Create Trigger Syntax
CREATE
[DEFINER = {user|CURRENT_USER}]
TRIGGERtrigger_nametrigger_timetrigger_event
ONThis statement creates a new trigger. A trigger is a named database object that is associated with a table, and that activates when a particular event occurs for the table. The trigger becomes associated with the table namedtbl_nameFOR EACH ROWtrigger_body
tbl_name, which must 
refer to a
      permanent table. You cannot associate a trigger with a
      TEMPORARY table or a view.
      CREATE 
TRIGGER was added in MySQL
      5.0.2.
    In MySQL 5.0
CREATE
      TRIGGER requires the
      SUPER privilege.The
DEFINER clause determines the 
security
      context to be used when checking access privileges at trigger
      activation time. It was added in MySQL 5.0.17. See later in this
      section for more information.
    trigger_time is the 
trigger action
      time. It can be BEFORE or
      AFTER to indicate that the trigger 
activates
      before or after each row to be modified.
    trigger_event indicates 
the kind of
      statement that activates the trigger. The
      trigger_event can be one
 of the
      following:
    - 
          INSERT: The trigger is activated whenever a new row is inserted into the table; for example, throughINSERT,LOAD DATA, andREPLACEstatements.
- 
          UPDATE: The trigger is activated whenever a row is modified; for example, throughUPDATEstatements.
- 
          DELETE: The trigger is activated whenever a row is deleted from the table; for example, throughDELETEandREPLACEstatements. However,DROP TABLEandTRUNCATE TABLEstatements on the table do not activate this trigger, because they do not useDELETE. See Section 12.1.21, “TRUNCATE TABLESyntax”.
trigger_event does not 
represent a
      literal type of SQL statement that activates the trigger so much
      as it represents a type of table operation. For example, an
      INSERT 
trigger is activated by not
      only INSERT 
statements but also
      LOAD DATA statements 
because both
      statements insert rows into a table.
    A potentially confusing example of this is the
INSERT
      INTO ... ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE ... syntax: a
      BEFORE INSERT trigger will activate 
for every
      row, followed by either an AFTER INSERT
 trigger
      or both the BEFORE UPDATE and AFTER
      UPDATE triggers, depending on whether there was a
      duplicate key for the row.
    There cannot be two triggers for a given table that have the same trigger action time and event. For example, you cannot have two
BEFORE UPDATE triggers for a table. 
But you can
      have a BEFORE UPDATE and a BEFORE
      INSERT trigger, or a BEFORE UPDATE
      and an AFTER UPDATE trigger.
    trigger_body is the 
statement to
      execute when the trigger activates. If you want to execute
      multiple statements, use the
      BEGIN ... END
      compound statement construct. This also enables you to use the
      same statements that are permissible within stored routines. See
      Section 12.6.1, “BEGIN
 ... END
      Compound-Statement Syntax”. Some statements are not permitted 
in
      triggers; see Section E.1, “Restrictions
 on Stored Programs”.
    You can refer to columns in the subject table (the table associated with the trigger) by using the aliases
OLD and NEW.
      OLD.col_name
 refers
      to a column of an existing row before it is updated or deleted.
      NEW.col_name
 refers
      to the column of a new row to be inserted or an existing row after
      it is updated.
    MySQL stores the
sql_mode system
      variable setting that is in effect at the time a trigger is
      created, and always executes the trigger with this setting in
      force, regardless of the current server
 SQL
      mode.
    
Note
Currently, cascaded foreign key actions do not activate
        triggers.
      
DEFINER clause specifies the 
MySQL account
      to be used when checking access privileges at trigger activation
      time. If a user value is
 given, it
      should be a MySQL account specified as
      'user_name'@'host_name'
      (the same format used in the GRANT
      statement), CURRENT_USER, or
      CURRENT_USER(). The default
      DEFINER value is the user who 
executes the
      CREATE 
TRIGGER statement. This is
      the same as specifying DEFINER = 
CURRENT_USER
      explicitly.
    If you specify the
DEFINER clause, 
these rules
      determine the legal DEFINER user 
values:
    - 
          If you do not have the SUPERprivilege, the only legaluservalue is your own account, either specified literally or by usingCURRENT_USER. You cannot set the definer to some other account.
- 
          If you have the SUPERprivilege, you can specify any syntactically legal account name. If the account does not actually exist, a warning is generated.
- 
          Although it is possible to create a trigger with a nonexistent
          DEFINERaccount, it is not a good idea for such triggers to be activated until the account actually does exist. Otherwise, the behavior with respect to privilege checking is undefined.
SUPER privilege for the use of
      CREATE 
TRIGGER, only the second of
      the preceding rules applies. (MySQL 5.1.6 implements the
      TRIGGER privilege and 
requires that
      privilege for trigger creation, so at that point both rules come
      into play and SUPER is required
      only for specifying a DEFINER value 
other than
      your own account.)
    From MySQL 5.0.17 on, MySQL takes the
DEFINER
      user into account when checking trigger privileges as follows:
    - 
          At CREATE TRIGGERtime, the user who issues the statement must have theSUPERprivilege.
- 
          At trigger activation time, privileges are checked against the
          DEFINERuser. This user must have these privileges:
 - 
              The SUPERprivilege.
- 
              The SELECTprivilege for the subject table if references to table columns occur usingOLD.orcol_nameNEW.in the trigger definition.col_name
- 
              The UPDATEprivilege for the subject table if table columns are targets ofSET NEW.assignments in the trigger definition.col_name=value
- Whatever other privileges normally are required for the statements executed by the trigger.
 
- 
              The 
DEFINER is not 
available
      and MySQL checks trigger privileges like this:
    - 
          At CREATE TRIGGERtime, the user who issues the statement must have theSUPERprivilege.
- At trigger activation time, privileges are checked against the user whose actions cause the trigger to be activated. This user must have whatever privileges normally are required for the statements executed by the trigger.
Within a trigger, the
CURRENT_USER() function returns the
      account used to check privileges at trigger activation time.
      Consistent with the privilege-checking rules just given,
      CURRENT_USER() returns the
      DEFINER user from MySQL 5.0.17 on. 
Before
      5.0.17, CURRENT_USER() returns the
      user whose actions caused the trigger to be activated. For
      information about user auditing within triggers, see
      Section 5.5.8, “Auditing
 MySQL Account Activity”.
    If you use
LOCK TABLES to 
lock a
      table that has triggers, the tables used within the trigger are
      also locked, as described in
      Section 12.3.5.2, “LOCK TABLES and Triggers”.
    
Note
Before MySQL 5.0.10, triggers cannot contain direct references
        to tables by name. Beginning with MySQL 5.0.10, you can write
        triggers such as the one named 
testref
 shown
        in this example:
      CREATE TABLE test1(a1 INT);
CREATE TABLE test2(a2 INT);
CREATE TABLE test3(a3 INT NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT PRIMARY KEY);
CREATE TABLE test4(
  a4 INT NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT PRIMARY KEY,
  b4 INT DEFAULT 0
);
delimiter |
CREATE TRIGGER testref BEFORE INSERT ON test1
  FOR EACH ROW BEGIN
    INSERT INTO test2 SET a2 = NEW.a1;
    DELETE FROM test3 WHERE a3 = NEW.a1;
    UPDATE test4 SET b4 = b4 + 1 WHERE a4 = NEW.a1;
  END;
|
delimiter ;
INSERT INTO test3 (a3) VALUES
  (NULL), (NULL), (NULL), (NULL), (NULL),
  (NULL), (NULL), (NULL), (NULL), (NULL);
INSERT INTO test4 (a4) VALUES
  (0), (0), (0), (0), (0), (0), (0), (0), (0), (0);
Suppose that you insert the following values into table
      test1 as shown here:
    mysql>As a result, the data in the four tables will be as follows:INSERT INTO test1 VALUES->(1), (3), (1), (7), (1), (8), (4), (4);Query OK, 8 rows affected (0.01 sec) Records: 8 Duplicates: 0 Warnings: 0
mysql>SELECT * FROM test1;+------+ | a1 | +------+ | 1 | | 3 | | 1 | | 7 | | 1 | | 8 | | 4 | | 4 | +------+ 8 rows in set (0.00 sec) mysql>SELECT * FROM test2;+------+ | a2 | +------+ | 1 | | 3 | | 1 | | 7 | | 1 | | 8 | | 4 | | 4 | +------+ 8 rows in set (0.00 sec) mysql>SELECT * FROM test3;+----+ | a3 | +----+ | 2 | | 5 | | 6 | | 9 | | 10 | +----+ 5 rows in set (0.00 sec) mysql>SELECT * FROM test4;+----+------+ | a4 | b4 | +----+------+ | 1 | 3 | | 2 | 0 | | 3 | 1 | | 4 | 2 | | 5 | 0 | | 6 | 0 | | 7 | 1 | | 8 | 1 | | 9 | 0 | | 10 | 0 | +----+------+ 10 rows in set (0.00 sec)
sumber : http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.0/en/create-trigger.html
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