View Source Ecto.Adapters.MyXQL (Ecto SQL v3.12.1)

Adapter module for MySQL.

It uses MyXQL for communicating to the database.

Options

MySQL options split in different categories described below. All options can be given via the repository configuration:

Connection options

  • :protocol - Set to :socket for using UNIX domain socket, or :tcp for TCP (default: :socket)
  • :socket - Connect to MySQL via UNIX sockets in the given path.
  • :hostname - Server hostname
  • :port - Server port (default: 3306)
  • :username - Username
  • :password - User password
  • :database - the database to connect to
  • :pool - The connection pool module, may be set to Ecto.Adapters.SQL.Sandbox
  • :ssl - Accepts a list of options to enable TLS for the client connection, or false to disable it. See the documentation for Erlang's ssl module for a list of options (default: false)
  • :connect_timeout - The timeout for establishing new connections (default: 5000)
  • :cli_protocol - The protocol used for the mysql client connection (default: "tcp"). This option is only used for mix ecto.load and mix ecto.dump, via the mysql command. For more information, please check MySQL docs
  • :socket_options - Specifies socket configuration
  • :show_sensitive_data_on_connection_error - show connection data and configuration whenever there is an error attempting to connect to the database

The :socket_options are particularly useful when configuring the size of both send and receive buffers. For example, when Ecto starts with a pool of 20 connections, the memory usage may quickly grow from 20MB to 50MB based on the operating system default values for TCP buffers. It is advised to stick with the operating system defaults but they can be tweaked if desired:

socket_options: [recbuf: 8192, sndbuf: 8192]

We also recommend developers to consult the MyXQL.start_link/1 documentation for a complete listing of all supported options.

Storage options

  • :charset - the database encoding (default: "utf8mb4")
  • :collation - the collation order
  • :dump_path - where to place dumped structures
  • :dump_prefixes - list of prefixes that will be included in the structure dump. For MySQL, this list must be of length 1. Multiple prefixes are not supported. When specified, the prefixes will have their definitions dumped along with the data in their migration table. When it is not specified, only the configured database and its migration table are dumped.

After connect callback

If you want to execute a callback as soon as connection is established to the database, you can use the :after_connect configuration. For example, in your repository configuration you can add:

after_connect: {MyXQL, :query!, ["SET variable = value", []]}

You can also specify your own module that will receive the MyXQL connection as argument.

Limitations

There are some limitations when using Ecto with MySQL that one needs to be aware of.

Engine

Tables created by Ecto are guaranteed to use InnoDB, regardless of the MySQL version.

UUIDs

MySQL does not support UUID types. Ecto emulates them by using binary(16).

Read after writes

Because MySQL does not support RETURNING clauses in INSERT and UPDATE, it does not support the :read_after_writes option of Ecto.Schema.field/3.

DDL Transaction

MySQL does not support migrations inside transactions as it automatically commits after some commands like CREATE TABLE. Therefore MySQL migrations does not run inside transactions.

Old MySQL versions

JSON support

MySQL introduced a native JSON type in v5.7.8, if your server is using this version or higher, you may use :map type for your column in migration:

add :some_field, :map

If you're using older server versions, use a TEXT field instead:

add :some_field, :text

in either case, the adapter will automatically encode/decode the value from JSON.

usec in datetime

Old MySQL versions did not support usec in datetime while more recent versions would round or truncate the usec value.

Therefore, in case the user decides to use microseconds in datetimes and timestamps with MySQL, be aware of such differences and consult the documentation for your MySQL version.

If your version of MySQL supports microsecond precision, you will be able to utilize Ecto's usec types.

Multiple Result Support

MyXQL supports the execution of queries that return multiple results, such as text queries with multiple statements separated by semicolons or stored procedures. These can be executed with Ecto.Adapters.SQL.query_many/4 or the YourRepo.query_many/3 shortcut.

Be default, these queries will be executed with the :query_type option set to :text. To take advantage of prepared statements when executing a stored procedure, set the :query_type option to :binary.