Reputation: 6174
How do I get the ID of the last updated row in MySQL using PHP?
Upvotes: 162
Views: 219688
Reputation: 4727
This is officially simple but remarkably counter-intuitive. If you're doing:
update users set status = 'processing' where status = 'pending'
limit 1
Change it to this:
update users set status = 'processing' where status = 'pending'
and last_insert_id(user_id)
limit 1
The addition of last_insert_id(user_id)
in the where
clause is telling MySQL to set its internal variable to the ID of the found row. When you pass a value to last_insert_id(expr)
like this, it ends up returning that value, which in the case of IDs like here is always a positive integer and therefore always evaluates to true, never interfering with the where clause. This only works if some row was actually found, so remember to check affected rows. You can then get the ID in multiple ways.
You can generate sequences without calling LAST_INSERT_ID(), but the utility of using the function this way is that the ID value is maintained in the server as the last automatically generated value. It is multi-user safe because multiple clients can issue the UPDATE statement and get their own sequence value with the SELECT statement (or mysql_insert_id()), without affecting or being affected by other clients that generate their own sequence values.
Returns the value generated for an AUTO_INCREMENT column by the previous INSERT or UPDATE statement. Use this function after you have performed an INSERT statement into a table that contains an AUTO_INCREMENT field, or have used INSERT or UPDATE to set a column value with LAST_INSERT_ID(expr).
The reason for the differences between LAST_INSERT_ID() and mysql_insert_id() is that LAST_INSERT_ID() is made easy to use in scripts while mysql_insert_id() tries to provide more exact information about what happens to the AUTO_INCREMENT column.
Performing an INSERT or UPDATE statement using the LAST_INSERT_ID() function will also modify the value returned by the mysqli_insert_id() function.
Putting it all together:
$affected_rows = DB::getAffectedRows("
update users set status = 'processing'
where status = 'pending' and last_insert_id(user_id)
limit 1"
);
if ($affected_rows) {
$user_id = DB::getInsertId();
}
(FYI that DB class is here.)
Upvotes: 23
Reputation: 32094
Hm, I am surprised that among the answers I do not see the easiest solution.
Suppose, item_id
is an integer identity column in items
table and you update rows with the following statement:
UPDATE items
SET qwe = 'qwe'
WHERE asd = 'asd';
Then, to know the latest affected row right after the statement, you should slightly update the statement into the following:
UPDATE items
SET qwe = 'qwe',
item_id=LAST_INSERT_ID(item_id)
WHERE asd = 'asd';
SELECT LAST_INSERT_ID();
If you need to update only really changed row, you would need to add a conditional update of the item_id through the LAST_INSERT_ID checking if the data is going to change in the row.
Upvotes: 38
Reputation: 3328
I've found an answer to this problem :)
SET @update_id := 0;
UPDATE some_table SET column_name = 'value', id = (SELECT @update_id := id)
WHERE some_other_column = 'blah' LIMIT 1;
SELECT @update_id;
EDIT by aefxx
This technique can be further expanded to retrieve the ID of every row affected by an update statement:
SET @uids := null;
UPDATE footable
SET foo = 'bar'
WHERE fooid > 5
AND ( SELECT @uids := CONCAT_WS(',', fooid, @uids) );
SELECT @uids;
This will return a string with all the IDs concatenated by a comma.
Upvotes: 274
Reputation: 606
Further more to the Above Accepted Answer
For those who were wondering about :=
& =
Significant difference between :=
and =
, and that is that :=
works as a variable-assignment operator everywhere, while =
only works that way in SET statements, and is a comparison operator everywhere else.
So SELECT @var = 1 + 1;
will leave @var
unchanged and return a boolean (1 or 0 depending on the current value of @var), while SELECT @var := 1 + 1;
will change @var
to 2, and return 2.
[Source]
Upvotes: 3
Reputation: 472
My solution is , first decide the "id" ( @uids ) with select command and after update this id with @uids .
SET @uids := (SELECT id FROM table WHERE some = 0 LIMIT 1);
UPDATE table SET col = 1 WHERE id = @uids;SELECT @uids;
it worked on my project.
Upvotes: 3
Reputation: 1463
Query :
$sqlQuery = "UPDATE
update_table
SET
set_name = 'value'
WHERE
where_name = 'name'
LIMIT 1;";
PHP function:
function updateAndGetId($sqlQuery)
{
mysql_query(str_replace("SET", "SET id = LAST_INSERT_ID(id),", $sqlQuery));
return mysql_insert_id();
}
It's work for me ;)
Upvotes: 7
Reputation: 47
ID of the last updated row is the same ID that you use in the 'updateQuery' to found & update that row. So, just save(call) that ID on anyway you want.
last_insert_id()
depends of the AUTO_INCREMENT
, but the last updated ID not.
Upvotes: 3
Reputation: 3
No need for so long Mysql code. In PHP, query should look something like this:
$updateQuery = mysql_query("UPDATE table_name SET row='value' WHERE id='$id'") or die ('Error');
$lastUpdatedId = mysql_insert_id();
Upvotes: -11
Reputation: 4404
This is the same method as Salman A's answer, but here's the code you actually need to do it.
First, edit your table so that it will automatically keep track of whenever a row is modified. Remove the last line if you only want to know when a row was initially inserted.
ALTER TABLE mytable
ADD lastmodified TIMESTAMP
DEFAULT CURRENT_TIMESTAMP
ON UPDATE CURRENT_TIMESTAMP;
Then, to find out the last updated row, you can use this code.
SELECT id FROM mytable ORDER BY lastmodified DESC LIMIT 1;
This code is all lifted from MySQL vs PostgreSQL: Adding a 'Last Modified Time' Column to a Table and MySQL Manual: Sorting Rows. I just assembled it.
Upvotes: 12
Reputation: 199
SET @uids := "";
UPDATE myf___ingtable
SET id = id
WHERE id < 5
AND ( SELECT @uids := CONCAT_WS(',', CAST(id AS CHAR CHARACTER SET utf8), @uids) );
SELECT @uids;
I had to CAST the id (dunno why)... or I cannot get the @uids content (it was a blob) Btw many thanks for Pomyk answer!
Upvotes: 7
Reputation: 24991
Hey, I just needed such a trick - I solved it in a different way, maybe it'll work for you. Note this is not a scalable solution and will be very bad for large data sets.
Split your query into two parts -
first, select the ids of the rows you want to update and store them in a temporary table.
secondly, do the original update with the condition in the update statement changed to where id in temp_table
.
And to ensure concurrency, you need to lock the table before this two steps and then release the lock at the end.
Again, this works for me, for a query which ends with limit 1
, so I don't even use a temp table, but instead simply a variable to store the result of the first select
.
I prefer this method since I know I will always update only one row, and the code is straightforward.
Upvotes: 3
Reputation: 1402
If you are only doing insertions, and want one from the same session, do as per peirix's answer. If you are doing modifications, you will need to modify your database schema to store which entry was most recently updated.
If you want the id from the last modification, which may have been from a different session (i.e. not the one that was just done by the PHP code running at present, but one done in response to a different request), you can add a TIMESTAMP column to your table called last_modified (see http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.1/en/datetime.html for information), and then when you update, set last_modified=CURRENT_TIME.
Having set this, you can then use a query like: SELECT id FROM table ORDER BY last_modified DESC LIMIT 1; to get the most recently modified row.
Upvotes: 2