MySQL 9.3 Reference Manual Including MySQL NDB Cluster 9.3
DECLAREhandler_action
HANDLER FORcondition_value
[,condition_value
] ...statement
handler_action
: { CONTINUE | EXIT | UNDO }condition_value
: {mysql_error_code
| SQLSTATE [VALUE]sqlstate_value
|condition_name
| SQLWARNING | NOT FOUND | SQLEXCEPTION }
The DECLARE ...
HANDLER
statement specifies a handler that deals with
one or more conditions. If one of these conditions occurs, the
specified statement
executes.
statement
can be a simple statement
such as SET
, or a compound
statement written using var_name
=
value
BEGIN
and
END
(see Section 15.6.1, “BEGIN ... END Compound Statement”).
Handler declarations must appear after variable or condition declarations.
The handler_action
value indicates
what action the handler takes after execution of the handler
statement:
CONTINUE
: Execution of the current
program continues.
EXIT
: Execution terminates for the
BEGIN ...
END
compound statement in which the handler is
declared. This is true even if the condition occurs in an
inner block.
UNDO
: Not supported.
The condition_value
for
DECLARE ...
HANDLER
indicates the specific condition or class of
conditions that activates the handler. It can take the following
forms:
mysql_error_code
: An integer
literal indicating a MySQL error code, such as 1051 to
specify “unknown table”:
DECLARE CONTINUE HANDLER FOR 1051 BEGIN -- body of handler END;
Do not use MySQL error code 0 because that indicates success rather than an error condition. For a list of MySQL error codes, see Server Error Message Reference.
SQLSTATE [VALUE] sqlstate_value
:
A 5-character string literal indicating an SQLSTATE value,
such as '42S01'
to specify “unknown
table”:
DECLARE CONTINUE HANDLER FOR SQLSTATE '42S02' BEGIN -- body of handler END;
Do not use SQLSTATE values that begin with
'00'
because those indicate success
rather than an error condition. For a list of SQLSTATE
values, see Server Error Message Reference.
condition_name
: A condition name
previously specified with
DECLARE
... CONDITION
. A condition name can be associated
with a MySQL error code or SQLSTATE value. See
Section 15.6.7.1, “DECLARE ... CONDITION Statement”.
SQLWARNING
: Shorthand for the class of
SQLSTATE values that begin with '01'
.
DECLARE CONTINUE HANDLER FOR SQLWARNING BEGIN -- body of handler END;
NOT FOUND
: Shorthand for the class of
SQLSTATE values that begin with '02'
.
This is relevant within the context of cursors and is used
to control what happens when a cursor reaches the end of a
data set. If no more rows are available, a No Data condition
occurs with SQLSTATE value '02000'
. To
detect this condition, you can set up a handler for it or
for a NOT FOUND
condition.
DECLARE CONTINUE HANDLER FOR NOT FOUND BEGIN -- body of handler END;
For another example, see Section 15.6.6, “Cursors”. The
NOT FOUND
condition also occurs for
SELECT ... INTO
statements
that retrieve no rows.
var_list
SQLEXCEPTION
: Shorthand for the class of
SQLSTATE values that do not begin with
'00'
, '01'
, or
'02'
.
DECLARE CONTINUE HANDLER FOR SQLEXCEPTION BEGIN -- body of handler END;
For information about how the server chooses handlers when a condition occurs, see Section 15.6.7.6, “Scope Rules for Handlers”.
If a condition occurs for which no handler has been declared, the action taken depends on the condition class:
For SQLEXCEPTION
conditions, the stored
program terminates at the statement that raised the
condition, as if there were an EXIT
handler. If the program was called by another stored
program, the calling program handles the condition using the
handler selection rules applied to its own handlers.
For SQLWARNING
conditions, the program
continues executing, as if there were a
CONTINUE
handler.
For NOT FOUND
conditions, if the
condition was raised normally, the action is
CONTINUE
. If it was raised by
SIGNAL
or
RESIGNAL
, the action is
EXIT
.
The following example uses a handler for SQLSTATE
'23000'
, which occurs for a duplicate-key error:
mysql>CREATE TABLE test.t (s1 INT, PRIMARY KEY (s1));
Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.00 sec) mysql>delimiter //
mysql>CREATE PROCEDURE handlerdemo ()
BEGIN
DECLARE CONTINUE HANDLER FOR SQLSTATE '23000' SET @x2 = 1;
SET @x = 1;
INSERT INTO test.t VALUES (1);
SET @x = 2;
INSERT INTO test.t VALUES (1);
SET @x = 3;
END;
//
Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.00 sec) mysql>CALL handlerdemo()//
Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.00 sec) mysql>SELECT @x//
+------+ | @x | +------+ | 3 | +------+ 1 row in set (0.00 sec)
Notice that @x
is 3
after
the procedure executes, which shows that execution continued to
the end of the procedure after the error occurred. If the
DECLARE ...
HANDLER
statement had not been present, MySQL would
have taken the default action (EXIT
) after
the second INSERT
failed due to
the PRIMARY KEY
constraint, and
SELECT @x
would have returned
2
.
To ignore a condition, declare a CONTINUE
handler for it and associate it with an empty block. For
example:
DECLARE CONTINUE HANDLER FOR SQLWARNING BEGIN END;
The scope of a block label does not include the code for
handlers declared within the block. Therefore, the statement
associated with a handler cannot use
ITERATE
or
LEAVE
to refer to labels for
blocks that enclose the handler declaration. Consider the
following example, where the
REPEAT
block has a label of
retry
:
CREATE PROCEDURE p () BEGIN DECLARE i INT DEFAULT 3; retry: REPEAT BEGIN DECLARE CONTINUE HANDLER FOR SQLWARNING BEGIN ITERATE retry; # illegal END; IF i < 0 THEN LEAVE retry; # legal END IF; SET i = i - 1; END; UNTIL FALSE END REPEAT; END;
The retry
label is in scope for the
IF
statement within the block. It
is not in scope for the CONTINUE
handler, so
the reference there is invalid and results in an error:
ERROR 1308 (42000): LEAVE with no matching label: retry
To avoid references to outer labels in handlers, use one of these strategies:
To leave the block, use an EXIT
handler.
If no block cleanup is required, the
BEGIN ...
END
handler body can be empty:
DECLARE EXIT HANDLER FOR SQLWARNING BEGIN END;
Otherwise, put the cleanup statements in the handler body:
DECLARE EXIT HANDLER FOR SQLWARNING
BEGIN
block cleanup statements
END;
To continue execution, set a status variable in a
CONTINUE
handler that can be checked in
the enclosing block to determine whether the handler was
invoked. The following example uses the variable
done
for this purpose:
CREATE PROCEDURE p () BEGIN DECLARE i INT DEFAULT 3; DECLARE done INT DEFAULT FALSE; retry: REPEAT BEGIN DECLARE CONTINUE HANDLER FOR SQLWARNING BEGIN SET done = TRUE; END; IF done OR i < 0 THEN LEAVE retry; END IF; SET i = i - 1; END; UNTIL FALSE END REPEAT; END;