40

When updating my Post model, I run:

$post->title = request('title');
$post->body = request('body');

$post->save();

This does not update my post. But it should according to the Laravel docs on updating Eloquent models. Why is my model not being updated?

Post model:

class Post extends Model
{
    protected $fillable = [
        'type',
        'title',
        'body',
        'user_id',
    ];

   ....
}

Post controller:

public function store($id)
{
    $post = Post::findOrFail($id);

    // Request validation
    if ($post->type == 1) {
        // Post type has title
        $this->validate(request(), [
            'title' => 'required|min:15',
            'body' => 'required|min:19',
        ]);

        $post->title = request('title');
        $post->body = request('body');
    } else {
        $this->validate(request(), [
            'body' => 'required|min:19',
        ]);

        $post->body = request('body');
    }

    $post->save();

    return redirect('/');
}

Bonus info

Running dd($post->save()) returns true.

Running

$post->save();

$fetchedPost = Post::find($post->id);
dd($fetchedPost);

shows me that $fetchedPost is the same post as before without the updated data.

20
  • are you sure you have the "body" field under POST model ? Oct 24, 2017 at 20:56
  • @MoeenBasra yes, sorry! I had cleaned up the other code to make it more readable and relevant (took out irrelevant parts like code cleaning that I've already validated, etc.) and I forgot to change that variable.
    – Jacob
    Oct 24, 2017 at 20:58
  • What does return dd($post->save())? Oct 24, 2017 at 20:59
  • @IvankaTodorova dd($post->save()) returns true. I added this in the question.
    – Jacob
    Oct 24, 2017 at 21:00
  • 1
    both $request injected to the store function or request helper returns the same thing. As request is binded with singleton pattern with container. Oct 24, 2017 at 21:10

14 Answers 14

23

Check your database table if the 'id' column is in uppercase 'ID'. Changing it to lower case allowed my save() method to work.

5
  • 12
    You don't have to change it. You could just define the primary key name in your model by adding protected $primaryKey = 'Id'; to your model. this in case the primary key is "Id" not "id"
    – Junior
    Dec 30, 2018 at 16:44
  • 1
    This was my issue, I am working on a database that existed and ids are not called Id or ID but a completely different thing. What makes this hard to catch is that I am using ` protected $primaryKey = 'myid'; ` And it is working fine for querying, but if it isn't an exact match, it won't save, the ID of my table was in upper case, changed it and voila, problem solved, your comment opened up my eyes.
    – Gary
    Apr 29, 2019 at 23:59
  • Damn MSSQL NON CASE SENSITIVE! Find the Model but Eloquent cannot save correctly. May 12, 2020 at 1:00
  • instead of changing from db change value from protected $primaryKey = 'Id'; model
    – TarangP
    Oct 19, 2020 at 10:56
  • my mysql USER_ID was capitalized, but I set $primaryKey = 'user_id'. Everything worked perfectly, except it would NOT save to the database. Uppercasing it worked. Thank you! Jul 13, 2022 at 15:56
18

I had the same and turned out to be because I was filtering the output columns without the primary key.

$rows = MyModel::where('...')->select('col2', 'col3')->get();
foreach($rows as $row){
    $rows->viewed = 1;
    $rows->save();
}

Fixed with

$rows = MyModel::where('...')->select('primary_key', 'col2', 'col3')->get();

Makes perfect sense on review, without the primary key available the update command will be on Null.

3
  • This was the cause of the issue for me as well. Thank you! Oct 8, 2019 at 22:06
  • This got me too. Have to be sure to include the primary key in the model in order to update it with save(). Never knew that.
    – HartleySan
    Sep 2, 2020 at 13:24
  • yeap, this was my problem, forgot the primary key as well :) thank! Aug 29, 2023 at 12:23
7

I had the same problem and changing the way I fetch the model solved it!

Was not saving even though everything was supposedly working just as you have mentioned:

$user = User::find($id)->first(); 

This is working:

$user = User::find($id);
1
  • remembering that it is functional to use the find method together with the save, but with some others the save does not work ... also remembering that find only uses the primaryKey Apr 17, 2019 at 14:35
6

You have to make sure that the instance that you are calling save() on has the attribute id

1
  • 1
    On the code shown, he is doing $post = Post::findOrFail($id);, so it must have an id set Apr 23, 2020 at 12:19
4

Since Laravel 5.5 laravel have change some validation mechanism I guess you need to try this way.

public function store(Request $request, $id)
{
    $post = Post::findOrFail($id);

    $validatedData = [];

    // Request validation
    if ($post->type == 1) {
        // Post type has title
        $validatedData = $request->validate([
          'title' => 'required|min:15',
          'body' => 'required|min:19',
      ]);
    } else {
      $validatedData = $request->validate([
        'body' => 'required|min:19',
    ]);
    }

    $post->update($validatedData);

    return redirect('/');
}
1
  • can you past the dump of $validatedData just before $post->update(); Oct 24, 2017 at 21:19
4

Running dd() inside a DB::transaction will cause a rollback, and the data in database will not change.

The reason being, that transaction will only save the changes to the database at the very end. Ergo, the act of running "dump and die" will naturally cause the script to cease and no therefore no database changes.

3

Check your table if primary key is not id ("column name should be in small letters only") if you have set column name with different key then put code in your Model like this

protected $primaryKey   = 'Id';

So this might be one of the possible solution in your case also if your column name contains capital letters. Yes this worked for me fine, You should have column names in small letter, If you don't have then mention it in the model file, mainly for primaryKey by which your model will try to access database.

2

For use save () method to update or delete if the database has a primary key other than "id". need to declare the attribute primaryKey = "" in the model, it will work

1

If you using transactions. Do not forget call DB::commit();

It must look like this:

try{
    DB::beginTransaction();
    // Model changes
    $model->save();
    DB::commit();
}catch (\PDOException $e) {
    DB::rollBack();
}
1

I have the same issue although there are try / catch block in controller@action() but there were no response, it just stops at $model->save(); there is no log entry either in apache error.log or laravel.log. I have just wrapped the save() with try / cactch as follows, that helped me to figure out the issue

    try{
        $model->save();
    }
    catch (\PDOException $e) {
        echo $e->getMessage();
    }
1

The issue stems from the database containing multiple results for the query involving Laravel Model.

What I'm trying to convey is that if you use methods like find, findOrFail, or any other query followed by ->first(), you'll obtain one of the records, but it's almost certain that there's at least one more record that matches the query. I understand my response might be somewhat delayed, but it could potentially assist others encountering the same problem.

To resolve this, consider adding additional criteria to your query to ensure that you receive only one result as a response. This step will help guarantee accurate outcomes.

1
  • Thank you. You also need to make sure the primary key is in the select statement if you're using one. Dec 5, 2023 at 12:40
0

Try this

public function store($id,Request $request)
{
    $post = Post::findOrFail($id);

    // Request validation
    if ($post->type == 1) {
        // Post type has title
         $request->validate([
            'title' => 'required|min:15',
            'body' => 'required|min:19',
        ]);
        $post->update([
              'title' => request('title');
              'body' => request('body');
             ]);
    } else {
         $request->validate([
            'body' => 'required|min:19',
        ]);

        $post->update([
              'body' => request('body');
             ]);
    }

    return redirect('/');
}
0
0

In my experience, if you select an Eloquent model from the db and the primary_key column is not part of the fetched columns, your $model->save() will return true but nothing is persisted to the database.

So, instead of doing \App\Users::where(...)->first(['email']), rather do \App\Users::where(...)->first(['id','email']), where id is the primary_key defined on the target table.

If the (sometimes micro-optimization) achieved by retrieving only a few columns is not really of importance to you, you can just fetch all columns by doing \App\Users::where(...)->first(), in which case you do not need to bother about the name of the primary_key column since all the columns will be fetched.

-1

I have been experiencing the same issue and found a workaround. I found that I was unable to save() my model within a function called {{ generateUrl() }} on my home.blade.php template. What worked was moving the save() call to the controller that returns the home.blade.php template. (IE, save()ing before the view is returned, then only performing read operations within {{ generateUrl() }}.)

I was (and am) generating a state to put in a URL on page load:

<!--views/home.blade.php-->

<a href="{{ EveAuth::generateUrl() }}">Add Character</a>

Below is what did not work.

// Providers/EveAuth.php

function generateUrl()
{
    $authedUser = auth()->user();
    if (!$authedUser) {
        return "#";
    }
    $user = User::find($authedUser->id);
    $user->state = str_random(16);
    $user->save();

    $baseUrl = 'https://login.eveonline.com/oauth/authorize?state=';

    return $baseUrl . $user->state;
}

This was able to find() the User from the database, but it was unable to save() it back. No errors were produced. The function appeared to work properly... until I tried to read the User's state later, and found that it did not match the state in the URL.

Here is what did work.

Instead of trying to save() my User as the page was being assembled, I generated the state, save()d it, then rendered the page:

// routes/web.php

Route::get('/', 'HomeController@index');

Landing at the root directory sends you to the index() function of HomeController.php:

// Controllers/HomeController.php

public function index()
{
    $authedUser = auth()->user();
    if ($authedUser) {
        $user = User::find($authedUser->id);
        $user->state = str_random(16);
        $user->save();
    }
    return view('home');
}

Then, when generating the URL, I did not have to save() the User, only read from it:

// Providers/EveAuth.php

function generateUrl()
{
    $authedUser = auth()->user();
    $user = User::find($authedUser->id);

    $baseUrl = 'https://login.eveonline.com/oauth/authorize?state=';

    return $baseUrl . $user->state;
}

This worked! The only difference (as far as I see) is that I'm save()ing the model before page assembly begins, as opposed to during page assembly.

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