Reputation: 3303
I have a simple table
made up of two columns: col_A
and col_B
.
The primary key is defined over both.
I need to update some rows and assign to col_A
values that may generate duplicates, for example:
UPDATE `table` SET `col_A` = 66 WHERE `col_A` = 70
This statement sometimes yields a duplicate key error.
I don't want to simply ignore the error with UPDATE IGNORE
, because then the rows that generate the error would remain unchanged. Instead, I want them to be deleted when they would conflict with another row after they have been updated
I'd like to write something like:
UPDATE `table` SET `col_A` = 66 WHERE `col_A` = 70 ON DUPLICATE KEY REPLACE
which unfortunately isn't legal in SQL, so I need help finding another way around. Also, I'm using PHP and could consider a hybrid solution (i.e. part query part php code), but keep in mind that I have to perform this updating operation many millions of times.
thanks for your attention,
Silvio
Reminder: UPDATE
's syntax has problems with joins with the same table that is being updated
EDIT: sorry, the column name in the WHERE clause was wrong, now I fixed it
Upvotes: 0
Views: 218
Reputation: 22340
Answer to revised question:
DELETE FROM
table_A
USING
table AS table_A
JOIN table AS table_B ON
table_A.col_B = table_B.col_B AND
table_B.col_A = 70
WHERE
table_A.col_A = 66
This gets rid of the rows that would cause problems. Then you issue your UPDATE
query. Ideally you will do it all inside a transaction to avoid a situation where troublesome rows are re-inserted in between the two queries.
Upvotes: 3
Reputation: 22340
Are there any foreign keys referencing this table? If not then the following should do:
CREATE PROCEDURE `MyProcedure` (IN invarA INT, IN invarB INT)
LANGUAGE SQL
NOT DETERMINISTIC
MODIFIES SQL DATA
SQL SECURITY DEFINER
BEGIN
DELETE FROM table WHERE col_B = invarB;
IF ROW_COUNT() > 0 THEN
INSERT INTO table (`col_A`, `col_B`) VALUES (invarA, invarB);
END IF;
END
Example call:
CALL `MyProcedure`(66, 70)
Upvotes: 1