The TRIGGERS
table provides
information about triggers. You must have the
SUPER
privilege to access this
table.
INFORMATION_SCHEMA
Name |
SHOW
Name |
Remarks |
TRIGGER_CATALOG |
NULL |
|
TRIGGER_SCHEMA |
||
TRIGGER_NAME |
Trigger |
|
EVENT_MANIPULATION |
Event |
|
EVENT_OBJECT_CATALOG |
NULL |
|
EVENT_OBJECT_SCHEMA |
||
EVENT_OBJECT_TABLE |
Table |
|
ACTION_ORDER |
0 |
|
ACTION_CONDITION |
NULL |
|
ACTION_STATEMENT |
Statement |
|
ACTION_ORIENTATION |
ROW |
|
ACTION_TIMING |
Timing |
|
ACTION_REFERENCE_OLD_TABLE |
NULL |
|
ACTION_REFERENCE_NEW_TABLE |
NULL |
|
ACTION_REFERENCE_OLD_ROW |
OLD |
|
ACTION_REFERENCE_NEW_ROW |
NEW |
|
CREATED |
NULL (0 ) |
|
SQL_MODE |
MySQL extension | |
DEFINER |
MySQL extension |
Notes:
The TRIGGERS
table was added in
MySQL 5.0.10.
The TRIGGER_SCHEMA
and
TRIGGER_NAME
columns contain the name of
the database in which the trigger occurs and the trigger name,
respectively.
The EVENT_MANIPULATION
column contains one
of the values 'INSERT'
,
'DELETE'
, or 'UPDATE'
.
As noted in Section 18.3, “Using Triggers”, every trigger is
associated with exactly one table. The
EVENT_OBJECT_SCHEMA
and
EVENT_OBJECT_TABLE
columns contain the
database in which this table occurs, and the table's name.
The ACTION_ORDER
statement contains the
ordinal position of the trigger's action within the list of
all similar triggers on the same table. Currently, this value
is always 0
, because it is not possible to
have more than one trigger with the same
EVENT_MANIPULATION
and
ACTION_TIMING
on the same table.
The ACTION_STATEMENT
column contains the
statement to be executed when the trigger is invoked. This is
the same as the text displayed in the
Statement
column of the output from
SHOW TRIGGERS
. Note that this
text uses UTF-8 encoding.
The ACTION_ORIENTATION
column always
contains the value 'ROW'
.
The ACTION_TIMING
column contains one of
the two values 'BEFORE'
or
'AFTER'
.
The columns ACTION_REFERENCE_OLD_ROW
and
ACTION_REFERENCE_NEW_ROW
contain the old
and new column identifiers, respectively. This means that
ACTION_REFERENCE_OLD_ROW
always contains
the value 'OLD'
and
ACTION_REFERENCE_NEW_ROW
always contains
the value 'NEW'
.
The SQL_MODE
column shows the server SQL
mode that was in effect at the time when the trigger was
created (and thus which remains in effect for this trigger
whenever it is invoked, regardless of the current
server SQL mode). The possible range of values for
this column is the same as that of the
sql_mode
system variable. See
Section 5.1.7, “Server SQL Modes”.
The DEFINER
column was added in MySQL
5.0.17. DEFINER
indicates who defined the
trigger.
The following columns currently always contain
NULL
: TRIGGER_CATALOG
,
EVENT_OBJECT_CATALOG
,
ACTION_CONDITION
,
ACTION_REFERENCE_OLD_TABLE
,
ACTION_REFERENCE_NEW_TABLE
, and
CREATED
.
Example, using the ins_sum
trigger defined in
Section 18.3, “Using Triggers”:
mysql> SELECT * FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.TRIGGERS\G
*************************** 1. row ***************************
TRIGGER_CATALOG: NULL
TRIGGER_SCHEMA: test
TRIGGER_NAME: ins_sum
EVENT_MANIPULATION: INSERT
EVENT_OBJECT_CATALOG: NULL
EVENT_OBJECT_SCHEMA: test
EVENT_OBJECT_TABLE: account
ACTION_ORDER: 0
ACTION_CONDITION: NULL
ACTION_STATEMENT: SET @sum = @sum + NEW.amount
ACTION_ORIENTATION: ROW
ACTION_TIMING: BEFORE
ACTION_REFERENCE_OLD_TABLE: NULL
ACTION_REFERENCE_NEW_TABLE: NULL
ACTION_REFERENCE_OLD_ROW: OLD
ACTION_REFERENCE_NEW_ROW: NEW
CREATED: NULL
SQL_MODE:
DEFINER: me@localhost
User Comments
This is one of the most important help thank you
--copy and paste in your prompt of mysql>
show triggers;
--for see all the triggers create
describe INFORMATION_SCHEMA.TRIGGERS;
--for see the columns of INFORMATION_SCHEMA table
describe INFORMATION_SCHEMA.COLUMNS;
SELECT * FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.COLUMNS;
--for see all the columns creates :)Dangerous
SELECT * FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.TRIGGERS;
--for see all the triggers informations
see you !!!
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