vote up 4 vote down star
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I have the following table of counters:

CREATE TABLE cache (
    key text PRIMARY KEY,
    generation int
);

I would like to increment one of the counters, or set it to zero if the corresponding row doesn't exist yet. Is there a way to do this without concurrency issues in standard SQL? The operation is sometimes part of a transaction, sometimes separate.

The SQL must run unmodified on SQLite, PostgreSQL and MySQL, if possible.

A search yielded several ideas which either suffer from concurrency issues, or are specific to a database:

  • Try to INSERT a new row, and UPDATE if there was an error. Unfortunately, the error on INSERT aborts the current transaction.

  • UPDATE the row, and if no rows were modified, INSERT a new row.

  • MySQL has an ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE clause.

EDIT: Thanks for all the great replies. It looks like Paul is right, and there's not a single, portable way of doing this. That's quite surprising to me, as it sounds like a very basic operation.

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You're not going to find a single solution that works for all these RDBMS. Sorry. – Paul Tomblin Mar 27 at 17:22
I was afraid that would be the case. – Remy Blank Mar 27 at 17:31

9 Answers

vote up 11 vote down check

MySQL (and subsequently SQLite) also support the REPLACE INTO syntax:

REPLACE INTO my_table (pk_id, col1) VALUES (5, '123');

This automatically identifies the primary key and finds a matching row to update, inserting a new one if none is found.

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> (and subsequently SQLite) ...you totally stole that from my answer :-) – Kyle Cronin Mar 27 at 17:24
Sorry - hope that's not considered rude? – andygeers Mar 27 at 17:43
if you found it useful , you could've atleast upvoted it :) – Learning Mar 27 at 17:45
Actually, to be specific, MySQL's REPLACE always does an insert, but it will delete the row if it already exists, first. dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/… – Evan Mar 28 at 3:57
It is important to understand that it is an insert+delete and never and update. The consequence of this, is that you will always want to make sure when you do a replace, you should always include data for all the fields. – Zoredache Mar 28 at 7:39
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vote up 1 vote down

the ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE clause is the best solution because: REPLACE does a DELETE followed by an INSERT so for an ever so slight period the record is removed creating the ever so slight possibility that a query could come back having skipped that if the page was viewed during the REPLACE query.

I prefer INSERT ... ON DUPLICATE UPDATE ... for that reason.

jmoz's solution is the best: though I prefer the SET syntax to the parentheses

INSERT INTO cache VALUES 
SET key = 'key', generation = 'generation'
ON DUPLICATE KEY 
UPDATE key = 'key', generation = (generation + 1)
;
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vote up 1 vote down

I would do something like the following:

INSERT INTO cache VALUES (key, generation)
ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE (key = key, generation = generation + 1);

Setting the generation value to 0 in code or in the sql but the using the ON DUP... to increment the value. I think that's the syntax anyway.

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I've used this solution in php/mysql applications it works very well. – Fire Crow Mar 28 at 22:44
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In PostgreSQL there is no merge command, and actually writing it is not trivial - there are actually strange edge cases that make the task "interesting".

The best (as in: working in the most possible conditions) approach, is to use function - such as one shown in manual (merge_db).

If you don't want to use function, you can usually get away with:

updated = db.execute(UPDATE ... RETURNING 1)
if (!updated)
  db.execute(INSERT...)

Just remember that it is not fault proof and it will fail eventually.

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vote up 3 vote down

Standard SQL provides the MERGE statement for this task. Not all DBMS support the MERGE statement.

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vote up 2 vote down

SQLite supports replacing a row if it already exists:

INSERT OR REPLACE INTO [...blah...]

You can shorten this to

REPLACE INTO [...blah...]

This shortcut was added to be compatible with the MySQL REPLACE INTO expression.

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+1 for sqlite context. – Learning Mar 27 at 17:45
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Could you use an insert trigger? If it fails, do an update.

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Trigger (at least in PostgreSQL) is running when the command worked. i.e. you can't have trigger that runs when base command failed. – depesz Mar 27 at 17:43
Hunh. Didn't know that. Thanks. – Michael Todd Mar 27 at 19:12
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If you don't have a common way to atomically update or insert (e.g., via a transaction) then you can fallback to another locking scheme. A 0-byte file, system mutex, named pipe, etc...

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vote up 5 vote down

I don't know that you are going to find a platform-neutral solution.

This is commonly called an "UPSERT".

See some related discussions:

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Is that solution really applicable? and portable? – Ryan Graham Mar 27 at 17:15

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