Metadata is “the data about the
data.” Anything that describes the
database — as opposed to being the
contents of the database — is
metadata. Thus column names, database names, user names, version
names, and most of the string results from
SHOW
are metadata. This is also
true of the contents of tables in
INFORMATION_SCHEMA
, because those tables by
definition contain information about database objects.
Representation of metadata must satisfy these requirements:
All metadata must be in the same character set. Otherwise,
neither the SHOW
commands nor
SELECT
statements for tables
in INFORMATION_SCHEMA
would work properly
because different rows in the same column of the results of
these operations would be in different character sets.
Metadata must include all characters in all languages. Otherwise, users would not be able to name columns and tables using their own languages.
To satisfy both requirements, MySQL stores metadata in a Unicode character set, namely UTF-8. This does not cause any disruption if you never use accented or non-Latin characters. But if you do, you should be aware that metadata is in UTF-8.
The metadata requirements mean that the return values of the
USER()
,
CURRENT_USER()
,
SESSION_USER()
,
SYSTEM_USER()
,
DATABASE()
, and
VERSION()
functions have the
UTF-8 character set by default.
The server sets the
character_set_system
system
variable to the name of the metadata character set:
mysql> SHOW VARIABLES LIKE 'character_set_system';
+----------------------+-------+
| Variable_name | Value |
+----------------------+-------+
| character_set_system | utf8 |
+----------------------+-------+
Storage of metadata using Unicode does not
mean that the server returns headers of columns and the results
of DESCRIBE
functions in the
character_set_system
character
set by default. When you use SELECT column1 FROM
t
, the name column1
itself is
returned from the server to the client in the character set
determined by the value of the
character_set_results
system
variable, which has a default value of
latin1
. If you want the server to pass
metadata results back in a different character set, use the
SET NAMES
statement to force the server to
perform character set conversion. SET NAMES
sets the character_set_results
and other related system variables. (See
Section 9.1.4, “Connection Character Sets and Collations”.) Alternatively, a client
program can perform the conversion after receiving the result
from the server. It is more efficient for the client perform the
conversion, but this option is not always available for all
clients.
If character_set_results
is set
to NULL
, no conversion is performed and the
server returns metadata using its original character set (the
set indicated by
character_set_system
).
Error messages returned from the server to the client are converted to the client character set automatically, as with metadata.
If you are using (for example) the
USER()
function for comparison or
assignment within a single statement, don't worry. MySQL
performs some automatic conversion for you.
SELECT * FROM t1 WHERE USER() = latin1_column;
This works because the contents of
latin1_column
are automatically converted to
UTF-8 before the comparison.
INSERT INTO t1 (latin1_column) SELECT USER();
This works because the contents of
USER()
are automatically
converted to latin1
before the assignment.
Although automatic conversion is not in the SQL standard, the SQL standard document does say that every character set is (in terms of supported characters) a “subset” of Unicode. Because it is a well-known principle that “what applies to a superset can apply to a subset,” we believe that a collation for Unicode can apply for comparisons with non-Unicode strings. For more information about coercion of strings, see Section 9.1.7.5, “Special Cases Where Collation Determination Is Tricky”.
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