INSTALL COMPONENT component_name [, component_name ...
[SET variable = expr [, variable = expr] ...]
variable: {
{GLOBAL | @@GLOBAL.} [component_prefix.]system_var_name
| {PERSIST | @@PERSIST.} [component_prefix.]system_var_name
}
This statement installs one or more components, which become
active immediately. A component provides services that are
available to the server and other components; see
Section 7.5, “MySQL Components”. INSTALL
COMPONENT
requires the
INSERT
privilege for the
mysql.component
system table because it adds
a row to that table to register the component.
Example:
INSTALL COMPONENT 'file://component1', 'file://component2';
A component is named using a URN that begins with
file://
and indicates the base name of the
library file that implements the component, located in the
directory named by the
plugin_dir
system variable.
Component names do not include any platform-dependent file name
suffix such as .so
or
.dll
. (These naming details are subject to
change because component name interpretation is itself performed
by a service and the component infrastructure makes it possible
to replace the default service implementation with alternative
implementations.)
INSTALL COMPONENT
permits setting
the values of component system variables when you install one or
more components. The SET
clause enables you
to specify variable values precisely when they are needed,
without the inconvenience or limitations associated with other
forms of assignment. Specifically, you can also set component
variables with these alternatives:
At server startup using options on the command line or in an option file, but doing so involves a server restart. The values do not take effect until you install the component. You can specify an invalid variable name for a component on the command line without triggering an error.
Dynamically while the server is running by means of the
SET
statement, which enables you to modify operation of the server without having to stop and restart it. Setting a read-only variable is not permitted.
The optional SET
clause applies a value, or
values, only to the component specified in the
INSTALL COMPONENT
statement,
rather than to all subsequent installations of that component.
SET GLOBAL|PERSIST
works for all types of
variables, including read-only variables, without having to
restart the server. A component system variable that you set
using INSTALL COMPONENT
takes
precedence over any conflicting value coming from the command
line or an option file.
Example:
INSTALL COMPONENT 'file://component1', 'file://component2'
SET GLOBAL component1.var1 = 12 + 3, PERSIST component2.var2 = 'strings';
Omitting PERSIST
or GLOBAL
is equivalent to specifying GLOBAL
.
Specifying PERSIST
for any variable in
SET
silently executes SET
PERSIST_ONLY
immediately after
INSTALL COMPONENT
loads the
components, but before updating the
mysql.component
table. If SET
PERSIST_ONLY
fails, then the server unloads all of the
previously loaded new components without persisting anything to
mysql.component
.
The SET
clause accepts only valid variable
names of the component being installed and emits an error
message for all invalid names. Subqueries, stored functions, and
aggregate functions are not permitted as part of the value
expression. If you install a single component, it is not
necessary to prefix the variable name with the component name.
While specifying a variable value using the
SET
clause is similar to that of the
command line—it is available immediately at variable
registration—there is a distinct difference in how the
SET
clause handles invalid
numerical values for boolean variables. For
example, if you set a boolean variable to 11
(component1.boolvar = 11
), you see the
following behavior:
SET
clause yields trueCommand line yields false (11 is neither ON nor 1)
If any error occurs, the statement fails and has no effect. For example, this happens if a component name is erroneous, a named component does not exist or is already installed, or component initialization fails.
A loader service handles component loading, which includes
adding installed components to the
mysql.component
system table that serves as a
registry. For subsequent server restarts, any components listed
in mysql.component
are loaded by the loader
service during the startup sequence. This occurs even if the
server is started with the
--skip-grant-tables
option.
If a component depends on services not present in the registry and you attempt to install the component without also installing the component or components that provide the services on which it depends, an error occurs:
ERROR 3527 (HY000): Cannot satisfy dependency for service 'component_a'
required by component 'component_b'.
To avoid this problem, either install all components in the same statement, or install the dependent component after installing any components on which it depends.
For keyring components, do not use
INSTALL COMPONENT
. Instead,
configure keyring component loading using a manifest file. See
Section 8.4.4.2, “Keyring Component Installation”.