This question pops up every once in a while, and there's this confusion that auto_increment
gives you sequential numbers that you can use, well, for sequences. You can't.
The sole purpose of primary key is to uniquely identify a row. And incrementing integer fits that role perfectly, it's easy to implement in C/C++ MySQL code and it works extremely fast and well.
But that's all it does. You don't get nice, sequential numbering feature out of it. You can't use it for what you want because there are, as you called it - gaps.
And no, you don't make MySQL fill the gaps. It's bad and it's dangerous and it creates problems that you didn't even think of.
Bottom line is that you never rely on auto_increment
to reuse "wasted" numbers.
Here's why:
InnoDB, default MySQL engine, uses the primary key internally to physically organize records on the hard drive. It relies on the feature that every next id is greater than one before. I won't get into details, but the key idea is that the index and data are written on the same page. That makes InnoDB extremely fast when doing primary key lookups (SELECT col FROM table WHERE id = 1000000
types of queries).
Now, what happens when you "reuse" the keys that had gaps - imagine this scenario: you have 1 million records. There were no number losses.
You delete the record 500 000.
Afterwards, you add new record, and using your logic - you need to "reuse" number 500 000. So you do it.
But, InnoDB expects every next record to be larger. So to conform to your needs, it has to rebalance what it has written. And it has to start from record 500 000. Now you have 500 000 records that are being reorganized, and that means you have 500 000 checks and writes going on. This kills your performance, COMPLETELY. Let's say you have a mechanical hard drive. It's capable of about 200-300 input output operations per second (IOPS). If every reorganized record requires 1 I/O, to reorganize 500 000 of them would take 20-30 minutes. Now you have inserts that take 30 minutes to complete.
The other problem, much more severe than the performance problem is concurrency and isolation problem.
What people don't understand is that MySQL (and other relational databases) solve the problem of concurrency, or if you will - problem of simultaneous access or "What happens when two users write at the same time" problem.
MySQL takes care of that, and even more. And the feature where it "wastes" numbers is what actually makes it happen. Every transaction relies on the primary key at one point. Even before you commit the transaction, an auto_increment was already assigned to it. So even when transaction fails or isn't commited, an auto_increment gets "wasted". It's actually DESIRABLE behavior.
I definitely didn't list all the disadvantages, just two that I could think of (I also didn't describe them in detail due to lack of time but principles do apply).
Conclusion is - do not "reuse" wasted auto_increment numbers, do not listen to people who tell you how to do it, do not assume that your project won't have problems I listed above. If you do, prepare to encounter problems you could never think of.