matanya@mysql_fdw
MySQL Foreign Data Wrapper for PostgreSQL
This is a foreign data wrapper (FDW) to connect PostgreSQL to MySQL.
Please note that this version of mysql_fdw works with PostgreSQL and EDB Postgres Advanced Server 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, and 18.
Contents
- Features
- Supported platforms
- Installation
- Usage
- Functions
- Generated columns
- Examples
- Limitations
- Contributing
- Support
- Useful links
- License
Features
Common features & enhancements
The following enhancements are added to the latest version of
mysql_fdw:
Write-able FDW
The previous version was only read-only, the latest version provides the
write capability. The user can now issue an insert, update, and delete
statements for the foreign tables using the mysql_fdw. It uses the PG
type casting mechanism to provide opposite type casting between MySQL
and PG data types.
Connection Pooling
The latest version comes with a connection pooler that utilises the same MySQL database connection for all the queries in the same session. The previous version would open a new MySQL database connection for every query. This is a performance enhancement.
Prepared Statement
(Refactoring for select queries to use prepared statement)
The select queries are now using prepared statements instead of simple
query protocol.
Pushdowning
WHERE clause push-down
The latest version will push-down the foreign table where clause to the foreign server. The where condition on the foreign table will be executed on the foreign server hence there will be fewer rows to bring across to PostgreSQL. This is a performance feature.
Column push-down
The previous version was fetching all the columns from the target foreign table. The latest version does the column push-down and only brings back the columns that are part of the select target list. This is a performance feature.
JOIN push-down
mysql_fdw now also supports join push-down. The joins between two
foreign tables from the same remote MySQL server are pushed to a remote
server, instead of fetching all the rows for both the tables and
performing a join locally, thereby enhancing the performance. Currently,
joins involving only relational and arithmetic operators in join-clauses
are pushed down to avoid any potential join failure. Also, only the
INNER and LEFT/RIGHT OUTER joins are supported, and not the FULL OUTER,
SEMI, and ANTI join. This is a performance feature.
AGGREGATE push-down
mysql_fdw now also supports aggregate push-down. Push aggregates to the
remote MySQL server instead of fetching all of the rows and aggregating
them locally. This gives a very good performance boost for the cases
where aggregates can be pushed down. The push-down is currently limited
to aggregate functions min, max, sum, avg, and count, to avoid pushing
down the functions that are not present on the MySQL server. Also,
aggregate filters and orders are not pushed down.
ORDER BY push-down
mysql_fdw now also supports order by push-down. If possible, push order by
clause to the remote server so that we get the ordered result set from the
foreign server itself. It might help us to have an efficient merge join.
NULLs behavior is opposite on the MySQL server. Thus to get an equivalent
result, we add the "expression IS NULL" clause at the beginning of each of
the ORDER BY expressions.
LIMIT OFFSET push-down
mysql_fdw now also supports limit offset push-down. Wherever possible,
perform LIMIT and OFFSET operations on the remote server. This reduces
network traffic between local PostgreSQL and remote MySQL servers.
ALL/NULL options are not supported on the MySQL server, and thus they are
not pushed down. Also, OFFSET without LIMIT is not supported on the MySQL
server hence queries having that construct are not pushed.
Supported platforms
mysql_fdw was developed on Linux, and should run on any
reasonably POSIX-compliant system.
Please refer to mysql_fdw_documentation.
Installation
Prerequisites
To compile the MySQL foreign data wrapper, MySQL's C client library is needed. This library can be downloaded from the official MySQL website.
Source installation
-
To build on POSIX-compliant systems you need to ensure the
pg_configexecutable is in your path when you runmake. This executable is typically in your PostgreSQL installation'sbindirectory. For example:$ export PATH=/usr/local/pgsql/bin/:$PATH -
The
mysql_configmust also be in the path, it resides in the MySQLbindirectory.$ export PATH=/usr/local/mysql/bin/:$PATH -
Compile the code using make.
$ make USE_PGXS=1 -
Finally install the foreign data wrapper.
$ make USE_PGXS=1 install -
Running regression test.
$ make USE_PGXS=1 installcheckHowever, make sure to set the
MYSQL_HOST,MYSQL_PORT,MYSQL_USER_NAME, andMYSQL_PWDenvironment variables correctly. The default settings can be found in themysql_init.shscript.
If you run into any issues, please let us know.
Usage
CREATE SERVER options
mysql_fdw accepts the following options via the CREATE SERVER command:
-
host as string, optional, default
127.0.0.1Address or hostname of the MySQL server.
-
port as integer, optional, default
3306Port number of the MySQL server.
-
secure_auth as boolean, optional, default
trueEnable or disable secure authentication.
-
init_command as string, optional, no default
SQL statement to execute when connecting to the MySQL server.
-
use_remote_estimate as boolean, optional, default
falseControls whether
mysql_fdwissues remoteEXPLAINcommands to obtain cost estimates. -
reconnect as boolean, optional, default
falseEnable or disable automatic reconnection to the MySQL server if the existing connection is found to have been lost.
-
sql_mode as string, optional, default
ANSI_QUOTESSet MySQL sql_mode for established connection.
-
ssl_key as string, optional, no default
The path name of the client private key file.
-
ssl_cert as string, optional, no default
The path name of the client public key certificate file.
-
ssl_ca as string, optional, no default
The path name of the Certificate Authority (CA) certificate file. This option, if used, must specify the same certificate used by the server.
-
ssl_capath as string, optional, no default
The path name of the directory that contains trusted SSL CA certificate files.
-
ssl_cipher as string, optional, no default
The list of permissible ciphers for SSL encryption.
-
fetch_size as integer, optional, default
100This option specifies the number of rows
mysql_fdwshould get in each fetch operation. It can be specified for a foreign table or a foreign server. The option specified on a table overrides an option specified for the server. -
character_set as string, optional, default
autoThe character set to use for MySQL connection. Default is
autowhich means autodetect based on the operating system setting. Before the introduction of thecharacter_setoption, the character set was set similar to the PostgreSQL database encoding. To get this older behavior set the character_set to special valuePGDatabaseEncoding. -
mysql_default_file as string, optional, no default
Set the MySQL default file path if connection details, such as username, password, etc., need to be picked from the default file.
-
truncatable as boolean, optional, default
trueThis option controls whether
mysql_fdwallows foreign tables to be truncated using the TRUNCATE command. It can be specified for a foreign table or a foreign server. A table-level option overrides a server-level option.
CREATE USER MAPPING options
mysql_fdw accepts the following options via the CREATE USER MAPPING
command:
-
username as string, no default
Username to use when connecting to MySQL.
-
password as string, no default
Password to authenticate to the MySQL server with.
CREATE FOREIGN TABLE options
mysql_fdw accepts the following table-level options via the
CREATE FOREIGN TABLE command.
-
dbname as string, mandatory
Name of the MySQL database to query. This is a mandatory option.
-
table_name as string, optional, default name of foreign table
Name of the MySQL table.
-
fetch_size as integer, optional
Same as
fetch_sizeparameter for foreign server. -
max_blob_size as integer, optional
Max blob size to read without truncation.
-
truncatable as boolean, optional, default
trueThe same as foreign server option.
IMPORT FOREIGN SCHEMA options
mysql_fdw supports IMPORT FOREIGN SCHEMA and
accepts the following custom options:
-
import_default as boolean, optional, default
falseThis option controls whether column DEFAULT expressions are included in the definitions of foreign tables imported from a foreign server.
-
import_not_null as boolean, optional, default
trueThis option controls whether column NOT NULL constraints are included in the definitions of foreign tables imported from a foreign server.
-
import_enum_as_text as boolean, optional, default
falseThis option can be used to map MySQL ENUM type to TEXT type in the definitions of foreign tables, otherwise emit a warning for type to be created.
-
import_generated as boolean, optional, default
trueThis option controls whether GENERATED column expressions are included in the definitions of foreign tables imported from a foreign server or not. The IMPORT will fail altogether if an imported generated expression uses a function or operator that does not exist on PostgreSQL.
TRUNCATE support
mysql_fdw implements the foreign data wrapper TRUNCATE API, available
from PostgreSQL 14. MySQL does provide a TRUNCATE command, see https://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/8.4/en/truncate-table.html.
Following restrictions apply:
TRUNCATE ... CASCADEis not supportedTRUNCATE ... RESTART IDENTITYis not supported and ignoredTRUNCATE ... CONTINUE IDENTITYis not supported and ignored- MySQL tables with foreign key references cannot be truncated
Functions
As well as the standard mysql_fdw_handler() and mysql_fdw_validator()
functions, mysql_fdw provides the following user-callable utility functions:
-
mysql_fdw_version()
Returns the version number as an integer.
-
mysql_fdw_display_pushdown_list()
Displays the
mysql_fdw_pushdown.configfile contents.
Generated columns
Note that while mysql_fdw will insert or update the generated column value
in MySQL, there is nothing to stop the value being modified within MySQL,
and hence no guarantee that in subsequent SELECT operations the column will
still contain the expected generated value. This limitation also applies to
postgres_fdw.
For more details on generated columns see:
Examples
Install the extension:
Once for a database you need, as PostgreSQL superuser.
-- load extension first time after install
CREATE EXTENSION mysql_fdw;
Create a foreign server with appropriate configuration:
Once for a foreign datasource you need, as PostgreSQL superuser.
-- create server object
CREATE SERVER mysql_server
FOREIGN DATA WRAPPER mysql_fdw
OPTIONS (host '127.0.0.1', port '3306');
Grant usage on foreign server to normal user in PostgreSQL:
Once for a normal user (non-superuser) in PostgreSQL, as PostgreSQL superuser. It is a good idea to use a superuser only where really necessary, so let's allow a normal user to use the foreign server (this is not required for the example to work, but it's security recommendation).
GRANT USAGE ON FOREIGN SERVER mysql_server TO pguser;
Where pguser is a sample user for works with foreign server (and foreign tables).
User mapping
Create an appropriate user mapping:
-- create user mapping
CREATE USER MAPPING FOR pguser
SERVER mysql_server
OPTIONS (username 'foo', password 'bar');
Where pguser is a sample user for works with foreign server (and foreign tables).
Create foreign table
All CREATE FOREIGN TABLE SQL commands can be executed as a normal PostgreSQL user if there were correct GRANT USAGE ON FOREIGN SERVER. No need PostgreSQL supersuer for security reasons but also works with PostgreSQL supersuer.
Please specify table_name option if MySQL table name is different from foreign table name.
-- create foreign table
CREATE FOREIGN TABLE warehouse (
warehouse_id int,
warehouse_name text,
warehouse_created timestamp
)
SERVER mysql_server
OPTIONS (dbname 'db', table_name 'warehouse');
Some other operations with foreign table data
-- insert new rows in table
INSERT INTO warehouse values (1, 'UPS', current_date);
INSERT INTO warehouse values (2, 'TV', current_date);
INSERT INTO warehouse values (3, 'Table', current_date);
-- select from table
SELECT * FROM warehouse ORDER BY 1;
warehouse_id | warehouse_name | warehouse_created
-------------+----------------+-------------------
1 | UPS | 10-JUL-20 00:00:00
2 | TV | 10-JUL-20 00:00:00
3 | Table | 10-JUL-20 00:00:00
-- delete row from table
DELETE FROM warehouse where warehouse_id = 3;
-- update a row of table
UPDATE warehouse set warehouse_name = 'UPS_NEW' where warehouse_id = 1;
-- explain a table with verbose option
EXPLAIN VERBOSE SELECT warehouse_id, warehouse_name FROM warehouse WHERE warehouse_name LIKE 'TV' limit 1;
QUERY PLAN
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Limit (cost=10.00..11.00 rows=1 width=36)
Output: warehouse_id, warehouse_name
-> Foreign Scan on public.warehouse (cost=10.00..1010.00 rows=1000 width=36)
Output: warehouse_id, warehouse_name
Local server startup cost: 10
Remote query: SELECT `warehouse_id`, `warehouse_name` FROM `db`.`warehouse` WHERE ((`warehouse_name` LIKE BINARY 'TV'))
Import a MySQL database as schema to PostgreSQL:
IMPORT FOREIGN SCHEMA someschema
FROM SERVER mysql_server
INTO public;
Limitations
Yet not described.
For more details, please refer to mysql_fdw documentation.
Contributing
If you experience any bug and have a fix for that, or have a new idea, create a ticket on github page. Before creating a pull request please read the contributing guidelines.
Support
This project will be modified to maintain compatibility with new PostgreSQL and EDB Postgres Advanced Server releases.
If you require commercial support, please contact the EnterpriseDB sales
team, or check whether your existing PostgreSQL support provider can
also support mysql_fdw.
Useful links
Source code
Reference FDW implementation, postgres_fdw
General FDW Documentation
- https://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/ddl-foreign-data.html
- https://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/sql-createforeigndatawrapper.html
- https://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/sql-createforeigntable.html
- https://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/sql-importforeignschema.html
- https://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/fdwhandler.html
- https://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/postgres-fdw.html
Other FDWs
License
Copyright (c) 2011-2025, EnterpriseDB Corporation.
Permission to use, copy, modify, and distribute this software and its documentation for any purpose, without fee, and without a written agreement is hereby granted, provided that the above copyright notice and this paragraph and the following two paragraphs appear in all copies.
See the LICENSE file for full details.
Install
- Install the
dbdevCLI - Generate migration:
dbdev add -o ./migrations -s extensions -v 1.2.0 package -n "matanya@mysql_fdw"
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