MySQL 4.0.2 introduced some additional flexibility in the way you specify options. SQL 4.0.2. Some of these changes relate to the way you specify options that have “enabled” and “disabled” states, and to the use of options that might be present in one version of MySQL but not another. Those capabilities are discussed in this section.
Some options are “boolean” and control behavior
that can be turned on or off. Some options control behavior that
can be turned on or off. For example, the
mysql client supports a
--column-names
option that
determines whether or not to display a row of column names at
the beginning of query results. By default, this option is
enabled. However, you may want to disable it in some instances,
such as when sending the output of mysql into
another program that expects to see only data and not an initial
header line.
To disable column names, you can specify the option using any of these forms:
--disable-column-names --skip-column-names --column-names=0
The --disable
and --skip
prefixes and the =0
suffix all have the same
effect: They turn the option off.
The “enabled” form of the option may be specified in any of these ways:
--column-names --enable-column-names --column-names=1
Another change to option processing introduced in MySQL 4.0.2 is
that you can use the --loose
prefix for
command-line options. If an option is prefixed by
--loose
, a program does not exit with an error
if it does not recognize the option, but instead issues only a
warning:
shell> mysql --loose-no-such-option
mysql: WARNING: unknown option '--no-such-option'
The --loose
prefix can be useful when you run
programs from multiple installations of MySQL on the same
machine and list options in an option file, An option that may
not be recognized by all versions of a program can be given
using the --loose
prefix (or
loose
in an option file). Versions of the
program that recognize the option process it normally, and
versions that do not recognize it issue a warning and ignore it.
This strategy requires that all versions involved be 4.0.2 or
later, because earlier versions know nothing of the
--loose
convention.
As of MySQL 4.0.2, mysqld enables a limit to
be placed on how large client programs can set dynamic system
variables. To do this, use a --maximum
prefix
with the variable name. For example,
--maximum-query_cache_size=4M
prevents any
client from making the query cache size larger than 4MB.
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