Skip to content
Projects
Groups
Snippets
Help
Loading...
Help
Support
Keyboard shortcuts
?
Submit feedback
Contribute to GitLab
Sign in / Register
Toggle navigation
M
mariadb
Project overview
Project overview
Details
Activity
Releases
Repository
Repository
Files
Commits
Branches
Tags
Contributors
Graph
Compare
Issues
0
Issues
0
List
Boards
Labels
Milestones
Merge Requests
0
Merge Requests
0
Analytics
Analytics
Repository
Value Stream
Wiki
Wiki
Snippets
Snippets
Members
Members
Collapse sidebar
Close sidebar
Activity
Graph
Create a new issue
Commits
Issue Boards
Open sidebar
Kirill Smelkov
mariadb
Commits
f2d6ec93
Commit
f2d6ec93
authored
Feb 04, 2003
by
pem@mysql.com
Browse files
Options
Browse Files
Download
Email Patches
Plain Diff
Some new stuff in the Docs/sp-* files, and renamed a few functions in preparation
for future work.
parent
b43d7af6
Changes
5
Hide whitespace changes
Inline
Side-by-side
Showing
5 changed files
with
77 additions
and
14 deletions
+77
-14
Docs/sp-imp-spec.txt
Docs/sp-imp-spec.txt
+37
-5
Docs/sp-implemented.txt
Docs/sp-implemented.txt
+21
-1
sql/sp.cc
sql/sp.cc
+2
-2
sql/sp.h
sql/sp.h
+13
-2
sql/sql_parse.cc
sql/sql_parse.cc
+4
-4
No files found.
Docs/sp-imp-spec.txt
View file @
f2d6ec93
...
...
@@ -166,11 +166,28 @@ calling a PROCEDURE.
expressions or statements.
- Parsing CREATE FUNCTION ...
Creating a functions is essensially the same thing as for a PROCEDURE,
with the addition that a FUNCTION has a return type and a RETURN
statement, but no OUT or INOUT parameters.
[QQ - More details here; sp_head needs a result slot and a type flag
indicating if it's a function or procedure]
- Storing, caching, dropping...
As seen above, the entired definition string, including the "CREATE
PROCEDURE" is kept. The procedure definition string is stored in the
table mysql.proc with the name as the key.
PROCEDURE" (or "FUNCTION") is kept. The procedure definition string is
stored in the table mysql.proc with the name and type as the key, the
type being one of the enum ("procedure","function").
A PROCEDURE is just stored int the mysql.proc table. A FUNCTION has an
additional requirement. They will be called in expressions with the same
syntax as UDFs, so UDFs and stored FUNCTIONs share the namespace. Thus,
we must make sure that we do not have UDFs and FUNCTIONs with the same
name (even if they are storded in different places).
This means that we can reparse the procedure as many time as we want.
The first time, the resulting Lex is used to store the procedure in
...
...
@@ -198,7 +215,7 @@ calling a PROCEDURE.
encapsulated in the files sp.{cc,h}.
- CALL
- CALL
ing a procedure
A CALL is parsed just like any statement. The resulting Lex has the
sql_command SQLCOM_CALL, the procedure's name and the parameters are
...
...
@@ -244,11 +261,26 @@ calling a PROCEDURE.
For this the support function, sp_head.cc:eval_func_item() is needed.
- Parsing DROP PROCEDURE
- Calling a FUNCTION
Functions don't have an explicit call keyword like procedures. Instead,
they appear in expressions with the conventional syntax "fun(arg, ...)".
The problem is that we already have User Defined Functions (UDFs) which
are called the same way. A UDF is detected by the lexical analyzer (not
the parser!), in the find_keyword() function, and returns a UDF_*_FUNC
or UDA_*_SUM token with the udf_func object as the yylval.
So, stored functions must be handled in a simpilar way, and as a
consequence, UDFs and functions must not have the same name.
[QQ - Details of how function calls works here]
- Parsing DROP PROCEDURE/FUNCTION
The procedure name is pushed to Lex->value_list.
The sql_command code for the result of parsing a is
SQLCOM_DROP_PROCEDURE.
SQLCOM_DROP_PROCEDURE
/SQLCOM_DROP_FUNCTION
.
Dropping is done by simply getting the procedure with the sp_find()
function and calling sp_drop() (both in sp.{cc,h}).
...
...
Docs/sp-implemented.txt
View file @
f2d6ec93
Stored Procedures implemented 2003-02-02:
Summary of Not Yet Implemented:
- FUNCTIONs
...
...
@@ -11,6 +12,7 @@ Summary of Not Yet Implemented:
- DECLARE CURSOR ...
- FOR-loops (as it requires cursors)
Summary of what's implemented:
- SQL PROCEDURES (CREATE/DROP)
...
...
@@ -19,6 +21,7 @@ Summary of what's implemented:
- BEGIN/END, SET, CASE, IF, LOOP, WHILE, REPEAT, ITERATE, LEAVE
- SELECT INTO local variables
List of what's implemented:
- CREATE PROCEDURE name ( args ) body
...
...
@@ -52,9 +55,26 @@ List of what's implemented:
- SET of local variables
Implemented as part of the pre-existing SET syntax. This allows an
extended syntax of "SET a=x, b=y, ..." where different variable types
(SP local and global) can be mixed.
(SP local and global) can be mixed. This also allows combinations
of local variables and some options that only make sense for
global/system variables; in that case the options are accepted but
ignored.
- The flow control constructs: CASE, IF, LOOP, WHILE, ITERATE and LEAVE
are fully implemented.
- SELECT ... INTO local variables (as well as global session variables)
is implemented. (Note: This is not SQL-99 feature, but common in other
databases.)
Open questions:
- What is the expected result when creating a procedure with a name that
already exists? An error or overwrite?
- Do PROCEDUREs and FUNCTIONs share namespace or not? I think not, but the
we need to flag the type in the mysql.proc table and the name alone is
not a unique key any more, or, we have separate tables.
(Unfortunately, mysql.func is already taken. Use "sfunc" and maybe even
rename "proc" into "sproc" while we still can, for consistency?)
- SQL-99 variables and parameters are typed. For the present we don't do
any type checking, since this is the way MySQL works. I still don't know
if we should keep it this way, or implement type checking.
sql/sp.cc
View file @
f2d6ec93
...
...
@@ -24,7 +24,7 @@
// the in-memory cache for SPs. (And store newly prepared SPs there of
// course.)
sp_head
*
sp_find
(
THD
*
thd
,
Item_string
*
iname
)
sp_find
_procedure
(
THD
*
thd
,
Item_string
*
iname
)
{
extern
int
yyparse
(
void
*
thd
);
LEX
*
tmplex
;
...
...
@@ -92,7 +92,7 @@ sp_create_procedure(THD *thd, char *name, uint namelen, char *def, uint deflen)
}
int
sp_drop
(
THD
*
thd
,
char
*
name
,
uint
namelen
)
sp_drop
_procedure
(
THD
*
thd
,
char
*
name
,
uint
namelen
)
{
TABLE
*
table
;
TABLE_LIST
tables
;
...
...
sql/sp.h
View file @
f2d6ec93
...
...
@@ -22,12 +22,23 @@
// Finds a stored procedure given its name. Returns NULL if not found.
//
sp_head
*
sp_find
(
THD
*
thd
,
Item_string
*
name
);
sp_find
_procedure
(
THD
*
thd
,
Item_string
*
name
);
int
sp_create_procedure
(
THD
*
thd
,
char
*
name
,
uint
namelen
,
char
*
def
,
uint
deflen
);
int
sp_drop
(
THD
*
thd
,
char
*
name
,
uint
namelen
);
sp_drop_procedure
(
THD
*
thd
,
char
*
name
,
uint
namelen
);
#if 0
sp_head *
sp_find_function(THD *thd, Item_string *name);
int
sp_create_function(THD *thd, char *name, uint namelen, char *def, uint deflen);
int
sp_drop_function(THD *thd, char *name, uint namelen);
#endif
#endif
/* _SP_H_ */
sql/sql_parse.cc
View file @
f2d6ec93
...
...
@@ -2833,7 +2833,7 @@ mysql_execute_command(THD *thd)
sp_head
*
sp
;
s
=
(
Item_string
*
)
lex
->
value_list
.
head
();
sp
=
sp_find
(
thd
,
s
);
sp
=
sp_find
_procedure
(
thd
,
s
);
if
(
!
sp
)
{
send_error
(
thd
,
ER_SP_DOES_NOT_EXIST
);
...
...
@@ -2862,7 +2862,7 @@ mysql_execute_command(THD *thd)
sp_head
*
sp
;
s
=
(
Item_string
*
)
lex
->
value_list
.
head
();
sp
=
sp_find
(
thd
,
s
);
sp
=
sp_find
_procedure
(
thd
,
s
);
if
(
!
sp
)
{
send_error
(
thd
,
ER_SP_DOES_NOT_EXIST
);
...
...
@@ -2882,7 +2882,7 @@ mysql_execute_command(THD *thd)
sp_head
*
sp
;
s
=
(
Item_string
*
)
lex
->
value_list
.
head
();
sp
=
sp_find
(
thd
,
s
);
sp
=
sp_find
_procedure
(
thd
,
s
);
if
(
!
sp
)
{
send_error
(
thd
,
ER_SP_DOES_NOT_EXIST
);
...
...
@@ -2892,7 +2892,7 @@ mysql_execute_command(THD *thd)
{
String
*
name
=
s
->
const_string
();
res
=
sp_drop
(
thd
,
name
->
c_ptr
(),
name
->
length
());
res
=
sp_drop
_procedure
(
thd
,
name
->
c_ptr
(),
name
->
length
());
if
(
res
!=
0
)
{
send_error
(
thd
,
ER_SP_DROP_FAILED
);
...
...
Write
Preview
Markdown
is supported
0%
Try again
or
attach a new file
Attach a file
Cancel
You are about to add
0
people
to the discussion. Proceed with caution.
Finish editing this message first!
Cancel
Please
register
or
sign in
to comment