Chapter 2. User Defined Functions
Way back in 1998, MySQL 3.21 introduced a framework that allowed users to create new SQL functions easily. It made it possible for developers to write their own functions in C/C++ and load them dynamically into the running server. The functions loaded within this framework were called User Defined Functions or UDFs.
Today not much has changed with UDFs, they are more stable and slightly more secure than they used to be, and they can be declared aggregate for use together with GROUP BY
queries. However, many UDFs that worked in 1998 with MySQL 3.21.24 would still work at the time of writing in 2010, with MySQL 5.1.47.
MySQL UDFs are not part of the newer MySQL Plugin API, but there are future plans to make this happen. In the meantime, they can serve as an introduction to MySQL plugins. And sometimes UDFs can be used together with plugins to complement their functionality. In this chapter, we will cover creating User Defined Functions and write several of...