1

In a MySQL database, I need to create a new closure table (called closure_new) that integrates a two column foreign key to another table, concept. This means adding rows to closure_new that are not in closure. How do I set up the SQL to accomplish this?

Here is my first attempt at the code for populating closure_new:

INSERT INTO `closure_new`
SELECT o.subtypeId, d.id, d.effectiveTime
  FROM concept d
  JOIN closure o
  ON o.subtypeId = d.id;

Note that my first attempt only addresses subtypeId/subtype_effectiveTime and might not address it completely. The SQL also needs to incorporate supertypeId/supertype_effectiveTime. How do I write the SQL to populate the closure_new table with records for each of the effectiveTime values associated with each subtypeId and each supertypeId?

Here is the concept table:

CREATE TABLE `concept` (
`id` BIGINT NOT NULL DEFAULT 0,
`effectiveTime` VARCHAR(8) NOT NULL DEFAULT '',
`some other fields`,
PRIMARY KEY (`id`,`effectiveTime`)
) ENGINE=InnoDB;  

Here is the old closure table:

CREATE TABLE `closure` (
    `id` int(11) UNSIGNED NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT PRIMARY KEY,
    `subtypeId` BIGINT(20) NOT NULL ,
    `supertypeId` BIGINT(20) NOT NULL ,
    PRIMARY KEY (`id`)
);

Here is the closure_new table that needs to be populated with the script I started to write above:

CREATE TABLE `closure_new` (
`id` int(11) UNSIGNED NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT PRIMARY KEY,
`subtypeId` BIGINT(20) NOT NULL ,
`subtype_effectiveTime` VARCHAR(8) NOT NULL DEFAULT '',
`supertypeId` BIGINT(20) NOT NULL ,
`supertype_effectiveTime` VARCHAR(8) NOT NULL DEFAULT '',
FOREIGN KEY (`supertypeId`, `supertype_effectiveTime`) references concept(`id`, `effectiveTime`),
FOREIGN KEY (`subtypeId`, `subtype_effectiveTime`) references concept(`id`, `effectiveTime`)
); ENGINE=InnoDB;

2 Answers 2

2

Try this:

insert into closure_new 
(subtypeId, subtype_effectiveTime, supertypeId, supertype_effectiveTime) 
select cl.id, co.effectiveTime, co.id, co.effectiveTime from closure cl inner join concept co

Your data better match or you will have some foreign key constraint issues

3
  • i'm not sure what your data looks like but perhaps you're looking for a left outer join then ?
    – Gad
    May 21, 2014 at 18:31
  • This code corrupted my database. The insert statement ran for over 24 hours and inserted over 260 GB of invalid data into the new table. I had to stop the script forcibly by killing the MySQL command line client and restarting the machine. I then had to spend a couple days running MySQL dump and restore operations that took 24 hours each before I was able to even start an uncorrupted windows MySQL service in order to delete the 260 GB table that was created. These 3 operations alone totaled 72 hours. By contrast, the code from the other responder ran in 31 minutes.
    – CodeMed
    May 26, 2014 at 19:38
  • hmmm my query is incomplete and missing the where at the end. probably a wrong copy/paste from the sql window. i never thought it could corrupt your data though... but i had tested it out before pasting it here so i'm pretty sure it works.
    – Gad
    May 29, 2014 at 23:28
1

Not sure if I completely understand what you're after, but how about:

INSERT INTO `closure_new` (subtypeId, subtype_effectiveTime, supertypeId, supertype_effectiveTime)
SELECT subCon.id, subCon.effectiveTime, superCon.id, superCOn.effectiveTimed.effectiveTime
  FROM closure o, concept subCon, concept superCon
 where subcon.Id = o.subtypeId and supercon.Id = o.supertypeId

Or possibly, you could just create view with that select statement.

3
  • Thank you for trying to help me. I ran the other responder's code and it added over 70 million rows to the new table before I had to kill the MySQL command line client and reboot the system to get it to stop. The result is that windows will no longer start the MySQL windows service, which essentially shuts down my development project until I get the windows MySQL service to launch again. I posted this as another question. Are you willing to help me with it? Here is the link: stackoverflow.com/questions/23816585/…
    – CodeMed
    May 22, 2014 at 22:54
  • Crikey! Once you get your server back up, do please try the above, but before you run the full Insert command, try it with the Select clause being select count(*), to see what will happen.
    – Chrisky
    May 23, 2014 at 16:29
  • I ran the above code and it created an expected number of new rows in 31 minutes. I am therefore marking this as the answer. Thank you, and +1.
    – CodeMed
    May 26, 2014 at 19:41

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