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28.2.4.6 Writing INFORMATION_SCHEMA Plugins
This section describes how to write a server-side INFORMATION_SCHEMA
table plugin. For example code that implements such plugins, see the sql/sql_show.cc
file of a MySQL source distribution. You can also look at the example plugins found in the InnoDB
source. See the handler/i_s.cc
and handler/ha_innodb.cc
files within the InnoDB
source tree (in the storage/innobase
directory).
To write an INFORMATION_SCHEMA
table plugin, include the following header files in the plugin source file. Other MySQL or general header files might also be needed, depending on the plugin capabilities and requirements.
#include <sql_class.h>
#include <table.h>
These header files are located in the sql
directory of MySQL source distributions. They contain C++ structures, so the source file for an INFORMATION_SCHEMA
plugin must be compiled as C++ (not C) code.
The source file for the example plugin developed here is named simple_i_s_table.cc
. It creates a simple INFORMATION_SCHEMA
table named SIMPLE_I_S_TABLE
that has two columns named NAME
and VALUE
. The general descriptor for a plugin library that implements the table looks like this:
mysql_declare_plugin(simple_i_s_library)
{
MYSQL_INFORMATION_SCHEMA_PLUGIN,
&simple_table_info, /* type-specific descriptor */
"SIMPLE_I_S_TABLE", /* table name */
"Author Name", /* author */
"Simple INFORMATION_SCHEMA table", /* description */
PLUGIN_LICENSE_GPL, /* license type */
simple_table_init, /* init function */
NULL,
0x0100, /* version = 1.0 */
NULL, /* no status variables */
NULL, /* no system variables */
NULL, /* no reserved information */
0 /* no flags */
}
mysql_declare_plugin_end;
The name
member (SIMPLE_I_S_TABLE
) indicates the name to use for references to the plugin in statements such as INSTALL PLUGIN
or UNINSTALL PLUGIN
. This is also the name displayed by SHOW PLUGINS
or INFORMATION_SCHEMA.PLUGINS
.
The simple_table_info
member of the general descriptor points to the type-specific descriptor, which consists only of the type-specific API version number:
static struct st_mysql_information_schema simple_table_info =
{ MYSQL_INFORMATION_SCHEMA_INTERFACE_VERSION };
The general descriptor points to the initialization and deinitialization functions:
The initialization function provides information about the table structure and a function that populates the table.
The deinitialization function performs any required cleanup. If no cleanup is needed, this descriptor member can be
NULL
(as in the example shown).
The initialization function should return 0 for success, 1 if an error occurs. The function receives a generic pointer, which it should interpret as a pointer to the table structure:
static int table_init(void *ptr)
{
ST_SCHEMA_TABLE *schema_table= (ST_SCHEMA_TABLE*)ptr;
schema_table->fields_info= simple_table_fields;
schema_table->fill_table= simple_fill_table;
return 0;
}
The function should set these two members of the table structure:
fields_info
: An array ofST_FIELD_INFO
structures that contain information about each column.fill_table
: A function that populates the table.
The array pointed to by fields_info
should contain one element per column of the INFORMATION_SCHEMA
plus a terminating element. The following simple_table_fields
array for the example plugin indicates that SIMPLE_I_S_TABLE
has two columns. NAME
is string-valued with a length of 10 and VALUE
is integer-valued with a display width of 20. The last structure marks the end of the array.
static ST_FIELD_INFO simple_table_fields[]=
{
{"NAME", 10, MYSQL_TYPE_STRING, 0, 0 0, 0},
{"VALUE", 6, MYSQL_TYPE_LONG, 0, MY_I_S_UNSIGNED, 0, 0},
{0, 0, MYSQL_TYPE_NULL, 0, 0, 0, 0}
};
For more information about the column information structure, see the definition of ST_FIELD_INFO
in the table.h
header file. The permissible MYSQL_TYPE_
type values are those used in the C API; see Section 27.7.4, “C API Data Structures”.xxx
The fill_table
member should be set to a function that populates the table and returns 0 for success, 1 if an error occurs. For the example plugin, the simple_fill_table()
function looks like this:
static int simple_fill_table(THD *thd, TABLE_LIST *tables, Item *cond)
{
TABLE *table= tables->table;
table->field[0]->store("Name 1", 6, system_charset_info);
table->field[1]->store(1);
if (schema_table_store_record(thd, table))
return 1;
table->field[0]->store("Name 2", 6, system_charset_info);
table->field[1]->store(2);
if (schema_table_store_record(thd, table))
return 1;
return 0;
}
For each row of the INFORMATION_SCHEMA
table, this function initializes each column, then calls schema_table_store_record()
to install the row. The store()
method arguments depend on the type of value to be stored. For column 0 (NAME
, a string), store()
takes a pointer to a string, its length, and information about the character set of the string:
store(const char *to, uint length, CHARSET_INFO *cs);
For column 1 (VALUE
, an integer), store()
takes the value and a flag indicating whether it is unsigned:
store(longlong nr, bool unsigned_value);
For other examples of how to populate INFORMATION_SCHEMA
tables, search for instances of schema_table_store_record()
in sql_show.cc
.
To compile and install a plugin library file, use the instructions in Section 28.2.4.3, “Compiling and Installing Plugin Libraries”. To make the library file available for use, install it in the plugin directory (the directory named by the plugin_dir
system variable).
To test the plugin, install it:
mysql> INSTALL PLUGIN SIMPLE_I_S_TABLE SONAME 'simple_i_s_table.so';
Verify that the table is present:
mysql> SELECT TABLE_NAME FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.TABLES
-> WHERE TABLE_NAME = 'SIMPLE_I_S_TABLE';
+------------------+
| TABLE_NAME |
+------------------+
| SIMPLE_I_S_TABLE |
+------------------+
Try to select from it:
mysql> SELECT * FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.SIMPLE_I_S_TABLE;
+--------+-------+
| NAME | VALUE |
+--------+-------+
| Name 1 | 1 |
| Name 2 | 2 |
+--------+-------+
Uninstall it:
mysql> UNINSTALL PLUGIN SIMPLE_I_S_TABLE;