Files implementing UDFs must be compiled and installed on the
host where the server runs. This process is described below
for the example UDF file
sql/udf_example.c
that is included in
MySQL source distributions.
If a UDF will be referred to in statements that will be replicated to slave servers, you must ensure that every slave also has the function available. Otherwise, replication will fail on the slaves when they attempt to invoke the function.
The immediately following instructions are for Unix. Instructions for Windows are given later in this section.
The udf_example.c
file contains the
following functions:
metaphon()
returns a metaphon string of the string argument. This is something like a soundex string, but it is more tuned for English.myfunc_double()
returns the sum of the ASCII values of the characters in its arguments, divided by the sum of the length of its arguments.myfunc_int()
returns the sum of the length of its arguments.sequence([const int])
returns a sequence starting from the given number or 1 if no number has been given.lookup()
returns the IP address for a host name.reverse_lookup()
returns the host name for an IP address. The function may be called either with a single string argument of the form'xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx'
or with four numbers.avgcost()
returns an average cost. This is an aggregate function.
A dynamically loadable file should be compiled as a sharable object file, using a command something like this:
shell> gcc -shared -o udf_example.so udf_example.c
If you are using gcc with
CMake (which is how MySQL is configured),
you should be able to create
udf_example.so
with a simpler command:
shell> make udf_example
After you compile a shared object containing UDFs, you must
install it and tell MySQL about it. Compiling a shared object
from udf_example.c
using
gcc directly produces a file named
udf_example.so
. Copy the shared object to
the server's plugin directory and name it
udf_example.so
. This directory is given
by the value of the
plugin_dir
system variable.
On some systems, the ldconfig program that
configures the dynamic linker does not recognize a shared
object unless its name begins with lib
. In
this case you should rename a file such as
udf_example.so
to
libudf_example.so
.
On Windows, you can compile user-defined functions by using the following procedure:
Obtain a MySQL source distribution. See Section 2.1.3, “How to Get MySQL”.
Obtain the CMake build utility, if necessary, from http://www.cmake.org. (Version 2.6 or later is required).
In the source tree, look in the
sql
directory. There are files namedudf_example.def
udf_example.c
there. Copy both files from this directory to your working directory.Create a CMake
makefile
(CMakeLists.txt
) with these contents:PROJECT(udf_example) # Path for MySQL include directory INCLUDE_DIRECTORIES("c:/mysql/include") ADD_DEFINITIONS("-DHAVE_DLOPEN") ADD_LIBRARY(udf_example MODULE udf_example.c udf_example.def) TARGET_LINK_LIBRARIES(udf_example wsock32)
Create the VC project and solution files:
cmake -G "<Generator>"
Invoking cmake --help shows you a list of valid Generators.
Create
udf_example.dll
:devenv udf_example.sln /build Release
After the shared object file has been installed, notify
mysqld about the new functions with the
following statements. If object files have a suffix different
from .so
on your system, substitute the
correct suffix throughout (for example,
.dll
on Windows).
mysql>CREATE FUNCTION metaphon RETURNS STRING SONAME 'udf_example.so';
mysql>CREATE FUNCTION myfunc_double RETURNS REAL SONAME 'udf_example.so';
mysql>CREATE FUNCTION myfunc_int RETURNS INTEGER SONAME 'udf_example.so';
mysql>CREATE FUNCTION sequence RETURNS INTEGER SONAME 'udf_example.so';
mysql>CREATE FUNCTION lookup RETURNS STRING SONAME 'udf_example.so';
mysql>CREATE FUNCTION reverse_lookup
->RETURNS STRING SONAME 'udf_example.so';
mysql>CREATE AGGREGATE FUNCTION avgcost
->RETURNS REAL SONAME 'udf_example.so';
To delete functions, use DROP
FUNCTION
:
mysql>DROP FUNCTION metaphon;
mysql>DROP FUNCTION myfunc_double;
mysql>DROP FUNCTION myfunc_int;
mysql>DROP FUNCTION sequence;
mysql>DROP FUNCTION lookup;
mysql>DROP FUNCTION reverse_lookup;
mysql>DROP FUNCTION avgcost;
The CREATE FUNCTION
and
DROP FUNCTION
statements update
the func
system table in the
mysql
database. The function's name, type
and shared library name are saved in the table. You must have
the INSERT
or
DELETE
privilege for the
mysql
database to create or drop functions,
respectively.
You should not use CREATE
FUNCTION
to add a function that has previously been
created. If you need to reinstall a function, you should
remove it with DROP FUNCTION
and then reinstall it with CREATE
FUNCTION
. You would need to do this, for example, if
you recompile a new version of your function, so that
mysqld gets the new version. Otherwise, the
server continues to use the old version.
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.