I'm trying to generate URL in SQL database using already assigned auto_incremented ID
When a new form is submitted then SQL automatically generates and unique lens_id for me. How can I automatically add it there in this lens_url? (Picture below)
You can do this by creating a trigger on your table. Trigger is as follows,
DELIMITER $$
CREATE TRIGGER `UpdateLensURL` BEFORE INSERT ON `your_table_name`
FOR EACH ROW BEGIN
SET NEW.lens_url= CONCAT('localhost:8888/lensview/post.php?id=', (
SELECT AUTO_INCREMENT
FROM information_schema.TABLES
WHERE TABLE_SCHEMA = DATABASE()
AND TABLE_NAME = 'your_table_name'
));
END;
$$
DELIMITER ;
There are two options here:
1) Use a stored procedure (which will require code changes for anywhere that inserts rows)
2) Use a trigger and insert as normal - something like below should do the trick:
DELIMITER //
CREATE TRIGGER my_awesome_trigger
BEFORE INSERT
ON your_table_name
FOR EACH ROW
BEGIN
DECLARE next_id int default 0;
SELECT auto_increment INTO next_id
FROM information_schema.tables
WHERE table_name = 'your_table_name'
AND table_schema = DATABASE();
SET NEW.lens_url = CONCAT('localhost:8888/.../', next_id);
END; //
DELIMITER ;
Try something like this
$qry1="insert into tablename(lens_name,lens_url,lens_category,lens_author,lens_discription,lens_repert)values('A','B','C','D','E','F')";// your query to insert data to table
mysqli_query($con,$qry1); // run query
$last_insertid=mysqli_insert_id($con); // save last insetred ID
$url="localhost:8888/lenseview/post.php?id=".$last_insertid; //prepare url
$qry2="upadte tablename set lens_url=$url where lens_id=$last_insertid"; //update query
mysqli_query($con,$qry2); // run your query to update url
I think easiest option would be this
$Last_Lens_IdQ = mysqli_query($conn, "SELECT `lens_id` FROM `table` ORDER BY `lens_id` DESC LIMIT 1");
$Last_LensId = mysqli_fetch_array($Last_Lens_IdQ);
$x = $Last_Lens[0]++;
$LensUrl = "localhost:8888/lenseview/post.php?id=".$x;
Then insert the field and use $LensUrl When inserting the lens url column
I have a products table stored inside the database which contains info related to the product.I have a stored procedure that gets the rows with maximum quantity.
Whenever i try to call that stored procedure from the php it returns false while when i run the same query in mysql console, it returns me the rows.
PHP Code:
$resVal=$mysqli->query('CALL get_max_quant_rows("'.$company.'","'.$type.'","'.$limit.'")');
$countVal=$resVal->fetch_row();
$countVal=$countVal[0];
$results = $mysqli->query('CALL get_max_quant_rows("'.$company.'","'.$type.'","'.$limit.'")');
var_dump('CALL get_max_quant_rows("'.$company.'","'.$type.'","'.$limit.'")');
var_dump($results);
The ouput of the var_dump of the above queries give me:
string(72) "CALL get_max_quant_rows("1471941595186287666657bc0bdb1c25d","Cakes","1")" bool(false)
I have shown you the var_dump of the query as to show you that the values are going perfectly inside the stored procedure.
When i ran the same query inside the console,it ran and it gave me the results.What could pe the possible reason for this behaviour?
Stored Procedure:
DELIMITER $$
USE `dboxyz`$$
DROP PROCEDURE IF EXISTS `get_max_quant_rows`$$
CREATE PROCEDURE `get_max_quant_rows`(company VARCHAR(8000),product_type VARCHAR(8000),limiter INT)
BEGIN
DECLARE emptyCheckFirst BIT;
DECLARE emptyCheckSecond BIT;
SET emptyCheckFirst=`dboxyz`.isNullOrEmpty(company);
SET emptyCheckSecond=`dboxyz`.isNullOrEmpty(product_type);
IF (emptyCheckFirst=0 AND emptyCheckSecond=0)
THEN
SELECT p1.id,p1.price,p1.product_code,p1.product_name,p1.quantity,p1.amount,p1.companyId FROM products p1
INNER JOIN (SELECT product_code,MAX(quantity) max_quantity FROM products WHERE companyId=company AND `type`=product_type
GROUP BY product_code) p2 ON p1.product_code=p2.product_code AND p1.quantity=p2.max_quantity LIMIT limiter;
END IF;
IF emptyCheckFirst=1 AND emptyCheckSecond=1
THEN
SELECT p1.id,p1.price,p1.product_code,p1.product_name,p1.quantity,p1.amount,p1.companyId FROM products p1
INNER JOIN (SELECT product_code,MAX(quantity) max_quantity FROM products
GROUP BY product_code) p2 ON p1.product_code=p2.product_code AND p1.quantity=p2.max_quantity LIMIT limiter;
END IF;
END$$
DELIMITER ;
Update:
Error given by the DB
Commands out of sync; you can't run this command now
DELIMITER $$
USE `dboxyz`$$
DROP FUNCTION IF EXISTS `isNullOrEmpty`$$
CREATE FUNCTION `isNullOrEmpty`(xx VARCHAR(8000)) RETURNS BIT(1)
BEGIN
DECLARE somevariable VARCHAR(8000);
SET somevariable=xx;
IF (somevariable IS NOT NULL AND LEN(somevariable)>0)
THEN
RETURN 0;
ELSE
RETURN 1;
END IF;
END$$
DELIMITER ;
MySQL stored procedures can return more than one result set, that is the reason to clear all results before do another query using the same connection.
Just use next_result, and do another query:
$results = $mysqli->query("CALL stored_procedure()");
$mysqli->next_result();
$results2 = $mysqli->query("CALL another_stored_procedure()");
I know that you can insert multiple rows at once, is there a way to update multiple rows at once (as in, in one query) in MySQL?
Edit:
For example I have the following
Name id Col1 Col2
Row1 1 6 1
Row2 2 2 3
Row3 3 9 5
Row4 4 16 8
I want to combine all the following Updates into one query
UPDATE table SET Col1 = 1 WHERE id = 1;
UPDATE table SET Col1 = 2 WHERE id = 2;
UPDATE table SET Col2 = 3 WHERE id = 3;
UPDATE table SET Col1 = 10 WHERE id = 4;
UPDATE table SET Col2 = 12 WHERE id = 4;
Yes, that's possible - you can use INSERT ... ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE.
Using your example:
INSERT INTO table (id,Col1,Col2) VALUES (1,1,1),(2,2,3),(3,9,3),(4,10,12)
ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE Col1=VALUES(Col1),Col2=VALUES(Col2);
Since you have dynamic values, you need to use an IF or CASE for the columns to be updated. It gets kinda ugly, but it should work.
Using your example, you could do it like:
UPDATE table SET Col1 = CASE id
WHEN 1 THEN 1
WHEN 2 THEN 2
WHEN 4 THEN 10
ELSE Col1
END,
Col2 = CASE id
WHEN 3 THEN 3
WHEN 4 THEN 12
ELSE Col2
END
WHERE id IN (1, 2, 3, 4);
The question is old, yet I'd like to extend the topic with another answer.
My point is, the easiest way to achieve it is just to wrap multiple queries with a transaction. The accepted answer INSERT ... ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE is a nice hack, but one should be aware of its drawbacks and limitations:
As being said, if you happen to launch the query with rows whose primary keys don't exist in the table, the query inserts new "half-baked" records. Probably it's not what you want
If you have a table with a not null field without default value and don't want to touch this field in the query, you'll get "Field 'fieldname' doesn't have a default value" MySQL warning even if you don't insert a single row at all. It will get you into trouble, if you decide to be strict and turn mysql warnings into runtime exceptions in your app.
I made some performance tests for three of suggested variants, including the INSERT ... ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE variant, a variant with "case / when / then" clause and a naive approach with transaction. You may get the python code and results here. The overall conclusion is that the variant with case statement turns out to be twice as fast as two other variants, but it's quite hard to write correct and injection-safe code for it, so I personally stick to the simplest approach: using transactions.
Edit: Findings of Dakusan prove that my performance estimations are not quite valid. Please see this answer for another, more elaborate research.
Not sure why another useful option is not yet mentioned:
UPDATE my_table m
JOIN (
SELECT 1 as id, 10 as _col1, 20 as _col2
UNION ALL
SELECT 2, 5, 10
UNION ALL
SELECT 3, 15, 30
) vals ON m.id = vals.id
SET col1 = _col1, col2 = _col2;
All of the following applies to InnoDB.
I feel knowing the speeds of the 3 different methods is important.
There are 3 methods:
INSERT: INSERT with ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE
TRANSACTION: Where you do an update for each record within a transaction
CASE: In which you a case/when for each different record within an UPDATE
I just tested this, and the INSERT method was 6.7x faster for me than the TRANSACTION method. I tried on a set of both 3,000 and 30,000 rows.
The TRANSACTION method still has to run each individually query, which takes time, though it batches the results in memory, or something, while executing. The TRANSACTION method is also pretty expensive in both replication and query logs.
Even worse, the CASE method was 41.1x slower than the INSERT method w/ 30,000 records (6.1x slower than TRANSACTION). And 75x slower in MyISAM. INSERT and CASE methods broke even at ~1,000 records. Even at 100 records, the CASE method is BARELY faster.
So in general, I feel the INSERT method is both best and easiest to use. The queries are smaller and easier to read and only take up 1 query of action. This applies to both InnoDB and MyISAM.
Bonus stuff:
The solution for the INSERT non-default-field problem is to temporarily turn off the relevant SQL modes: SET SESSION sql_mode=REPLACE(REPLACE(##SESSION.sql_mode,"STRICT_TRANS_TABLES",""),"STRICT_ALL_TABLES",""). Make sure to save the sql_mode first if you plan on reverting it.
As for other comments I've seen that say the auto_increment goes up using the INSERT method, this does seem to be the case in InnoDB, but not MyISAM.
Code to run the tests is as follows. It also outputs .SQL files to remove php interpreter overhead
<?php
//Variables
$NumRows=30000;
//These 2 functions need to be filled in
function InitSQL()
{
}
function RunSQLQuery($Q)
{
}
//Run the 3 tests
InitSQL();
for($i=0;$i<3;$i++)
RunTest($i, $NumRows);
function RunTest($TestNum, $NumRows)
{
$TheQueries=Array();
$DoQuery=function($Query) use (&$TheQueries)
{
RunSQLQuery($Query);
$TheQueries[]=$Query;
};
$TableName='Test';
$DoQuery('DROP TABLE IF EXISTS '.$TableName);
$DoQuery('CREATE TABLE '.$TableName.' (i1 int NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT, i2 int NOT NULL, primary key (i1)) ENGINE=InnoDB');
$DoQuery('INSERT INTO '.$TableName.' (i2) VALUES ('.implode('), (', range(2, $NumRows+1)).')');
if($TestNum==0)
{
$TestName='Transaction';
$Start=microtime(true);
$DoQuery('START TRANSACTION');
for($i=1;$i<=$NumRows;$i++)
$DoQuery('UPDATE '.$TableName.' SET i2='.(($i+5)*1000).' WHERE i1='.$i);
$DoQuery('COMMIT');
}
if($TestNum==1)
{
$TestName='Insert';
$Query=Array();
for($i=1;$i<=$NumRows;$i++)
$Query[]=sprintf("(%d,%d)", $i, (($i+5)*1000));
$Start=microtime(true);
$DoQuery('INSERT INTO '.$TableName.' VALUES '.implode(', ', $Query).' ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE i2=VALUES(i2)');
}
if($TestNum==2)
{
$TestName='Case';
$Query=Array();
for($i=1;$i<=$NumRows;$i++)
$Query[]=sprintf('WHEN %d THEN %d', $i, (($i+5)*1000));
$Start=microtime(true);
$DoQuery("UPDATE $TableName SET i2=CASE i1\n".implode("\n", $Query)."\nEND\nWHERE i1 IN (".implode(',', range(1, $NumRows)).')');
}
print "$TestName: ".(microtime(true)-$Start)."<br>\n";
file_put_contents("./$TestName.sql", implode(";\n", $TheQueries).';');
}
UPDATE table1, table2 SET table1.col1='value', table2.col1='value' WHERE table1.col3='567' AND table2.col6='567'
This should work for ya.
There is a reference in the MySQL manual for multiple tables.
Use a temporary table
// Reorder items
function update_items_tempdb(&$items)
{
shuffle($items);
$table_name = uniqid('tmp_test_');
$sql = "CREATE TEMPORARY TABLE `$table_name` ("
." `id` int(10) unsigned NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT"
.", `position` int(10) unsigned NOT NULL"
.", PRIMARY KEY (`id`)"
.") ENGINE = MEMORY";
query($sql);
$i = 0;
$sql = '';
foreach ($items as &$item)
{
$item->position = $i++;
$sql .= ($sql ? ', ' : '')."({$item->id}, {$item->position})";
}
if ($sql)
{
query("INSERT INTO `$table_name` (id, position) VALUES $sql");
$sql = "UPDATE `test`, `$table_name` SET `test`.position = `$table_name`.position"
." WHERE `$table_name`.id = `test`.id";
query($sql);
}
query("DROP TABLE `$table_name`");
}
Why does no one mention multiple statements in one query?
In php, you use multi_query method of mysqli instance.
From the php manual
MySQL optionally allows having multiple statements in one statement string. Sending multiple statements at once reduces client-server round trips but requires special handling.
Here is the result comparing to other 3 methods in update 30,000 raw. Code can be found here which is based on answer from #Dakusan
Transaction: 5.5194580554962
Insert: 0.20669293403625
Case: 16.474853992462
Multi: 0.0412278175354
As you can see, multiple statements query is more efficient than the highest answer.
If you get error message like this:
PHP Warning: Error while sending SET_OPTION packet
You may need to increase the max_allowed_packet in mysql config file which in my machine is /etc/mysql/my.cnf and then restart mysqld.
There is a setting you can alter called 'multi statement' that disables MySQL's 'safety mechanism' implemented to prevent (more than one) injection command. Typical to MySQL's 'brilliant' implementation, it also prevents user from doing efficient queries.
Here (http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.1/en/mysql-set-server-option.html) is some info on the C implementation of the setting.
If you're using PHP, you can use mysqli to do multi statements (I think php has shipped with mysqli for a while now)
$con = new mysqli('localhost','user1','password','my_database');
$query = "Update MyTable SET col1='some value' WHERE id=1 LIMIT 1;";
$query .= "UPDATE MyTable SET col1='other value' WHERE id=2 LIMIT 1;";
//etc
$con->multi_query($query);
$con->close();
Hope that helps.
You can alias the same table to give you the id's you want to insert by (if you are doing a row-by-row update:
UPDATE table1 tab1, table1 tab2 -- alias references the same table
SET
col1 = 1
,col2 = 2
. . .
WHERE
tab1.id = tab2.id;
Additionally, It should seem obvious that you can also update from other tables as well. In this case, the update doubles as a "SELECT" statement, giving you the data from the table you are specifying. You are explicitly stating in your query the update values so, the second table is unaffected.
You may also be interested in using joins on updates, which is possible as well.
Update someTable Set someValue = 4 From someTable s Inner Join anotherTable a on s.id = a.id Where a.id = 4
-- Only updates someValue in someTable who has a foreign key on anotherTable with a value of 4.
Edit: If the values you are updating aren't coming from somewhere else in the database, you'll need to issue multiple update queries.
No-one has yet mentioned what for me would be a much easier way to do this - Use a SQL editor that allows you to execute multiple individual queries. This screenshot is from Sequel Ace, I'd assume that Sequel Pro and probably other editors have similar functionality. (This of course assumes you only need to run this as a one-off thing rather than as an integrated part of your app/site).
And now the easy way
update my_table m, -- let create a temp table with populated values
(select 1 as id, 20 as value union -- this part will be generated
select 2 as id, 30 as value union -- using a backend code
-- for loop
select N as id, X as value
) t
set m.value = t.value where t.id=m.id -- now update by join - quick
Yes ..it is possible using INSERT ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE sql statement..
syntax:
INSERT INTO table_name (a,b,c) VALUES (1,2,3),(4,5,6)
ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE a=VALUES(a),b=VALUES(b),c=VALUES(c)
use
REPLACE INTO`table` VALUES (`id`,`col1`,`col2`) VALUES
(1,6,1),(2,2,3),(3,9,5),(4,16,8);
Please note:
id has to be a primary unique key
if you use foreign keys to
reference the table, REPLACE deletes then inserts, so this might
cause an error
I took the answer from #newtover and extended it using the new json_table function in MySql 8. This allows you to create a stored procedure to handle the workload rather than building your own SQL text in code:
drop table if exists `test`;
create table `test` (
`Id` int,
`Number` int,
PRIMARY KEY (`Id`)
);
insert into test (Id, Number) values (1, 1), (2, 2);
DROP procedure IF EXISTS `Test`;
DELIMITER $$
CREATE PROCEDURE `Test`(
p_json json
)
BEGIN
update test s
join json_table(p_json, '$[*]' columns(`id` int path '$.id', `number` int path '$.number')) v
on s.Id=v.id set s.Number=v.number;
END$$
DELIMITER ;
call `Test`('[{"id": 1, "number": 10}, {"id": 2, "number": 20}]');
select * from test;
drop table if exists `test`;
It's a few ms slower than pure SQL but I'm happy to take the hit rather than generate the sql text in code. Not sure how performant it is with huge recordsets (the JSON object has a max size of 1Gb) but I use it all the time when updating 10k rows at a time.
The following will update all rows in one table
Update Table Set
Column1 = 'New Value'
The next one will update all rows where the value of Column2 is more than 5
Update Table Set
Column1 = 'New Value'
Where
Column2 > 5
There is all Unkwntech's example of updating more than one table
UPDATE table1, table2 SET
table1.col1 = 'value',
table2.col1 = 'value'
WHERE
table1.col3 = '567'
AND table2.col6='567'
UPDATE tableName SET col1='000' WHERE id='3' OR id='5'
This should achieve what you'r looking for. Just add more id's. I have tested it.
UPDATE `your_table` SET
`something` = IF(`id`="1","new_value1",`something`), `smth2` = IF(`id`="1", "nv1",`smth2`),
`something` = IF(`id`="2","new_value2",`something`), `smth2` = IF(`id`="2", "nv2",`smth2`),
`something` = IF(`id`="4","new_value3",`something`), `smth2` = IF(`id`="4", "nv3",`smth2`),
`something` = IF(`id`="6","new_value4",`something`), `smth2` = IF(`id`="6", "nv4",`smth2`),
`something` = IF(`id`="3","new_value5",`something`), `smth2` = IF(`id`="3", "nv5",`smth2`),
`something` = IF(`id`="5","new_value6",`something`), `smth2` = IF(`id`="5", "nv6",`smth2`)
// You just building it in php like
$q = 'UPDATE `your_table` SET ';
foreach($data as $dat){
$q .= '
`something` = IF(`id`="'.$dat->id.'","'.$dat->value.'",`something`),
`smth2` = IF(`id`="'.$dat->id.'", "'.$dat->value2.'",`smth2`),';
}
$q = substr($q,0,-1);
So you can update hole table with one query
The table[file_request ] structure:
user_id[INT] file_id[CHAR(10)] all_files
This is the SQL code which work fine in MySQL clien: I am using heidisql
DROP PROCEDURE IF EXISTS check_user_files;
DELIMITER \\
CREATE PROCEDURE check_user_files(IN p_user_id INT,IN p_file_id CHAR(10),IN p_all_files VARCHAR(500))
BEGIN
IF EXISTS(SELECT 1 FROM file_request WHERE user_id = p_user_id AND movie_id = p_file_id) THEN
UPDATE file_request SET `requring_date`=NOW(),`all_files`= p_all_files WHERE `user_id`=p_user_id AND `movie_id`=p_file_id;
ELSE
INSERT INTO file_request (`user_id`,`requring_date`,`movie_id`,`all_files`)
VALUES (p_user_id,NOW(),p_file_id,p_all_files);
END IF;
END \\
DELIMITER ;
CALL check_user_files('23','T40431284','07 08 10 11 13 14');
DELIMITER ;
CALL check_user_files('23','F87951','01 02 03');
And I trying to create and execute the SQL query from PHP [didn't work] :
// create the call procedure statements
foreach($fileData as $key=>$value){
$callSP .= "DELIMITER ; \n
CALL check_user_files('$userID','$key','$value');\n";
}
$insert_file_request_query = "DROP PROCEDURE IF EXISTS check_user_files;
DELIMITER \\\\
CREATE PROCEDURE check_user_files(IN p_user_id INT,IN p_file_id CHAR(10),IN p_all_files VARCHAR(500))
BEGIN
IF EXISTS(SELECT 1 FROM file_request WHERE user_id = p_user_id AND movie_id = p_file_id) THEN
UPDATE file_request SET `requring_date`=NOW(),`all_files`= p_all_files WHERE `user_id`=p_user_id AND `movie_id`=p_file_id;
ELSE
INSERT INTO file_request (`user_id`,`requring_date`,`movie_id`,`all_files`)
VALUES (p_user_id,NOW(),p_file_id,p_all_files);
END IF;
END \\\\
$callSP";
mysqli_query($conn,$insert_file_request_query);
The SQL query which created from PHP didn't work as in the MySQL client!?
So, how can I fix it!?
[update1]
I found that the SQL query must in the special format [ the formate which work fine in the MySQL client] or shouldn't work,I tried to copy and paste the query which echo from the PHP, the query code become one line and couldn't execute in MySQL client,too.
[update2]
The code of create store procedure will work fine when I execute it alone from PHP.I mean,I split the whole process into three parts and execute them one by one.
part1: drop the procedure if it was exists; [using mysqli_query()]
part2: create the procedure;[using mysqli_query()]
part3:call the procedure;[using mysqli_multi_query()]
$insert_file_request_query = '';
foreach($fileData as $key=>$value){
$insert_file_request_query .= "CALL check_save_file_request('$userID','$key','$value');";
}
mysqli_multi_query($conn,$insert_file_request_query);
And my final solution was to create the Store Procedure in MySQL and call it from the PHP.It works fine now.
Thank you very much!!
You can't combine multiple statements in mysqli_query. Split out the definition of the stored procedure from the CALLs to it. If that still fails, we'll need the full and exact error message that you receive.