As of MySQL 5.5, you can use the SIGNAL syntax to throw an exception: signal sqlstate '45000' set message_text = 'My Error Message'; State 45000 is a generic state representing "unhandled user-defined exception".
MySQL triggers cannot: Use SHOW , LOAD DATA , LOAD TABLE , BACKUP DATABASE, RESTORE , FLUSH and RETURN statements.
Restrictions. We can access the OLD rows but cannot update them. We can access the NEW rows but cannot update them. We cannot create an AFTER UPDATE trigger on a VIEW.
You can disable a trigger temporarily using the DISABLE TRIGGER statement. Disable trigger does not delete the trigger. The trigger exists in the current database but it doesn't fire. In the above syntax, trigger_name is the name of the trigger to be disabled under the schema_name schema.
As of MySQL 5.5, you can use the SIGNAL
syntax to throw an exception:
signal sqlstate '45000' set message_text = 'My Error Message';
State 45000 is a generic state representing "unhandled user-defined exception".
Here is a more complete example of the approach:
delimiter //
use test//
create table trigger_test
(
id int not null
)//
drop trigger if exists trg_trigger_test_ins //
create trigger trg_trigger_test_ins before insert on trigger_test
for each row
begin
declare msg varchar(128);
if new.id < 0 then
set msg = concat('MyTriggerError: Trying to insert a negative value in trigger_test: ', cast(new.id as char));
signal sqlstate '45000' set message_text = msg;
end if;
end
//
delimiter ;
-- run the following as seperate statements:
insert into trigger_test values (1), (-1), (2); -- everything fails as one row is bad
select * from trigger_test;
insert into trigger_test values (1); -- succeeds as expected
insert into trigger_test values (-1); -- fails as expected
select * from trigger_test;
Here is one hack that may work. It isn't clean, but it looks like it might work:
Essentially, you just try to update a column that doesn't exist.
Unfortunately, the answer provided by @RuiDC does not work in MySQL versions prior to 5.5 because there is no implementation of SIGNAL for stored procedures.
The solution I've found is to simulate a signal throwing a table_name doesn't exist
error, pushing a customized error message into the table_name
.
The hack could be implemented using triggers or using a stored procedure. I describe both options below following the example used by @RuiDC.
DELIMITER $$
-- before inserting new id
DROP TRIGGER IF EXISTS before_insert_id$$
CREATE TRIGGER before_insert_id
BEFORE INSERT ON test FOR EACH ROW
BEGIN
-- condition to check
IF NEW.id < 0 THEN
-- hack to solve absence of SIGNAL/prepared statements in triggers
UPDATE `Error: invalid_id_test` SET x=1;
END IF;
END$$
DELIMITER ;
Stored procedures allows you to use dynamic sql, which makes possible the encapsulation of the error generation functionality in one procedure. The counterpoint is that we should control the applications insert/update methods, so they use only our stored procedure (not granting direct privileges to INSERT/UPDATE).
DELIMITER $$
-- my_signal procedure
CREATE PROCEDURE `my_signal`(in_errortext VARCHAR(255))
BEGIN
SET @sql=CONCAT('UPDATE `', in_errortext, '` SET x=1');
PREPARE my_signal_stmt FROM @sql;
EXECUTE my_signal_stmt;
DEALLOCATE PREPARE my_signal_stmt;
END$$
CREATE PROCEDURE insert_test(p_id INT)
BEGIN
IF NEW.id < 0 THEN
CALL my_signal('Error: invalid_id_test; Id must be a positive integer');
ELSE
INSERT INTO test (id) VALUES (p_id);
END IF;
END$$
DELIMITER ;
The following procedure is (on mysql5) a way to throw custom errors , and log them at the same time:
create table mysql_error_generator(error_field varchar(64) unique) engine INNODB;
DELIMITER $$
CREATE PROCEDURE throwCustomError(IN errorText VARCHAR(44))
BEGIN
DECLARE errorWithDate varchar(64);
select concat("[",DATE_FORMAT(now(),"%Y%m%d %T"),"] ", errorText) into errorWithDate;
INSERT IGNORE INTO mysql_error_generator(error_field) VALUES (errorWithDate);
INSERT INTO mysql_error_generator(error_field) VALUES (errorWithDate);
END;
$$
DELIMITER ;
call throwCustomError("Custom error message with log support.");
CREATE TRIGGER sample_trigger_msg
BEFORE INSERT
FOR EACH ROW
BEGIN
IF(NEW.important_value) < (1*2) THEN
DECLARE dummy INT;
SELECT
Enter your Message Here!!!
INTO dummy
FROM mytable
WHERE mytable.id=new.id
END IF;
END;
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