CREATE [AGGREGATE] FUNCTIONfunction_name
RETURNS {STRING|INTEGER|REAL|DECIMAL} SONAMEshared_library_name
A user-defined function (UDF) is a way to extend MySQL with a
new function that works like a native (built-in) MySQL function
such as ABS()
or
CONCAT()
.
function_name
is the name that should
be used in SQL statements to invoke the function. The
RETURNS
clause indicates the type of the
function's return value. As of MySQL 5.0.3,
DECIMAL
is a legal value after
RETURNS
, but currently
DECIMAL
functions return string
values and should be written like STRING
functions.
shared_library_name
is the basename
of the shared object file that contains the code that implements
the function. As of MySQL 5.0.67, the file must be located in
the plugin directory. This directory is given by the value of
the plugin_dir
system variable.
If the value of plugin_dir
is
empty, the behavior that is used before 5.0.67 applies: The file
must be located in a directory that is searched by your system's
dynamic linker.
To create a function, you must have the
INSERT
privilege for the
mysql
database. This is necessary because
CREATE FUNCTION
adds a row to the
mysql.func
system table that records the
function's name, type, and shared library name. If you do not
have this table, you should run the
mysql_upgrade command to create it. See
Section 4.4.9, “mysql_upgrade — Check Tables for MySQL Upgrade”.
An active function is one that has been loaded with
CREATE FUNCTION
and not removed
with DROP FUNCTION
. All active
functions are reloaded each time the server starts, unless you
start mysqld with the
--skip-grant-tables
option. In
this case, UDF initialization is skipped and UDFs are
unavailable.
For instructions on writing user-defined functions, see Section 21.2.2, “Adding a New User-Defined Function”. For the UDF mechanism to work, functions must be written in C or C++ (or another language that can use C calling conventions), your operating system must support dynamic loading and you must have compiled mysqld dynamically (not statically).
An AGGREGATE
function works exactly like a
native MySQL aggregate (summary) function such as
SUM
or
COUNT()
. For
AGGREGATE
to work, your
mysql.func
table must contain a
type
column. If your
mysql.func
table does not have this column,
you should run the mysql_upgrade program to
create it (see Section 4.4.9, “mysql_upgrade — Check Tables for MySQL Upgrade”).
To upgrade the shared library associated with a UDF, issue a
DROP FUNCTION
statement,
upgrade the shared library, and then issue a
CREATE FUNCTION
statement. If
you upgrade the shared library first and then use
DROP FUNCTION
, the server may
crash.
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