MySQL 5.7 Reference Manual Including MySQL NDB Cluster 7.5 and NDB Cluster 7.6
HANDLERtbl_nameOPEN [ [AS]alias] HANDLERtbl_nameREADindex_name{ = | <= | >= | < | > } (value1,value2,...) [ WHEREwhere_condition] [LIMIT ... ] HANDLERtbl_nameREADindex_name{ FIRST | NEXT | PREV | LAST } [ WHEREwhere_condition] [LIMIT ... ] HANDLERtbl_nameREAD { FIRST | NEXT } [ WHEREwhere_condition] [LIMIT ... ] HANDLERtbl_nameCLOSE
The HANDLER statement provides direct access to
table storage engine interfaces. It is available for
InnoDB and MyISAM tables.
The HANDLER ... OPEN statement opens a table,
making it accessible using subsequent HANDLER ...
READ statements. This table object is not shared by
other sessions and is not closed until the session calls
HANDLER ... CLOSE or the session terminates.
If you open the table using an alias, further references to the
open table with other HANDLER statements must
use the alias rather than the table name. If you do not use an
alias, but open the table using a table name qualified by the
database name, further references must use the unqualified table
name. For example, for a table opened using
mydb.mytable, further references must use
mytable.
The first HANDLER ... READ syntax fetches a row
where the index specified satisfies the given values and the
WHERE condition is met. If you have a
multiple-column index, specify the index column values as a
comma-separated list. Either specify values for all the columns in
the index, or specify values for a leftmost prefix of the index
columns. Suppose that an index my_idx includes
three columns named col_a,
col_b, and col_c, in that
order. The HANDLER statement can specify values
for all three columns in the index, or for the columns in a
leftmost prefix. For example:
HANDLER ... READ my_idx = (col_a_val,col_b_val,col_c_val) ... HANDLER ... READ my_idx = (col_a_val,col_b_val) ... HANDLER ... READ my_idx = (col_a_val) ...
To employ the HANDLER interface to refer to a
table's PRIMARY KEY, use the quoted identifier
`PRIMARY`:
HANDLER tbl_name READ `PRIMARY` ...
The second HANDLER ... READ syntax fetches a
row from the table in index order that matches the
WHERE condition.
The third HANDLER ... READ syntax fetches a row
from the table in natural row order that matches the
WHERE condition. It is faster than
HANDLER when a full table
scan is desired. Natural row order is the order in which rows are
stored in a tbl_name READ
index_nameMyISAM table data file. This
statement works for InnoDB tables as well, but
there is no such concept because there is no separate data file.
Without a LIMIT clause, all forms of
HANDLER ... READ fetch a single row if one is
available. To return a specific number of rows, include a
LIMIT clause. It has the same syntax as for the
SELECT statement. See
Section 13.2.9, “SELECT Statement”.
HANDLER ... CLOSE closes a table that was
opened with HANDLER ... OPEN.
There are several reasons to use the HANDLER
interface instead of normal SELECT
statements:
HANDLER is faster than
SELECT:
A designated storage engine handler object is allocated
for the HANDLER ... OPEN. The object is
reused for subsequent HANDLER
statements for that table; it need not be reinitialized
for each one.
There is less parsing involved.
There is no optimizer or query-checking overhead.
The handler interface does not have to provide a
consistent look of the data (for example,
dirty reads are
permitted), so the storage engine can use optimizations
that SELECT does not
normally permit.
HANDLER makes it easier to port to MySQL
applications that use a low-level ISAM-like
interface. (See Section 14.21, “InnoDB memcached Plugin” for an
alternative way to adapt applications that use the key-value
store paradigm.)
HANDLER enables you to traverse a database
in a manner that is difficult (or even impossible) to
accomplish with SELECT. The
HANDLER interface is a more natural way to
look at data when working with applications that provide an
interactive user interface to the database.
HANDLER is a somewhat low-level statement. For
example, it does not provide consistency. That is,
HANDLER ... OPEN does not
take a snapshot of the table, and does not
lock the table. This means that after a HANDLER ...
OPEN statement is issued, table data can be modified (by
the current session or other sessions) and these modifications
might be only partially visible to HANDLER ...
NEXT or HANDLER ... PREV scans.
An open handler can be closed and marked for reopen, in which case the handler loses its position in the table. This occurs when both of the following circumstances are true:
Any session executes FLUSH
TABLES or DDL statements on the handler's table.
The session in which the handler is open executes
non-HANDLER statements that use tables.
TRUNCATE TABLE for a table closes
all handlers for the table that were opened with
HANDLER OPEN.
If a table is flushed with
FLUSH
TABLES was opened with tbl_name WITH READ
LOCKHANDLER, the
handler is implicitly flushed and loses its position.