You can use the TEMPORARY
keyword when
creating a table. A TEMPORARY
table is
visible only within the current session, and is dropped
automatically when the session is closed. This means that two
different sessions can use the same temporary table name without
conflicting with each other or with an existing
non-TEMPORARY
table of the same name. (The
existing table is hidden until the temporary table is dropped.)
InnoDB
does not support compressed temporary
tables. When innodb_strict_mode
is enabled (the default),
CREATE TEMPORARY
TABLE
returns an error if
ROW_FORMAT=COMPRESSED
or
KEY_BLOCK_SIZE
is specified. If
innodb_strict_mode
is disabled,
warnings are issued and the temporary table is created using a
non-compressed row format. The
innodb_file_per-table
option
does not affect the creation of InnoDB
temporary tables.
CREATE TABLE
causes an implicit
commit, except when used with the TEMPORARY
keyword. See Section 15.3.3, “Statements That Cause an Implicit Commit”.
TEMPORARY
tables have a very loose
relationship with databases (schemas). Dropping a database does
not automatically drop any TEMPORARY
tables
created within that database.
To create a temporary table, you must have the
CREATE TEMPORARY TABLES
privilege. After a session has created a temporary table, the
server performs no further privilege checks on the table. The
creating session can perform any operation on the table, such as
DROP TABLE
,
INSERT
,
UPDATE
, or
SELECT
.
One implication of this behavior is that a session can
manipulate its temporary tables even if the current user has no
privilege to create them. Suppose that the current user does not
have the CREATE TEMPORARY TABLES
privilege but is able to execute a definer-context stored
procedure that executes with the privileges of a user who does
have CREATE TEMPORARY TABLES
and
that creates a temporary table. While the procedure executes,
the session uses the privileges of the defining user. After the
procedure returns, the effective privileges revert to those of
the current user, which can still see the temporary table and
perform any operation on it.
You cannot use CREATE TEMPORARY TABLE ...
LIKE
to create an empty table based on the definition
of a table that resides in the mysql
tablespace, InnoDB
system tablespace
(innodb_system
), or a general tablespace. The
tablespace definition for such a table includes a
TABLESPACE
attribute that defines the
tablespace where the table resides, and the aforementioned
tablespaces do not support temporary tables. To create a
temporary table based on the definition of such a table, use
this syntax instead:
CREATE TEMPORARY TABLE new_tbl SELECT * FROM orig_tbl LIMIT 0;
Support for TABLESPACE =
innodb_file_per_table
and TABLESPACE =
innodb_temporary
clauses with
CREATE TEMPORARY
TABLE
is deprecated; expect it to be removed in a
future version of MySQL.