Documentation Home
MySQL 9.0 Reference Manual
Related Documentation Download this Manual
PDF (US Ltr) - 40.0Mb
PDF (A4) - 40.1Mb
Man Pages (TGZ) - 259.0Kb
Man Pages (Zip) - 366.2Kb
Info (Gzip) - 4.0Mb
Info (Zip) - 4.0Mb


15.7.4.5 UNINSTALL COMPONENT Statement

UNINSTALL COMPONENT component_name [, component_name ] ...

This statement deactivates and uninstalls one or more components. A component provides services that are available to the server and other components; see Section 7.5, “MySQL Components”. UNINSTALL COMPONENT is the complement of INSTALL COMPONENT. It requires the DELETE privilege for the mysql.component system table because it removes the row from that table that registers the component. UNINSTALL COMPONENT does not undo persisted variables, including the variables persisted using INSTALL COMPONENT ... SET PERSIST.

Example:

UNINSTALL COMPONENT 'file://component1', 'file://component2';

For information about component naming, see Section 15.7.4.3, “INSTALL COMPONENT Statement”.

If any error occurs, the statement fails and has no effect. For example, this happens if a component name is erroneous, a named component is not installed, or cannot be uninstalled because other installed components depend on it.

A loader service handles component unloading, which includes removing uninstalled components from the mysql.component system table that serves as a registry. As a result, unloaded components are not loaded during the startup sequence for subsequent server restarts.

Note

This statement has no effect for keyring components, which are loaded using a manifest file and cannot be uninstalled. See Section 8.4.4.2, “Keyring Component Installation”.