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I’m trying to modify a table to make its primary key column AUTO_INCREMENT after the fact. I have tried the following SQL, but got a syntax error notification.

ALTER TABLE document
ALTER COLUMN document_id AUTO_INCREMENT

Am I doing something wrong or is this not possible?

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21 Answers 21

451
ALTER TABLE document MODIFY COLUMN document_id INT auto_increment
5
  • 3
    I'm curious why you would suggest INT(4). Any particular reason? Jan 30, 2010 at 19:34
  • 3
    @Steven Oxley because I declared my table that way.
    – C. Ross
    Jan 30, 2010 at 19:48
  • 34
    Specifying a number between parenthesis does exactly nothing (well ok, almost nothing) for MySQL integer types. The only thing that may be influenced by the number is the display width, and it is up to the client to do that. But don't be deceived and think that it works like it does for VARCHAR and DECIMAL types - in those cases, the amount of data you can store in there is actually specified, whereas a particular flavour of INT is always allows storage of the exact same range of values Jan 30, 2010 at 20:03
  • I always get an primary key error while doing this operations, so I have this is what I do: SET FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS = 0; ALTER TABLE document DROP PRIMARY KEY; ALTER TABLE document MODIFY COLUMN document_id INT PRIMARY KEY AUTO_INCREMENT NOT NULL; SET FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS = 1;
    – Fernando
    Jul 13, 2019 at 15:50
  • This doesn't seem to work in MySQL because you need to set the column as a primary key since only one column is allowed to be auto_increment (also see Roland Bouman's answer below
    – charlchad
    Sep 15, 2019 at 4:51
91

Roman is right, but note that the auto_increment column must be part of the PRIMARY KEY or a UNIQUE KEY (and in almost 100% of the cases, it should be the only column that makes up the PRIMARY KEY):

ALTER TABLE document MODIFY document_id INT AUTO_INCREMENT PRIMARY KEY
2
  • 12
    +1. Primary key required if not defined at the time of table creation.
    – user966588
    Apr 13, 2012 at 9:07
  • 1
    Also this means that data in that column needs to be already unique Mar 16, 2018 at 6:30
13

In my case it only worked when I put not null. I think this is a constraint.

ALTER TABLE document MODIFY COLUMN document_id INT NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT;
9

You can apply the atuto_increment constraint to the data column by the following query:

ALTER TABLE customers MODIFY COLUMN customer_id BIGINT NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT;

But, if the columns are part of a foreign key constraint you, will most probably receive an error. Therefore, it is advised to turn off foreign_key_checks by using the following query:

SET foreign_key_checks = 0;

Therefore, use the following query instead:

SET foreign_key_checks = 0;
ALTER TABLE customers MODIFY COLUMN customer_id BIGINT NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT;
SET foreign_key_checks = 1;
8

The SQL to do this would be:

ALTER TABLE `document` MODIFY COLUMN `document_id` INT AUTO_INCREMENT;

There are a couple of reasons that your SQL might not work. First, you must re-specify the data type (INT in this case). Also, the column you are trying to alter must be indexed (it does not have to be the primary key, but usually that is what you would want). Furthermore, there can only be one AUTO_INCREMENT column for each table. So, you may wish to run the following SQL (if your column is not indexed):

ALTER TABLE `document` MODIFY `document_id` INT AUTO_INCREMENT PRIMARY KEY;

You can find more information in the MySQL documentation: http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.1/en/alter-table.html for the modify column syntax and http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.1/en/create-table.html for more information about specifying columns.

8

You must specify the type of the column before the auto_increment directive, i.e. ALTER TABLE document MODIFY COLUMN document_id INT AUTO_INCREMENT.

1
  • 1
    It should be MODIFY COLUMN
    – shxfee
    Sep 24, 2014 at 23:45
7

AUTO_INCREMENT is part of the column's datatype, you have to define the complete datatype for the column again:

ALTER TABLE document
ALTER COLUMN document_id int AUTO_INCREMENT

(int taken as an example, you should set it to the type the column had before)

6

You can do it like this:

 alter table [table_name] modify column [column_name] [column_type] AUTO_INCREMENT;
1
  • This seems to be just a repeat of all the other answers.
    – Pang
    Apr 12, 2018 at 7:15
5

You can use the following query to make document_id to increment automatically

ALTER TABLE document MODIFY COLUMN document_id INT auto_increment

It is preferred to make document_id primary key as well

ALTER TABLE document MODIFY COLUMN document_id INT auto_increment PRIMARY KEY;
1
  • 1
    Note that if that column is already a primary key you can't declare it again there else it gives error about multiple primary keys (you'd expect it to be a bit more clever there and see that it's the same primary key I guess). So in that case you just skip the PRIMARY KEY and it doesn't affect the existing primary key setting on that column May 18, 2018 at 2:08
4

Below statement works. Note that you need to mention the data type again for the column name (redeclare the data type the column was before).

ALTER TABLE document
MODIFY COLUMN document_id int AUTO_INCREMENT;
4

Setting column as primary key and auto_increment at the same time:

  mysql> ALTER TABLE persons MODIFY COLUMN personID INT auto_increment PRIMARY KEY;
    Query OK, 10 rows affected (0.77 sec)
    Records: 10  Duplicates: 0  Warnings: 0

    mysql>
3

AUTO_INCREMENT is part of the column's datatype, you have to define the complete datatype for the column again:

ALTER TABLE document
MODIFY COLUMN document_id int AUTO_INCREMENT

(int taken as an example, you should set it to the type the column had before)

3

If none of the above works try this. This is what I did in MYSQL and yes, you need to write the column name (document_id) twice.

ALTER TABLE document
CHANGE COLUMN document_id document_id INT(11) NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT ;
2

To modify the column in mysql we use alter and modify keywords. Suppose we have created a table like:

create table emp(
    id varchar(20),
    ename varchar(20),
    salary float
);

Now we want to modify type of the column id to integer with auto increment. You could do this with a command like:

alter table emp modify column id int(10) auto_increment;
2

Previous Table syntax:

CREATE TABLE apim_log_request (TransactionId varchar(50) DEFAULT NULL);

For changing the TransactionId to auto increment use this query

ALTER TABLE apim_log_request MODIFY COLUMN TransactionId INT auto_increment;
2
alter table tbl_user MODIFY COLUMN id int(10) auto_increment;
2

Just like this:

alter table document modify column id int(11) auto_increment;

1

As you are redefining the column again, you have to specify the datatype again and add auto_increment to it as it's a part of datatype.

ALTER TABLE `document` MODIFY COLUMN `document_id` INT AUTO_INCREMENT;
0

Try the following:

ALTER TABLE table_name MODIFY COLUMN id datatype auto_increment;
-1

Since SQL tag is attached to the question I really think all answers missed one major point.

MODIFY command does not exist in SQL server So you will be getting an error when you run the

ALTER TABLE Satellites MODIFY COLUMN SatelliteID INT auto_increment PRIMARY KEY;

enter image description here

In this case you can either add new column as INT IDENTITY

ALTER TABLE Satellites
   ADD ID INT IDENTITY
       CONSTRAINT PK_YourTable PRIMARY KEY CLUSTERED;

OR


Fill the existing null index with incremental numbers using this method,
DECLARE @id INT
SET @id = 0 
UPDATE Satellites SET @id = SatelliteID = @id + 1 
-3

Use the following queries:

ALTER TABLE YourTable DROP COLUMN IDCol

ALTER TABLE YourTable ADD IDCol INT IDENTITY(1,1)

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