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I am developing a web application where I need to create user accounts; the user-id is the e-mail address of the user. User-ids and passwords are stored in a MySQL database.

To create the account, the user goes to a registration page, and enters his/her e-mail address and a password. If the e-mail address is not already in the database, then a new account is created. These are TWO database operations - first to check if the e-mail address is already in the database, and if not, then second to create a new user record with this new e-mail address.

This TWO step process leaves open the possibility that two accounts with same e-mail address could be created. So my question is: How to make this an atomic operation to remove this possibility.

I'm using PHP and MySQL.

Edit: Don't understand why this question has been put on hold. Programmers building web applications encounter this problem without fail, the problem is asking for a fail-safe algorithm and deals with common tools PHP & MySQL. Furthermore, an attempted solution has been explained which clearly does not work.

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  • Based on your explanation. Only one account could ever be created. Nov 21, 2013 at 4:17
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    Check the email exists in your db with a simple select query and if there is a return then throw an error else insert. I don't understand what complication is worrying you?? And for an added measure u can set the email column in db as unique
    – zamil
    Nov 21, 2013 at 4:22
  • @zamil, it wouldn't happen by accident, but if someone submitted two requests for the same email at the same time, there'd be two instances of the account-creation code running concurrently, and if the timing is right, they'd both check for a record and find none, then both decide to insert one.
    – Wyzard
    Nov 21, 2013 at 4:25
  • If two people try to create the account at the same time with the same e-mail address, both would succeed if the two select operations happen before two insert operations. Nov 21, 2013 at 4:26
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    You'd still need to insert some sort of database record for the account, so that the email-verification process has something to compare against when the user completes the verification step.
    – Wyzard
    Nov 21, 2013 at 4:33

2 Answers 2

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First, create a unique constraint on that column, to ensure that it'll never have more than one record with the same email address. If the application tries to insert a duplicate record, the insert query will fail.

Second, you'll probably want to use MySQL's INSERT IGNORE to suppress the error when the application attempts to insert a duplicate record. Then you can do the two queries in the opposite order: first do the INSERT IGNORE to create a record if there wasn't one already, and then SELECT whatever info you need based on the email address. If there was already a record for the same email address, the INSERT IGNORE will do nothing and the SELECT will find that pre-existing record.

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  • Seems like the way to go. But how does putting UNIQUE constraint on a column impact performance? For example, if there are n records, then inserting a new record should require at least log(n) time. May be it is not important for practical values of n, and because the operation will not happen that often. Just wondering aloud if this is the best way to go? Nov 21, 2013 at 6:27
  • Unique constraints are typically implemented with indexes, which are typically implemented with B-trees, so yes, it'll generally take log(n) time to check whether a record already exists. But that same B-tree index can also be used to find the matching record in log(n) time when you do a SELECT, which is much better than the linear time it'd take to loop through all the records.
    – Wyzard
    Nov 21, 2013 at 6:33
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use UNIQUE in mysql. That will stop it from happening but you will get an error if you try. Then in the PHP you'll need something to search the existing. you can do something as simple as this:

SELECT 1 FROM users WHERE username = '[email protected]';

if the 1 is there then you'd have a user that already exists and you wouldn't wanna try to add that person.

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