1900.2.18
by Stewart Smith
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=========================
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Notable MySQL Differences
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=========================
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1945.3.2
by Marisa Plumb
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Drizzle was forked from the (now defunct) MySQL 6.0 tree in 2008. Since then there have been a lot of changes. Drizzle is in some ways similar to MySQL, and in other ways, unrecognizable. |
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This section of documentation aims to explore some of the notable differences between MySQL and Drizzle, and has been modified from its original state on the Drizzle Wiki. |
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1900.2.18
by Stewart Smith
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Usage
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-----
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1994.4.81
by Marisa Plumb
edits |
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* There is no embedded server. The Drizzle Server is not loadable as a shared library.
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* Drizzle is optimized for massively concurrent environments. If we have the choice of improving performance for 1024 simultaneous connections to the detriment of performance with only 64 connections, we will take that choice.
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1945.3.2
by Marisa Plumb
edited mysql differences doc |
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* It is designed for modern POSIX systems
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1900.2.18
by Stewart Smith
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* Microsoft Windows is not a supported platform (neither is HP-UX or IRIX).
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1945.3.2
by Marisa Plumb
edited mysql differences doc |
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* Drizzle doesn't use timezones. Everything is UTC.
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1900.2.18
by Stewart Smith
add section on notable differences from MySQL |
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Installation
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------------
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1945.3.2
by Marisa Plumb
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* No scripts/mysql_install_db or similar. Drizzle aims for a "just works" installation, without administrative overhead.
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1900.2.18
by Stewart Smith
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* No system database that needs upgrading between versions.
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1994.4.81
by Marisa Plumb
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* Drizzle can listen on the Drizzle port (4427) and/or MySQL port (3306) and speak the respective protocols.
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1900.2.18
by Stewart Smith
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Architecture
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------------
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1945.3.2
by Marisa Plumb
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Drizzle is designed around the concept of being a microkernel. There should |
1900.2.18
by Stewart Smith
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be a small core of the server with most functionality being provided through |
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small, efficient and hard to misuse plugin interfaces. The goal is a small, |
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1994.4.81
by Marisa Plumb
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light-weight kernel that is easy to maintain, understand and extend. |
1900.2.18
by Stewart Smith
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1945.3.2
by Marisa Plumb
edited mysql differences doc |
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Drizzle is written in C++ and makes use of the Standard Template Library (STL) |
1900.2.18
by Stewart Smith
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and Boost. Only where performance or correctness proves to be inadequate will |
1945.3.2
by Marisa Plumb
edited mysql differences doc |
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we consider rolling our own; our preference is to fix the upstream library |
1900.2.18
by Stewart Smith
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instead. |
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Network protocol
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----------------
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Pluggable network protocols allow Drizzle to speak one (or more) of several |
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protocols. Currently we support the MySQL protocol (compatible with existing |
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MySQL client libraries) and the Drizzle protocol, which is still under |
1945.3.2
by Marisa Plumb
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development. |
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The Drizzle protocol embodies several important differences from MySQL: |
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1900.2.18
by Stewart Smith
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1994.4.81
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* Client sends first packet (rather than the server)
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1945.3.1
by Marisa Plumb
edits and basic rewrites to the introduction docs |
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* Built in sharding
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1994.4.81
by Marisa Plumb
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* Multi statement support (without requiring a semicolon to separate them)
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* Room for expansion to include NoSQL-type commands inline with SQL commands.
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1900.2.18
by Stewart Smith
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1945.3.2
by Marisa Plumb
edited mysql differences doc |
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There is also a console plugin -- instead of providing access over a network |
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socket, this plugin allows access from the current tty. |
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1900.2.18
by Stewart Smith
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Plugin API
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----------
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1945.3.2
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The existing plugin APIs that Drizzle inherited from MySQL have been reworked. |
1900.2.18
by Stewart Smith
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1945.3.2
by Marisa Plumb
edited mysql differences doc |
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* User Defined Functions (UDFs) now follow the same API as a given
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1900.2.18
by Stewart Smith
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server instead of a different C API. This means that UDFs are on the |
1994.4.81
by Marisa Plumb
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exact same level as built-in functions |
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* Some parts of the storage Engine API have been extensively reworked, especially
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around transactions and DDL |
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1900.2.18
by Stewart Smith
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* Logging is now pluggable
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* Authentication is pluggable
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* Replication is pluggable
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* INFORMATION_SCHEMA plugins have been replaced by the function_engine, which
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by Marisa Plumb
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is a lot more space and time efficient |
1900.2.18
by Stewart Smith
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* Network protocols are pluggable
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by Marisa Plumb
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* Scheduler is pluggable (multi_thread, pool_of_threads, etc)
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* Plugin points for manipulating rows before/after operations: these can be used for
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replication and the PBMS Blob Streaming plugin |
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Stored Procedures
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1945.3.2
by Marisa Plumb
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Drizzle does not currently have any plugins that implement stored procedures. We |
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by Marisa Plumb
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viewed the implementation in MySQL to be non-optimal. They bloat the parser |
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and only support one language (SQL2003 stored procedures), which was not |
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well known. |
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Fundamentally, stored procedures usually are not the correct architectural |
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decision for applications that need to scale. Pushing more computation down |
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into the database (which is the trickiest layer to scale) isn't a good idea. |
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1994.4.81
by Marisa Plumb
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We do recognize the value of using stored procedures to reduce the time row locks are held, but think we can achieve the same advantage by improved batching of commands over the wire. This removes adding and administering stored procedures from the list of things that can go wrong in administering the database. |
1900.2.18
by Stewart Smith
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Triggers
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--------
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Drizzle does not currently have any plugin that provides SQL triggers. We |
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have some hooks for callbacks inside the server so that plugins can hook |
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into points that triggers could. |
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Views
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-----
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SQL Views are not currently supported in Drizzle. We believe they should be |
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1994.4.81
by Marisa Plumb
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implemented via a query rewrite plugin. |
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See the `Query Rewrite Blueprint <https://blueprints.launchpad.net/Drizzle/+spec/query-rewrite>`_ on launchpad. |
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1900.2.18
by Stewart Smith
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Partitioning
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INFORMATION_SCHEMA
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------------------
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1994.4.39
by Marisa Plumb
new material to address https://bugs.launchpad.net/drizzle/+bug/684803, new functions |
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1945.3.4
by Marisa Plumb
SQL edits and rewrites |
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The INFORMATION_SCHEMA provides access to database metadata. |
1900.2.18
by Stewart Smith
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The INFORMATION_SCHEMA in Drizzle is strictly ANSI compliant. If you write |
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a query to any of the tables in the INFORMATION_SCHEMA in Drizzle, you can |
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directly run these on any other ANSI compliant system. |
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For information that does not fit into the standard, there is also the |
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DATA_DICTIONARY schema. Use of tables in DATA_DICTIONARY is non-portable. |
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This allows developers to easily know if the query is portable or not. |
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Authentication, Authorization and Access
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----------------------------------------
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1945.3.4
by Marisa Plumb
SQL edits and rewrites |
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Authentication lies in Drizzle plugins. Currently there are PAM and HTTP AUTH plugins for authentication. |
1900.2.18
by Stewart Smith
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Through the PAM plugin, you can use any PAM module (such as LDAP). |
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by Marisa Plumb
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For more information, see our authentication doc. |
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Command line clients
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--------------------
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We've stopped the confusion: -p means port and -P means password. |
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No gotcha of using the unix socket when localhost is specified and then |
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connecting you to the wrong database server. |
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1945.3.1
by Marisa Plumb
edits and basic rewrites to the introduction docs |
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There is no Drizzle admin command. |
1900.2.18
by Stewart Smith
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Storage Engines
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* MERGE storage engine has been removed
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* FEDERATED storage engine has been removed (all current development is
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focused on FederatedX, so having FEDERATED made no sense). |
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* CSV engine is now for temporary tables only. See the filesystem_engine for
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the future of reading files as database tables. |
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* MyISAM is for temporary tables only.
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* ARCHIVE is fully supported
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* PBXT is merged
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FRM Files
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There are no FRM files in Drizzle. Engines now own their own metadata. |
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1945.3.2
by Marisa Plumb
edited mysql differences doc |
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Some still choose to store these in files on disk. These are now in a |
1900.2.18
by Stewart Smith
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documented file format (using the google protobuf library). |
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SHOW commands
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-------------
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Several SHOW commands have been removed, replaced with INFORMATION_SCHEMA |
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or DATA_DICTIONARY views. All SHOW commands are aliases to INFORMATION_SCHEMA |
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queries. Our INFORMATION_SCHEMA implementation does not have the drawbacks |
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of the MySQL implementation. |
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by Andrew Hutchings
Make SHOW TABLE STATUS show the an AUTO_INCREMENT value |
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Here are some specific SHOW differences: |
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1900.2.18
by Stewart Smith
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* SHOW ENGINES: use DATA_DICTIONARY
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2141.2.1
by Andrew Hutchings
Make SHOW TABLE STATUS show the an AUTO_INCREMENT value |
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* SHOW CREATE TABLE: specifies the AUTO_INCREMENT at CREATE/ALTER TABLE time,
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not the current AUTO_INCREMENT |
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* SHOW TABLE STATUS: only shows tables in the current table cache
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* SHOW [ENGINE] STATUS: use the DATA_DICTIONARY tables for that engine
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Removed commands
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----------------
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* ALTER TABLE UPGRADE
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* REPAIR TABLE
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* CREATE FUNCTION
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* CONVERT
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* SET NAMES
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1994.4.38
by Marisa Plumb
multi-table exlanation to address https://bugs.launchpad.net/drizzle/+bug/686641 |
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* Multi-table delete and multi-table update code was removed and can be accomplished through subqueries. More detailed information can be found in the :doc:`dml` section. |
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Operators Removed
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-----------------
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1994.4.39
by Marisa Plumb
new material to address https://bugs.launchpad.net/drizzle/+bug/684803, new functions |
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Bit operators |
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* && |
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* >>
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* <<
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* ~
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* ^
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* '|'
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* &
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1900.2.18
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Removed functions
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-----------------
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* crypt()
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* bit_length()
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* bit_count()
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Keywords removed
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----------------
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1994.4.39
by Marisa Plumb
new material to address https://bugs.launchpad.net/drizzle/+bug/684803, new functions |
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1900.2.18
by Stewart Smith
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* BIT_AND
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* BIT_OR
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* BIT_XOR
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* CIPHER
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* CLIENT
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* CODE
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* CONTRIBUTORS
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* CPU
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* DEFINER
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* DES_KEY_FILE
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* ENGINES
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* EVERY
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* IO
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* IPC
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* ISSUSER
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Objects Removed
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---------------
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* There is no requirement for a 'mysql' schema.
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* There is no SET datatype, use ENUM.
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* There is no SET NAMES command, UTF-8 by default
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* There is no CHARSET or CHARACTER SET commands, everything defaults to UTF8
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* There is no TIME type, use DATETIME or INT.
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* There is no TINYINT, SMALLINT or MEDIUMINT. Integer operations have been optimized around 32 and 64 bit integers.
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* There are no TINYBLOB, MEDIUMBLOB and LONGBLOB datatypes. We have optimized a single BLOB container.
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* There are no TINYTEXT, MEDIUMTEXT and LONGTEXT datatypes. Use TEXT or BLOB.
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* There is no UNSIGNED (as per the standard).
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* There are no spatial data types GEOMETRY, POINT, LINESTRING & POLYGON (go use `Postgres <http://www.postgresql.org>`_). |
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* No YEAR field type.
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* There are no FULLTEXT indexes for the MyISAM storage engine (the only engine FULLTEXT was supported in). Look at either Lucene, Sphinx, or Solr.
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* No "dual" table.
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* The "LOCAL" keyword in "LOAD DATA LOCAL INFILE" is not supported
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