CALL sp_name([parameter[,...]])
CALL sp_name[()]
      The CALL statement invokes a stored
      procedure that was defined previously with
      CREATE PROCEDURE.
    
      Stored procedures that take no arguments can be invoked without
      parentheses. That is, CALL p() and
      CALL p are equivalent.
    
      CALL can pass back values to its
      caller using parameters that are declared as
      OUT or INOUT parameters.
      When the procedure returns, a client program can also obtain the
      number of rows affected for the final statement executed within
      the routine: At the SQL level, call the
      ROW_COUNT() function; from the C
      API, call the
      mysql_affected_rows() function.
    
For information about the effect of unhandled conditions on procedure parameters, see Section 15.6.7.8, “Condition Handling and OUT or INOUT Parameters”.
      To get back a value from a procedure using an
      OUT or INOUT parameter, pass
      the parameter by means of a user variable, and then check the
      value of the variable after the procedure returns. (If you are
      calling the procedure from within another stored procedure or
      function, you can also pass a routine parameter or local routine
      variable as an IN or INOUT
      parameter.) For an INOUT parameter, initialize
      its value before passing it to the procedure. The following
      procedure has an OUT parameter that the
      procedure sets to the current server version, and an
      INOUT value that the procedure increments by
      one from its current value:
    
DELIMITER //
CREATE PROCEDURE p (OUT ver_param VARCHAR(25), INOUT incr_param INT)
BEGIN
  # Set value of OUT parameter
  SELECT VERSION() INTO ver_param;
  # Increment value of INOUT parameter
  SET incr_param = incr_param + 1;
END //
DELIMITER ;
      Before calling the procedure, initialize the variable to be passed
      as the INOUT parameter. After calling the
      procedure, you can see that the values of the two variables are
      set or modified:
    
mysql> SET @increment = 10;
mysql> CALL p(@version, @increment);
mysql> SELECT @version, @increment;
+----------+------------+
| @version | @increment |
+----------+------------+
| 9.4.0   |         11 |
+----------+------------+
      In prepared CALL statements used
      with PREPARE and
      EXECUTE, placeholders can be used
      for IN parameters, OUT, and
      INOUT parameters. These types of parameters can
      be used as follows:
    
mysql> SET @increment = 10;
mysql> PREPARE s FROM 'CALL p(?, ?)';
mysql> EXECUTE s USING @version, @increment;
mysql> SELECT @version, @increment;
+----------+------------+
| @version | @increment |
+----------+------------+
| 9.4.0   |         11 |
+----------+------------+
      To write C programs that use the
      CALL SQL statement to execute
      stored procedures that produce result sets, the
      CLIENT_MULTI_RESULTS flag must be enabled. This
      is because each CALL returns a
      result to indicate the call status, in addition to any result sets
      that might be returned by statements executed within the
      procedure. CLIENT_MULTI_RESULTS must also be
      enabled if CALL is used to execute
      any stored procedure that contains prepared statements. It cannot
      be determined when such a procedure is loaded whether those
      statements produce result sets, so it is necessary to assume that
      they do so.
    
      CLIENT_MULTI_RESULTS can be enabled when you
      call mysql_real_connect(), either
      explicitly by passing the CLIENT_MULTI_RESULTS
      flag itself, or implicitly by passing
      CLIENT_MULTI_STATEMENTS (which also enables
      CLIENT_MULTI_RESULTS).
      CLIENT_MULTI_RESULTS is enabled by default.
    
      To process the result of a CALL
      statement executed using
      mysql_query() or
      mysql_real_query(), use a loop
      that calls mysql_next_result() to
      determine whether there are more results. For an example, see
      Multiple Statement Execution Support.
    
      C programs can use the prepared-statement interface to execute
      CALL statements and access
      OUT and INOUT parameters.
      This is done by processing the result of a
      CALL statement using a loop that
      calls mysql_stmt_next_result() to
      determine whether there are more results. For an example, see
      Prepared CALL Statement Support. Languages that
      provide a MySQL interface can use prepared
      CALL statements to directly
      retrieve OUT and INOUT
      procedure parameters.
    
Metadata changes to objects referred to by stored programs are detected and cause automatic reparsing of the affected statements when the program is next executed. For more information, see Section 10.10.3, “Caching of Prepared Statements and Stored Programs”.