113

I've created a table with a primary key and enabled AUTO_INCREMENT:

CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS test.authors (
    hostcheck_id INT PRIMARY KEY AUTO_INCREMENT,
    instance_id INT,
    host_object_id INT,
    check_type INT,
    is_raw_check INT,
    current_check_attempt INT,
    max_check_attempts INT,
    state INT,
    state_type INT,
    start_time datetime,
    start_time_usec INT,
    end_time datetime,
    end_time_usec INT,
    command_object_id INT,
    command_args VARCHAR(25),
    command_line VARCHAR(100),
    timeout int,
    early_timeout INT,
    execution_time DEC(18,5),
    latency DEC(18,3),
    return_code INT,
    output VARCHAR(50),
    long_output VARCHAR(50),
    perfdata VARCHAR(50)
);

Then, with the query below, I've tried "" and "1" for the first value but it doesn't work:

INSERT INTO  test.authors VALUES ('1','1','67','0','0','1','10','0','1',
'2012-01-03 12:50:49','108929','2012-01-03 12:50:59','198963','21','',
'/usr/local/nagios/libexec/check_ping  5','30','0','4.04159','0.102','1',
'PING WARNING -DUPLICATES FOUND! Packet loss = 0%, RTA = 2.86 ms','',
'rta=2.860000m=0%;80;100;0'); 

So, how to insert data to MySQL with auto-incremented column(field)?

0

7 Answers 7

189

Set the auto increment field to NULL or 0 if you want it to be auto magically assigned...

3
  • 1
    This works for me unlike skipping autoincrement column value.
    – ASten
    Mar 3, 2017 at 12:19
  • 12
    Prefer NULL, as 0's behaviour can be affected by NO_AUTO_VALUE_ON_ZERO.
    – BenMorel
    Jun 18, 2018 at 23:04
  • yup, this is how you can insert using a select instead of values
    – grantr
    Apr 26, 2022 at 15:22
89

In order to take advantage of the auto-incrementing capability of the column, do not supply a value for that column when inserting rows. The database will supply a value for you.

INSERT INTO test.authors (
   instance_id,host_object_id,check_type,is_raw_check,
   current_check_attempt,max_check_attempts,state,state_type,
   start_time,start_time_usec,end_time,end_time_usec,command_object_id,
   command_args,command_line,timeout,early_timeout,execution_time,
   latency,return_code,output,long_output,perfdata
) VALUES (
   '1','67','0','0','1','10','0','1','2012-01-03 12:50:49','108929',
   '2012-01-03 12:50:59','198963','21','',
   '/usr/local/nagios/libexec/check_ping  5','30','0','4.04159',
   '0.102','1','PING WARNING -DUPLICATES FOUND! Packet loss = 0%, RTA = 2.86 ms',
   '','rta=2.860000m=0%;80;100;0'
);
4
  • but the query you pasted for me you put value for primery key?? Jan 6, 2012 at 4:45
  • 3
    @SalmanRaza: no, look: the column "hostcheck_id" is missing from the query I suggested. I gave values for only 23 columns but there are 24 columns in the table. I guess Adrian's suggestion would work too, but I didn't know you could do that!
    – Celada
    Jan 6, 2012 at 4:51
  • 4
    @Celada great thing about this site - you learn something even when your own answer is correct :-) Jan 6, 2012 at 5:01
  • 1
    @All thanks for your reply ! it help me out i pass '0' value for primery key column Jan 6, 2012 at 6:05
37

The default keyword works for me:

mysql> insert into user_table (user_id, ip, partial_ip, source, user_edit_date, username) values 
(default, '39.48.49.126', null, 'user signup page', now(), 'newUser');
---
Query OK, 1 row affected (0.00 sec)

I'm running mysql --version 5.1.66:

mysql  Ver 14.14 Distrib **5.1.66**, for debian-linux-gnu (x86_64) using readline 6.1
5
  • You can leave the column names out as long as the values match the order of the columns. It may be considered bad practice to do it, but for a one-time quick insert it's a good solution.
    – Shahar
    Oct 20, 2015 at 14:24
  • @Shahar This is much better than leaving the column name out. By this way, you have an better idea of what is going on in your SQL
    – Ikhlak S.
    Apr 11, 2016 at 12:51
  • @user3284463 I totally agree, I just think it's worth mentioning.
    – Shahar
    Apr 11, 2016 at 13:20
  • 1
    Yeah, the problem is that the order may match NOW but won't necessarily match when the sql is run LATER.
    – Kzqai
    Oct 25, 2016 at 17:02
  • Thanks a lot, for potgres 10.10 is not permitted to put 0 or null values, but with default it works;
    – tarmogoyf
    Feb 10, 2020 at 15:48
13

Check out this post

According to it

No value was specified for the AUTO_INCREMENT column, so MySQL assigned sequence numbers automatically. You can also explicitly assign NULL or 0 to the column to generate sequence numbers.

11

I see three possibilities here that will help you insert into your table without making a complete mess but "specifying" a value for the AUTO_INCREMENT column, since you are supplying all the values you can do either one of the following options.

First approach (Supplying NULL):

INSERT INTO test.authors VALUES (
 NULL,'1','67','0','0','1','10','0','1','2012-01-03 12:50:49','108929',
 '2012-01-03 12:50:59','198963','21','',
 '/usr/local/nagios/libexec/check_ping  5','30','0','4.04159',
 '0.102','1','PING WARNING -DUPLICATES FOUND! Packet loss = 0%, RTA = 2.86 ms',
 '','rta=2.860000m=0%;80;100;0'
);

Second approach (Supplying '' {Simple quotes / apostrophes} although it will give you a warning):

INSERT INTO test.authors VALUES (
 '','1','67','0','0','1','10','0','1','2012-01-03 12:50:49','108929',
 '2012-01-03 12:50:59','198963','21','',
 '/usr/local/nagios/libexec/check_ping  5','30','0','4.04159',
 '0.102','1','PING WARNING -DUPLICATES FOUND! Packet loss = 0%, RTA = 2.86 ms',
 '','rta=2.860000m=0%;80;100;0'
);

Third approach (Supplying default):

INSERT INTO test.authors VALUES (
 default,'1','67','0','0','1','10','0','1','2012-01-03 12:50:49','108929',
 '2012-01-03 12:50:59','198963','21','',
 '/usr/local/nagios/libexec/check_ping  5','30','0','4.04159',
 '0.102','1','PING WARNING -DUPLICATES FOUND! Packet loss = 0%, RTA = 2.86 ms',
 '','rta=2.860000m=0%;80;100;0'
);

Either one of these examples should suffice when inserting into that table as long as you include all the values in the same order as you defined them when creating the table.

2

For auto-incremented column(field):

CREATE TABLE person (
    id INT NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT,
    first_name VARCHAR(50) NOT NULL,
    last_name VARCHAR(50) NOT NULL,
    PRIMARY KEY (id)
);

You can use NULL or 0 to insert an auto-incremented value as shown below:

                        -- Here
INSERT INTO person VALUES (NULL, "John", "Smith")
                        -- Here
INSERT INTO person VALUES (0, "John", "Smith")
1
  • default is ok too
    – jacky
    Sep 19, 2023 at 4:03
-1

I used something like this to type only values in my SQL request. There are too much columns in my case, and im lazy.

insert into my_table select max(id)+1, valueA, valueB, valueC.... from my_table; 

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