Migrate Applications from MySQL Databases to Autonomous Database
You can migrate SQL statements from MySQL to Oracle SQL and run the statements on Autonomous Database.
- Translate MySQL Statements to Oracle SQL
You can translate SQL statements written in MySQL to Oracle SQL and run the translated statements on Autonomous Database. - Run MySQL Statements in Autonomous Database
You can interactively translate and run MySQL statements in your Autonomous Database. - Migrate MySQL Files to Oracle SQL
You can migrate a file containing MySQL statements to a file containing Oracle SQL statements. - Limitations for Migration and Translation of MySQL Statements to Oracle SQL
This section summarizes the limitations for migrating SQL statements from MySQL to Oracle SQL.
Parent topic: Migrate Applications from Non-Oracle SQL to Oracle SQL
Translate MySQL Statements to Oracle SQL
You can translate SQL statements written in MySQL to Oracle SQL and run the translated statements on Autonomous Database.
Use DBMS_CLOUD_MIGRATION.MIGRATE_SQL
to translate a MySQL statement to Oracle SQL. There are procedure and function variants of DBMS_CLOUD_MIGRATION.MIGRATE_SQL
.
Migrate MySQL Statement to Oracle SQL with MIGRATE_SQL Procedure
The following example accepts the SQL statement written in MySQL as input, translates the statement to Oracle SQL, assigns the translated SQL statement to output_sql_result
, and prints the result:
SET SERVEROUTPUT ON
declare output_sql_result CLOB;
BEGIN
DBMS_CLOUD_MIGRATION.MIGRATE_SQL
(
original_sql => 'CREATE TABLE movie (movie_id INT, title VARCHAR(255));',
output_sql => output_sql_result,
source_db => 'MYSQL');
DBMS_OUTPUT.PUT_LINE (output_sql_result);
END;
/
OUTPUT
–-------------------------------------------------------------
CREATE TABLE movie (movie_id NUMBER(10), title VARCHAR2(255));
The original_sql
parameter specifies the MySQL statement.
The output_sql
parameter stores the translated SQL.
The source_db
parameter specifies MySQL as the database name.
See MIGRATE_SQL Procedure and Function for more information.
Migrate MySQL Statement to Oracle SQL with MIGRATE_SQL Function
The following example shows the DBMS_CLOUD_MIGRATION.MIGRATE_SQL
function within a SELECT
statement. The function input is a MySQL statement and the function returns the translated statement in Oracle SQL:
SELECT DBMS_CLOUD_MIGRATION.MIGRATE_SQL
(
'CREATE TABLE movie (film_id INT, title VARCHAR(255));','MYSQL') AS output FROM DUAL;
OUTPUT
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
create table cars (brand VARCHAR2(255), model VARCHAR2(255);
See MIGRATE_SQL Procedure and Function for more information.
Notes for running DBMS_CLOUD_MIGRATION.MIGRATE_SQL
:
-
You may encounter an error during the translation if the input SQL statement is not supported in Oracle SQL. See Limitations for Migration and Translation of MySQL Statements to Oracle SQL for more information.
-
The
DBMS_CLOUD_MIGRATION.MIGRATE_SQL
subprograms only accept one SQL statement as input. So, only a single SQL statement can be translated per call.
Run MySQL Statements in Autonomous Database
You can interactively translate and run MySQL statements in your Autonomous Database.
Use the ENABLE_TRANSLATION
procedure to enable real-time translation of SQL statements written in MySQL. After you enable translation in a session, MySQL statements are automatically translated and run as Oracle SQL statements, and you can see the results.
ENABLE_TRANSLATION
you can interactively do the following in a session:
-
Create the tables. For example, create the tables
MOVIE
andINVENTORY
. -
Insert data into tables.
-
Query tables.
-
Perform JOIN operations on tables. For example, you can perform a left outer join on tables.
To enable translation with MySQL and run commands:
You can query the V$MAPPED_SQL
view to list the MySQL statements that are translated and mapped in memory to Oracle SQL statements.
For example:
SELECT v.*
FROM v$mapped_sql v, dba_objects o
WHERE v.sql_translation_profile_id = o.object_id
AND o.object_name = 'MYSQL'
AND o.object_type = 'TRANSLATION PROFILE';
See V$MAPPED_SQL for more information.
Migrate MySQL Files to Oracle SQL
You can migrate a file containing MySQL statements to a file containing Oracle SQL statements.
The DBMS_CLOUD_MIGRATION.MIGRATE_FILE
procedure translates SQL statements in a MySQL file in Object Storage and generates a new file containing Oracle SQL.
As a prerequisite, upload one or more MySQL files with a .sql
extension to a location on Object Storage. The following examples use the file mysqltest.sql
that is uploaded to Object Storage. See Put data into object storage for more information.
To migrate MySQL files to Oracle SQL:
Run the following query to view the content of the mysqltest_oracle.sql
file:
SELECT UTL_RAW.CAST_TO_VARCHAR2 (DBMS_CLOUD.GET_OBJECT(
credential_name => 'OCI$RESOURCE_PRINCIPAL',
object_uri => 'https://objectstorage.region.oraclecloud.com/n/namespace/b/bucket/o/files'))
FROM dual;
UTL_RAW.CAST_TO_VARCHAR2(DBMS_CLOUD.GET_OBJECT(CREDENTIAL_NAME=>'CRED1',OBJECT_U
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
DROP TABLE movie;
DROP TABLE inventory;
CREATE TABLE movie (film_id NUMBER(10), title VARCHAR2(255));
INSERT INTO movie (film_id, title) VALUES (123, 'Tangled');
INSERT INTO movie (film_id, title) VALUES (234, 'Frozen');
CREATE TABLE movie (film_id NUMBER(10), inventory_id NUMBER(10));
INSERT INTO movie (film_id, inventory_id) VALUES (123, 223);
INSERT INTO inventory (film_id, inventory_id) VALUES (234, 334);
SELECT * FROM movie;
Alternatively, if you create a credential instead of the resource principal,
OCI$RESOURCE_PRINCIPAL
, specify the credential name in the
credential_name
parameter.
See GET_OBJECT Procedure and Function for more information.
Limitations for Migration and Translation of MySQL Statements to Oracle SQL
This section summarizes the limitations for migrating SQL statements from MySQL to Oracle SQL.
Note the following restrictions when migrating from MySQL database flavor to Oracle SQL:
-
User-Defined Global Variables: MySQL user-defined global variables declared using
@var_name
format are not supported when translating to Oracle SQL. -
Quoted Identifiers: MySQL identifiers that are enclosed with backticks (`), such as
`var_name`
, are not supported when translating to Oracle SQL. Only identifiers that are without quotes or are enclosed in double quotation marks are supported. -
Delimiters:
-
For functions and procedures, only
$$
and//
delimiters are supported. -
For SQL statements only
;
delimiter is supported.
-
-
ADDTIME(datetime, time)
-
AES_DECRYPT(crypt_str, key_str)
-
AES_ENCRYPT(str, key_str)
-
BIN(num)
-
CONV(num, from_base, to_base)
-
CONVERT_TZ(datetime, from, to)
-
CRC32(exp)
-
DATE_ADD(date, interval)