Tell me more ×
Facebook - Stack Overflow is a question and answer site for facebook developers. It's 100% free, no registration required.
Facebook and Stack Exchange are now working together to support the Facebook developer community. Facebook engineers participate here along with the best Facebook developers in the world. If you have a technical question about Facebook, this is the best place to ask.

I've got a stored procedure in a MySQL database that simply updates a date column and returns the previous date. If I call this stored procedure from the MySQL client, it works fine, but when I try to call the stored procedure from Python using MySQLdb I can't seem to get it to give me the return value.

Here's the code to the stored procedure:

CREATE PROCEDURE test_stuff.get_lastpoll()
BEGIN
    DECLARE POLLTIME TIMESTAMP DEFAULT NULL;
    START TRANSACTION;

    SELECT poll_date_time
      FROM test_stuff.poll_table
      LIMIT 1 
      INTO POLLTIME
    FOR UPDATE;

    IF POLLTIME IS NULL THEN
        INSERT INTO 
               test_stuff.poll_table 
               (poll_date_time)
        VALUES 
               ( UTC_TIMESTAMP() );

        COMMIT;
        SELECT NULL as POLL_DATE_TIME;
    ELSE
        UPDATE test_stuff.poll_table SET poll_date_time = UTC_TIMESTAMP();
        COMMIT;
        SELECT DATE_FORMAT(POLLTIME, '%Y-%m-%d %H:%i:%s') as POLL_DATE_TIME;
    END IF;
END

The code I'm using to try to call the stored procedure is similar to this:

#!/usr/bin/python

import sys
import MySQLdb

try:
    mysql = MySQLdb.connect(user=User,passwd=Passwd,db="test_stuff")
    mysql_cursor = mysql.cursor()

    results=mysql_cursor.callproc( "get_lastpoll", () )
    print results

    mysql_cursor.close()
    mysql.close()

except MySQLdb.Error, e:
    print "MySQL Error %d:  %s" % ( e.args[0], e.args[1] )
    sys.exit(1)

I know that you can do IN and OUT parameters, but from what I can determine from the MySQLdb documentation, this isn't possible with MySQLdb. Does anyone have any clue how I could get the results of the stored procedure?

If I run it from a SQL tool, here's the output:

POLL_DATE_TIME       
-------------------  
2009-02-18 22:27:07

If I run the Python script, it returns back an empty set, like this:

()
share|improve this question

3 Answers

You still have to fetch the results.

results = cursor.fetchone()

or

results = cursor.fetchall()

etc..

share|improve this answer
This helped me find the answer, thanks! – m0j0 Feb 19 '09 at 17:06
up vote 4 down vote accepted

What I had to do is modify the Python code to use execute() instead of callproc(), and then use the fetchone() to get the results. I'm answering it myself since mluebke's answer wasn't entirely complete (even though it was helpful!).

mysql_cursor.execute( "call get_lastpoll();" )
results=mysql_cursor.fetchone()
print results[0]

This gives me the correct output:

2009-02-19 17:10:42
share|improve this answer

callproc also works fine, you don't need to use execute:

mysql_cursor.callproc( "get_lastpoll", () )
result = mysql_cursor.fetchone()
share|improve this answer

Your Answer

 
discard

By posting your answer, you agree to the privacy policy and terms of service.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.