I'm trying to figure out the best datatype and size in my DB to store unix timestamps...
In otherwords:
INT(32)
etc...
Thanks for any tips.
TIMESTAMP is a pretty straight-forward choice. It's implemented as a UNIX timestamp internally, but externally it appears as a date string (e.g. "1970-01-01 00:00:01").
EDIT: To migrate an INT to a timestamp, where time_test
is the table and ts
is the original column:
ALTER TABLE time_test ADD ts_new TIMESTAMP;
UPDATE time_test SET ts_new = FROM_UNIXTIME(ts);
ALTER TABLE time_test DROP ts;
ALTER TABLE time_test CHANGE COLUMN ts_new ts TIMESTAMP;
You may have to tweak it slightly if you care about the column order.
SELECT ts FROM time_test
you'll see a date string. But if you do SELECT UNIX_TIMESTAMP(ts) FROM time_test;
you'll get exactly the number you put in (no precision loss). There may be ways to avoid the explicit function call.
Apr 9, 2011 at 22:55
MySql supports Unix timestamps directly as the TIMESTAMP data type.
You have the normal limitations; dates must be from 1 Jan 1970 until 19 Jan 2038.