A stored routine is either a procedure or a function. Stored
routines are created with the CREATE
PROCEDURE
and CREATE
FUNCTION
statements (see
Section 12.1.12, “CREATE PROCEDURE
and
CREATE FUNCTION
Syntax”). A procedure is invoked using
a CALL
statement (see
Section 12.2.1, “CALL
Syntax”), and can only pass back values using
output variables. A function can be called from inside a statement
just like any other function (that is, by invoking the function's
name), and can return a scalar value. The body of a stored routine
can use compound statements (see
Section 12.7, “MySQL Compound-Statement Syntax”).
Stored routines can be dropped with the DROP
PROCEDURE
and DROP
FUNCTION
statements (see
Section 12.1.21, “DROP PROCEDURE
and
DROP FUNCTION
Syntax”), and altered with the
ALTER PROCEDURE
and
ALTER FUNCTION
statements (see
Section 12.1.4, “ALTER PROCEDURE
Syntax”).
A stored procedure or function is associated with a particular database. This has several implications:
When the routine is invoked, an implicit USE
is performed (and
undone when the routine terminates).
db_name
USE
statements within stored
routines are disallowed.
You can qualify routine names with the database name. This can
be used to refer to a routine that is not in the current
database. For example, to invoke a stored procedure
p
or function f
that is
associated with the test
database, you can
say CALL test.p()
or
test.f()
.
When a database is dropped, all stored routines associated with it are dropped as well.
Stored functions cannot be recursive.
Recursion in stored procedures is allowed but disabled by default.
To enable recursion, set the
max_sp_recursion_depth
server
system variable to a value greater than zero. Stored procedure
recursion increases the demand on thread stack space. If you
increase the value of
max_sp_recursion_depth
, it may be
necessary to increase thread stack size by increasing the value of
thread_stack
at server startup.
See Section 5.1.4, “Server System Variables”, for more
information.
MySQL supports the very useful extension that allows the use of
regular SELECT
statements (that is,
without using cursors or local variables) inside a stored
procedure. The result set of such a query is simply sent directly
to the client. Multiple SELECT
statements generate multiple result sets, so the client must use a
MySQL client library that supports multiple result sets. This
means the client must use a client library from a version of MySQL
at least as recent as 4.1. The client should also specify the
CLIENT_MULTI_RESULTS
option when it connects.
For C programs, this can be done with the
mysql_real_connect()
C API
function. See Section 21.9.3.52, “mysql_real_connect()
”, and
Section 21.9.12, “C API Support for Multiple Statement Execution”.
MySQL Enterprise. MySQL Enterprise subscribers will find numerous articles about stored routines in the MySQL Enterprise Knowledge Base. Access to this collection of articles is one of the advantages of subscribing to MySQL Enterprise. For more information, see http://www.mysql.com/products/enterprise/advisors.html.
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