77

Please correct me if I am wrong, but I think there is no such thing as mass update in an Eloquent model.

Is there a way to make a mass update on the DB table without issuing a query for every row?

For example, is there a static method, something like

User::updateWhere(
    array('age', '<', '18'),
    array(
        'under_18' => 1 
        [, ...]
    )
);

(yes, it is a silly example but you get the picture...)

Why isn't there such a feature implemented? Am I the only one who would be very happy if something like this comes up?

I (the developers), wouldn't like to implement it like:

DB::table('users')->where('age', '<', '18')->update(array('under_18' => 1));

because as the project grows, we may require the programmers to change the table name in the future and they cannot search and replace for the table name!

Is there such a static method to perform this operation? And if there is not, can we extend the Illuminate\Database\Eloquent\Model class to accomplish such a thing?

9 Answers 9

134

Perhaps this was not possible a few years ago but in recent versions of Laravel you can definitely do:

User::where('age', '<', 18)->update(['under_18' => 1]);

Worth noting that you need the where method before calling update.

7
  • 6
    Can confirm this, works with Laravel 5.2, way more elegant and "eloquent" solution. May 26, 2017 at 7:46
  • 1
    Works Laravel 5.6
    – Cholowao
    Apr 4, 2018 at 11:12
  • 2
    Thank you for this. I was digging into the source code to check if they actually did that! Feb 14, 2019 at 16:04
  • 2
    The accepted answer is outdated, and the first result in google when searching 'eloquent mass update' is this question; so I guess this should be the accepted answer.
    – HosseyNJF
    Mar 3, 2020 at 15:03
  • 1
    If you don't have a where() method, you may also use query() to do a mass update. E.g. User::query()->update(...) will update every single row.
    – ralphjsmit
    Jan 6, 2022 at 16:16
73

For mass update/insert features, it was requested but Taylor Otwell (Laravel author) suggest that users should use Query Builder instead. https://github.com/laravel/framework/issues/1295

Your models should generally extend Illuminate\Database\Eloquent\Model. Then you access the entity iself, for example if you have this:

<?php
Use Illuminate\Database\Eloquent\Model;

class User extends Model {

    // table name defaults to "users" anyway, so this definition is only for
    // demonstration on how you can set a custom one
    protected $table = 'users';
    // ... code omited ...

Update #2

You have to resort to query builder. To cover table naming issue, you could get it dynamically via getTable() method. The only limitation of this is that you need your user class initialized before you can use this function. Your query would be as follows:

$userTable = (new User())->getTable();
DB::table($userTable)->where('age', '<', 18)->update(array('under_18' => 1));

This way your table name is controller in User model (as shown in the example above).

Update #1

Other way to do this (not efficient in your situation) would be:

$users = User::where('age', '<', 18)->get();
foreach ($users as $user) {
    $user->field = value;
    $user->save();
}

This way the table name is kept in users class and your developers don't have to worry about it.

5
  • 3
    I am well aware of the method you describe. I thought I was clear that I want to do such a trivial thing using ONE QUERY in my database. Imagine if there were about 20K rows that need to be updated. With the way you describe, 20K queries will be executed. Not to mention the overhead for keeping in memory 20K records!! Mar 16, 2014 at 12:21
  • Yes, this is the way I did it also. I just extended the Eloquent Class with a static function like so ` public static function getTableName() { return with(new static)->getTable(); } ` and I get the table name with Model::getTableName I cannot accept your answer though, since it does not address the initial question. Still I will upvote it because your time is precious and I can accept that :) Thank you! Mar 16, 2014 at 14:32
  • First paragraph covers the answer that there is no such method. I even provided the link to issue where you can see Laravel's author closing it with directions to use query builder. There is no other way to do it in Eloquent.
    – ek9
    Mar 16, 2014 at 14:43
  • I guess you are right, you did answer the question :) Jan 31, 2015 at 16:38
  • In L6 is possible : User::where('age', '<', 18)->update(['field' => request()->value]);
    – Vit
    Jun 12, 2020 at 15:05
20

If you need to update all data without any condition, try below code

Model::query()->update(['column1' => 0, 'column2' => 'New']);
1
  • 2
    Exactly this is what I was looking for, with mass edit we don't always need to use where() statement. And Since we cannot call update() as static method of our Model ( Users:update() ) this was helpful answer for me. Short and Clear. Mar 16, 2020 at 12:16
19

A litle correction to @metamaker answer:

DB::beginTransaction();
     // do all your updates here
        foreach ($users as $user) {
            $new_value = rand(1,10) // use your own criteria
            DB::table('users')
               ->where('id', '=', $user->id)
               ->update(['status' => $new_value  // update your field(s) here
                ]);
        }
    // when done commit
DB::commit();

Now you can have 1 milion different updates in one DB transaction

1
  • Whilst this is simple to understand, and will not apply part of the update unless it can apply all, it is a long way short of being suitable for mass update. As pointed out above, this is n+1 queries, but this could be done in 1 query. n+1 queries could see various issues, ranging from execution time issues to firewall blocking.
    – SEoF
    Oct 6, 2021 at 13:13
5

Use database transactions to update multiple entities in a bulk. Transaction will be committed when your update function finished, or rolled back if exception occurred somewhere in between.

https://laravel.com/docs/5.4/database#database-transactions

For example, this is how I regenerate materialized path slugs (https://communities.bmc.com/docs/DOC-9902) for articles in a single bulk update:

public function regenerateDescendantsSlugs(Model $parent, $old_parent_slug)
    {
        $children = $parent->where('full_slug', 'like', "%/$old_parent_slug/%")->get();

        \DB::transaction(function () use ($children, $parent, $old_parent_slug) {
            /** @var Model $child */
            foreach ($children as $child) {
                $new_full_slug  = $this->regenerateSlug($parent, $child);
                $new_full_title = $this->regenerateTitle($parent, $child);

                \DB::table($parent->getTable())
                    ->where('full_slug', '=', $child->full_slug)
                    ->update([
                        'full_slug' => $new_full_slug,
                        'full_title' => $new_full_title,
                    ]);
            }
        });
    }
3
  • Best answer from my point of view. I posted and answer with a cleaner version.
    – catalin87
    Feb 7, 2019 at 9:21
  • 1
    I don't think this quite answers the question. This will result in many queries running within a single transaction but it would still result in thousands of individual queries. The round trip time to the database can add up in cases like this. For example if the roundtrip time is around 300 µs this would add 6 seconds to the execution time for the ~20k rows to update that the OP suggested.
    – Tim Martin
    Aug 12, 2019 at 16:37
  • Whilst this is simple to understand, and will not apply part of the update unless it can apply all, it is a long way short of being suitable for mass update. As pointed out above, this is n+1 queries, but this could be done in 1 query. n+1 queries could see various issues, ranging from execution time issues to firewall blocking.
    – SEoF
    Oct 6, 2021 at 13:12
4

Laravel 6.*

We can update mass data on query as follow :

Appointment::where('request_id' , $appointment_request->id)
    ->where('user_id', Auth::user()->id)
    ->where('status', '!=', 'Canceled')
    ->where('id', '!=', $appointment->id)
    ->update([
        'status' => 'Canceled',
        'canceled_by' => Auth::user()->id
    ]);
1

Another example of working code of the mass query and mass update in same instruction:

Coordinate::whereIn('id',$someCoordIdsArray)->where('status','<>',Order::$ROUTE_OPTIMIZED)
       ->update(['status'=>Order::$ROUTE_OPTIMIZED]);
0

From Laravel 8 you can also use upsert which helped me updated multiple rows at once with each rows having different values.

https://laravel.com/docs/8.x/eloquent#upserts

-3

laravel 5.8 you can accomplish mass update like so:

User::where('id', 24)->update (dataAssociativeArray) ;
1
  • 7
    Mass update means updating multiple entities with one query, I don't think your example shows how to do that. Jul 29, 2019 at 7:03

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