Views (including updatable views) are available in MySQL Server 5.1.
Answers to some frequently asked questions concerning views in MySQL 5.1 can be found in Section A.6, “MySQL 5.1 FAQ — Views”.
This chapter discusses the following topics:
Creating or altering views with CREATE VIEW
or ALTER VIEW
Destroying views with DROP VIEW
Discussion of restrictions on use of views is given in Section D.4, “Restrictions on Views”.
To use views if you have upgraded to MySQL 5.1 from an older release that did not support views, you should upgrade your grant tables so that they contain the view-related privileges. See Section 4.4.8, “mysql_upgrade — Check Tables for MySQL Upgrade”.
Metadata about views can be obtained from the
INFORMATION_SCHEMA.VIEWS table and by using the
SHOW CREATE VIEW statement. See
Section 27.15, “The INFORMATION_SCHEMA VIEWS Table”, and
Section 12.5.4.11, “SHOW CREATE VIEW Syntax”.
ALTER
[ALGORITHM = {UNDEFINED | MERGE | TEMPTABLE}]
[DEFINER = { user | CURRENT_USER }]
[SQL SECURITY { DEFINER | INVOKER }]
VIEW view_name [(column_list)]
AS select_statement
[WITH [CASCADED | LOCAL] CHECK OPTION]
This statement changes the definition of a view, which must exist.
The syntax is similar to that for CREATE VIEW
and the effect is the same as for CREATE OR REPLACE
VIEW. See Section 26.2, “CREATE VIEW Syntax”. This statement
requires the CREATE VIEW and
DROP privileges for the view, and some
privilege for each column referred to in the
SELECT statement. As of MySQL 5.1.23,
ALTER VIEW is allowed only to the definer or
users with the SUPER privilege.
CREATE
[OR REPLACE]
[ALGORITHM = {UNDEFINED | MERGE | TEMPTABLE}]
[DEFINER = { user | CURRENT_USER }]
[SQL SECURITY { DEFINER | INVOKER }]
VIEW view_name [(column_list)]
AS select_statement
[WITH [CASCADED | LOCAL] CHECK OPTION]
The CREATE VIEW statement creates a new view,
or replaces an existing one if the OR REPLACE
clause is given. If the view does not exist, CREATE OR
REPLACE VIEW is the same as CREATE
VIEW. If the view does exist, CREATE OR REPLACE
VIEW is the same as ALTER VIEW.
The select_statement is a
SELECT statement that provides the definition
of the view. (When you select from the view, you select in effect
using the SELECT statement.)
select_statement can select from base
tables or other views.
The view definition is “frozen” at creation time, so
changes to the underlying tables afterward do not affect the view
definition. For example, if a view is defined as SELECT
* on a table, new columns added to the table later do
not become part of the view.
The ALGORITHM clause affects how MySQL
processes the view. The DEFINER and
SQL SECURITY clauses specify the security
context to be used when checking access privileges at view
invocation time. The WITH CHECK OPTION clause
can be given to constrain inserts or updates to rows in tables
referenced by the view. These clauses are described later in this
section.
The CREATE VIEW statement requires the
CREATE VIEW privilege for the view, and some
privilege for each column selected by the
SELECT statement. For columns used elsewhere in
the SELECT statement you must have the
SELECT privilege. If the OR
REPLACE clause is present, you must also have the
DROP privilege for the view.
A view belongs to a database. By default, a new view is created in
the default database. To create the view explicitly in a given
database, specify the name as
db_name.view_name when you create it.
mysql> CREATE VIEW test.v AS SELECT * FROM t;
Base tables and views share the same namespace within a database, so a database cannot contain a base table and a view that have the same name.
Views must have unique column names with no duplicates, just like
base tables. By default, the names of the columns retrieved by the
SELECT statement are used for the view column
names. To define explicit names for the view columns, the optional
column_list clause can be given as a
list of comma-separated identifiers. The number of names in
column_list must be the same as the
number of columns retrieved by the SELECT
statement.
When you modify an existing view, the current view definition is
backed up and saved. It is stored in that table's database
directory, in a sub-folder named arc. The
backup file will be named
view_name.frm-00001. If you alter the view
again, the next backup will be named
view_name.frm-00002. The three latest view
backup definitions will be stored.
Backed up view definitions will not be preserved by mysqldump, or any other such programs, but you could retain it from a file copy. However, they are not needed for anything, but to provide you with a backup of your previous view definition.
Also note that while it is safe to remove these, it is not safe to do so while mysqld is running. If you delete this folder (or sub-files) while mysqld is running, you will receive an error the next time you try to alter that view:
mysql> ALTER VIEW v AS SELECT * FROM t; ERROR 6 (HY000): Error on delete of '.\test\arc/v.frm-0004' (Errcode: 2)
Columns retrieved by the SELECT statement can
be simple references to table columns. They can also be
expressions that use functions, constant values, operators, and so
forth.
Unqualified table or view names in the SELECT
statement are interpreted with respect to the default database. A
view can refer to tables or views in other databases by qualifying
the table or view name with the proper database name.
A view can be created from many kinds of SELECT
statements. It can refer to base tables or other views. It can use
joins, UNION, and subqueries. The
SELECT need not even refer to any tables. The
following example defines a view that selects two columns from
another table, as well as an expression calculated from those
columns:
mysql>CREATE TABLE t (qty INT, price INT);mysql>INSERT INTO t VALUES(3, 50);mysql>CREATE VIEW v AS SELECT qty, price, qty*price AS value FROM t;mysql>SELECT * FROM v;+------+-------+-------+ | qty | price | value | +------+-------+-------+ | 3 | 50 | 150 | +------+-------+-------+
A view definition is subject to the following restrictions:
The SELECT statement cannot contain a
subquery in the FROM clause.
The SELECT statement cannot refer to system
or user variables.
The SELECT statement cannot refer to
prepared statement parameters.
Within a stored routine, the definition cannot refer to routine parameters or local variables.
Any table or view referred to in the definition must exist.
However, after a view has been created, it is possible to drop
a table or view that the definition refers to. In this case,
use of the view results in an error. To check a view
definition for problems of this kind, use the CHECK
TABLE statement.
The definition cannot refer to a TEMPORARY
table, and you cannot create a TEMPORARY
view.
The tables named in the view definition must already exist.
You cannot associate a trigger with a view.
ORDER BY is allowed in a view definition, but
it is ignored if you select from a view using a statement that has
its own ORDER BY.
For other options or clauses in the definition, they are added to
the options or clauses of the statement that references the view,
but the effect is undefined. For example, if a view definition
includes a LIMIT clause, and you select from
the view using a statement that has its own
LIMIT clause, it is undefined which limit
applies. This same principle applies to options such as
ALL, DISTINCT, or
SQL_SMALL_RESULT that follow the
SELECT keyword, and to clauses such as
INTO, FOR UPDATE,
LOCK IN SHARE MODE, and
PROCEDURE.
If you create a view and then change the query processing environment by changing system variables, that may affect the results that you get from the view:
mysql>CREATE VIEW v (mycol) AS SELECT 'abc';Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.01 sec) mysql>SET sql_mode = '';Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.00 sec) mysql>SELECT "mycol" FROM v;+-------+ | mycol | +-------+ | mycol | +-------+ 1 row in set (0.01 sec) mysql>SET sql_mode = 'ANSI_QUOTES';Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.00 sec) mysql>SELECT "mycol" FROM v;+-------+ | mycol | +-------+ | abc | +-------+ 1 row in set (0.00 sec)
The DEFINER and SQL SECURITY
clauses determine which MySQL account to use when checking access
privileges for the view when a statement is executed that
references the view. They were addded in MySQL 5.1.2. The legal
SQL SECURITY characteristic values are
DEFINER and INVOKER. These
indicate that the required privileges must be held by the user who
defined or invoked the view, respectively. The default
SQL SECURITY value is
DEFINER.
If a user value is given for the
DEFINER clause, it should be a MySQL account in
'
format (the same format used in the user_name'@'host_name'GRANT
statement). The user_name and
host_name values both are required. The
definer can also be given as
CURRENT_USER or
CURRENT_USER(). The default
DEFINER value is the user who executes the
CREATE VIEW statement. This is the same as
specifying DEFINER = CURRENT_USER explicitly.
If you specify the DEFINER clause, these rules
determine the legal DEFINER user values:
If you do not have the SUPER privilege, the
only legal user value is your own
account, either specified literally or by using
CURRENT_USER. You cannot set
the definer to some other account.
If you have the SUPER privilege, you can
specify any syntactically legal account name. If the account
does not actually exist, a warning is generated.
If the SQL SECURITY value is
DEFINER but the definer account does not
exist when the view is referenced, an error occurs.
Within a stored routine that is defined with the SQL
SECURITY DEFINER characteristic,
CURRENT_USER returns the routine
creator. This also affects a view defined within such a routine,
if the view definition contains a DEFINER value
of CURRENT_USER.
As of MySQL 5.1.2 (when the DEFINER and
SQL SECURITY clauses were implemented), view
privileges are checked like this:
At view definition time, the view creator must have the privileges needed to use the top-level objects accessed by the view. For example, if the view definition refers to table columns, the creator must have privileges for the columns, as described previously. If the definition refers to a stored function, only the privileges needed to invoke the function can be checked. The privileges required when the function runs can be checked only as it executes: For different invocations of the function, different execution paths within the function might be taken.
When a view is referenced, privileges for objects accessed by
the view are checked against the privileges held by the view
creator or invoker, depending on whether the SQL
SECURITY characteristic is
DEFINER or INVOKER,
respectively.
If reference to a view causes execution of a stored function,
privilege checking for statements executed within the function
depend on whether the function is defined with a SQL
SECURITY characteristic of
DEFINER or INVOKER. If
the security characteristic is DEFINER, the
function runs with the privileges of its creator. If the
characteristic is INVOKER, the function
runs with the privileges determined by the view's SQL
SECURITY characteristic.
Prior to MySQL 5.1.2 (before the DEFINER and
SQL SECURITY clauses were implemented),
privileges required for objects used in a view are checked at view
creation time.
Example: A view might depend on a stored function, and that
function might invoke other stored routines. For example, the
following view invokes a stored function f():
CREATE VIEW v AS SELECT * FROM t WHERE t.id = f(t.name);
Suppose that f() contains a statement such as
this:
IF name IS NULL then CALL p1(); ELSE CALL p2(); END IF;
The privileges required for executing statements within
f() need to be checked when
f() executes. This might mean that privileges
are needed for p1() or p2(),
depending on the execution path within f().
Those privileges must be checked at runtime, and the user who must
possess the privileges is determined by the SQL
SECURITY values of the view v and the
function f().
The DEFINER and SQL SECURITY
clauses for views are extensions to standard SQL. In standard SQL,
views are handled using the rules for SQL SECURITY
INVOKER.
If you invoke a view that was created before MySQL 5.1.2, it is
treated as though it was created with a SQL SECURITY
DEFINER clause and with a DEFINER
value that is the same as your account. However, because the
actual definer is unknown, MySQL issues a warning. To make the
warning go away, it is sufficient to re-create the view so that
the view definition includes a DEFINER clause.
The optional ALGORITHM clause is a MySQL
extension to standard SQL. It affects how MySQL processes the
view. ALGORITHM takes three values:
MERGE, TEMPTABLE, or
UNDEFINED. The default algorithm is
UNDEFINED if no ALGORITHM
clause is present.
For MERGE, the text of a statement that refers
to the view and the view definition are merged such that parts of
the view definition replace corresponding parts of the statement.
For TEMPTABLE, the results from the view are
retrieved into a temporary table, which then is used to execute
the statement.
For UNDEFINED, MySQL chooses which algorithm to
use. It prefers MERGE over
TEMPTABLE if possible, because
MERGE is usually more efficient and because a
view cannot be updatable if a temporary table is used.
A reason to choose TEMPTABLE explicitly is that
locks can be released on underlying tables after the temporary
table has been created and before it is used to finish processing
the statement. This might result in quicker lock release than the
MERGE algorithm so that other clients that use
the view are not blocked as long.
A view algorithm can be UNDEFINED for three
reasons:
No ALGORITHM clause is present in the
CREATE VIEW statement.
The CREATE VIEW statement has an explicit
ALGORITHM = UNDEFINED clause.
ALGORITHM = MERGE is specified for a view
that can be processed only with a temporary table. In this
case, MySQL generates a warning and sets the algorithm to
UNDEFINED.
As mentioned earlier, MERGE is handled by
merging corresponding parts of a view definition into the
statement that refers to the view. The following examples briefly
illustrate how the MERGE algorithm works. The
examples assume that there is a view v_merge
that has this definition:
CREATE ALGORITHM = MERGE VIEW v_merge (vc1, vc2) AS SELECT c1, c2 FROM t WHERE c3 > 100;
Example 1: Suppose that we issue this statement:
SELECT * FROM v_merge;
MySQL handles the statement as follows:
v_merge becomes t
* becomes vc1, vc2,
which corresponds to c1, c2
The view WHERE clause is added
The resulting statement to be executed becomes:
SELECT c1, c2 FROM t WHERE c3 > 100;
Example 2: Suppose that we issue this statement:
SELECT * FROM v_merge WHERE vc1 < 100;
This statement is handled similarly to the previous one, except
that vc1 < 100 becomes c1 <
100 and the view WHERE clause is
added to the statement WHERE clause using an
AND connective (and parentheses
are added to make sure the parts of the clause are executed with
correct precedence). The resulting statement to be executed
becomes:
SELECT c1, c2 FROM t WHERE (c3 > 100) AND (c1 < 100);
Effectively, the statement to be executed has a
WHERE clause of this form:
WHERE (select WHERE) AND (view WHERE)
The MERGE algorithm requires a one-to-one
relationship between the rows in the view and the rows in the
underlying table. If this relationship does not hold, a temporary
table must be used instead. Lack of a one-to-one relationship
occurs if the view contains any of a number of constructs:
Some views are updatable. That is, you can use them in statements
such as UPDATE, DELETE, or
INSERT to update the contents of the underlying
table. For a view to be updatable, there must be a one-to-one
relationship between the rows in the view and the rows in the
underlying table. There are also certain other constructs that
make a view non-updatable. To be more specific, a view is not
updatable if it contains any of the following:
Aggregate functions (SUM(),
MIN(),
MAX(),
COUNT(), and so forth)
DISTINCT
GROUP BY
HAVING
UNION or UNION ALL
Subquery in the select list
Certain joins (see additional join discussion later in this section)
Non-updatable view in the FROM clause
A subquery in the WHERE clause that refers
to a table in the FROM clause
Refers only to literal values (in this case, there is no underlying table to update)
ALGORITHM = TEMPTABLE (use of a temporary
table always makes a view non-updatable)
With respect to insertability (being updatable with
INSERT statements), an updatable view is
insertable if it also satisfies these additional requirements for
the view columns:
There must be no duplicate view column names.
The view must contain all columns in the base table that do not have a default value.
The view columns must be simple column references and not derived columns. A derived column is one that is not a simple column reference but is derived from an expression. These are examples of derived columns:
3.14159
col1 + 3
UPPER(col2)
col3 / col4
(subquery)
A view that has a mix of simple column references and derived columns is not insertable, but it can be updatable if you update only those columns that are not derived. Consider this view:
CREATE VIEW v AS SELECT col1, 1 AS col2 FROM t;
This view is not insertable because col2 is
derived from an expression. But it is updatable if the update does
not try to update col2. This update is
allowable:
UPDATE v SET col1 = 0;
This update is not allowable because it attempts to update a derived column:
UPDATE v SET col2 = 0;
It is sometimes possible for a multiple-table view to be
updatable, assuming that it can be processed with the
MERGE algorithm. For this to work, the view
must use an inner join (not an outer join or a
UNION). Also, only a single table in the view
definition can be updated, so the SET clause
must name only columns from one of the tables in the view. Views
that use UNION ALL are disallowed even though
they might be theoretically updatable, because the implementation
uses temporary tables to process them.
For a multiple-table updatable view, INSERT can
work if it inserts into a single table. DELETE
is not supported.
INSERT DELAYED is not supported for views.
If a table contains an AUTO_INCREMENT column,
inserting into an insertable view on the table that does not
include the AUTO_INCREMENT column does not
change the value of
LAST_INSERT_ID(), because the side
effects of inserting default values into columns not part of the
view should not be visible.
The WITH CHECK OPTION clause can be given for
an updatable view to prevent inserts or updates to rows except
those for which the WHERE clause in the
select_statement is true.
In a WITH CHECK OPTION clause for an updatable
view, the LOCAL and CASCADED
keywords determine the scope of check testing when the view is
defined in terms of another view. The LOCAL
keyword restricts the CHECK OPTION only to the
view being defined. CASCADED causes the checks
for underlying views to be evaluated as well. When neither keyword
is given, the default is CASCADED. Consider the
definitions for the following table and set of views:
mysql>CREATE TABLE t1 (a INT);mysql>CREATE VIEW v1 AS SELECT * FROM t1 WHERE a < 2->WITH CHECK OPTION;mysql>CREATE VIEW v2 AS SELECT * FROM v1 WHERE a > 0->WITH LOCAL CHECK OPTION;mysql>CREATE VIEW v3 AS SELECT * FROM v1 WHERE a > 0->WITH CASCADED CHECK OPTION;
Here the v2 and v3 views are
defined in terms of another view, v1.
v2 has a LOCAL check option,
so inserts are tested only against the v2
check. v3 has a CASCADED
check option, so inserts are tested not only against its own
check, but against those of underlying views. The following
statements illustrate these differences:
mysql>INSERT INTO v2 VALUES (2);Query OK, 1 row affected (0.00 sec) mysql>INSERT INTO v3 VALUES (2);ERROR 1369 (HY000): CHECK OPTION failed 'test.v3'
MySQL sets a flag, called the view updatability flag, at
CREATE VIEW time. The flag is set to
YES (true) if UPDATE and
DELETE (and similar operations) are legal for
the view. Otherwise, the flag is set to NO
(false). The IS_UPDATABLE column in the
INFORMATION_SCHEMA.VIEWS table displays the
status of this flag. It means that the server always knows whether
a view is updatable. If the view is not updatable, statements such
UPDATE, DELETE, and
INSERT are illegal and will be rejected. (Note
that even if a view is updatable, it might not be possible to
insert into it, as described elsewhere in this section.)
The updatability of views may be affected by the value of the
updatable_views_with_limit system variable. See
Section 5.1.3, “System Variables”.
DROP VIEW [IF EXISTS]
view_name [, view_name] ...
[RESTRICT | CASCADE]
DROP VIEW removes one or more views. You must
have the DROP privilege for each view. If any
of the views named in the argument list do not exist, MySQL
returns an error indicating by name which non-existing views it
was unable to drop, but it also drops all of the views in the list
that do exist.
The IF EXISTS clause prevents an error from
occurring for views that don't exist. When this clause is given, a
NOTE is generated for each non-existent view.
See Section 12.5.4.32, “SHOW WARNINGS Syntax”.
RESTRICT and CASCADE, if
given, are parsed and ignored.