MySQL 9.3 Reference Manual Including MySQL NDB Cluster 9.3
MySQL supports query rewrite plugins that can examine and possibly modify SQL statements received by the server before the server executes them. See Query Rewrite Plugins.
MySQL distributions include a postparse query rewrite plugin named
Rewriter
and scripts for installing the plugin
and its associated elements. These elements work together to
provide statement-rewriting capability:
A server-side plugin named Rewriter
examines statements and may rewrite them, based on its
in-memory cache of rewrite rules.
These statements are subject to rewriting:
SELECT
,
INSERT
,
REPLACE
,
UPDATE
, and
DELETE
.
Standalone statements and prepared statements are subject to rewriting. Statements occurring within view definitions or stored programs are not subject to rewriting.
The Rewriter
plugin uses a database named
query_rewrite
containing a table named
rewrite_rules
. The table provides
persistent storage for the rules that the plugin uses to
decide whether to rewrite statements. Users communicate with
the plugin by modifying the set of rules stored in this table.
The plugin communicates with users by setting the
message
column of table rows.
The query_rewrite
database contains a
stored procedure named
flush_rewrite_rules()
that loads the
contents of the rules table into the plugin.
A loadable function named
load_rewrite_rules()
is used by
the flush_rewrite_rules()
stored procedure.
The Rewriter
plugin exposes system
variables that enable plugin configuration and status
variables that provide runtime operational information. This
plugin also supports a privilege
(SKIP_QUERY_REWRITE
) that
protects a given user's queries from being rewritten.
The following sections describe how to install and use the
Rewriter
plugin, and provide reference
information for its associated elements.