options beginning with
SQL_ are MySQL extensions to standard SQL.
The ALL and DISTINCT
options 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
options. 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 12.2.8.1, “JOIN Syntax”.
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 7.2.1, “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 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 needed, and prefers sorting to
using a temporary table with a key on the GROUP
BY elements. For
SQL_SMALL_RESULT, MySQL uses fast 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 option 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 11.13, “Information Functions”.
The SQL_CACHE and
SQL_NO_CACHE options affect caching of
query results in the query cache (see
Section 7.5.5, “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.
SQL_NO_CACHE tells MySQL not to store the
result in the query cache. For a query that uses
UNION, subqueries, or views,
the following rules apply:
MySQL supports the following JOIN syntaxes
for the table_references part of
SELECT statements and
multiple-table DELETE and
UPDATE statements:
table_references:table_reference[,table_reference] ...table_reference:table_factor|join_tabletable_factor:tbl_name[[AS]alias] [index_hint)] |table_subquery[AS]alias| (table_references) | { OJtable_referenceLEFT OUTER JOINtable_referenceONconditional_expr}join_table:table_reference[INNER | CROSS] JOINtable_factor[join_condition] |table_referenceSTRAIGHT_JOINtable_factor|table_referenceSTRAIGHT_JOINtable_factorONconditional_expr|table_reference{LEFT|RIGHT} [OUTER] JOINtable_referencejoin_condition|table_referenceNATURAL [{LEFT|RIGHT} [OUTER]] JOINtable_factorjoin_condition: ONconditional_expr| USING (column_list)index_hint: USE {INDEX|KEY} [FOR JOIN] (index_list) | IGNORE {INDEX|KEY} [FOR JOIN] (index_list) | FORCE {INDEX|KEY} [FOR JOIN] (index_list)index_list:index_name[,index_name] ...
A table reference is also known as a join expression.
The syntax of table_factor is
extended in comparison with the SQL Standard. The latter accepts
only table_reference, not a list of
them inside a pair of parentheses.
This is a conservative extension if we consider each comma in a
list of table_reference items 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, CROSS JOIN is a syntactic
equivalent to INNER JOIN (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 versions of MySQL prior to 5.0.1, parentheses in
table_references were just omitted
and all join operations were grouped to the left. In general,
parentheses can be ignored in join expressions containing only
inner join operations. As of 5.0.1, nested joins are allowed
(see Section 7.2.11, “Nested Join Optimization”).
Further changes in join processing were made in 5.0.12 to make MySQL more compliant with standard SQL. These charges are described later in this section.
Index hints can be specified to affect how the MySQL optimizer makes use of indexes. For more information, see Section 12.2.8.2, “Index Hint Syntax”.
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_nametbl_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 subquery in the FROM clause. Such
subqueries must include an alias to
give the subquery result a table name. A trivial example
follows; see also Section 12.2.9.8, “Subqueries in the FROM Clause”.
SELECT * FROM (SELECT 1, 2, 3) AS t1;
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
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 conditional_expr used with
ON is any conditional expression of the
form that can be used in a WHERE clause.
Generally, you should use the ON clause
for conditions that specify how to join tables, and the
WHERE clause to restrict which rows you
want 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). This assumes that
right_tbl.id is declared NOT
NULL. See
Section 7.2.9, “LEFT JOIN and RIGHT JOIN
Optimization”.
The
USING(
clause names a list of columns that must exist in both
tables. If tables 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 ... LEFT OUTER JOIN ...} 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;
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 puts the
tables in the wrong 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;
Join Processing Changes in MySQL 5.0.12
Beginning with MySQL 5.0.12, natural joins and joins with
USING, including outer join variants, are
processed according to the SQL:2003 standard. The goal was to
align the syntax and semantics of MySQL with respect to
NATURAL JOIN and JOIN ...
USING according to SQL:2003. However, these changes in
join processing can result in different output columns for some
joins. Also, some queries that appeared to work correctly in
older versions must be rewritten to comply with the standard.
These changes have five main aspects:
The way that MySQL determines the result columns of
NATURAL or USING join
operations (and thus the result of the entire
FROM clause).
Expansion of SELECT * and SELECT
into a list
of selected columns.
tbl_name.*
Resolution of column names in NATURAL or
USING joins.
Transformation of NATURAL or
USING joins into JOIN ...
ON.
Resolution of column names in the ON
condition of a JOIN ... ON.
The following list provides more detail about several effects of the 5.0.12 change in join processing. The term “previously” means “prior to MySQL 5.0.12.”
The columns of a NATURAL join or a
USING join may be different from
previously. Specifically, redundant output columns no longer
appear, and the order of columns for SELECT
* expansion may be different from before.
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);
Previously, the statements produced this output:
+------+------+------+------+ | i | j | k | j | +------+------+------+------+ | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | +------+------+------+------+ +------+------+------+------+ | i | j | k | j | +------+------+------+------+ | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | +------+------+------+------+
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. But in both cases, the redundant
column is not eliminated. Also, the order of the columns is
not correct according to standard SQL.
Now the statements produce this output:
+------+------+------+ | j | i | k | +------+------+------+ | 1 | 1 | 1 | +------+------+------+ +------+------+------+ | j | i | k | +------+------+------+ | 1 | 1 | 1 | +------+------+------+
The redundant column is eliminated and the column order is correct according to standard SQL:
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 via 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 V1 IS NOT NULL THEN V1 ELSE V2 END)
If the join operation is any other join, the result columns of the join consists of the concatenation of all columns of the joined tables. This is the same as previously.
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:
mysql> SELECT * FROM t1 NATURAL LEFT JOIN t2;
+------+------+------+
| a | b | c |
+------+------+------+
| 1 | x | NULL |
| 2 | y | z |
+------+------+------+
Here column a contains the values of
t1.a.
mysql> SELECT * FROM t1 NATURAL RIGHT JOIN t2;
+------+------+------+
| a | c | b |
+------+------+------+
| 2 | z | y |
| 3 | w | NULL |
+------+------+------+
Here column a contains the values of
t2.a.
Compare these 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 |
+------+------+------+------+
Previously, a USING clause could be
rewritten as an ON clause that compares
corresponding columns. For example, the following two
clauses were semantically identical:
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
Now the two clauses no longer are quite the same:
With respect to determining which rows satisfy the join condition, both joins remain 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 preceding
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 will be
omitted from the result.
The evaluation of multi-way natural joins differs in a very
important way that affects the result of
NATURAL or USING joins
and that can require query rewriting. Suppose that you have
three tables t1(a,b),
t2(c,b), and t3(a,c)
that each have one row: t1(1,2),
t2(10,2), and
t3(7,10). Suppose also that you have this
NATURAL JOIN on the three tables:
SELECT ... FROM t1 NATURAL JOIN t2 NATURAL JOIN t3;
Previously, the left operand of the second join was
considered to be t2, whereas it should be
the nested join (t1 NATURAL JOIN t2). As
a result, the columns of t3 are checked
for common columns only in t2, and, if
t3 has common columns with
t1, these columns are not used as
equi-join columns. Thus, previously, the preceding query was
transformed to the following equi-join:
SELECT ... FROM t1, t2, t3 WHERE t1.b = t2.b AND t2.c = t3.c;
That join is missing one more equi-join predicate
(t1.a = t3.a). As a result, it produces
one row, not the empty result that it should. The correct
equivalent query is this:
SELECT ... FROM t1, t2, t3 WHERE t1.b = t2.b AND t2.c = t3.c AND t1.a = t3.a;
If you require the same query result in current versions of MySQL as in older versions, rewrite the natural join as the first equi-join.
Previously, the comma operator (,) and
JOIN both had the same precedence, so the
join expression t1, t2 JOIN t3 was
interpreted as ((t1, t2) JOIN t3). Now
JOIN has higher precedence, so the
expression is interpreted as (t1, (t2 JOIN
t3)). This change affects statements that use an
ON clause, because that clause can refer
only to columns in the operands of the join, and the change
in precedence changes 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);
Previously, the SELECT was
legal due to the implicit grouping of
t1,t2 as (t1,t2). Now
the JOIN takes precedence, 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 allow the join to be
processed, 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);
Alternatively, avoid the use of the comma operator and use
JOIN instead:
SELECT * FROM t1 JOIN t2 JOIN t3 ON (t1.i1 = t3.i3);
This change also applies to statements that mix the comma
operator with INNER JOIN, CROSS
JOIN, LEFT JOIN, and
RIGHT JOIN, all of which now have higher
precedence than the comma operator.
Previously, the ON clause could refer to
columns in tables named to its right. Now 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;
Previously, the SELECT
statement was legal. Now 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. The statement should be
rewritten as follows:
SELECT * FROM t1 JOIN t2 JOIN t3 ON (i1 = i3);
Resolution of column names in NATURAL or
USING joins is different than previously.
For column names that are outside the
FROM clause, MySQL now handles a superset
of the queries compared to previously. That is, in cases
when MySQL formerly issued an error that some column is
ambiguous, the query now is handled correctly. This is due
to the fact that MySQL now treats the common columns of
NATURAL or USING joins
as a single column, so when a query refers to such columns,
the query compiler does not consider them as ambiguous.
Example:
SELECT * FROM t1 NATURAL JOIN t2 WHERE b > 1;
Previously, this query would produce an error ERROR
1052 (23000): Column 'b' in where clause is
ambiguous. Now the query produces the correct
result:
+------+------+------+ | b | c | y | +------+------+------+ | 4 | 2 | 3 | +------+------+------+
One extension of MySQL compared to the SQL:2003 standard is
that MySQL allows you to qualify the common (coalesced)
columns of NATURAL or
USING joins (just as previously), while
the standard disallows that.
You can provide hints to give the optimizer information about
how to choose indexes during query processing.
Section 12.2.8.1, “JOIN Syntax”, describes the general syntax for
specifying tables in a SELECT
statement. The syntax for an individual table, including that
for index hints, looks like this:
tbl_name[[AS]alias] [index_hint]index_hint: USE {INDEX|KEY} [FOR JOIN] (index_list) | IGNORE {INDEX|KEY} [FOR JOIN] (index_list) | FORCE {INDEX|KEY} [FOR JOIN] (index_list)index_list:index_name[,index_name] ...
By specifying USE INDEX
(, you can tell
MySQL to use only one of the named indexes to find rows in the
table. The alternative syntax index_list)IGNORE INDEX
( can be used to
tell MySQL to not use some particular index or indexes. These
hints are useful if index_list)EXPLAIN shows
that MySQL is using the wrong index from the list of possible
indexes.
You can also use FORCE INDEX, which acts like
USE INDEX
( but with the
addition that a table scan is assumed to be
very expensive. In other words, a table
scan is used only if there is no way to use one of the given
indexes to find rows in the table.
index_list)
Each hint requires the names of indexes,
not the names of columns. The name of a PRIMARY
KEY is PRIMARY. To see the index
names for a table, use SHOW
INDEX.
An index_name value need not be a
full index name