Expand description
Conversions between Rust and MySQL/MariaDB types.
§Types
| Rust type | MySQL/MariaDB type(s) |
|---|---|
bool | TINYINT(1), BOOLEAN, BOOL (see below) |
i8 | TINYINT |
i16 | SMALLINT |
i32 | INT |
i64 | BIGINT |
u8 | TINYINT UNSIGNED |
u16 | SMALLINT UNSIGNED |
u32 | INT UNSIGNED |
u64 | BIGINT UNSIGNED |
f32 | FLOAT |
f64 | DOUBLE |
&str, String | VARCHAR, CHAR, TEXT |
&[u8], Vec<u8> | VARBINARY, BINARY, BLOB |
IpAddr | VARCHAR, TEXT |
Ipv4Addr | INET4 (MariaDB-only), VARCHAR, TEXT |
Ipv6Addr | INET6 (MariaDB-only), VARCHAR, TEXT |
MySqlTime | TIME (encode and decode full range) |
Duration | TIME (for decoding positive values only) |
§Note: BOOLEAN/BOOL Type
MySQL and MariaDB treat BOOLEAN as an alias of the TINYINT type:
For the most part, you can simply use the Rust type bool when encoding or decoding a value
using the dynamic query interface, or passing a boolean as a parameter to the query macros
(query!() et al.).
However, because the MySQL wire protocol does not distinguish between TINYINT and BOOLEAN,
the query macros cannot know that a TINYINT column is semantically a boolean.
By default, they will map a TINYINT column as i8 instead, as that is the safer assumption.
Thus, you must use the type override syntax in the query to tell the macros you are expecting
a bool column. See the docs for query!() and query_as!() for details on this syntax.
§NOTE: MySQL’s TIME type is signed
MySQL’s TIME type can be used as either a time-of-day value, or a signed interval.
Thus, it may take on negative values.
Decoding a std::time::Duration returns an error if the TIME value is negative.
§chrono
Requires the chrono Cargo feature flag.
| Rust type | MySQL/MariaDB type(s) |
|---|---|
chrono::DateTime<Utc> | TIMESTAMP |
chrono::DateTime<Local> | TIMESTAMP |
chrono::NaiveDateTime | DATETIME |
chrono::NaiveDate | DATE |
chrono::NaiveTime | TIME (time-of-day only) |
chrono::TimeDelta | TIME (decodes full range; see note for encoding) |
§NOTE: MySQL’s TIME type is dual-purpose
MySQL’s TIME type can be used as either a time-of-day value, or an interval.
However, chrono::NaiveTime is designed only to represent a time-of-day.
Decoding a TIME value as chrono::NaiveTime will return an error if the value is out of range.
The MySqlTime type supports the full range and it also implements TryInto<chrono::NaiveTime>.
Decoding a chrono::TimeDelta also supports the full range.
To encode a chrono::TimeDelta, convert it to MySqlTime first using TryFrom/TryInto.
§time
Requires the time Cargo feature flag.
| Rust type | MySQL/MariaDB type(s) |
|---|---|
time::PrimitiveDateTime | DATETIME |
time::OffsetDateTime | TIMESTAMP |
time::Date | DATE |
time::Time | TIME (time-of-day only) |
time::Duration | TIME (decodes full range; see note for encoding) |
§NOTE: MySQL’s TIME type is dual-purpose
MySQL’s TIME type can be used as either a time-of-day value, or an interval.
However, time::Time is designed only to represent a time-of-day.
Decoding a TIME value as time::Time will return an error if the value is out of range.
The MySqlTime type supports the full range, and it also implements TryInto<time::Time>.
Decoding a time::Duration also supports the full range.
To encode a time::Duration, convert it to MySqlTime first using TryFrom/TryInto.
§bigdecimal
Requires the bigdecimal Cargo feature flag.
| Rust type | MySQL/MariaDB type(s) |
|---|---|
bigdecimal::BigDecimal | DECIMAL |
§decimal
Requires the decimal Cargo feature flag.
| Rust type | MySQL/MariaDB type(s) |
|---|---|
rust_decimal::Decimal | DECIMAL |
§uuid
Requires the uuid Cargo feature flag.
| Rust type | MySQL/MariaDB type(s) |
|---|---|
uuid::Uuid | BINARY(16) (see note) |
uuid::fmt::Hyphenated | CHAR(36), VARCHAR, TEXT, UUID (MariaDB-only) |
uuid::fmt::Simple | CHAR(32), VARCHAR, TEXT |
§Note: Uuid uses binary format
MySQL does not have a native datatype for UUIDs.
The UUID() function returns a 36-character TEXT value,
which encourages storing UUIDs as text.
MariaDB’s UUID type stores and retrieves as text, though it has a better representation
for index sorting (see MariaDB manual: UUID data-type for details).
As an opinionated library, SQLx chose to map uuid::Uuid to/from binary format by default
(16 bytes, the raw value of a UUID; SQL type BINARY(16)).
This saves 20 bytes over the text format for each value.
The impl Decode<MySql> for Uuid does not support the text format, and will return an error.
If you want to use the text format compatible with the UUID() function,
use [uuid::fmt::Hyphenated][::uuid::fmt::Hyphenated] in the place of Uuid.
The MySQL official blog has an article showing how to support both binary and text format UUIDs by storing the binary and adding a generated column for the text format, though this is rather verbose and fiddly: https://dev.mysql.com/blog-archive/storing-uuid-values-in-mysql-tables/
§json
Requires the json Cargo feature flag.
| Rust type | MySQL/MariaDB type(s) |
|---|---|
Json<T> | JSON |
serde_json::JsonValue | JSON |
&serde_json::value::RawValue | JSON |
§Nullable
In addition, Option<T> is supported where T implements Type. An Option<T> represents
a potentially NULL value from MySQL/MariaDB.
Structs§
- Container for a MySQL
TIMEvalue, which may be an interval or a time-of-day.
Enums§
- Errors returned by
MySqlTime::new(). - The sign for a
MySqlTimetype.