You can change the default server character set and collation with
the --character-set-server
and
--collation-server
options when you
start the server. The collation must be a legal collation for the
default character set. (Use the SHOW
COLLATION
statement to determine which collations are
available for each character set.) See
Section 5.1.2, “Server Command Options”.
If you try to use a character set that is not compiled into your binary, you might run into the following problems:
Your program uses an incorrect path to determine where the
character sets are stored (which is typically the
share/mysql/charsets
or
share/charsets
directory under the MySQL
installation directory). This can be fixed by using the
--character-sets-dir
option when you run the
program in question. For example, to specify a directory to be
used by MySQL client programs, list it in the
[client]
group of your option file. The
examples given here show what the setting might look like for
Unix or Windows, respectively:
[client] character-sets-dir=/usr/local/mysql/share/mysql/charsets [client] character-sets-dir="C:/Program Files/MySQL/MySQL Server 5.0/share/charsets"
The character set is a complex character set that cannot be loaded dynamically. In this case, you must recompile the program with support for the character set.
For Unicode character sets, you can define collations without recompiling by using LDML notation. See Section 9.4.4, “Adding a UCA Collation to a Unicode Character Set”.
The character set is a dynamic character set, but you do not have a configuration file for it. In this case, you should install the configuration file for the character set from a new MySQL distribution.
If your character set index file does not contain the name for
the character set, your program displays an error message. The
file is named Index.xml
and the message
is:
Character set 'charset_name
' is not a compiled character set and is not
specified in the '/usr/share/mysql/charsets/Index.xml' file
To solve this problem, you should either get a new index file or manually add the name of any missing character sets to the current file.
You can force client programs to use specific character set as follows:
[client]
default-character-set=charset_name
This is normally unnecessary. However, when
character_set_system
differs from
character_set_server
or
character_set_client
, and you
input characters manually (as database object identifiers, column
values, or both), these may be displayed incorrectly in output
from the client or the output itself may be formatted incorrectly.
In such cases, starting the mysql client with
--default-character-set=
— that is, setting the client character set to match the
system character set — should fix the problem.
system_character_set
For MyISAM
tables, you can check the character
set name and number for a table with myisamchk -dvv
tbl_name
.
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