Using SET CHARACTER SET utf8
after using SET NAMES utf8
will actually reset the character_set_connection
and collation_connection
to
@@character_set_database
and @@collation_database
respectively.
The manual states that
SET NAMES x
is equivalent to
SET character_set_client = x;
SET character_set_results = x;
SET character_set_connection = x;
and SET CHARACTER SET x
is equivalent to
SET character_set_client = x;
SET character_set_results = x;
SET collation_connection = @@collation_database;
whereas SET collation_connection = x
also internally executes SET character_set_connection = <<character_set_of_collation_x>>
and SET character_set_connection = x
internally also executes SET collation_connection = <<default_collation_of_character_set_x
.
So essentially you're resetting character_set_connection
to @@character_set_database
and collation_connection
to @@collation_database
. The manual explains the usage of these variables:
What character set should the server
translate a statement to after
receiving it?
For this, the server uses the
character_set_connection and
collation_connection system variables.
It converts statements sent by the
client from character_set_client to
character_set_connection (except for
string literals that have an
introducer such as _latin1 or _utf8).
collation_connection is important for
comparisons of literal strings. For
comparisons of strings with column
values, collation_connection does not
matter because columns have their own
collation, which has a higher
collation precedence.
To sum this up, the encoding/transcoding procedure MySQL uses to process the query and its results is a multi-step-thing:
- MySQL treats the incoming query as being encoded in
character_set_client
.
- MySQL transcodes the statement from
character_set_client
into character_set_connection
- when comparing string values to column values MySQL transcodes the string value from
character_set_connection
into the character set of the given database column and uses the column collation to do sorting and comparison.
- MySQL builds up the result set encoded in
character_set_results
(this includes result data as well as result metadata such as column names and so on)
So it could be the case that a SET CHARACTER SET utf8
would not be sufficient to provide full UTF-8 support. Think of a default database character set of latin1
and columns defined with utf8
-charset and go through the steps described above. As latin1
cannot cover all the characters that UTF-8 can cover you may lose character information in step 3.
- Step 3: Given that your query is encoded in UTF-8 and contains characters that cannot be represented with
latin1
, these characters will be lost on transcoding from utf8
to latin1
(the default database character set) making your query fail.
So I think it's safe to say that SET NAMES ...
is the correct way to handle character set issues. Even though I might add that setting up your MySQL server variables correctly (all the required variables can be set statically in your my.cnf
) frees you from the performance overhead of the extra query required on every connect.
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