To enable or disable the execution of scheduled events, it is
necessary to set the value of the global
event_scheduler system variable.
This requires privileges sufficient to set global system
variables. See Section 7.1.9.1, “System Variable Privileges”.
The EVENT privilege governs the
creation, modification, and deletion of events. This privilege can
be bestowed using GRANT. For
example, this GRANT statement
confers the EVENT privilege for the
schema named myschema on the user
jon@ghidora:
GRANT EVENT ON myschema.* TO jon@ghidora;(We assume that this user account already exists, and that we wish for it to remain unchanged otherwise.)
To grant this same user the EVENT
privilege on all schemas, use the following statement:
GRANT EVENT ON *.* TO jon@ghidora;
The EVENT privilege has global or
schema-level scope. Therefore, trying to grant it on a single
table results in an error as shown:
mysql> GRANT EVENT ON myschema.mytable TO jon@ghidora;
ERROR 1144 (42000): Illegal GRANT/REVOKE command; please
consult the manual to see which privileges can be used
It is important to understand that an event is executed with the
privileges of its definer, and that it cannot perform any actions
for which its definer does not have the requisite privileges. For
example, suppose that jon@ghidora has the
EVENT privilege for
myschema. Suppose also that this user has the
SELECT privilege for
myschema, but no other privileges for this
schema. It is possible for jon@ghidora to
create a new event such as this one:
CREATE EVENT e_store_ts
ON SCHEDULE
EVERY 10 SECOND
DO
INSERT INTO myschema.mytable VALUES (UNIX_TIMESTAMP());
The user waits for a minute or so, and then performs a
SELECT * FROM mytable; query, expecting to see
several new rows in the table. Instead, the table is empty. Since
the user does not have the INSERT
privilege for the table in question, the event has no effect.
If you inspect the MySQL error log
(),
you can see that the event is executing, but the action it is
attempting to perform fails:
hostname.err
2013-09-24T12:41:31.261992Z 25 [ERROR] Event Scheduler:
[jon@ghidora][cookbook.e_store_ts] INSERT command denied to user
'jon'@'ghidora' for table 'mytable'
2013-09-24T12:41:31.262022Z 25 [Note] Event Scheduler:
[jon@ghidora].[myschema.e_store_ts] event execution failed.
2013-09-24T12:41:41.271796Z 26 [ERROR] Event Scheduler:
[jon@ghidora][cookbook.e_store_ts] INSERT command denied to user
'jon'@'ghidora' for table 'mytable'
2013-09-24T12:41:41.272761Z 26 [Note] Event Scheduler:
[jon@ghidora].[myschema.e_store_ts] event execution failed.Since this user very likely does not have access to the error log, it is possible to verify whether the event's action statement is valid by executing it directly:
mysql> INSERT INTO myschema.mytable VALUES (UNIX_TIMESTAMP());
ERROR 1142 (42000): INSERT command denied to user
'jon'@'ghidora' for table 'mytable'
Inspection of the Information Schema
EVENTS table shows that
e_store_ts exists and is enabled, but its
LAST_EXECUTED column is
NULL:
mysql> SELECT * FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.EVENTS
> WHERE EVENT_NAME='e_store_ts'
> AND EVENT_SCHEMA='myschema'\G
*************************** 1. row ***************************
EVENT_CATALOG: NULL
EVENT_SCHEMA: myschema
EVENT_NAME: e_store_ts
DEFINER: jon@ghidora
EVENT_BODY: SQL
EVENT_DEFINITION: INSERT INTO myschema.mytable VALUES (UNIX_TIMESTAMP())
EVENT_TYPE: RECURRING
EXECUTE_AT: NULL
INTERVAL_VALUE: 5
INTERVAL_FIELD: SECOND
SQL_MODE: NULL
STARTS: 0000-00-00 00:00:00
ENDS: 0000-00-00 00:00:00
STATUS: ENABLED
ON_COMPLETION: NOT PRESERVE
CREATED: 2006-02-09 22:36:06
LAST_ALTERED: 2006-02-09 22:36:06
LAST_EXECUTED: NULL
EVENT_COMMENT:
1 row in set (0.00 sec)
To rescind the EVENT privilege, use
the REVOKE statement. In this
example, the EVENT privilege on the
schema myschema is removed from the
jon@ghidora user account:
REVOKE EVENT ON myschema.* FROM jon@ghidora;
Revoking the EVENT privilege from
a user does not delete or disable any events that may have been
created by that user.
An event is not migrated or dropped as a result of renaming or dropping the user who created it.
Suppose that the user jon@ghidora has been
granted the EVENT and
INSERT privileges on the
myschema schema. This user then creates the
following event:
CREATE EVENT e_insert
ON SCHEDULE
EVERY 7 SECOND
DO
INSERT INTO myschema.mytable;
After this event has been created, root revokes
the EVENT privilege for
jon@ghidora. However,
e_insert continues to execute, inserting a new
row into mytable each seven seconds. The same
would be true if root had issued either of
these statements:
DROP USER jon@ghidora;RENAME USER jon@ghidora TO someotherguy@ghidora;
You can verify that this is true by examining the Information
Schema EVENTS table before and after
issuing a DROP USER or
RENAME USER statement.
Event definitions are stored in the data dictionary. To drop an
event created by another user account, you must be the MySQL
root user or another user with the necessary
privileges.
Users' EVENT privileges are stored
in the Event_priv columns of the
mysql.user and mysql.db
tables. In both cases, this column holds one of the values
'Y' or 'N'.
'N' is the default.
mysql.user.Event_priv is set to
'Y' for a given user only if that user has the
global EVENT privilege (that is, if
the privilege was bestowed using GRANT EVENT ON
*.*). For a schema-level
EVENT privilege,
GRANT creates a row in
mysql.db and sets that row's
Db column to the name of the schema, the
User column to the name of the user, and the
Event_priv column to 'Y'.
There should never be any need to manipulate these tables
directly, since the GRANT
EVENT and REVOKE EVENT statements
perform the required operations on them.
Five status variables provide counts of event-related operations (but not of statements executed by events; see Section 27.10, “Restrictions on Stored Programs”). These are:
Com_create_event: The number ofCREATE EVENTstatements executed since the last server restart.Com_alter_event: The number ofALTER EVENTstatements executed since the last server restart.Com_drop_event: The number ofDROP EVENTstatements executed since the last server restart.Com_show_create_event: The number ofSHOW CREATE EVENTstatements executed since the last server restart.Com_show_events: The number ofSHOW EVENTSstatements executed since the last server restart.
You can view current values for all of these at one time by
running the statement SHOW STATUS LIKE
'%event%';.