bool
mysql_stmt_attr_set(MYSQL_STMT *stmt,
                    enum enum_stmt_attr_type option,
                    const void *arg)Can be used to affect behavior for a prepared statement. This function may be called multiple times to set several options.
          The option argument is the option that you
          want to set. The arg argument is the value
          for the option. arg should point to a
          variable that is set to the desired attribute value. The
          variable type is as indicated in the following table.
        
          The following table shows the possible
          option values.
        
| Option | Argument Type | Function | 
|---|---|---|
| STMT_ATTR_UPDATE_MAX_LENGTH | bool * | If set to 1, causes mysql_stmt_store_result()to update the metadataMYSQL_FIELD->max_lengthvalue. | 
| STMT_ATTR_CURSOR_TYPE | unsigned long * | Type of cursor to open for statement when mysql_stmt_execute()is
                invoked.*argcan beCURSOR_TYPE_NO_CURSOR(the default)
                orCURSOR_TYPE_READ_ONLY. | 
| STMT_ATTR_PREFETCH_ROWS | unsigned long * | Number of rows to fetch from server at a time when using a cursor. *argcan be in the range from 1 to
                the maximum value ofunsigned long.
                The default is 1. | 
          If you use the STMT_ATTR_CURSOR_TYPE option
          with CURSOR_TYPE_READ_ONLY, a cursor is
          opened for the statement when you invoke
          mysql_stmt_execute(). If there
          is already an open cursor from a previous
          mysql_stmt_execute() call, it
          closes the cursor before opening a new one.
          mysql_stmt_reset() also closes
          any open cursor before preparing the statement for
          re-execution.
          mysql_stmt_free_result()
          closes any open cursor.
        
          If you open a cursor for a prepared statement,
          mysql_stmt_store_result() is
          unnecessary, because that function causes the result set to be
          buffered on the client side.
        
The following example opens a cursor for a prepared statement and sets the number of rows to fetch at a time to 5:
MYSQL_STMT *stmt;
int rc;
unsigned long type;
unsigned long prefetch_rows = 5;
stmt = mysql_stmt_init(mysql);
type = (unsigned long) CURSOR_TYPE_READ_ONLY;
rc = mysql_stmt_attr_set(stmt, STMT_ATTR_CURSOR_TYPE, (void*) &type);
/* ... check return value ... */
rc = mysql_stmt_attr_set(stmt, STMT_ATTR_PREFETCH_ROWS,
                         (void*) &prefetch_rows);
/* ... check return value ... */