23

I did a dump of a mysql 5.5 database and loaded it into a 5.6 server.

The dump added ON UPDATE CURRENT_TIMESTAMP to a bunch of columns that didn't have it previously.

I'm searching for an ALTER TABLE statement that will remove the ON UPDATE CURRENT_TIMESTAMP rule without making any other changes. In my imagination it should be something like ON UPDATE NOOP or ON UPDATE NO_CURRENT_TIMESTAMP.

ON UPDATE JUST_BE_A_NORMAL_COLUMN?

I tried using the "Clear default" option in mysql workbench and it did the opposite of what it should have done - it gave the column a default!

I was able to get rid of the default with ALTER TABLE t ALTER COLUMN c DROP DEFAULT, so the column is mandatory in INSERTs (just like it was before the dump/reload, as I wanted it) but the unwanted behavior on UPDATEs remains.

I have not enabled the explicit_defaults_for_timestamp option. If I was starting fresh I'd definitely use that option since it seems a lot more sane. But since I already had the columns configured the way I wanted them in 5.5, I expected them to keep the same semantics when transferred to 5.6. Apparently mysqldump just wasn't smart enough.

At this point I'm not sure I understand what effects would result from enabling explicit_defaults_for_timestamp. Would that option change the behavior of existing tables, or does it only change the interpretation of future CREATE TABLE commands? Would turning it on somehow help me fix the broken columns?

UPDATE:

A similar question is here but that one is about creating a new table, not altering an existing column. In fact that question is the one I used as a guide when creating the tables on the 5.5 server. I used the 2-step procedure: create with default 0 to suppress ON UPDATE CURRENT_TIMESTAMP, then drop default.

The 2-step procedure definitely doesn't produce the correct result on the 5.6 server without explicit_defaults_for_timestamp; this is a sign that either 5.6 doesn't perfectly imitate the old behavior in this mode, or the old server never did what I thought it was doing. I can't be sure which.

5 Answers 5

31
ALTER TABLE mytable
     CHANGE mycolumn
            mycolumn TIMESTAMP NOT NULL DEFAULT CURRENT_TIMESTAMP

I believe this will reset and void the ON UPDATE. This would effectively make this definition:

CREATE TABLE mytable (
  # Other Columns
  mycolumn timestamp NOT NULL default CURRENT_TIMESTAMP on update CURRENT_TIMESTAMP
)

Change into this one:

CREATE TABLE mytable (
  # Other Columns
  mycolumn timestamp NOT NULL default CURRENT_TIMESTAMP
)

If you wanted to reset the column entirely, you should be able to simply redefine it like:

ALTER TABLE mytable
     CHANGE mycolumn
            mycolumn TIMESTAMP NOT NULL;
5
  • I need a way to do this without adding a default. Your suggestions create a default, and then if I drop the default, the auto-update attribute comes back.
    – user2404501
    Aug 5, 2015 at 18:49
  • See the second alter statement. That modifies the column without specifying a default. Aug 5, 2015 at 19:58
  • Which brings in all the "hidden default" behaviors - CURRENT_TIMESTAMP as both the default for insertion and the auto-update. Maybe with explicit_defaults_for_timestamp it would work. But since I discovered I can't set that option without restarting the server, it's not something I can test right away.
    – user2404501
    Aug 5, 2015 at 20:06
  • 1
    Actually, on a second attempt, your first suggestion followed by a ALTER TABLE ... ALTER COLUMN ... DROP DEFAULT seems to be working. I'm still trying to figure out why that exact combination works and other similar ones don't.
    – user2404501
    Aug 5, 2015 at 21:41
  • It still doesn't make sense, but I have gathered enough information to describe (if not explain) the behavior. And as a lucky side effect I solved my original problem too. I posted my results as a self-answer, but I'm giving you credit for pointing me in the right direction.
    – user2404501
    Aug 6, 2015 at 20:49
27

Using the ideas from the other answers, and a couple of freshly installed mysql server instances, I have done a comparison of the behavior of several different CREATE and ALTER commands on 3 different server configurations:

  • mysql 5.5.45
  • mysql 5.6.26 without explicit_defaults_for_timestamp
  • mysql 5.6.26 with explicit_defaults_for_timestamp

The easiest one to explain is 5.6 with explicit_defaults_for_timestamp. Everything is sane. The timestamp type is not noticeably different from any other type. Columns created before the explicit_defaults_for_timestamp flag was turned on retain their old defaults and magic update.

In 5.5, the implicit defaults happen when a timestamp column is created (if it is the first timestamp column in the table). These are well documented already. The magic update behavior can be avoided by setting an explicit default, and then the default can be removed, leaving the column with the 3 desired attributes: non-nullable, no default, no magic update. This is the result of CREATE TABLE t (TIMESTAMP c NOT NULL DEFAULT 0) and ALTER TABLE t ALTER COLUMN c DROP DEFAULT.

This state can't be recreated with a single CREATE TABLE command, and it doesn't survive a mysqldump.

5.6 without explicit_defaults_for_timestamp is the most interesting case. It's almost the same as 5.5, but the DROP DEFAULT command is different. If you try the "create with default 0 then drop default" sequence, the magic update attribute appears as a side effect of the drop. But if you make the default CURRENT_TIMESTAMP instead of 0, then the DROP DEFAULT works without the side effect. (Must be a bug. I can't imagine any reason it would intentionally behave this way.)

Therefore this pair of commands will have the same result on all of the server configurations I tested:

ALTER TABLE t CHANGE COLUMN c c TIMESTAMP NOT NULL DEFAULT CURRENT_TIMESTAMP;
ALTER TABLE t ALTER COLUMN c DROP DEFAULT;

The column now has no default and no magic update.

2
  • 1
    Accept your answer! (I'm honored to encounter the same problem with a 10k user :D)
    – user2558887
    Feb 24, 2018 at 21:32
  • Work on 5.7 too ! Thank you !!
    – hexaJer
    Nov 6, 2019 at 6:41
1

For your use case I think you would be better served with DATETIME, eg:

ALTER TABLE `my_table`
    CHANGE `my_col` `my_col` DATETIME NOT NULL DEFAULT NOW();

This will default to NOW() on insert, but remain unaffected on update.

See this question for a good explanation of the difference: Should I use field 'datetime' or 'timestamp'?

1

If you want to remove both the DEFAULT value and ON UPDATE value, nothing but the following helped me

ALTER TABLE `your_table` CHANGE `your_column` `your_column` TIMESTAMP NOT NULL DEFAULT '0000-00-00 00:00:00';
0

Try enabling the explicit_defaults_for_timestamp system variable and then redefine the columns with:

ALTER TABLE `table` CHANGE COLUMN `col` `col` TIMESTAMP NOT NULL;

If I understand the documentation correctly enabling explicit_defaults_for_timestamp is mandatory to be able to define TIMESTAMP columns declared as NOT NULL and without an explicit DEFAULT.

1
  • I suspect you're right. I wish the documentation would be more clear about the option's effect on existing columns so I could be more confident about turning it on. Taking the plunge... and set @@explicit_defaults_for_timestamp=1 didn't work. Read-only variable. I guess that means it requires a server restart.
    – user2404501
    Aug 5, 2015 at 19:26

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