This section describes the different functions that you need to define when you create an aggregate UDF. Section 22.3.2, “Adding a New User-Defined Function”, describes the order in which MySQL calls these functions.
              xxx_reset()
            
              This function is called when MySQL finds the first row in
              a new group. It should reset any internal summary
              variables and then use the given
              UDF_ARGS argument as the first value in
              your internal summary value for the group. Declare
              xxx_reset() as follows:
            
void xxx_reset(UDF_INIT *initid, UDF_ARGS *args,
               char *is_null, char *error);
              xxx_reset() is not needed or used in
              MySQL 5.5, in which the UDF interface uses
              xxx_clear() instead. However, you can
              define both xxx_reset() and
              xxx_clear() if you want to have your
              UDF work with older versions of the server. (If you do
              include both functions, the xxx_reset()
              function in many cases can be implemented internally by
              calling xxx_clear() to reset all
              variables, and then calling xxx_add()
              to add the UDF_ARGS argument as the
              first value in the group.)
            
              xxx_clear()
            
              This function is called when MySQL needs to reset the
              summary results. It is called at the beginning for each
              new group but can also be called to reset the values for a
              query where there were no matching rows. Declare
              xxx_clear() as follows:
            
void xxx_clear(UDF_INIT *initid, char *is_null, char *error);
              is_null is set to point to
              CHAR(0) before calling
              xxx_clear().
            
              If something went wrong, you can store a value in the
              variable to which the error argument
              points. error points to a single-byte
              variable, not to a string buffer.
            
              xxx_clear() is required by MySQL
              5.5.
            
              xxx_add()
            
              This function is called for all rows that belong to the
              same group. You should use it to add the value in the
              UDF_ARGS argument to your internal
              summary variable.
            
void xxx_add(UDF_INIT *initid, UDF_ARGS *args,
             char *is_null, char *error);
          The xxx() function for an aggregate UDF
          should be declared the same way as for a nonaggregate UDF. See
          Section 22.3.2.1, “UDF Calling Sequences for Simple Functions”.
        
          For an aggregate UDF, MySQL calls the xxx()
          function after all rows in the group have been processed. You
          should normally never access its UDF_ARGS
          argument here but instead return a value based on your
          internal summary variables.
        
          Return value handling in xxx() should be
          done the same way as for a nonaggregate UDF. See
          Section 22.3.2.4, “UDF Return Values and Error Handling”.
        
          The xxx_reset() and
          xxx_add() functions handle their
          UDF_ARGS argument the same way as functions
          for nonaggregate UDFs. See Section 22.3.2.3, “UDF Argument Processing”.
        
          The pointer arguments to is_null and
          error are the same for all calls to
          xxx_reset(),
          xxx_clear(), xxx_add()
          and xxx(). You can use this to remember
          that you got an error or whether the xxx()
          function should return NULL. You should not
          store a string into *error!
          error points to a single-byte variable, not
          to a string buffer.
        
          *is_null is reset for each group (before
          calling xxx_clear()).
          *error is never reset.
        
          If *is_null or *error
          are set when xxx() returns, MySQL returns
          NULL as the result for the group function.
        


User Comments
Note it is a little tricky to make aggregate UDFs work with ROLLUP. It *is* possible, but you have to work around this bug: http://bugs.mysql.com/bug.php?id=38297
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