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Hi all,

We have a table that maintains account balances by recording transactions in that table. i.e. the most recent row is the account balance.

When recording a withdrawal, we would like to ensure that the balance can never go negative. Our proposed solution is something like:

INSERT INTO `txns`
  (`account_id`, `prev_balance`, `txn_type`, `new_balance`,  `amount`, `description`)
SELECT 
  t.account_id, t.new_balance, $txn_type, t.new_balance - $amount, $amount, $description
FROM`txns` t
WHERE t.account_id = '$account'
  AND (select new_balance 
        FROM txns 
        WHERE account_id = '$account' 
        ORDER BY txn_id desc limit 1) >= $amount
ORDER BY txn_id desc LIMIT 1;"

But we are a bit concerned about the performance if the ANDed subquery (we had subquery performance issues on a previous project). None of the developers here are sql specialists. Deposits do not have the additional clause.

This is all on MySQL 5.0

flag
Thanks for the feedback everyone. I will look into triggers some more. – Fred Jan 28 at 20:23
Pling. Maybe my tinkering (edited my article) will give you some more ideas. – Leonidas Jan 28 at 23:52

3 Answers

vote up 2 vote down

I cannot say anything about the performance of the query, sorry. But you might want to consider triggers to prevent the case of the 'new_balance' ever becoming negative. (Because it strikes me as odd to do a null-insert in case the 'new_balance' is lower than $amount, but it might work nevertheless :) ).

See documenation of MySQL 5.0 for details how to create a trigger.

Basically you would put the check, if NEW.new_balance ís negative into a BEFORE-trigger. If yes, then you would use a "STOP ACTION", a deliberate error in execution, to abort the trigger and INSERT-query. See ideas on the mentioned page in the comments.

Update: Tinkered a little bit around (my excuse for installing MySQL at home).

My version has the problem of writing a second time to the DB for each value entered into moneylog.

Maybe switching to a stored proc would be advisable. Or somebody else has a better idea, I'm not that much into DB :)

CREATE DATABASE triggertest;
CONNECT triggertest;

CREATE TABLE transferlog (
  account SMALLINT UNSIGNED NOT NULL ,
  amount INT NOT NULL,
  new_balance INT NOT NULL
) ENGINE=INNODB;

CREATE TABLE stopaction (
  entry CHAR(20) NOT NULL,
  dummy SMALLINT,
  UNIQUE(`entry`)
);

INSERT INTO stopaction (`entry`) VALUES ('stop');

DELIMITER #
CREATE TRIGGER nonneg_insert BEFORE INSERT ON transferlog
  FOR EACH ROW BEGIN
    INSERT INTO stopaction (`entry`)
      SELECT CASE WHEN NEW.new_balance<0 THEN 'stop'
                  ELSE 'none' END;
    DELETE FROM stopaction WHERE entry!='stop';
  END;
#

CREATE TRIGGER nonneg_update BEFORE UPDATE ON transferlog
  FOR EACH ROW BEGIN
    INSERT INTO stopaction (`entry`)
      SELECT CASE WHEN NEW.new_balance<0 THEN 'stop'
                  ELSE 'none' END;
    DELETE FROM stopaction WHERE entry!='stop';
  END;
#
DELIMITER ;


INSERT INTO transferlog (`account`, `amount`, `new_balance`)  
  VALUES (1, 1000, 1000);
INSERT INTO transferlog (`account`, `amount`, `new_balance`)
  VALUES (1, -1000, 0);
INSERT INTO transferlog (`account`, `amount`, `new_balance`)
  VALUES (1, -1000, -1000);
INSERT INTO transferlog (`account`, `amount`, `new_balance`)
  VALUES (1, 10, 20);
SELECT version();

DROP DATABASE triggertest;

Maybe it will suit you, my output for the INSERT-Lines is:

mysql> INSERT INTO transferlog (`account`, `amount`, `new_balance`)  VALUES (1, 1000, 1000);
Query OK, 1 row affected (0.03 sec)

mysql> INSERT INTO transferlog (`account`, `amount`, `new_balance`)  VALUES (1, -1000, 0);
Query OK, 1 row affected (0.02 sec)

mysql> INSERT INTO transferlog (`account`, `amount`, `new_balance`)  VALUES (1, -1000, -1000);
ERROR 1062 (23000): Duplicate entry 'stop' for key 1

mysql> INSERT INTO transferlog (`account`, `amount`, `new_balance`)  VALUES (1, 10, 20);
Query OK, 1 row affected (0.02 sec)

mysql> SELECT version();
+---------------------+
| version()           |
+---------------------+
| 5.0.67-community-nt |
+---------------------+
1 row in set (0.00 sec)
link|flag
This is exactly right. Triggers are ideal for this, so simply have the trigger fail the statement execution and catch the error. – cdeszaq Jan 28 at 19:09
The additional clause prevents the insert from happening at all if the balance goes negative, so it's not a null insert (I look at the affected rows count and raise an exception if no row was inserted) – Fred Jan 28 at 19:14
As for triggers, I have looked at that a bit, but the tricky part seems to be causing an artificial error to abort the insert. – Fred Jan 28 at 19:15
vote up 0 vote down

Why don't you just do:

INSERT INTO `txns`
  (`account_id`, `prev_balance`, `txn_type`, `new_balance`,  `amount`, `description`)
SELECT *
FROM (
 SELECT
  t.account_id, t.new_balance, $txn_type, t.new_balance - $amount, $amount, $description
 FROM `txns` t
 WHERE t.account_id = '$account'
 ORDER BY txn_id desc
 LIMIT 1
)
WHERE new_balance - $amount > 0
link|flag
This doesn't work at all. – Fred Jan 28 at 20:23
vote up 0 vote down

I have to agree with the trigger idea. If this is an accounting rule that must be followed no matter how the data is entered, it needs to be in a trigger.

If this is true only for this particular case, then do it in the SQL code. I don't know mySQL but in SQL server Iwould put the check in an if statment and fail the transaction if the IF condition is met. The critical thing here isn't to ignore the data but to actively fail the transaction,otherwise the user thinks the data has been entered when it has not met the criteria to be entered. I would never write any cdode for a finacial system that isn't encapsulated in transactions which would rollback the entire transaction and send an error to the user if the business rules are not met. Business rules are extremely critical to financial applications (and should usually be in triggers so that they are never missed no matter how the data is put into the system) and data integrity can be a real problem if all the steps do not succeed and you are not in a transaction and rolling back when there is a problem.

link|flag
MySQL doesn't do check constraints (other wise, I would just use that). My current solution is a single row atomic update of balances. – Fred Jan 28 at 19:23

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