(Not really an answer, but some illustrative examples.)
Case 1: Text is correctly stored as latin1 in latin1 column; use CONVERT TO
mysql> CREATE TABLE alters (
-> c VARCHAR(11) CHARACTER SET latin1 NOT NULL
-> );
mysql> INSERT INTO alters (c) VALUES ('aabc'), (UNHEX('61e06263')), (UNHEX('61e16263'));
mysql> SELECT c, HEX(c) from alters;
+-------+----------+
| c | HEX(c) |
+-------+----------+
| aabc | 61616263 |
| aàbc | 61E06263 |
| aábc | 61E16263 |
+-------+----------+
mysql> ALTER TABLE alters CONVERT TO CHARACTER SET utf8;
mysql> SELECT c, HEX(c) from alters;
+-------+------------+
| c | HEX(c) |
+-------+------------+
| aabc | 61616263 |
| aàbc | 61C3A06263 |
| aábc | 61C3A16263 |
+-------+------------+
mysql> -- Observation: text was correctly converted to utf8.
mysql> SHOW CREATE TABLE alters\G
Create Table: CREATE TABLE `alters` (
`c` varchar(11) NOT NULL
) ENGINE=InnoDB DEFAULT CHARSET=utf8
Case 2: Text is correctly stored as latin1 in latin1 column; use "Double ALTER"
mysql> CREATE TABLE alters (
-> c VARCHAR(11) CHARACTER SET latin1 NOT NULL
-> );
mysql> INSERT INTO alters (c) VALUES ('aabc'), (UNHEX('61e06263')), (UNHEX('61e16263'));
mysql> ALTER TABLE alters MODIFY c VARBINARY(11) NOT NULL;
mysql> ALTER TABLE alters MODIFY c VARCHAR(11) CHARACTER SET utf8 NOT NULL;
Query OK, 3 rows affected, 2 warnings (0.10 sec)
Records: 3 Duplicates: 0 Warnings: 2
mysql> SHOW WARNINGS;
+---------+------+----------------------------------------------------------+
| Level | Code | Message |
+---------+------+----------------------------------------------------------+
| Warning | 1366 | Incorrect string value: '\xE0bc' for column 'c' at row 2 |
| Warning | 1366 | Incorrect string value: '\xE1bc' for column 'c' at row 3 |
+---------+------+----------------------------------------------------------+
mysql> SELECT c, HEX(c) from alters;
+------+----------+
| c | HEX(c) |
+------+----------+
| aabc | 61616263 |
| a | 61 |
| a | 61 |
+------+----------+
mysql> -- Observation: text was truncated ! BAD
mysql> SHOW CREATE TABLE alters\G
Create Table: CREATE TABLE `alters` (
`c` varchar(11) CHARACTER SET utf8 NOT NULL
) ENGINE=InnoDB DEFAULT CHARSET=latin1
Case 3: Text was incorrectly stored as utf8 in a latin1 column; use the "Double ALTER to fix it
mysql> CREATE TABLE alters (
-> c VARCHAR(11) CHARACTER SET latin1 NOT NULL
-> );
mysql> INSERT INTO alters (c) VALUES ('aabc'), (UNHEX('61c3a06263')), (UNHEX('61c3a16263'));
mysql> ALTER TABLE alters MODIFY c VARBINARY(11) NOT NULL;
mysql> ALTER TABLE alters MODIFY c VARCHAR(11) CHARACTER SET utf8 NOT NULL;
mysql> SELECT c, HEX(c) from alters;
+-------+------------+
| c | HEX(c) |
+-------+------------+
| aabc | 61616263 |
| aàbc | 61C3A06263 |
| aábc | 61C3A16263 |
+-------+------------+
mysql> SHOW CREATE TABLE alters\G
Create Table: CREATE TABLE `alters` (
`c` varchar(11) CHARACTER SET utf8 NOT NULL
) ENGINE=InnoDB DEFAULT CHARSET=latin1
Case 4: Using ALTER ... MODIFY; note the LENGTH and CHAR_LENGTH
mysql> CREATE TABLE alters (
-> c VARCHAR(9) CHARACTER SET latin1 NOT NULL
-> );
mysql> INSERT INTO alters (c) VALUES ('aabc'), (UNHEX('61e06263')),
-> (UNHEX('61e16263')),
-> (UNHEX('61e162633536373839'));
mysql> SELECT c, HEX(c), LENGTH(c), CHAR_LENGTH(c) from alters;
+------------+--------------------+-----------+----------------+
| c | HEX(c) | LENGTH(c) | CHAR_LENGTH(c) |
+------------+--------------------+-----------+----------------+
| aabc | 61616263 | 4 | 4 |
| aàbc | 61E06263 | 4 | 4 |
| aábc | 61E16263 | 4 | 4 |
| aábc56789 | 61E162633536373839 | 9 | 9 |
+------------+--------------------+-----------+----------------+
mysql> ALTER TABLE alters MODIFY c VARCHAR(9) CHARACTER SET utf8 NOT NULL;
mysql> SELECT c, HEX(c), LENGTH(c), CHAR_LENGTH(c) from alters;
+------------+----------------------+-----------+----------------+
| c | HEX(c) | LENGTH(c) | CHAR_LENGTH(c) |
+------------+----------------------+-----------+----------------+
| aabc | 61616263 | 4 | 4 |
| aàbc | 61C3A06263 | 5 | 4 |
| aábc | 61C3A16263 | 5 | 4 |
| aábc56789 | 61C3A162633536373839 | 10 | 9 |
+------------+----------------------+-----------+----------------+
mysql> SHOW CREATE TABLE alters\G
Create Table: CREATE TABLE `alters` (
`c` varchar(9) CHARACTER SET utf8 NOT NULL
) ENGINE=InnoDB DEFAULT CHARSET=latin1
1 row in set (0.00 sec)
Notes:
- No Warnings except for the one case where I did SHOW.
- Default table CHARSET was not changed, but that is not a problem.
BLOB
then to the destinationUTF8mb4
character set, but my memory is sketchy on this. Also, does it matter what it turns it to? It only effects the data length as far as I'm aware so once converted simply ALTER table to change mediumtext to whatever you want... (?)mediumtext
ortext
doesn't matter as much; what's important is that it doesn't change. If you have a master -> slave replication setup, and want to run the conversion on slave first, the replication will break when the master tries to insert new data into the slave. The structure of the two tables will not be the same.utf8mb4
uses 4bytes per character instead of 3 so that if you have the maximum number of characters inlatin1_
it will overflow and truncate the same byte-sized container inutf8mb4
TEXT
to utf8 may expand beyond the 64K-byte limit ofTEXT
. (etc.)