SETvariable_assignment[,variable_assignment] ...variable_assignment:user_var_name=expr| [GLOBAL | SESSION]system_var_name=expr| [@@global. | @@session. | @@]system_var_name=expr
The SET statement assigns values to different
types of variables that affect the operation of the server or your
client. Older versions of MySQL employed SET
OPTION, but this syntax is deprecated in favor of
SET without OPTION.
This section describes use of SET for assigning
values to system variables or user variables. For general
information about these types of variables, see
Section 5.1.3, “System Variables”,
Section 5.1.4, “Session System Variables”, and
Section 8.4, “User-Defined Variables”. System variables also can be set
at server startup, as described in
Section 5.1.5, “Using System Variables”.
Some variants of SET syntax are used in other
contexts:
SET CHARACTER SET and SET
NAMES assign values to character set and collation
variables associated with the connection to the server.
SET ONESHOT is used for replication. These
variants are described later in this section.
SET PASSWORD assigns account passwords. See
Section 12.5.1.6, “SET PASSWORD Syntax”.
SET TRANSACTION ISOLATION LEVEL sets the
isolation level for transaction processing. See
Section 12.4.6, “SET TRANSACTION Syntax”.
SET is used within stored routines to
assign values to local routine variables. See
Section 22.2.7.2, “Variable SET Statement”.
The following discussion shows the different
SET syntaxes that you can use to set variables.
The examples use the = assignment operator, but
the := operator also is allowable.
A user variable is written as
@ and can be
set as follows:
var_name
SET @var_name=expr;
Many system variables are dynamic and can be changed while the
server runs by using the SET statement. For a
list, see Section 5.1.5.2, “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.
MySQL Enterprise. The MySQL Enterprise Monitor makes extensive use of system variables to determine the state of your server. For more information see advisors.html.
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
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=16Mshell>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;
To display system variables names and values, use the
SHOW VARIABLES statement. (See
Section 12.5.6.30, “SHOW VARIABLES Syntax”.)
The following list describes SET options that
have non-standard syntax (that is, options that are not set with
syntax).
name =
value
CHARACTER SET
{
charset_name | DEFAULT}
This maps all strings from and to the client with the given
mapping. You can add new mappings by editing
sql/convert.cc in the MySQL source
distribution. SET CHARACTER SET sets three
session system variables:
character_set_client and
character_set_results are set to the given
character set, and character_set_connection
to the value of character_set_database. See
Section 9.1.4, “Connection Character Sets and Collations”.
The default mapping can be restored by using the value
DEFAULT. The default depends on the server
configuration.
ucs2, utf16, and
utf32 cannot be used as a client character
set, which means that they do not work for SET
CHARACTER SET.
NAMES {'
charset_name'
[COLLATE 'collation_name'] |
DEFAULT}
SET NAMES sets the three session system
variables character_set_client,
character_set_connection, and
character_set_results to the given
character set. Setting
character_set_connection to
charset_name also sets
collation_connection to the default
collation for charset_name. The optional
COLLATE clause may be used to specify a
collation explicitly. See
Section 9.1.4, “Connection Character Sets and Collations”.
The default mapping can be restored by using a value of
DEFAULT. The default depends on the server
configuration.
ucs2, utf16, and
utf32 cannot be used as a client character
set, which means that they do not work for SET
NAMES.
This option is a modifier, not a variable. It can be used to
influence the effect of variables that set the character set,
the collation, and the time zone. ONE_SHOT
is primarily used for replication purposes:
mysqlbinlog uses SET
ONE_SHOT to modify temporarily the values of
character set, collation, and time zone variables to reflect
at rollforward what they were originally.
ONE_SHOT is for internal use only and is
deprecated for MySQL 5.0 and up.
You cannot use ONE_SHOT with other than the
allowed set of variables; if you try, you get an error like
this:
mysql> SET ONE_SHOT max_allowed_packet = 1;
ERROR 1382 (HY000): The 'SET ONE_SHOT' syntax is reserved for purposes
internal to the MySQL server
If ONE_SHOT is used with the allowed
variables, it changes the variables as requested, but only for
the next non-SET statement. After that, the
server resets all character set, collation, and time
zone-related system variables to their previous values.
Example:
mysql>SET ONE_SHOT character_set_connection = latin5;mysql>SET ONE_SHOT collation_connection = latin5_turkish_ci;mysql>SHOW VARIABLES LIKE '%_connection';+--------------------------+-------------------+ | Variable_name | Value | +--------------------------+-------------------+ | character_set_connection | latin5 | | collation_connection | latin5_turkish_ci | +--------------------------+-------------------+ mysql>SHOW VARIABLES LIKE '%_connection';+--------------------------+-------------------+ | Variable_name | Value | +--------------------------+-------------------+ | character_set_connection | latin1 | | collation_connection | latin1_swedish_ci | +--------------------------+-------------------+

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