The MySQL server maintains many system variables that indicate how
it is configured. Section 5.1.4, “Server System Variables”,
describes the meaning of these variables. Each system variable has
a default value. System variables can be set at server startup
using options on the command line or in an option file. Most of
them can be changed dynamically while the server is running by
means of the
SET
statement, which enables you to modify operation of the server
without having to stop and restart it. You can refer to system
variable values in expressions.
The server maintains two kinds of system variables. Global variables affect the overall operation of the server. Session variables affect its operation for individual client connections. A given system variable can have both a global and a session value. Global and session system variables are related as follows:
When the server starts, it initializes all global variables to their default values. These defaults can be changed by options specified on the command line or in an option file. (See Section 4.2.3, “Specifying Program Options”.)
The server also maintains a set of session variables for each
client that connects. The client's session variables are
initialized at connect time using the current values of the
corresponding global variables. For example, the client's SQL
mode is controlled by the session
sql_mode
value, which is
initialized when the client connects to the value of the
global sql_mode
value.
System variable values can be set globally at server startup by
using options on the command line or in an option file. When you
use a startup option to set a variable that takes a numeric value,
the value can be given with a suffix of K
,
M
, or G
(either uppercase or
lowercase) to indicate a multiplier of 1024,
10242 or
10243; that is, units of kilobytes,
megabytes, or gigabytes, respectively. Thus, the following command
starts the server with a query cache size of 16 megabytes and a
maximum packet size of one gigabyte:
mysqld --query_cache_size=16M --max_allowed_packet=1G
Within an option file, those variables are set like this:
[mysqld] query_cache_size=16M max_allowed_packet=1G
The lettercase of suffix letters does not matter;
16M
and 16m
are equivalent,
as are 1G
and 1g
.
If you want to restrict the maximum value to which a system
variable can be set at runtime with the
SET
statement, you can specify this maximum by using an option of the
form
--maximum-
at server startup. For example, to prevent the value of
var_name
=value
query_cache_size
from being
increased to more than 32MB at runtime, use the option
--maximum-query_cache_size=32M
.
Many system variables are dynamic and can be changed while the
server runs by using the
SET
statement. For a list, see
Section 5.1.6.2, “Dynamic System Variables”. To change a system
variable with
SET
, refer
to it as var_name
, optionally preceded
by a modifier:
To indicate explicitly that a variable is a global variable,
precede its name by GLOBAL
or
@@global.
. The
SUPER
privilege is required to
set global variables.
To indicate explicitly that a variable is a session variable,
precede its name by SESSION
,
@@session.
, or @@
.
Setting a session variable requires no special privilege, but
a client can change only its own session variables, not those
of any other client.
LOCAL
and @@local.
are
synonyms for SESSION
and
@@session.
.
If no modifier is present,
SET
changes the session variable.
A SET
statement can contain multiple variable assignments, separated by
commas. If you set several system variables, the most recent
GLOBAL
or SESSION
modifier
in the statement is used for following variables that have no
modifier specified.
Examples:
SET sort_buffer_size=10000; SET @@local.sort_buffer_size=10000; SET GLOBAL sort_buffer_size=1000000, SESSION sort_buffer_size=1000000; SET @@sort_buffer_size=1000000; SET @@global.sort_buffer_size=1000000, @@local.sort_buffer_size=1000000;
The @@
syntax for system variables is supported for compatibility with
some other database systems.
var_name
If you change a session system variable, the value remains in effect until your session ends or until you change the variable to a different value. The change is not visible to other clients.
If you change a global system variable, the value is remembered
and used for new connections until the server restarts. (To make a
global system variable setting permanent, you should set it in an
option file.) The change is visible to any client that accesses
that global variable. However, the change affects the
corresponding session variable only for clients that connect after
the change. The global variable change does not affect the session
variable for any client that is currently connected (not even that
of the client that issues the
SET GLOBAL
statement).
To prevent incorrect usage, MySQL produces an error if you use
SET GLOBAL
with a variable that can only be used with
SET SESSION
or if you do not specify GLOBAL
(or
@@global.
) when setting a global variable.
To set a SESSION
variable to the
GLOBAL
value or a GLOBAL
value to the compiled-in MySQL default value, use the
DEFAULT
keyword. For example, the following two
statements are identical in setting the session value of
max_join_size
to the global
value:
SET max_join_size=DEFAULT; SET @@session.max_join_size=@@global.max_join_size;
Not all system variables can be set to DEFAULT
.
In such cases, use of DEFAULT
results in an
error.
You can refer to the values of specific global or sesson system
variables in expressions by using one of the
@@
-modifiers. For example, you can retrieve
values in a SELECT
statement like
this:
SELECT @@global.sql_mode, @@session.sql_mode, @@sql_mode;
When you refer to a system variable in an expression as
@@
(that is,
when you do not specify var_name
@@global.
or
@@session.
), MySQL returns the session value if
it exists and the global value otherwise. (This differs from
SET @@
, which always refers to
the session value.)
var_name
=
value
Some variables displayed by SHOW VARIABLES
may not be available using SELECT
@@
syntax; an
var_name
Unknown system variable
occurs. As a
workaround in such cases, you can use SHOW VARIABLES
LIKE '
.
var_name
'
Suffixes for specifying a value multiplier can be used when
setting a variable at server startup, but not to set the value
with SET
at
runtime. On the other hand, with
SET
you can
assign a variable's value using an expression, which is not true
when you set a variable at server startup. For example, the first
of the following lines is legal at server startup, but the second
is not:
shell>mysql --max_allowed_packet=16M
shell>mysql --max_allowed_packet=16*1024*1024
Conversely, the second of the following lines is legal at runtime, but the first is not:
mysql>SET GLOBAL max_allowed_packet=16M;
mysql>SET GLOBAL max_allowed_packet=16*1024*1024;
Some system variables can be enabled with the
SET
statement by setting them to ON
or
1
, or disabled by setting them to
OFF
or 0
. However, to set
such a variable on the command line or in an option file, you
must set it to 1
or 0
;
setting it to ON
or OFF
will not work. For example, on the command line,
--delay_key_write=1
works but
--delay_key_write=ON
does not.
To display system variable names and values, use the
SHOW VARIABLES
statement:
mysql> SHOW VARIABLES;
+---------------------------------+-----------------------------------+
| Variable_name | Value |
+---------------------------------+-----------------------------------+
| auto_increment_increment | 1 |
| auto_increment_offset | 1 |
| automatic_sp_privileges | ON |
| back_log | 50 |
| basedir | /home/mysql/ |
| binlog_cache_size | 32768 |
| bulk_insert_buffer_size | 8388608 |
| character_set_client | latin1 |
| character_set_connection | latin1 |
| character_set_database | latin1 |
| character_set_results | latin1 |
| character_set_server | latin1 |
| character_set_system | utf8 |
| character_sets_dir | /home/mysql/share/mysql/charsets/ |
| collation_connection | latin1_swedish_ci |
| collation_database | latin1_swedish_ci |
| collation_server | latin1_swedish_ci |
...
| innodb_additional_mem_pool_size | 1048576 |
| innodb_autoextend_increment | 8 |
| innodb_buffer_pool_size | 8388608 |
| innodb_checksums | ON |
| innodb_commit_concurrency | 0 |
| innodb_concurrency_tickets | 500 |
| innodb_data_file_path | ibdata1:10M:autoextend |
| innodb_data_home_dir | |
...
| version | 5.1.6-alpha-log |
| version_comment | Source distribution |
| version_compile_machine | i686 |
| version_compile_os | suse-linux |
| wait_timeout | 28800 |
+---------------------------------+-----------------------------------+
With a LIKE
clause, the statement
displays only those variables that match the pattern. To obtain a
specific variable name, use a LIKE
clause as shown:
SHOW VARIABLES LIKE 'max_join_size'; SHOW SESSION VARIABLES LIKE 'max_join_size';
To get a list of variables whose name match a pattern, use the
“%
” wildcard character in a
LIKE
clause:
SHOW VARIABLES LIKE '%size%'; SHOW GLOBAL VARIABLES LIKE '%size%';
Wildcard characters can be used in any position within the pattern
to be matched. Strictly speaking, because
“_
” is a wildcard that matches any
single character, you should escape it as
“\_
” to match it literally. In
practice, this is rarely necessary.
For SHOW VARIABLES
, if you specify
neither GLOBAL
nor SESSION
,
MySQL returns SESSION
values.
The reason for requiring the GLOBAL
keyword
when setting GLOBAL
-only variables but not when
retrieving them is to prevent problems in the future. If we were
to remove a SESSION
variable that has the same
name as a GLOBAL
variable, a client with the
SUPER
privilege might accidentally
change the GLOBAL
variable rather than just the
SESSION
variable for its own connection. If we
add a SESSION
variable with the same name as a
GLOBAL
variable, a client that intends to
change the GLOBAL
variable might find only its
own SESSION
variable changed.
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