The EVENTS table provides information
about scheduled events, which are discussed in
Section 18.4, “Using the Event Scheduler”.
INFORMATION_SCHEMA
Name |
SHOW
Name |
Remarks |
EVENT_CATALOG |
NULL, MySQL extension |
|
EVENT_SCHEMA |
Db |
MySQL extension |
EVENT_NAME |
Name |
MySQL extension |
DEFINER |
Definer |
MySQL extension |
TIME_ZONE |
Time zone |
MySQL extension |
EVENT_BODY |
MySQL extension | |
EVENT_DEFINITION |
MySQL extension | |
EVENT_TYPE |
Type |
MySQL extension |
EXECUTE_AT |
Execute at |
MySQL extension |
INTERVAL_VALUE |
Interval value |
MySQL extension |
INTERVAL_FIELD |
Interval field |
MySQL extension |
SQL_MODE |
MySQL extension | |
STARTS |
Starts |
MySQL extension |
ENDS |
Ends |
MySQL extension |
STATUS |
Status |
MySQL extension |
ON_COMPLETION |
MySQL extension | |
CREATED |
MySQL extension | |
LAST_ALTERED |
MySQL extension | |
LAST_EXECUTED |
MySQL extension | |
EVENT_COMMENT |
MySQL extension | |
ORIGINATOR |
Originator | MySQL extension |
CHARACTER_SET_CLIENT |
MySQL extension | |
COLLATION_CONNECTION |
MySQL extension | |
DATABASE_COLLATION |
MySQL extension |
Notes:
The EVENTS table is a nonstandard
table. It was added in MySQL 5.1.6.
EVENT_CATALOG: The value of this column is
always NULL.
EVENT_SCHEMA: The name of the schema
(database) to which this event belongs.
EVENT_NAME: The name of the event.
DEFINER: The user who created the event.
Always displayed in
'
format.
user_name'@'host_name'
TIME_ZONE: The time zone in effect when
schedule for the event was last modified. If the event's
schedule has not been modified since the event was created,
then this is the time zone that was in effect at the event's
creation. The default value is SYSTEM.
This column was added in MySQL 5.1.17. See Section C.2.25, “Changes in MySQL 5.1.17 (04 April 2007)”, for important information if you are using the Event Scheduler and are upgrading from MySQL 5.1.16 (or earlier) to MySQL 5.1.17 (or later).
EVENT_BODY: The language used for the
statements in the event's DO
clause; in MySQL 5.1, this is always
SQL.
This column was added in MySQL 5.1.12. It is not to be
confused with the column of the same name (now named
EVENT_DEFINITION) that existed in earlier
MySQL versions.
EVENT_DEFINITION: The text of the SQL
statement making up the event's
DO clause; in other words, the
statement executed by this event.
Prior to MySQL 5.1.12, this column was named
EVENT_BODY.
EVENT_TYPE: One of the two values
ONE TIME or RECURRING.
EXECUTE_AT: For a one-time event, this is
the DATETIME value specified in
the AT clause of the
CREATE EVENT statement used to
create the event, or of the last ALTER
EVENT statement that modified the event. The value
shown in this column reflects the addition or subtraction of
any INTERVAL value included in the event's
AT clause. For example, if an event is
created using ON SCHEDULE AT CURRENT_TIMESTAMP +
'1:6' DAY_HOUR, and the event was created at
2006-02-09 14:05:30, the value shown in this column would be
'2006-02-10 20:05:30'.
If the event's timing is determined by an
EVERY clause instead of an
AT clause (that is, if the event is
recurring), the value of this column is
NULL.
INTERVAL_VALUE: For recurring events, this
column contains the numeric portion of the event's
EVERY clause.
For a one-time event (that is, an event whose timing is
determined by an AT clause), this column's
value is NULL.
INTERVAL_FIELD: For recurring events, this
column contains the units portion of the
EVERY clause governing the timing of the
event. Thus, this column contains a value such as
'YEAR',
'QUARTER', 'DAY', and so
on.
In early MySQL 5.1 releases, this value was prefixed with
'INTERVAL_', and was displayed as
'INTERVAL_YEAR',
'INTERVAL_QUARTER',
'INTERVAL_DAY', and so on.
For a one-time event (that is, an event whose timing is
determined by an AT clause), this column's
value is NULL.
SQL_MODE: The SQL mode in effect at the
time the event was created or altered.
STARTS: For a recurring event whose
definition includes a STARTS clause, this
column contains the corresponding
DATETIME value. As with the
EXECUTE_AT column, this value resolves any
expressions used.
If there is no STARTS clause affecting the
timing of the event, this column is empty. (Prior to MySQL
5.1.8, it contained NULL in such cases.)
ENDS: For a recurring event whose
definition includes a ENDS clause, this
column contains the corresponding
DATETIME value. As with the
EXECUTE_AT column (see previous example),
this value resolves any expressions used.
If there is no ENDS clause affecting the
timing of the event, this column contains
NULL.
STATUS: One of the three values
ENABLED, DISABLED, or
SLAVESIDE_DISABLED.
SLAVESIDE_DISABLED was added to the list of
possible values for this column in MySQL 5.1.18. This value
indicates that the creation of the event occurred on another
MySQL server acting as a replication master and was replicated
to the current MySQL server which is acting as a slave, but
the event is not presently being executed on the slave. See
Section 16.3.1.8, “Replication of Invoked Features”, for more
information.
ON_COMPLETION: One of the two values
PRESERVE or NOT
PRESERVE.
CREATED: The date and time when the event
was created. This is a DATETIME
value.
LAST_ALTERED: The date and time when the
event was last modified. This is a
DATETIME value. If the event
has not been modified since its creation, this column holds
the same value as the CREATED column.
LAST_EXECUTED: The date and time when the
event last executed. A DATETIME
value. If the event has never executed, this column's value is
NULL.
Before MySQL 5.1.23, LAST_EXECUTED
indicates when event finished executing. As of 5.1.23,
LAST_EXECUTED instead indicates when the
event started. As a result, the ENDS column
is never less than LAST_EXECUTED.
EVENT_COMMENT: The text of a comment, if
the event has one. If there is no comment, the value of this
column is an empty string.
ORIGINATOR: The server ID of the MySQL
server on which the event was created; used in replication.
The default value is 0. This column was added in MySQL 5.1.18.
CHARACTER_SET_CLIENT is the session value
of the character_set_client
system variable when the event was created.
COLLATION_CONNECTION is the session value
of the collation_connection
system variable when the event was created.
DATABASE_COLLATION is the collation of the
database with which the event is associated. These columns
were added in MySQL 5.1.21.
Example: Suppose the user
jon@ghidora creates an event named
e_daily, and then modifies it a few minutes
later using an ALTER EVENT
statement, as shown here:
DELIMITER |
CREATE EVENT e_daily
ON SCHEDULE
EVERY 1 DAY
COMMENT 'Saves total number of sessions then clears the table each day'
DO
BEGIN
INSERT INTO site_activity.totals (time, total)
SELECT CURRENT_TIMESTAMP, COUNT(*)
FROM site_activity.sessions;
DELETE FROM site_activity.sessions;
END |
DELIMITER ;
ALTER EVENT e_daily
ENABLED;
(Note that comments can span multiple lines.)
This user can then run the following
SELECT statement, and obtain the
output shown:
mysql>SELECT * FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.EVENTS>WHERE EVENT_NAME = 'e_daily'>AND EVENT_SCHEMA = 'myschema'\G*************************** 1. row *************************** EVENT_CATALOG: NULL EVENT_SCHEMA: test EVENT_NAME: e_daily DEFINER: paul@localhost TIME_ZONE: SYSTEM EVENT_BODY: SQL EVENT_DEFINITION: BEGIN INSERT INTO site_activity.totals (time, total) SELECT CURRENT_TIMESTAMP, COUNT(*) FROM site_activity.sessions; DELETE FROM site_activity.sessions; END EVENT_TYPE: RECURRING EXECUTE_AT: NULL INTERVAL_VALUE: 1 INTERVAL_FIELD: DAY SQL_MODE: STARTS: 2008-09-03 12:13:39 ENDS: NULL STATUS: ENABLED ON_COMPLETION: NOT PRESERVE CREATED: 2008-09-03 12:13:39 LAST_ALTERED: 2008-09-03 12:13:39 LAST_EXECUTED: NULL EVENT_COMMENT: Saves total number of sessions then clears the table each day ORIGINATOR: 1 CHARACTER_SET_CLIENT: latin1 COLLATION_CONNECTION: latin1_swedish_ci DATABASE_COLLATION: latin1_swedish_ci
Prior to MySQL 5.1.17, the times displayed in the
STARTS, ENDS, and
LAST_EXECUTED columns were given in terms of
Universal Time (GMT or UTC), regardless of the server's time zone
setting (Bug#16420). Beginning with MySQL 5.1.17, these times are
all given in terms of local time as determined by the MySQL
server's time_zone setting. (The
same was true of the starts,
ends, and last_executed
columns of the mysql.event table as well as the
Starts and Ends columns in
the output of SHOW [FULL] EVENTS.)
The CREATED and LAST_ALTERED
columns use the server time zone (as do the
created and last_altered
columns of the mysql.event table).
See also Section 12.5.5.19, “SHOW EVENTS Syntax”.

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