415

Is there a query (command) to truncate all the tables in a database in one operation? I want to know if I can do this with one single query.

10
  • 2
    Truncate all tables? do you meant truncate all columns of all tables in a database? What query language is this in? (e.g. SQL, MySQL, Oracle, Postgres, etc)
    – Jay
    Dec 16, 2009 at 7:02
  • Im not sure I would recommend doing this as you could very easily get yourself into trouble. Is there a reason why you cant just script the truncates and run the script? Dec 16, 2009 at 7:06
  • thanks 4 the reply but only reason not scripting it is running short of time so thought of runnind a query in mysql
    – devang
    Dec 16, 2009 at 7:11
  • ya its in mysql..and query means something similar to truncate table table_name..here i want to truncate all rows of all tables in my db in one query
    – devang
    Dec 16, 2009 at 7:18
  • You can use Information_Schema with a cursor. Not sure about MySql, but it should support Information_Schema.Tables Dec 16, 2009 at 7:34

31 Answers 31

386

Drop (i.e. remove tables)

mysql -Nse 'show tables' DATABASE_NAME | while read table; do mysql -e "drop table $table" DATABASE_NAME; done

Truncate (i.e. empty tables)

mysql -Nse 'show tables' DATABASE_NAME | while read table; do mysql -e "truncate table $table" DATABASE_NAME; done
13
  • 20
    Yup, clean, ty. But you might need to run this with -uUSER -pPASSWORD. Also you might have to run it multiple times if you have FK withou delete on cascade.
    – mihaicc
    Oct 4, 2012 at 14:53
  • 52
    If you run into FK problems such as "Cannot delete or update a parent row: a foreign key constraint fails", be sure to disable foreign key checks by modifying the command as follows: mysql -e "SET FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS = 0; drop table $table" DATABASE_NAME
    – chemick
    Jan 25, 2013 at 18:00
  • 28
    No need to loop the mysql client though. Take it out of the loop like this: mysql -Nse 'show tables' DATABASE_NAME | while read table; do echo "drop table $table;"; done | mysql DATABASE_NAME Nov 29, 2013 at 22:04
  • 4
    @TylerCollier you need a .my.cnf
    – Felix Eve
    Jan 30, 2015 at 6:24
  • 3
    Based on the above answer and comments, and because they didn't work as expected for me, i made a simple bash script that you can use for this. You can find it at: gist.github.com/mocanuga/eff26a3dcc40ef657a1c812f68511f6d
    – mocanuga
    Apr 26, 2017 at 11:03
221

The following query will generate a list of individual truncate commands for all database tables in a Mysql schema(s). (Replace dbSchemaName1 with name of your Db schema.)

SELECT CONCAT('TRUNCATE TABLE ',table_schema,'.',TABLE_NAME, ';') 
    FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.TABLES WHERE table_schema IN ('dbSchemaName1','dbSchemaName2');

Copy the query results (which might look like the following) and paste the list of truncate commands into a SQL query tab in MySQL Worbench or your query command tool of choice:

TRUNCATE TABLE dbSchemaName1.table1;
TRUNCATE TABLE dbSchemaName1.table2;
TRUNCATE TABLE dbSchemaName1.table3;

Note: you may receive the following error:

ERROR 1217 (23000): Cannot delete or update a parent row: a foreign key constraint fails

This occurs if there are tables with foreign keys references to the table you are trying to drop/truncate.

To resolve this turn off foreign key checks before running the truncate commands:

SET FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS=0;  -- turn off foreign key checks
TRUNCATE TABLE dbSchemaName1.table1;  -- truncate tables
TRUNCATE TABLE dbSchemaName1.table2;
TRUNCATE TABLE dbSchemaName1.table3;
SET FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS=1;  -- turn on foreign key checks
7
  • 1
    This is probably the best solution if you have a user and password for your database, and you don't want to type them visibly in your shell.
    – Bach
    Mar 31, 2016 at 10:40
  • 9
    Upvoted because this solution requires only DB access and not SSH access. In addition it's OS-independent.
    – mastazi
    Mar 29, 2017 at 23:43
  • @mastazi i have a few questions : 1. what is "table_schema"stand for ? is it standing from the schema name? 2.what TABLE_NAME stand for? is it standing for the the tables that should be deleted? 3. should i write tall the tables that should be deleted tin the command like "('db1_name','db2_name')"?
    – AAEM
    Aug 17, 2018 at 12:17
  • 1
    @Ahmed the only substitutions required is that you have to replace db1_name and db2_name with the names of your databases. Then you have to copy the results of this query, and paste them as a new mysql query and execute them. INFORMATION_SCHEMA is a built-in schema that comes pre-installed in every MySQL installation and holds info about your databases, don't touch it or your MySQL will start misbehaving :-) table_schema and table_name are columns of the table called "TABLES" within information_schema
    – mastazi
    Aug 18, 2018 at 5:08
  • 4
    How do you "use query result" to truncate tables?
    – The Onin
    Aug 6, 2020 at 18:58
83

Use phpMyAdmin in this way:

Database View => Check All (tables) => Empty

If you want to ignore foreign key checks, you can uncheck the box that says:

[ ] Enable foreign key checks

You'll need to be running atleast version 4.5.0 or higher to get this checkbox.

Its not MySQL CLI-fu, but hey, it works!

6
  • 45
    Who said we didn't? This answer apparently proves useful to people; it helps.
    – bzeaman
    Feb 22, 2015 at 15:36
  • 3
    This will not work if you have a parent-child database schema. Jan 27, 2016 at 1:28
  • 3
    Foreign key constraint fails. Jul 27, 2017 at 17:30
  • 1
    @BrianHannay Edited the answer to add a note about the checkbox that disables foreign key checks.
    – Nemo
    Jul 27, 2017 at 17:59
  • 3
    @BrianHannay It was added in PMA 4.5.0 in June 2015. I found the changelog and the original issue
    – Nemo
    Jul 27, 2017 at 19:08
25

MS SQL Server 2005+ (Remove PRINT for actual execution...)

EXEC sp_MSforeachtable 'PRINT ''TRUNCATE TABLE ?'''

If your database platform supports INFORMATION_SCHEMA views, take the results of the following query and execute them.

SELECT 'TRUNCATE TABLE ' + TABLE_NAME FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.TABLES

Try this for MySQL:

SELECT Concat('TRUNCATE TABLE ', TABLE_NAME) FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.TABLES

Adding a semicolon to the Concat makes it easier to use e.g. from within mysql workbench.

SELECT Concat('TRUNCATE TABLE ', TABLE_NAME, ';') FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.TABLES
9
  • hi..thanks for d reply i tried this query but doesnt seem to work..is der something like truncate table table_name which i can use for all tables in my db..
    – devang
    Dec 16, 2009 at 7:15
  • I forgot that MySQL doesn't support the "+" operator directly. Assuming that is the error, I added the CONCAT() example above. If you are still getting an error message, then please share the actual error message.
    – beach
    Dec 16, 2009 at 7:23
  • this query works but what if i have a diff db name eg devang..is my db name so if i use it according to your above query throws the foll error.. Table 'devang.TABLES' doesn't exist
    – devang
    Dec 16, 2009 at 7:40
  • 3
    Ahh. INFORMATION_SCHEMA is a view that exists in the active database. If you change your database, the view would then be executed against that DB. There is no need to modify the query when changing databases. Just follow these steps: 1) change active database. 2) run the script. 3) copy the results 4) paste the results back into the editor 5) execute the results. All tables in the active database are now truncated.
    – beach
    Dec 16, 2009 at 7:51
  • 2
    BEWARE! This selects all tables in all databases (even the ones that are NOT in the current database. The MySQL example doesn't work, but in my case it returned 293 row (tables) instead of 66. Imagine the data loss...
    – f4der
    Nov 28, 2014 at 12:47
23
SET FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS = 0;

SELECT @str := CONCAT('TRUNCATE TABLE ', table_schema, '.', table_name, ';')
FROM   information_schema.tables
WHERE  table_type   = 'BASE TABLE'
  AND  table_schema IN ('db1_name','db2_name');

PREPARE stmt FROM @str;

EXECUTE stmt;

DEALLOCATE PREPARE stmt;

SET FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS = 1;
4
  • 1
    If you want to work with current database (and thus make this code portable), change last condition in SELECT to this: AND table_schema = DATABASE();
    – alx
    Jun 8, 2019 at 13:34
  • It doesn't truncate for me. MySQL 5.7.25 Jun 12, 2019 at 16:49
  • Testing on MySQL 5.7.12 (Aurora MySQL 2.7.2), this only truncates the last table from the SELECT query. @str doesn't seem to concatenate all tables together.
    – Mike Hill
    Oct 14, 2021 at 20:26
  • I was able to concat all rows with SELECT @str := GROUP_CONCAT(CONCAT('TRUNCATE TABLE ', table_schema, '.', table_name, '') SEPARATOR ';\n')
    – Jairo
    Feb 7, 2022 at 15:34
22

I found this to drop all tables in a database:

mysqldump -uUSERNAME -pPASSWORD --add-drop-table --no-data DATABASENAME | grep ^DROP | mysql -uUSERNAME -pPASSWORD DATABASENAME

Usefull if you are limited by hosting solution (not able to drop a whole database).

I modified it to truncate the tables. There is no "--add-truncate-table" for mysqldump, so i did:

mysqldump -uUSERNAME -pPASSWORD --add-drop-table --no-data DATABASENAME | grep ^DROP | sed -e 's/DROP TABLE IF EXISTS/TRUNCATE TABLE/g' | mysql -uUSERNAME -pPASSWORD DATABASENAME

works for me --edit, fixing a typo in the last command

0
21

I found it most simple to just do something like the code below, just replace the table names with your own. important make sure the last line is always SET FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS=1;

SET FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS=0;
TRUNCATE `table1`;
TRUNCATE `table2`;
TRUNCATE `table3`;
TRUNCATE `table4`;
TRUNCATE `table5`;
TRUNCATE `table6`;
TRUNCATE `table7`;
SET FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS=1;
2
  • 7
    you do not have to repeat SET FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS=0; after every TRUNCATE command just at start line that will mark mode as 0
    – HMagdy
    Jan 12, 2015 at 12:24
  • Its not possible to edit and add table name if you table count is higher like more than 500+.
    – Mithlaj
    Feb 21, 2023 at 7:31
16

This will print the command to truncate all tables:

SELECT GROUP_CONCAT(Concat('TRUNCATE TABLE ',table_schema,'.',TABLE_NAME) SEPARATOR ';') FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.TABLES where table_schema in ('my_db');
6
  1. To truncate a table, one must drop the foreign key constraints mapped to the columns in this table from other tables (in fact on all tables in the specific DB/Schema).
  2. So, all foreign key constraints must be dropped initially followed by table truncation.
  3. Optionally, use the optimize table (in mysql, innodb engine esp) to reclaim the used data space/size to OS after data truncation.
  4. Once data truncation is carried out, create the same foreign key constraints again on the same table. See below a script that would generate the script to carry out the above operations.

    SELECT CONCAT('ALTER TABLE ',TABLE_SCHEMA,'.',TABLE_NAME,' DROP FOREIGN KEY ',CONSTRAINT_NAME,';') FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.TABLE_CONSTRAINTS
    WHERE CONSTRAINT_TYPE='FOREIGN KEY' AND TABLE_SCHEMA='<TABLE SCHEMA>'
    UNION
    SELECT CONCAT('TRUNCATE TABLE ',TABLE_SCHEMA,'.',TABLE_NAME,';') FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.TABLES
    WHERE TABLE_SCHEMA='<TABLE SCHEMA>' AND TABLE_TYPE='BASE TABLE'
    UNION
    SELECT CONCAT('OPTIMIZE TABLE ',TABLE_SCHEMA,'.',TABLE_NAME,';') FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.TABLES
    WHERE TABLE_SCHEMA='<TABLE SCHEMA>' AND TABLE_TYPE='BASE TABLE'
    UNION
    SELECT CONCAT('ALTER TABLE ',TABLE_SCHEMA,'.',TABLE_NAME,' ADD CONSTRAINT ',CONSTRAINT_NAME,' FOREIGN KEY(',COLUMN_NAME,')',' REFERENCES ',REFERENCED_TABLE_NAME,'(',REFERENCED_COLUMN_NAME,');') FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.KEY_COLUMN_USAGE
    WHERE CONSTRAINT_NAME LIKE 'FK%' AND TABLE_SCHEMA='<TABLE SCHEMA>'
    INTO OUTFILE "C:/DB Truncate.sql" LINES TERMINATED BY '\n';
    

Now, run the Db Truncate.sql script generated

Benefits. 1) Reclaim disk space 2) Not needed to drop and recreate the DB/Schema with the same structure

Drawbacks. 1) FK constraints should be names in the table with the name containing 'FK' in the constraint name.

5

Here is my variant to have 'one statement to truncate 'em all'.

First, I am using a separate database named 'util' for my helper stored procedures. The code of my stored procedure to truncate all tables is:

DROP PROCEDURE IF EXISTS trunctables;
DELIMITER ;;
CREATE  PROCEDURE trunctables(theDb varchar(64))
BEGIN
    declare tname varchar(64);
    declare tcursor CURSOR FOR 
    SELECT table_name FROM information_schema.tables WHERE table_type <> 'VIEW' AND table_schema = theDb;
    SET FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS = 0; 
    OPEN tcursor;
    l1: LOOP
        FETCH tcursor INTO tname;
        if tname = NULL then leave l1; end if;
        set @sql = CONCAT('truncate `', theDB, '`.`', tname, '`');
        PREPARE stmt from @sql;
        EXECUTE stmt;
        DEALLOCATE PREPARE stmt;
    END LOOP l1;
    CLOSE tcursor;
    SET FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS = 1; 
END ;;
DELIMITER ;

Once you have this stored procedure in your util database, you can call it like

call util.trunctables('nameofdatabase');

which is now exactly one statement :-)

1
  • 1
    This was the only scriptable solution that reliably worked for me.
    – Mike Hill
    Oct 15, 2021 at 16:48
4

if using sql server 2005, there is a hidden stored procedure that allows you to execute a command or a set of commands against all tables inside a database. Here is how you would call TRUNCATE TABLE with this stored procedure:

EXEC [sp_MSforeachtable] @command1="TRUNCATE TABLE ?"

Here is a good article that elaborates further.

For MySql, however, you could use mysqldump and specify the --add-drop-tables and --no-data options to drop and create all tables ignoring the data. like this:

mysqldump -u[USERNAME] -p[PASSWORD] --add-drop-table --no-data [DATABASE]

mysqldump usage guide from dev.mysql

3

Use this and form the query

SELECT Concat('TRUNCATE TABLE ',table_schema,'.',TABLE_NAME, ';') 
FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.TABLES where  table_schema in (db1,db2)
INTO OUTFILE '/path/to/file.sql';

Now use this to use this query

mysql -u username -p </path/to/file.sql

if you get an error like this

ERROR 1701 (42000) at line 3: Cannot truncate a table referenced in a foreign key constraint

the easiest way to go through is at the top of your file add this line

SET FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS=0;

which says that we don't want to check the foreign key constraints while going through this file.

It will truncate all tables in databases db1 and bd2.

1
  • the db names should be in qoutes
    – Roman M
    Jul 15, 2014 at 14:06
3

here for i know here

   SELECT Concat('TRUNCATE TABLE ',table_schema,'.',TABLE_NAME, ';') 
    FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.TABLES where  table_schema in ('databasename1','databasename2');

If cannot delete or update a parent row: a foreign key constraint fails

That happens if there are tables with foreign keys references to the table you are trying to drop/truncate.

Before truncating tables All you need to do is:

SET FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS=0;

Truncate your tables and change it back to

SET FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS=1; 

user this php code

    $truncate = mysql_query("SELECT Concat('TRUNCATE TABLE ',table_schema,'.',TABLE_NAME, ';') as tables_query FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.TABLES where table_schema in ('databasename')");

    while($truncateRow=mysql_fetch_assoc($truncate)){

        mysql_query($truncateRow['tables_query']);

    }
?>

check detail here link

2

No. There is no single command to truncate all mysql tables at once. You will have to create a small script to truncate the tables one by one.

ref: http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.0/en/truncate-table.html

2

This worked for me. Change database, username and password accordingly.

mysql -Nse 'show tables' -D DATABASE -uUSER -pPWD | while read table; do echo "SET FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS = 0;drop table \`$table\`;SET FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS = 1;"; done | mysql DATABASE -uUSER -pPWD
2

Ans by battousaix is perfect! I just used his answer and created the final working command for truncate database tables.

mysql -P 3306 -h YOUR_HOST_HERE -u YOUR_USERNAME_HERE -pYOUR_PASSWORD_HERE -Nse 'show tables' DATABASE_NAME | while read table; do mysql -P 3306 -h YOUR_HOST_HERE -u YOUR_USERNAME_HERE -pYOUR_PASSWORD_HERE -e "SET FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS = 0; truncate table $table" DATABASE_NAME; done

The above command will work perfectly for the MySQL server.

Also, It's included.

SET FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS = 0

1

Here is a procedure that should truncate all tables in the local database.

Let me know if it doesn't work and I'll delete this answer.

Untested

CREATE PROCEDURE truncate_all_tables()
BEGIN

   -- Declare local variables
   DECLARE done BOOLEAN DEFAULT 0;
   DECLARE cmd VARCHAR(2000);

   -- Declare the cursor
   DECLARE cmds CURSOR
   FOR
   SELECT CONCAT('TRUNCATE TABLE ', TABLE_NAME) FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.TABLES;

   -- Declare continue handler
   DECLARE CONTINUE HANDLER FOR SQLSTATE '02000' SET done=1;

   -- Open the cursor
   OPEN cmds;

   -- Loop through all rows
   REPEAT

      -- Get order number
      FETCH cmds INTO cmd;

      -- Execute the command
      PREPARE stmt FROM cmd;
      EXECUTE stmt;
      DROP PREPARE stmt;

   -- End of loop
   UNTIL done END REPEAT;

   -- Close the cursor
   CLOSE cmds;

END;
1
1

I find that TRUNCATE TABLE .. has trouble with foreign key constraints, even after a NOCHECK CONSTRAINT ALL, so I use a DELETE FROM statement instead. This does mean that identity seeds are not reset, you could always add a DBCC CHECKIDENT to achieve this.

I Use the code below to print out to the message window the sql for truncating all the tables in the database, before running it. It just makes it a bit harder to make a mistake.

EXEC sp_MSforeachtable 'PRINT ''ALTER TABLE ? NOCHECK CONSTRAINT ALL'''
EXEC sp_MSforeachtable 'print ''DELETE FROM ?'''
EXEC sp_MSforeachtable 'print ''ALTER TABLE ? WITH CHECK CHECK CONSTRAINT all'''
1

I know this isn't exactly one command, but the desired result can be achieved from within phpMyAdmin by following these steps:

  1. Select (all) tables to be removed (Check All)
  2. Select "Drop" / "Truncate" from the "With selected:" list
  3. On the confirmation page ("Do you really want to:") copy the query (everything with the red background)
  4. Go at the top and click on SQL and write: "SET FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS=0;" then paste the previously copied query
  5. Click "Go"

The idea is to quickly get all the tables from the database (which you do in 5 seconds and 2 clicks) but disable foreign key checks first. No CLI and no dropping the database and adding it again.

1
  • Using a readily available GUI to do this simply is very handy, and does do the trick. Aug 26, 2021 at 20:30
1

PHP single command:

php -r '$d="PUT_YOUR_DB_NAME_HERE"; $q="show tables"; $dt="drop table"; exec("mysql -Nse \"$q\" $d", $o); foreach($o as $e) `mysql -e "$dt $e" $d`;'

Executed PHP script:

$d="PUT_YOUR_DB_NAME_HERE"; 
$q="show tables"; 
$dt="drop table"; 

exec("mysql -Nse \"$q\" $d", $o); 

foreach($o as $e)
  `mysql -e "$dt $e" $d`;
1

I find the top answer to be amazing. However it fails when you have an authenticated MySQL Database user.

Here is a solution built on top of the top answer I linked. This solution securely handles authentication without having to:

  • Type the password for each table
  • Worry about your password leaking somewhere
  • Side-effects on other MySQL cnf files (~/.my.cnf) For more details on what these files do, check out resources section at the bottom of this answer.

1. Create local .my.cnf file

vi .temp.my.cnf
[client]
user=<admin_user_goes_here>
password=<admin_password_goes_here>

2. Truncate or drop all tables

2.A Truncate All Tables (empty only)

mysql --defaults-extra-file=.temp.my.cnf -Nse 'show tables' <db_name_goes_here> | while read table; do mysql --defaults-extra-file=.temp.my.cnf -e "truncate table $table" <db_name_goes_here>; done

2.B Drop All Tables (remove entirely)

mysql --defaults-extra-file=.temp.my.cnf -Nse 'show tables' <db_name_goes_here> | while read table; do mysql --defaults-extra-file=.temp.my.cnf -e "drop table $table" <db_name_goes_here>; done

3. Cleanup

Delete your user-password file

rm -rf .temp.my.cnf

Resources:

0

I am not sure but I think there is one command using which you can copy the schema of database into new database, once you have done this you can delete the old database and after this you can again copy the database schema to the old name.

1
  • 1
    mysqldump -uuser -ppassword --no-data salesLeadsBrittany >salesLeadsTemplate.sql This will create a sql file with the schema only (no data). You can delete the data base after this command and can recreate the database by importing the schema.
    – GJ.
    Dec 16, 2009 at 7:39
0
TB=$( mysql -Bse "show tables from DATABASE" );
for i in ${TB};
    do echo "Truncating table ${i}";
    mysql -e "set foreign_key_checks=0; set unique_checks=0;truncate table DATABASE.${i}; set foreign_key_checks=1; set unique_checks=1";
    sleep 1;
done

--

David,

Thank you for taking the time to format the code, but this is how it is supposed to be applied.

-Kurt

On a UNIX or Linux box:

Make sure you are in a bash shell. These commands are to be run, from the command line as follows.

Note:

I store my credentials in my ~/.my.cnf file, so I don't need to supply them on the command line.

Note:

cpm is the database name

I am only showing a small sample of the results, from each command.

Find your foreign key constraints:

klarsen@Chaos:~$ mysql -Bse "select concat(table_name, ' depends on ', referenced_table_name)
             from information_schema.referential_constraints
             where constraint_schema = 'cpm'
             order by referenced_table_name"
  1. approval_external_system depends on approval_request
  2. address depends on customer
  3. customer_identification depends on customer
  4. external_id depends on customer
  5. credential depends on customer
  6. email_address depends on customer
  7. approval_request depends on customer
  8. customer_status depends on customer
  9. customer_image depends on customer

List the tables and row counts:

klarsen@Chaos:~$ mysql -Bse "SELECT table_name, table_rows FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.TABLES WHERE TABLE_SCHEMA = 'cpm'" | cat -n

 1  address 297
 2  approval_external_system    0
 3  approval_request    0
 4  country 189
 5  credential  468
 6  customer    6776
 7  customer_identification 5631
 8  customer_image  2
 9  customer_status 13639

Truncate your tables:

klarsen@Chaos:~$ TB=$( mysql -Bse "show tables from cpm" ); for i in ${TB}; do echo "Truncating table ${i}"; mysql -e "set foreign_key_checks=0; set unique_checks=0;truncate table cpm.${i}; set foreign_key_checks=1; set unique_checks=1"; sleep 1; done
  1. Truncating table address
  2. Truncating table approval_external_system
  3. Truncating table approval_request
  4. Truncating table country
  5. Truncating table credential
  6. Truncating table customer
  7. Truncating table customer_identification
  8. Truncating table customer_image
  9. Truncating table customer_status

Verify that it worked:

klarsen@Chaos:~$ mysql -Bse "SELECT table_name, table_rows FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.TABLES WHERE TABLE_SCHEMA = 'cpm'" | cat -n

 1  address 0
 2  approval_external_system    0
 3  approval_request    0
 4  country 0
 5  credential  0
 6  customer    0
 7  customer_identification 0
 8  customer_image  0
 9  customer_status 0
10  email_address   0

On a Windows box:

NOTE:

cpm is the database name

C:\>for /F "tokens=*" %a IN ('mysql -Bse "show tables" cpm') do mysql -e "set foreign_key_checks=0; set unique_checks=0; truncate table %a; foreign_key_checks=1; set unique_checks=1" cpm
0

The following MySQL query will itself produce a single query that will truncate all tables in a given database. It bypasses FOREIGN keys:

SELECT CONCAT(
         'SET FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS=0; ',
         GROUP_CONCAT(dropTableSql SEPARATOR '; '), '; ',
         'SET FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS=1;'
       ) as dropAllTablesSql
FROM   ( SELECT  Concat('TRUNCATE TABLE ', table_schema, '.', TABLE_NAME) AS dropTableSql
         FROM    INFORMATION_SCHEMA.TABLES
         WHERE   table_schema = 'DATABASE_NAME' ) as queries
0
mysqldump -u root -p --no-data dbname > schema.sql
mysqldump -u root -p drop dbname
mysqldump -u root -p < schema.sql
1
  • This is actually a very nice solution :) Oct 1, 2021 at 11:36
0

Soln 1)

mysql> select group_concat('truncate',' ',table_name,';') from information_schema.tables where table_schema="db_name" into outfile '/tmp/a.txt';
mysql> /tmp/a.txt;

Soln 2)

- Export only structure of a db
- drop the database
- import the .sql of structure 

-- edit ----

earlier in solution 1, i had mentioned concat() instead of group_concat() which would have not returned the desired result
2
  • 1
    This only seems to return the first table: TRUNCATE table1, and forgets about all the other tables. Jul 4, 2014 at 18:54
  • 1
    You may get a secure-file-priv error. That is a security feature to allow only a specific directory to be written to. In MySQL type this command: show variables LIKE "secure_file_priv"; It will show you the folder that is able to be written to. In my case it is /var/lib/mysql-files/. Use that instead of /tmp -- just make sure the filename you are writing to is not already in that folder. OR you can disable it in my.cnf in the [mysql] block by putting this line: secure-file-priv='' and restarting MySQL. But if you do that you are turning off a level of security. Jan 5, 2022 at 20:28
0

We can write a bash script like below

truncate_tables_in_mysql() {
    type mysql >/dev/null 2>&1 && echo "MySQL present." || sudo apt-get install -y mysql-client
    
    tables=$(mysql -h 127.0.0.1 -P $MYSQL_PORT -u $MYSQL_USER  -p$MYSQL_PASSWORD -e "USE $BACKEND_DATABASE;    
SHOW TABLES;")
    tables_list=($tables)
    
    query_string="USE $BACKEND_DATABASE; SET FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS = 0;"
    for table in "${tables_list[@]:1}"
    do
        query_string="$query_string TRUNCATE TABLE \`$table\`; "
    done
    query_string="$query_string SET FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS = 1;"
    
    mysql -h 127.0.0.1 -P $MYSQL_PORT -u $MYSQL_USER -p$MYSQL_PASSWORD -e "$query_string"
}

You can replace env variables with your MySQL details. Using one command you can truncate all the tables in a DB.

0

Small addition to @Mathias Bynens's answer. When I run this I got an error because foreign key check

mysql -Nse 'SHOW TABLES' <database_name> | while read table; do mysql -e "SET FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS=0; DROP TABLE $table" <database_name>; done

If there are views in the database it returns an error. I had to clear views manually by drop view <view_name>;

0

As it happens, I recently needed to clear all tables in the database with the specified name prefix.

(export MYSQL_PWD=the_password; dbNameMatch="the_database_name_prefix%"; databaseList=$(mysql -u root -Nse "SHOW DATABASES LIKE '$dbNameMatch'"); for dbName in $databaseList; do mysql -uroot -Nse 'show tables' "$dbName" | while read table; do mysql -uroot -e "truncate table \`$table\`" "$dbName" & done; done)

This single-line command works wor me. holp it helpful for you.

-1

An idea could be to just drop and recreate the tables?

EDIT:

@Jonathan Leffler: True

Other Suggestion (or case you dont need to truncate ALL tables):

Why not just create a basic stored procedure to truncate specific tables

CREATE PROCEDURE [dbo].[proc_TruncateTables]
AS
TRUNCATE TABLE Table1
TRUNCATE TABLE Table2
TRUNCATE TABLE Table3
GO
2
  • That loses all constraints, permissions, views, etc on the tables - which is a considerable nuisance. Dec 16, 2009 at 7:29
  • You could do a delete, then reseed all the tables instead of truncate. I assume the mark down is out of frustration. Just restore your backup. Feb 29, 2012 at 19:04

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.