安装方式
手动下载安装
下载 ZIP 后解压到技能目录即可安装。若在桌面客户端 WebView中直接下载出现异常,本站会改为提示页 + 原始链接,请按页内说明操作。
下载 ZIP (shub-mysql-v1.0.1.zip)触发指令
/mysql
跨平台安装指引
该技能声明兼容以下 1 个平台,将 ZIP 解压到对应目录即可被识别。
unzip shub-mysql-v1.0.1.zip -d ~/.claude/skills/
mkdir -p 创建;启用 Skill 后请重启对应 Agent 让配置生效。
使用指南
MySQL(通用)
围绕 MySQL(通用):建表、索引、事务与备份等通用操作;与「mysql-skill」「tg-mysql-design」按场景选用。 无需在每次任务前把零散英文说明手工拼进上下文,也 减少 与客户端默认行为脱节的试错;具体命令、钩子与 JSON 参数仍以 ZIP 包内 SKILL.md 为权威。下文结构与站内 MCP CLI 类专题稿相同:何时用、前置、流程、速查与故障。
何时使用
- 建表、索引、事务与备份等通用操作
- 与「mysql-skill」「tg-mysql-design」按场景选用
- 已获取本技能 ZIP,并准备在 Claude Code / OpenClaw 中按 SKILL.md 挂载。
- 希望用中文专题稿快速判断「该不该启用」,再深入英文 SKILL 查参数与边界。
- 需要与团队对齐同一套触发方式、目录约定或回调格式时。
前置条件
- 通用:可运行 Claude Code 或文档要求的客户端;有可读写的项目工作区(或 SKILL.md 指定的沙箱目录)。
- 权威细节:API Key / OAuth、钩子路径、环境变量以 ZIP 内 SKILL.md 为准。
典型流程
- 从 ClawHub / 站内分发获取技能 ZIP,校验版本与校验和(若提供)。
- 阅读 SKILL.md 的安装段落:目录落点、客户端类型(Claude Code / OpenClaw / 脚本)。
- 用文档中的最小示例完成第一次调用(单文件修改、单次查询或单次委派)。
- 确认工作目录、权限边界与输出路径后,再处理多文件或长耗时任务。
- 需要回调 / Webhook / 通知时,按 SKILL.md 配置端点并在测试环境先验通。
与 ZIP / SKILL.md 的关系
站内专题稿与 MCP CLI 类 oss 稿同样:概括何时用、怎么接、怎么排错;命令模板、钩子名、JSON 字段、版本矩阵一律以 ZIP 内 SKILL.md 与 ClawHub 上游为准。
命令示例(摘自包内 SKILL.md)
以下为从上游 SKILL.md(或入库正文)自动抽取的终端/脚本片段;路径、环境变量与参数以当前 ZIP 与官方说明为准。
ClawHub slug:mysql(安装命令以 SKILL.md / claw CLI 为准)。
站内入库时的触发命令(完整语义见 ZIP):
# 使用本技能时可在对话中引用或执行上述指令;完整参数与示例见下载包内 SKILL.md。
/mysql
最佳实践
- 先 SKILL.md 再猜参数;站内专题稿不替代 schema 与必填字段说明。
- 委派任务时写清验收标准(命令、文件路径、测试命令),减少来回追问。
- 长任务用文档推荐的回调 / 日志落盘代替高频轮询,省 Token 也省机器负载。
- 多技能同时启用时,注意钩子加载顺序与重复工具调用(以 SKILL.md 冲突说明为准)。
调试与排错
- 打开 stderr 与客户端日志;PTY/tmux 场景同时看面板最后几十行输出。
- 参数错误时对照 SKILL.md 中的 JSON/CLI 示例(引号、转义、工作目录)。
- 网络类失败:查代理、防火墙、MCP 传输方式(stdio / HTTP / SSE)。
速查
| 动作 | 说明 |
|------|------|
| 获取技能包 | ClawHub / 站内 ZIP,核对版本 |
| 权威步骤 | 优先阅读 ZIP 内 SKILL.md |
| 首次试跑 | 使用 SKILL.md 最小示例 |
| 验收 | 对照路径、测试命令或回调负载 |
常见故障
- 无输出或立即退出 → 工作目录错误、依赖未装、或 Claude Code 未登录;按 SKILL.md 自检清单执行。
- 权限被拒绝 → 检查沙箱路径、
--permission-mode与工具白名单。 - 与简介不符 → 以英文 SKILL 与上游仓库为准,站内稿仅作结构化导读。
## Quick Reference
| Topic | File |
|-------|------|
| Index design deep dive | `indexes.md` |
| Transactions and locking | `transactions.md` |
| Query optimization | `queries.md` |
| Production config | `production.md` |
## Character Set Traps
- `utf8` is broken—only 3 bytes, can't store emoji; always use `utf8mb4`
- `utf8mb4_unicode_ci` for case-insensitive sorting; `utf8mb4_bin` for exact byte comparison
- Collation mismatch in JOINs kills performance—ensure consistent collation across tables
- Connection charset must match: `SET NAMES utf8mb4` or connection string parameter
- Index on utf8mb4 column larger—may hit index size limits; consider prefix index
## Index Differences from PostgreSQL
- No partial indexes—can't `WHERE active = true` in index definition
- No expression indexes until MySQL 8.0.13—must use generated columns before that
- TEXT/BLOB needs prefix length: `INDEX (description(100))`—without length, error
- No INCLUDE for covering—add columns to index itself: `INDEX (a, b, c)` to cover c
- Foreign keys auto-indexed only in InnoDB—verify engine before assuming
## UPSERT Patterns
- `INSERT ... ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE`—not standard SQL; needs unique key conflict
- `LAST_INSERT_ID()` for auto-increment—no RETURNING clause like PostgreSQL
- `REPLACE INTO` deletes then inserts—changes auto-increment ID, triggers DELETE cascade
- Check affected rows: 1 = inserted, 2 = updated (counter-intuitive)
## Locking Traps
- `SELECT ... FOR UPDATE` locks rows—but gap locks may lock more than expected
- InnoDB uses next-key locking—prevents phantom reads but can cause deadlocks
- Lock wait timeout default 50s—`innodb_lock_wait_timeout` for adjustment
- `FOR UPDATE SKIP LOCKED` exists in MySQL 8+—queue pattern
- InnoDB default isolation is REPEATABLE READ, not READ COMMITTED like PostgreSQL
- Deadlocks are expected—code must catch and retry, not just fail
## GROUP BY Strictness
- `sql_mode` includes `ONLY_FULL_GROUP_BY` by default in MySQL 5.7+
- Non-aggregated columns must be in GROUP BY—unlike old MySQL permissive mode
- `ANY_VALUE(column)` to silence error when you know values are same
- Check sql_mode on legacy databases—may behave differently
## InnoDB vs MyISAM
- Always use InnoDB—transactions, row locking, foreign keys, crash recovery
- MyISAM still default for some system tables—don't use for application data
- Check engine: `SHOW TABLE STATUS`—convert with `ALTER TABLE ... ENGINE=InnoDB`
- Mixed engines in JOINs work but lose transaction guarantees
## Query Quirks
- `LIMIT offset, count` different order than PostgreSQL's `LIMIT count OFFSET offset`
- `!=` and `<>` both work; prefer `<>` for SQL standard
- No transactional DDL—`ALTER TABLE` commits immediately, can't rollback
- Boolean is `TINYINT(1)`—`TRUE`/`FALSE` are just 1/0
- `IFNULL(a, b)` instead of `COALESCE` for two args—though COALESCE works
## Connection Management
- `wait_timeout` kills idle connections—default 8 hours; pooler may not notice
- `max_connections` default 151—often too low; each uses memory
- Connection pools: don't exceed max_connections across all app instances
- `SHOW PROCESSLIST` to see active connections—kill long-running with `KILL <id>`
## Replication Awareness
- Statement-based replication can break with non-deterministic functions—UUID(), NOW()
- Row-based replication safer but more bandwidth—default in MySQL 8
- Read replicas have lag—check `Seconds_Behind_Master` before relying on replica reads
- Don't write to replica—usually read-only but verify
## Performance
- `EXPLAIN ANALYZE` only in MySQL 8.0.18+—older versions just EXPLAIN without actual times
- Query cache removed in MySQL 8—don't rely on it; cache at application level
- `OPTIMIZE TABLE` for fragmented tables—locks table; use pt-online-schema-change for big tables
- `innodb_buffer_pool_size`—set to 70-80% of RAM for dedicated DB server