Table 12.24 Miscellaneous Functions
| Name | Description |
|---|---|
DEFAULT() | Return the default value for a table column |
GET_LOCK() | Get a named lock |
INET_ATON() | Return the numeric value of an IP address |
INET_NTOA() | Return the IP address from a numeric value |
INET6_ATON() | Return the numeric value of an IPv6 address |
INET6_NTOA() | Return the IPv6 address from a numeric value |
IS_FREE_LOCK() | Whether the named lock is free |
IS_IPV4() | Whether argument is an IPv4 address |
IS_IPV4_COMPAT() | Whether argument is an IPv4-compatible address |
IS_IPV4_MAPPED() | Whether argument is an IPv4-mapped address |
IS_IPV6() | Whether argument is an IPv6 address |
IS_USED_LOCK() | Whether the named lock is in use; return connection identifier if true |
MASTER_POS_WAIT() | Block until the slave has read and applied all updates up to the specified position |
NAME_CONST() | Causes the column to have the given name |
RAND() | Return a random floating-point value |
RELEASE_LOCK() | Releases the named lock |
SLEEP() | Sleep for a number of seconds |
UUID() | Return a Universal Unique Identifier (UUID) |
UUID_SHORT() | Return an integer-valued universal identifier |
VALUES() | Defines the values to be used during an INSERT |
Returns the default value for a table column. An error results if the column has no default value.
mysql> UPDATE t SET i = DEFAULT(i)+1 WHERE id < 100;
Formats the number X to a format
like '#,###,###.##', rounded to
D decimal places, and returns the
result as a string. For details, see
Section 12.5, “String Functions”.
Tries to obtain a lock with a name given by the string
str, using a timeout of
timeout seconds. A negative
timeout value means infinite
timeout. The lock is exclusive. While held by one session,
other sessions cannot obtain a lock of the same name.
Returns 1 if the lock was obtained
successfully, 0 if the attempt timed out
(for example, because another client has previously locked the
name), or NULL if an error occurred (such
as running out of memory or the thread was killed with
mysqladmin kill).
A lock obtained with GET_LOCK()
is released explicitly by executing
RELEASE_LOCK() or implicitly
when your session terminates (either normally or abnormally).
Locks obtained with GET_LOCK()
are not released when transactions commit or roll back.
The behavior of GET_LOCK()
changes in MySQL 5.7. In consideration of future upgrades,
limit the str value to 64
characters or less and do not rely on subsequent calls to
GET_LOCK() releasing previous
locks.
GET_LOCK() can be used to
implement application locks or to simulate record locks. Names
are locked on a server-wide basis. If a name has been locked
within one session, GET_LOCK()
blocks any request by another session for a lock with the same
name. This enables clients that agree on a given lock name to
use the name to perform cooperative advisory locking. But be
aware that it also enables a client that is not among the set
of cooperating clients to lock a name, either inadvertently or
deliberately, and thus prevent any of the cooperating clients
from locking that name. One way to reduce the likelihood of
this is to use lock names that are database-specific or
application-specific. For example, use lock names of the form
db_name.str or
app_name.str.
mysql>SELECT GET_LOCK('lock1',10);-> 1 mysql>SELECT IS_FREE_LOCK('lock2');-> 1 mysql>SELECT GET_LOCK('lock2',10);-> 1 mysql>SELECT RELEASE_LOCK('lock2');-> 1 mysql>SELECT RELEASE_LOCK('lock1');-> NULL
The second RELEASE_LOCK() call
returns NULL because the lock
'lock1' was automatically released by the
second GET_LOCK() call.
If multiple clients are waiting for a lock, the order in which they will acquire it is undefined. Applications should not assume that clients will acquire the lock in the same order that they issued the lock requests.
GET_LOCK() is unsafe for
statement-based replication. A warning is logged if you use
this function when
binlog_format is set to
STATEMENT.
Given the dotted-quad representation of an IPv4 network
address as a string, returns an integer that represents the
numeric value of the address in network byte order (big
endian). INET_ATON() returns
NULL if it does not understand its
argument.
mysql> SELECT INET_ATON('10.0.5.9');
-> 167773449
For this example, the return value is calculated as 10×2563 + 0×2562 + 5×256 + 9.
INET_ATON() may or may not
return a non-NULL result for short-form IP
addresses (such as '127.1' as a
representation of '127.0.0.1'). Because of
this, INET_ATON()a should not
be used for such addresses.
To store values generated by
INET_ATON(), use an
INT UNSIGNED column rather than
INT, which is signed. If you
use a signed column, values corresponding to IP addresses
for which the first octet is greater than 127 cannot be
stored correctly. See
Section 11.2.6, “Out-of-Range and Overflow Handling”.
Given a numeric IPv4 network address in network byte order,
returns the dotted-quad string representation of the address
as a nonbinary string in the connection character set.
INET_NTOA() returns
NULL if it does not understand its
argument.
mysql> SELECT INET_NTOA(167773449);
-> '10.0.5.9'
Given an IPv6 or IPv4 network address as a string, returns a
binary string that represents the numeric value of the address
in network byte order (big endian). Because numeric-format
IPv6 addresses require more bytes than the largest integer
type, the representation returned by this function has the
VARBINARY data type:
VARBINARY(16) for IPv6
addresses and VARBINARY(4) for
IPv4 addresses. If the argument is not a valid address,
INET6_ATON() returns
NULL.
The following examples use
HEX() to display the
INET6_ATON() result in
printable form:
mysql>SELECT HEX(INET6_ATON('fdfe::5a55:caff:fefa:9089'));-> 'FDFE0000000000005A55CAFFFEFA9089' mysql>SELECT HEX(INET6_ATON('10.0.5.9'));-> '0A000509'
INET6_ATON() observes several constraints
on valid arguments. These are given in the following list
along with examples.
A trailing zone ID is not permitted, as in
fe80::3%1 or
fe80::3%eth0.
A trailing network mask is not permitted, as in
2001:45f:3:ba::/64 or
192.168.1.0/24.
For values representing IPv4 addresses, only classless
addresses are supported. Classful addresses such as
192.168.1 are rejected. A trailing port
number is not permitted, as in
192.168.1.2:8080. Hexadecimal numbers
in address components are not permitted, as in
192.0xa0.1.2. Octal numbers are not
supported: 192.168.010.1 is treated as
192.168.10.1, not
192.168.8.1. These IPv4 constraints
also apply to IPv6 addresses that have IPv4 address parts,
such as IPv4-compatible or IPv4-mapped addresses.
To convert an IPv4 address expr
represented in numeric form as an
INT value to an IPv6 address
represented in numeric form as a
VARBINARY value, use this
expression:
INET6_ATON(INET_NTOA(expr))
For example:
mysql> SELECT HEX(INET6_ATON(INET_NTOA(167773449)));
-> '0A000509'
This function was added in MySQL 5.6.3.
Given an IPv6 or IPv4 network address represented in numeric
form as a binary string, returns the string representation of
the address as a nonbinary string in the connection character
set. If the argument is not a valid address,
INET6_NTOA() returns
NULL.
INET6_NTOA() has these
properties:
It does not use operating system functions to perform conversions, thus the output string is platform independent.
The return string has a maximum length of 39 (4 x 8 + 7). Given this statement:
CREATE TABLE t AS SELECT INET6_NTOA(expr) AS c1;
The resulting table would have this definition:
CREATE TABLE t (c1 VARCHAR(39) CHARACTER SET utf8 DEFAULT NULL);
The return string uses lowercase letters for IPv6 addresses.
mysql>SELECT INET6_NTOA(INET6_ATON('fdfe::5a55:caff:fefa:9089'));-> 'fdfe::5a55:caff:fefa:9089' mysql>SELECT INET6_NTOA(INET6_ATON('10.0.5.9'));-> '10.0.5.9' mysql>SELECT INET6_NTOA(UNHEX('FDFE0000000000005A55CAFFFEFA9089'));-> 'fdfe::5a55:caff:fefa:9089' mysql>SELECT INET6_NTOA(UNHEX('0A000509'));-> '10.0.5.9'
This function was added in MySQL 5.6.3.
Checks whether the lock named str
is free to use (that is, not locked). Returns
1 if the lock is free (no one is using the
lock), 0 if the lock is in use, and
NULL if an error occurs (such as an
incorrect argument).
This function is unsafe for statement-based replication. A
warning is logged if you use this function when
binlog_format is set to
STATEMENT.
Returns 1 if the argument is a valid IPv4 address specified as a string, 0 otherwise.
mysql> SELECT IS_IPV4('10.0.5.9'), IS_IPV4('10.0.5.256');
-> 1, 0
For a given argument, if
IS_IPV4() returns 1,
INET_ATON() (and
INET6_ATON()) will return
non-NULL. The converse statement is not
true: In some cases,
INET_ATON() returns
non-NULL when
IS_IPV4() returns 0.
As implied by the preceding remarks,
IS_IPV4() is more strict than
INET_ATON() about what
constitutes a valid IPv4 address, so it may be useful for
applications that need to perform strong checks against
invalid values. Alternatively, use
INET6_ATON() to convert IPv4
addresses to internal form and check for a
NULL result (which indicates an invalid
address). INET6_ATON() is
equally strong as IS_IPV4()
about checking IPv4 addresses.
This function was added in MySQL 5.6.3.
This function takes an IPv6 address represented in numeric
form as a binary string, as returned by
INET6_ATON(). It returns 1 if
the argument is a valid IPv4-compatible IPv6 address, 0
otherwise. IPv4-compatible addresses have the form
::.
ipv4_address
mysql>SELECT IS_IPV4_COMPAT(INET6_ATON('::10.0.5.9'));-> 1 mysql>SELECT IS_IPV4_COMPAT(INET6_ATON('::ffff:10.0.5.9'));-> 0
The IPv4 part of an IPv4-compatible address can also be
represented using hexadecimal notation. For example,
192.168.0.1 has this raw hexadecimal value:
mysql> SELECT HEX(INET6_ATON('192.168.0.1'));
-> 'C0A80001'
Expressed in IPv4-compatible form,
::192.168.0.1 is equivalent to
::c0a8:0001 or (without leading zeros)
::c0a8:1
mysql>SELECT->IS_IPV4_COMPAT(INET6_ATON('::192.168.0.1')),->IS_IPV4_COMPAT(INET6_ATON('::c0a8:0001')),->IS_IPV4_COMPAT(INET6_ATON('::c0a8:1'));-> 1, 1, 1
This function was added in MySQL 5.6.3.
This function takes an IPv6 address represented in numeric
form as a binary string, as returned by
INET6_ATON(). It returns 1 if
the argument is a valid IPv4-mapped IPv6 address, 0 otherwise.
IPv4-mapped addresses have the form
::ffff:.
ipv4_address
mysql>SELECT IS_IPV4_MAPPED(INET6_ATON('::10.0.5.9'));-> 0 mysql>SELECT IS_IPV4_MAPPED(INET6_ATON('::ffff:10.0.5.9'));-> 1
As with IS_IPV4_COMPAT() the IPv4 part of
an IPv4-mapped address can also be represented using
hexadecimal notation:
mysql>SELECT->IS_IPV4_MAPPED(INET6_ATON('::ffff:192.168.0.1')),->IS_IPV4_MAPPED(INET6_ATON('::ffff:c0a8:0001')),->IS_IPV4_MAPPED(INET6_ATON('::ffff:c0a8:1'));-> 1, 1, 1
This function was added in MySQL 5.6.3.
Returns 1 if the argument is a valid IPv6 address specified as a string, 0 otherwise. This function does not consider IPv4 addresses to be valid IPv6 addresses.
mysql> SELECT IS_IPV6('10.0.5.9'), IS_IPV6('::1');
-> 0, 1
For a given argument, if
IS_IPV6() returns 1,
INET6_ATON() will return
non-NULL.
This function was added in MySQL 5.6.3.
Checks whether the lock named str
is in use (that is, locked). If so, it returns the connection
identifier of the client session that holds the lock.
Otherwise, it returns NULL.
This function is unsafe for statement-based replication. A
warning is logged if you use this function when
binlog_format is set to
STATEMENT.
MASTER_POS_WAIT(
log_name,log_pos[,timeout])
This function is useful for control of master/slave
synchronization. It blocks until the slave has read and
applied all updates up to the specified position in the master
log. The return value is the number of log events the slave
had to wait for to advance to the specified position. The
function returns NULL if the slave SQL
thread is not started, the slave's master information is not
initialized, the arguments are incorrect, or an error occurs.
It returns -1 if the timeout has been
exceeded. If the slave SQL thread stops while
MASTER_POS_WAIT() is waiting,
the function returns NULL. If the slave is
past the specified position, the function returns immediately.
If a timeout value is specified,
MASTER_POS_WAIT() stops waiting
when timeout seconds have elapsed.
timeout must be greater than 0; a
zero or negative timeout means no
timeout.
This function is unsafe for statement-based replication. A
warning is logged if you use this function when
binlog_format is set to
STATEMENT.
Returns the given value. When used to produce a result set
column, NAME_CONST() causes the
column to have the given name. The arguments should be
constants.
mysql> SELECT NAME_CONST('myname', 14);
+--------+
| myname |
+--------+
| 14 |
+--------+
This function is for internal use only. The server uses it when writing statements from stored programs that contain references to local program variables, as described in Section 20.7, “Binary Logging of Stored Programs”, You might see this function in the output from mysqlbinlog.
For your applications, you can obtain exactly the same result as in the example just shown by using simple aliasing, like this:
mysql> SELECT 14 AS myname;
+--------+
| myname |
+--------+
| 14 |
+--------+
1 row in set (0.00 sec)
See Section 13.2.9, “SELECT Syntax”, for more information about column aliases.
Releases the lock named by the string
str that was obtained with
GET_LOCK(). Returns
1 if the lock was released,
0 if the lock was not established by this
thread (in which case the lock is not released), and
NULL if the named lock did not exist. The
lock does not exist if it was never obtained by a call to
GET_LOCK() or if it has
previously been released.
The DO statement is convenient
to use with RELEASE_LOCK(). See
Section 13.2.3, “DO Syntax”.
This function is unsafe for statement-based replication. A
warning is logged if you use this function when
binlog_format is set to
STATEMENT.
Sleeps (pauses) for the number of seconds given by the
duration argument, then returns 0.
If SLEEP() is interrupted, it
returns 1. The duration may have a fractional part.
When sleep returns normally (without interruption), it returns 0:
mysql> SELECT SLEEP(1000);
+-------------+
| SLEEP(1000) |
+-------------+
| 0 |
+-------------+
When SLEEP() is the only thing
invoked by a query that is interrupted, it returns 1 and the
query itself returns no error. This statement is interrupted
using KILL
QUERY from another session:
mysql> SELECT SLEEP(1000);
+-------------+
| SLEEP(1000) |
+-------------+
| 1 |
+-------------+
When SLEEP() is only part of a
query that is interrupted, the query returns an error. This
statement is interrupted using
KILL QUERY
from another session:
mysql> SELECT 1 FROM t1 WHERE SLEEP(1000);
ERROR 1317 (70100): Query execution was interrupted
This function is unsafe for statement-based replication. A
warning is logged if you use this function when
binlog_format is set to
STATEMENT.
Returns a Universal Unique Identifier (UUID) generated according to RFC 4122, “A Universally Unique IDentifier (UUID) URN Namespace” (http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc4122.txt).
A UUID is designed as a number that is globally unique in
space and time. Two calls to
UUID() are expected to generate
two different values, even if these calls are performed on two
separate devices not connected to each other.
Although UUID() values are
intended to be unique, they are not necessarily unguessable
or unpredictable. If unpredictability is required, UUID
values should be generated some other way.
UUID() returns a value that
conforms to UUID version 1 as described in RFC 4122. The value
is a 128-bit number represented as a utf8
string of five hexadecimal numbers in
aaaaaaaa-bbbb-cccc-dddd-eeeeeeeeeeee
format:
The first three numbers are generated from the low, middle, and high parts of a timestamp. The high part also includes the UUID version number.
The fourth number preserves temporal uniqueness in case the timestamp value loses monotonicity (for example, due to daylight saving time).
The fifth number is an IEEE 802 node number that provides spatial uniqueness. A random number is substituted if the latter is not available (for example, because the host device has no Ethernet card, or it is unknown how to find the hardware address of an interface on the host operating system). In this case, spatial uniqueness cannot be guaranteed. Nevertheless, a collision should have very low probability.
The MAC address of an interface is taken into account only on FreeBSD and Linux. On other operating systems, MySQL uses a randomly generated 48-bit number.
mysql> SELECT UUID();
-> '6ccd780c-baba-1026-9564-5b8c656024db'
UUID() does not work with
statement-based replication.
Returns a “short” universal identifier as a
64-bit unsigned integer. Values returned by
UUID_SHORT() differ from the
string-format 128-bit identifiers returned by the
UUID() function and have
different uniqueness properties. The value of
UUID_SHORT() is guaranteed to
be unique if the following conditions hold:
The server_id value of
the current server is between 0 and 255 and is unique
among your set of master and slave servers
You do not set back the system time for your server host between mysqld restarts
You invoke UUID_SHORT() on
average fewer than 16 million times per second between
mysqld restarts
The UUID_SHORT() return value
is constructed this way:
(server_id & 255) << 56 + (server_startup_time_in_seconds << 24) + incremented_variable++;
mysql> SELECT UUID_SHORT();
-> 92395783831158784
UUID_SHORT() does not work
with statement-based replication.
In an
INSERT
... ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE statement, you can use
the
VALUES(
function in the col_name)UPDATE clause
to refer to column values from the
INSERT portion of the
statement. In other words,
VALUES(
in the col_name)UPDATE clause refers to
the value of col_name that would be
inserted, had no duplicate-key conflict occurred. This
function is especially useful in multiple-row inserts. The
VALUES() function is meaningful
only in the ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE clause
of INSERT statements and
returns NULL otherwise. See
Section 13.2.5.3, “INSERT ... ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE Syntax”.
mysql>INSERT INTO table (a,b,c) VALUES (1,2,3),(4,5,6)->ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE c=VALUES(a)+VALUES(b);