There are a number of limitations regarding subqueries, which are discussed below.
The following tables and data will be used in the examples that follow:
CREATE TABLE staff(name VARCHAR(10),age TINYINT); CREATE TABLE customer(name VARCHAR(10),age TINYINT);
INSERT INTO staff VALUES ('Bilhah',37), ('Valerius',61), ('Maia',25); INSERT INTO customer VALUES ('Thanasis',48), ('Valerius',61), ('Brion',51);
MariaDB doesn't support LIMIT in subqueries with certain subquery operators. For example:
SELECT * FROM staff WHERE name IN (SELECT name FROM customer ORDER BY name); +----------+------+ | name | age | +----------+------+ | Valerius | 61 | +----------+------+
is valid, but
SELECT * FROM staff WHERE name IN (SELECT NAME FROM customer ORDER BY name LIMIT 1); ERROR 1235 (42000): This version of MariaDB doesn't yet support 'LIMIT & IN/ALL/ANY/SOME subquery'
is not.
It's not possible to both modify and select from the same table in a subquery. For example:
DELETE FROM staff WHERE name = (SELECT name FROM staff WHERE age=61); ERROR 1093 (HY000): Table 'staff' is specified twice, both as a target for 'DELETE' and as a separate source for data
There is only partial support for row comparison operations. The expression in
expr op {ALL|ANY|SOME} subquery,
must be scalar and the subquery can only return a single column.
However, because of the way IN
is implemented (it is rewritten as a sequence of =
comparisons and AND
), the expression in
expression [NOT] IN subquery
is permitted to be an n-tuple and the subquery can return rows of n-tuples.
For example:
SELECT * FROM staff WHERE (name,age) NOT IN ( SELECT name,age FROM customer WHERE age >=51] ); +--------+------+ | name | age | +--------+------+ | Bilhah | 37 | | Maia | 25 | +--------+------+
is permitted, but
SELECT * FROM staff WHERE (name,age) = ALL ( SELECT name,age FROM customer WHERE age >=51 ); ERROR 1241 (21000): Operand should contain 1 column(s)
is not.
Subqueries in the FROM clause cannot be correlated subqueries. They cannot be evaluated for each row of the outer query since they are evaluated to produce a result set during when the query is executed.
A subquery can refer to a stored function which modifies data. This is an extension to the SQL standard, but can result in indeterminate outcomes. For example, take:
SELECT ... WHERE x IN (SELECT f() ...);
where f() inserts rows. The function f() could be executed a different number of times depending on how the optimizer chooses to handle the query.
This sort of construct is therefore not safe to use in replication that is not row-based, as there could be different results on the master and the slave.
© 2019 MariaDB
Licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported License and the GNU Free Documentation License.
https://mariadb.com/kb/en/subquery-limitations/