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MySQL 5.1 Plugin Development

MySQL 5.1 Plugin Development

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MySQL 5.1 Plugin Development

MySQL 5.1 Plugin Development

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Overview of this book

MySQL has introduced a Plugin API with its latest version – a robust, powerful, and easy way of extending the server functionality with loadable modules on the fly. But until now anyone wishing to develop a plugin would almost certainly need to dig into the MySQL source code and search the Web for missing bits of the information.This is the first book on the MySQL Plugin API. Written together with one of the Plugin API primary architects, it contains all the details you need to build a plugin. It shows what a plugin should contain and how to compile, install, and package it. Every chapter illustrates the material with thoroughly explained source code examples.Starting from the basic features, common to all plugin types, and the structure of the plugin framework, this book will guide you through the different plugin types, from simple examples to advanced ones. Server monitoring, full-text search in JPEG comments, typo-tolerant searches, getting the list of all user variables, system usage statistics, or a complete storage engine with indexes – these and other plugins are developed in different chapters of this book, demonstrating the power and versatility of the MySQL Plugin API and explaining the intricate details of MySQL Plugin programming.
Table of Contents (16 chapters)
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MySQL 5.1 Plugin Development
Credits
About the Authors
About the Reviewer
Preface

An Image Metadata processor


In the previous examples we have discussed full-text parser plugins that were actually doing the parsing—extracting words from a text. But as we have seen in Chapter 6, a full-text parser plugin does not necessarily have to do that. Only "tokenizer" plugins do. In this example we will create an "extractor" plugin—a plugin that merely converts the data to plain text and lets MySQL parse it with a built-in parser.

As many know, digital cameras store inside an image file the metadata that contains various details about the photo. It is stored using a format called Exif (Exchangeable image file format).

This full-text parser plugin will take the image filenames from the database, parse the Exif data, and allow MySQL to index it. In other words, one can INSERT rows with filenames in the table, but MATCH … AGAINST() will search in the Exif metadata of these images!

How to access Exif data

To extract the image metadata we will use the libexif library. It is included...

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