Table of Contents
This chapter describes the syntax for the SQL statements supported in MySQL versions 4.1 and earlier.
ALTER DATABASE [db_name]alter_specification[alter_specification] ...alter_specification: [DEFAULT] CHARACTER SETcharset_name| [DEFAULT] COLLATEcollation_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.
The CHARACTER SET clause changes the default
database character set. The COLLATE clause
changes the default database collation.
Chapter 10, Character Set Support, discusses character set and collation
names.
ALTER DATABASE was added in MySQL 4.1.1.
Beginning with MySQL 4.1.8, the database name can be omitted, in
which case the statement applies to the default database.
ALTER [IGNORE] TABLEtbl_namealter_specification[,alter_specification] ...alter_specification: ADD [COLUMN]column_definition[FIRST | AFTERcol_name] | ADD [COLUMN] (column_definition,...) | ADD {INDEX|KEY} [index_name] [index_type] (index_col_name,...) | ADD [CONSTRAINT [symbol]] PRIMARY KEY [index_type] (index_col_name,...) | ADD [CONSTRAINT [symbol]] UNIQUE [INDEX|KEY] [index_name] [index_type] (index_col_name,...) | ADD [FULLTEXT|SPATIAL] [INDEX|KEY] [index_name] (index_col_name,...) | ADD [CONSTRAINT [symbol]] FOREIGN KEY [index_name] (index_col_name,...) [reference_definition] | ALTER [COLUMN]col_name{SET DEFAULTliteral| DROP DEFAULT} | CHANGE [COLUMN]old_col_namecolumn_definition[FIRST|AFTERcol_name] | MODIFY [COLUMN]column_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| CONVERT TO CHARACTER SETcharset_name[COLLATEcollation_name] | [DEFAULT] CHARACTER SETcharset_name[COLLATEcollation_name] | DISCARD TABLESPACE | IMPORT TABLESPACE |table_option...index_col_name:col_name[(length)] [ASC | DESC]index_type: USING {BTREE | HASH}
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. This
includes table_option modifications,
for options such as ENGINE,
AUTO_INCREMENT, and
AVG_ROW_LENGTH. (However, ALTER
TABLE ignores the DATA DIRECTORY
and INDEX DIRECTORY table options.)
Section 13.1.5, CREATE TABLE Syntax, lists all table options.
Some operations may result in warnings if attempted on a table
for which the storage engine does not support the operation. In
MySQL 4.1 and up, these warnings can be displayed with
SHOW WARNINGS. See
Section 13.5.4.21, 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 13.1.5.1, Silent Column Specification Changes. For example, if you try
to change a tbl_nameVARCHAR column to
CHAR, MySQL still uses
VARCHAR if the table contains other
variable-length columns.
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 clients.
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.
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. There is no need
to create a temporary table. (You can also use the
RENAME TABLE statement to rename tables. See
Section 13.1.9, RENAME TABLE Syntax.)
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.
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.
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. Note that this syntax includes the column
name, not just its data type. See
Section 13.1.5, CREATE TABLE Syntax.
You can rename a column using a CHANGE
clause. To do so, specify the old and new column names and
the type that the column currently has. For example, to
rename an old_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;
However, as of MySQL 3.22.16a, you can also use
MODIFY to change a column's type without
renaming it:
ALTER TABLE t1 MODIFY b BIGINT NOT NULL;
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.
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.
In MySQL 3.22 or later, to add a column at a specific
position within a table row, use FIRST or
AFTER
. The default
is to add the column last. From MySQL 4.0.1 on, you can also
use col_nameFIRST and AFTER in
CHANGE or MODIFY
operations.
ALTER ... SET DEFAULT or ALTER
... DROP DEFAULT specify a new default value for a
column or remove the old default value, respectively. If the
old default is removed and the column can be
NULL, the new default is
NULL. If the column cannot be
NULL, MySQL assigns a default value, as
described in Section 11.1.4, Data Type Default Values.
DROP INDEX removes an index. This is a
MySQL extension to standard SQL. See
Section 13.1.7, DROP INDEX Syntax.
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 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 index.
(Prior to MySQL 4.1.2, if no primary index exists,
DROP PRIMARY KEY drops the first
UNIQUE index in the table. MySQL marks
the first UNIQUE key as the
PRIMARY KEY if no PRIMARY
KEY was specified explicitly.)
If you add a UNIQUE INDEX or
PRIMARY KEY to a table, it is stored
before any non-unique index so that MySQL can detect
duplicate keys as early as possible.
From MySQL 4.1.0 on, 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 13.1.4, CREATE 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.
If you use ALTER TABLE on a
MyISAM table, all non-unique indexes are
created in a separate batch (as for REPAIR
TABLE). This should make ALTER
TABLE much faster when you have many indexes.
As of MySQL 4.0, this feature can be activated explicitly.
ALTER TABLE ... DISABLE KEYS tells MySQL
to stop updating non-unique indexes for a
MyISAM table. 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.
The FOREIGN KEY and
REFERENCES clauses are supported by the
InnoDB storage engine, which implements
ADD [CONSTRAINT
[. See
Section 14.2.7.4, 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 13.1.5, 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 1.9.5, MySQL Differences from Standard SQL.
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.
Starting from MySQL 4.0.13, InnoDB
supports the use of ALTER TABLE to drop
foreign keys:
ALTER TABLEtbl_nameDROP FOREIGN KEYfk_symbol;
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 more information, see
Section 14.2.7.4, FOREIGN KEY Constraints.
Pending INSERT DELAYED statements are
lost if a table is write locked and ALTER
TABLE is used to modify the table structure.
From MySQL 4.1.2 on, 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;
This is useful, for example, after upgrading from MySQL 4.0.x to 4.1.x. See Section 10.9, Upgrading Character Sets from MySQL 4.0.
Warning: The preceding
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.
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.
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 a new column which you add
to a table (for example, with ALTER TABLE ... ADD
column).
Warning: From MySQL 4.1.2
and up, ALTER TABLE ... DEFAULT CHARACTER
SET and ALTER TABLE ... CHARACTER
SET are equivalent and change only the default
table character set. In MySQL 4.1 releases before 4.1.2,
ALTER TABLE ... DEFAULT CHARACTER SET
changes the default character set, but ALTER TABLE
... CHARACTER SET (without
DEFAULT) changes the default character
set and also converts all columns to the new
character set.
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;
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 17.2.3.33, 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 indexes on column d and on column
a:
ALTER TABLE t2 ADD INDEX (d), ADD INDEX (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 for you
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 13.5.3, valueSET Syntax.
From MySQL 4.1.2, you can use the ALTER TABLE ...
AUTO_INCREMENT= table
option for valueInnoDB tables to set the sequence
number for new rows if the value is greater than the maximum
value in the AUTO_INCREMENT column.
If the value is less than the current maximum value in
the column, no error message is given and the current sequence
value is not changed.
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;
Important: 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;
See also Section A.7.1, Problems with ALTER TABLE.
CREATE DATABASE [IF NOT EXISTS]db_name[create_specification[create_specification] ...]create_specification: [DEFAULT] CHARACTER SETcharset_name| [DEFAULT] COLLATEcollation_name
CREATE DATABASE creates a database with the
given name. To use this statement, you need the
CREATE privilege for the database.
An error occurs if the database exists and you did not specify
IF NOT EXISTS.
As of MySQL 4.1.1,
create_specification options specify
database characteristics. Database characteristics are stored in
the db.opt file in the database directory.
The CHARACTER SET clause specifies the
default database character set. The COLLATE
clause specifies the default database collation.
Chapter 10, Character 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 only creates a
directory under the MySQL data directory (and the
db.opt file, for MySQL 4.1.1 and up). Rules
for allowable database names are given in
Section 9.2, Database, Table, Index, Column, and Alias 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 8.9, mysqladmin Client for Administering a MySQL Server.
CREATE [UNIQUE|FULLTEXT|SPATIAL] INDEXindex_name[index_type] ONtbl_name(index_col_name,...)index_col_name:col_name[(length)] [ASC | DESC]index_type: USING {BTREE | HASH}
In MySQL 3.22 or later, CREATE INDEX is
mapped to an ALTER TABLE statement to create
indexes. See Section 13.1.2, ALTER TABLE Syntax. The CREATE
INDEX statement does not do anything prior to MySQL
3.22. For more information about indexes, see
Section 7.4.5, 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 13.1.5, 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.
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 non-binary
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.
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 partial columns for indexes can make the index file much
smaller, which could save a lot of disk space and might also
speed up INSERT operations.
Prefixes can be up to 1000 bytes long (767 bytes for
InnoDB tables). (Before MySQL 4.1.2, the
limit is 255 bytes for all tables.) Note that prefix limits are
measured in bytes, whereas the prefix length in CREATE
INDEX statements is interpreted as number of
characters for non-binary 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.
FULLTEXT indexes are supported only for
MyISAM tables and can include only
CHAR, VARCHAR, and
TEXT columns. Indexing always happens over
the entire column; partial indexing is not supported and any
prefix length is ignored if specified. See
Section 12.7, Full-Text Search Functions, for details of operation.
FULLTEXT indexes are available in MySQL
3.23.23 or later.
SPATIAL indexes are supported only for
MyISAM tables and can include only spatial
columns that are defined as NOT NULL.
SPATIAL indexes are available in MySQL 4.1 or
later. Chapter 16, Spatial Extensions, describes the
spatial data types.
You can add an index on a column that can have
NULL values only if you are using MySQL
3.23.2 or newer and are using the MyISAM,
InnoDB, or BDB storage
engine. This is also true for MEMORY tables
as of MySQL 4.0.2. You can only add an index on a
BLOB or TEXT column if you
are using MySQL 3.23.2 or newer and are using the
MyISAM or BDB storage
engine, or MySQL 4.0.14 or newer and the
InnoDB storage engine.
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.
From MySQL 4.1.0 on, 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 |
InnoDB | BTREE |
MEMORY/HEAP | HASH, BTREE |
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.
CREATE [TEMPORARY] TABLE [IF NOT EXISTS]tbl_name(create_definition,...) [table_option...]
Or:
CREATE [TEMPORARY] TABLE [IF NOT EXISTS]tbl_name[(create_definition,...)] [table_option...]select_statement
Or:
CREATE [TEMPORARY] TABLE [IF NOT EXISTS]tbl_name{ LIKEold_tbl_name| (LIKEold_tbl_name) }create_definition:column_definition| [CONSTRAINT [symbol]] PRIMARY KEY [index_type] (index_col_name,...) | {INDEX|KEY} [index_name] [index_type] (index_col_name,...) | [CONSTRAINT [symbol]] UNIQUE [INDEX|KEY] [index_name] [index_type] (index_col_name,...) | {FULLTEXT|SPATIAL} [INDEX|KEY] [index_name] (index_col_name,...) | [CONSTRAINT [symbol]] FOREIGN KEY [index_name] (index_col_name,...) [reference_definition] | CHECK (expr)column_definition:col_namedata_type[NOT NULL | NULL] [DEFAULTdefault_value] [AUTO_INCREMENT] [UNIQUE [KEY] | [PRIMARY] KEY] [COMMENT 'string'] [reference_definition]data_type: 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}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_option: {ENGINE|TYPE} =engine_name| AUTO_INCREMENT =value| AVG_ROW_LENGTH =value| [DEFAULT] CHARACTER SETcharset_name| CHECKSUM = {0 | 1} | COLLATEcollation_name| COMMENT = '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' | RAID_TYPE = { 1 | STRIPED | RAID0 } RAID_CHUNKS =valueRAID_CHUNKSIZE =value| 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 9.2, Database, Table, Index, Column, and Alias 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.
In MySQL 3.22 or later, 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`.
From MySQL 3.23 on, 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.)
From MySQL 4.0.2 on, to create temporary tables, you must have
the CREATE TEMPORARY TABLES privilege.
In MySQL 3.23 or later, 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.
Note: If you use IF NOT
EXISTS in a CREATE TABLE ... SELECT
statement, any rows selected by the SELECT
part are inserted regardless of whether the table already
exists.
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 14, Storage Engines and Table Types, describes what files each storage engine creates to represent tables.
data_type represents the data type is
a column definition. spatial_type
represents a spatial data type. For general information on the
properties of data types other than the spatial types, see
Chapter 11, Data Types. For information about spatial data
types, see Chapter 16, Spatial Extensions.
Some attributes do not apply to all data types.
AUTO_INCREMENT applies only to integer 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 column can have the additional attribute
AUTO_INCREMENT. When you insert a value
of NULL (recommended) or
0 into an indexed
AUTO_INCREMENT column, the column is set
to the next sequence value. Typically this is
, where
value+1value is the largest value for
the column currently in the table.
AUTO_INCREMENT sequences begin with
1.
To retrieve an AUTO_INCREMENT value after
inserting a row, use the LAST_INSERT_ID()
SQL function or the mysql_insert_id() C
API function. See Section 12.9.3, Information Functions,
and Section 17.2.3.35, mysql_insert_id().
As of MySQL 4.1.1, 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 5.2.5, SQL Modes.
Note: There can be only one
AUTO_INCREMENT column per table, it must
be indexed, and it cannot have a DEFAULT
value. As of MySQL 3.23, 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 14.2.7.3, How AUTO_INCREMENT Columns Work in
InnoDB.
From MySQL 4.1.0 on, the attribute SERIAL
is an alias for BIGINT UNSIGNED NOT NULL
AUTO_INCREMENT UNIQUE.
As of MySQL 4.1, 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 Chapter 10, Character Set Support.
CHARSET is a synonym for
CHARACTER SET. Example:
CREATE TABLE t (c CHAR(20) CHARACTER SET utf8 COLLATE utf8_bin);
Also as of 4.1, MySQL interprets length specifications in
character column definitions in characters. (Earlier
versions interpret them in bytes.) Lengths for
BINARY and VARBINARY
are in bytes.
NULL values are handled differently for
TIMESTAMP columns than for other column
types. Before MySQL 4.1.6, you cannot store a literal
NULL in a TIMESTAMP
column; setting the column to NULL sets
it to the current date and time. Because
TIMESTAMP columns behave this way, the
NULL and NOT NULL
attributes do not apply in the normal way and are ignored if
you specify them. On the other hand, to make it easier for
MySQL clients to use TIMESTAMP columns,
the server reports that such columns can be assigned
NULL values (which is true), even though
TIMESTAMP never actually contains a
NULL value. You can see this when you use
DESCRIBE
to get a
description of your table.
tbl_name
Note that setting a TIMESTAMP column to
0 is not the same as setting it to
NULL, because 0 is a
valid TIMESTAMP value.
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 as of
MySQL 4.1.2. See Section 11.3.1.2, TIMESTAMP Properties as of MySQL 4.1.
If a column definition includes no explicit
DEFAULT value, MySQL determines the
default value as described in
Section 11.1.4, Data Type Default Values.
BLOB and TEXT columns
cannot be assigned a default value.
A comment for a column can be specified with the
COMMENT option. The comment is displayed
by the SHOW CREATE TABLE and
SHOW FULL COLUMNS statements. This option
is operational as of MySQL 4.1. (It is allowed but ignored
in earlier versions.)
KEY is normally a synonym for
INDEX. From MySQL 4.1, 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 14.2.14, InnoDB Table and Index Structures.)
In the created table, a PRIMARY KEY is
placed first, followed by all UNIQUE
indexes, and then the non-unique 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 (new in MySQL 3.23.11).
In MySQL, the name of a PRIMARY KEY is
PRIMARY. For other indexes, if you do not
assign a name, the index is assigned the same name as the
first indexed column, with an optional suffix
(_2, _3,
...) to make it unique. You can see index
names for a table using SHOW INDEX FROM
. See
Section 13.5.4.11, tbl_nameSHOW INDEX Syntax.
From MySQL 4.1.0 on, 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 13.1.4, CREATE INDEX Syntax.
For more information about indexes, see Section 7.4.5, How MySQL Uses Indexes.
Only the MyISAM,
InnoDB, BDB, and (as
of MySQL 4.0.2) 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 non-binary 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 7.4.3, Column Indexes.
Only the MyISAM and (as of MySQL 4.0.14)
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). (Before MySQL 4.1.2, the
limit is 255 bytes for all tables.) Note that prefix limits
are measured in bytes, whereas the prefix length in
CREATE TABLE statements is interpreted as
number of characters for non-binary 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 11.4.3, The BLOB and TEXT Types.
In MySQL 3.23.23 or later, you can create special
FULLTEXT indexes, which are used for
full-text searches. Only the MyISAM table
type supports FULLTEXT indexes. They can
be created only from CHAR,
VARCHAR, and TEXT
columns. Indexing always happens over the entire column;
partial indexing is not supported and any prefix length is
ignored if specified. See Section 12.7, Full-Text Search Functions,
for details of operation.
In MySQL 4.1 or later, 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
Chapter 16, Spatial Extensions.
In MySQL 3.23.44 or later, InnoDB tables
support checking of foreign key constraints. See
Section 14.2, 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 as of MySQL 3.23.50
and 4.0.8, respectively. For the precise syntax, see
Section 14.2.7.4, 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 1.9.5.5, Foreign Keys.
For MyISAM and ISAM
tables, each NULL column takes one bit
extra, rounded up to the nearest byte. The maximum row
length in bytes can be calculated as follows:
row length = 1
+ (sum of column lengths)
+ (number of NULL columns + delete_flag + 7)/8
+ (number of variable-length columns)
delete_flag is 1 for tables with
static row format. Static tables use a bit in the row record
for a flag that indicates whether the row has been deleted.
delete_flag is 0 for dynamic
tables because the flag is stored in the dynamic row header.
These calculations do not apply for
InnoDB tables, for which storage size is
no different for NULL columns than for
NOT NULL columns.
The table_option part of the
CREATE TABLE syntax can be used in MySQL 3.23
and above. The = that separates an option
name and its value is optional as of MySQL 4.1.
The ENGINE and TYPE
options specify the storage engine for the table.
ENGINE was added in MySQL 4.0.18 (for 4.0)
and 4.1.2 (for 4.1). It is the preferred option name as of those
versions, and TYPE has become deprecated.
TYPE is supported throughout the 4.x series,
but likely will be removed in the future.
The ENGINE and TYPE table
options take the storage engine names shown in the following
table.
| Storage Engine | Description |
ARCHIVE | The archiving storage engine. See
Section 14.7, The ARCHIVE Storage Engine. |
BDB | Transaction-safe tables with page locking. Also known as
BerkeleyDB. See
Section 14.5, The BDB (BerkeleyDB) Storage
Engine. |
CSV | Tables that store rows in comma-separated values format. See
Section 14.8, The CSV Storage Engine. |
EXAMPLE | An example engine. See Section 14.6, The EXAMPLE Storage Engine. |
HEAP | The data for this table is stored only in memory. See
Section 14.4, The MEMORY (HEAP) Storage Engine. |
ISAM | The original MySQL storage engine. See
Section 14.10, The ISAM Storage Engine. |
InnoDB | Transaction-safe tables with row locking and foreign keys. See
Section 14.2, The InnoDB Storage Engine. |
MEMORY | An alias for HEAP. (Actually, as of MySQL 4.1,
MEMORY is the preferred term.) |
MERGE | A collection of MyISAM tables used as one table. Also
known as MRG_MyISAM. See
Section 14.3, The MERGE Storage Engine. |
MyISAM | The binary portable storage engine that is the improved replacement for
ISAM. See
Section 14.1, The MyISAM Storage Engine. |
NDBCLUSTER | Clustered, fault-tolerant, memory-based tables. Also known as
NDB. See
Chapter 15, 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 non-transactional (to get more speed). In MySQL 4.1.1,
a warning occurs if the storage engine specification is not
honored.
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. This works for MyISAM only, for
MEMORY as of MySQL 4.1.0, and for
InnoDB as of MySQL 4.1.2. 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.
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 do not specify either option,
the maximum size for a table is 4GB. (If your operating
system does not support files that large, table sizes are
constrained by the operating system limit.) If you want to
keep down the pointer sizes to make the index smaller and
faster and you do not 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 5.2.2, 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 may increase the default pointer size by
setting this variable.
[DEFAULT] CHARACTER SET
Specify a default character set for the table.
CHARSET is a synonym for
CHARACTER SET.
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.)
COLLATE
Specify a default collation for the table.
COMMENT
A comment for the table, up to 60 characters long.
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 pathname to the directory, not a
relative path.
These options work only for MyISAM tables
from MySQL 4.0 on, 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.
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 5.2.2, 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. This option was introduced in MySQL 4.0.0. See
Section 14.3, 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.
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 or
VARCHAR columns.
If you do not use PACK_KEYS, the default
is to pack only 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
Encrypt the .frm file with a password.
This option does nothing in the standard MySQL version.
The RAID_TYPE option can help you to
exceed the 2GB/4GB limit for the MyISAM
data file (not the index file) on operating systems that do
not support big files. This option is unnecessary and not
recommended for filesystems that support big files.
You can get more speed from the I/O bottleneck by putting
RAID directories on different physical
disks. The only allowed RAID_TYPE is
STRIPED. 1 and
RAID0 are aliases for
STRIPED.
If you specify the RAID_TYPE option for a
MyISAM table, specify the
RAID_CHUNKS and
RAID_CHUNKSIZE options as well. The
maximum RAID_CHUNKS value is 255.
MyISAM creates
RAID_CHUNKS subdirectories named
00, 01,
02, ... 09,
0a, 0b, ... in the
database directory. In each of these directories,
MyISAM creates a file
.
When writing data to the data file, the
tbl_name.MYDRAID handler maps the first
RAID_CHUNKSIZE*1024 bytes to the first
file, the next RAID_CHUNKSIZE*1024 bytes
to the next file, and so on.
RAID_TYPE works on any operating system,
as long as you have built MySQL with the
--with-raid option to
configure. To determine whether a server
supports RAID tables, use SHOW
VARIABLES LIKE 'have_raid' to see whether the
variable value is YES.
ROW_FORMAT
Defines how the rows should be stored. Currently, this
option works only with 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 14.1.3, MyISAM Table Storage Formats.
UNION
UNION is used when you want to access a
collection of identical MyISAM tables as
one. This works only with MERGE tables.
See Section 14.3, The MERGE Storage Engine.
In MySQL 4.1, you must have
SELECT, UPDATE, and
DELETE privileges for the tables you map
to a MERGE table.
(Note: Originally, all tables used had
to be in the same database as the MERGE
table itself. This restriction has been lifted as of MySQL
4.1.1.
As of MySQL 3.23, 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))->TYPE=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.
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;
As of MySQL 4.1, you can explicitly specify the data type for a generated column:
CREATE TABLE foo (a TINYINT NOT NULL) SELECT b+1 AS a FROM bar;
In MySQL 4.1, you can also use LIKE to create
an empty table based on the definition of another table,
including any column attributes and indexes the original table
has:
CREATE TABLEnew_tblLIKEorig_tbl;
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.
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 update log or binary log can be used to
re-create the original tables, MySQL does not allow concurrent
inserts for CREATE TABLE ... SELECT
statements.
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.
VARCHAR columns with a length less than
four are changed to CHAR.
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 14, Storage Engines and Table Types.
From MySQL 4.1.0 onward, 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. Note that this conversion
results in a change in behavior with regard to treatment
of trailing spaces.
Similar conversions occur for BINARY
and VARBINARY, except that they are
converted to a BLOB type.
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).
Other silent column specification changes include changes to attribute or index specifications:
TIMESTAMP display sizes are discarded
from MySQL 4.1 on, due to changes made to the
TIMESTAMP data type in that version.
Before MySQL 4.1, TIMESTAMP display
sizes must be even and in the range from 2 to 14. If you
specify a display size of 0 or greater than 14, the size
is coerced to 14. Odd-valued sizes in the range from 1 to
13 are coerced to the next higher even number.
Before MySQL 4.1.6, you cannot store a literal
NULL in a TIMESTAMP
column; setting it to NULL sets it to
the current date and time. Because
TIMESTAMP columns behave this way, the
NULL and NOT NULL
attributes do not apply in the normal way and are ignored
if you specify them. DESCRIBE
always
reports that a tbl_nameTIMESTAMP column can be
assigned NULL values.
Columns that are part of a PRIMARY KEY
are made NOT NULL even if not declared
that way.
Starting from MySQL 3.23.51, trailing spaces are
automatically deleted from ENUM and
SET member values when the table is
created.
MySQL maps certain data types used by other SQL database vendors to MySQL types. See Section 11.7, 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.
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 14.1.3.3, Compressed Table Characteristics.
DROP DATABASE [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.
Important: When a database is
dropped, user privileges on the database are
not automatically dropped. See
Section 13.5.1.2, GRANT Syntax.
In MySQL 3.22 or later, you can use the keywords IF
EXISTS to prevent an error from occurring if the
database does not exist.
If you use DROP DATABASE on a symbolically
linked database, both the link and the original database are
deleted.
As of MySQL 4.1.2, 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 these extensions:
.BAK | .DAT | .HSH | .ISD |
.ISM | .MRG | .MYD | .MYI |
.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 in versions of MySQL
after 4.1, where sup