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MySQL: ALTER IGNORE TABLE ADD UNIQUE, what will be truncated?

I have a table with 4 columns: ID, type, owner, description. ID is AUTO_INCREMENT PRIMARY KEY and now I want to:

ALTER IGNORE TABLE `my_table`
    ADD UNIQUE (`type`, `owner`);

Of course I have few records with type = 'Apple' and owner = 'Apple CO'. So my question is which record will be the special one to stay after that ALTER TABLE, the one with smallest ID or maybe the one with biggest as the latest inserted?

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kuba Avatar asked Mar 28 '11 08:03

kuba


2 Answers

The first record will be kept, the rest deleted §§:

IGNORE is a MySQL extension to standard SQL. It controls how ALTER TABLE works if there are duplicates on unique keys in the new table or if warnings occur when strict mode is enabled. If IGNORE is not specified, the copy is aborted and rolled back if duplicate-key errors occur. If IGNORE is specified, only the first row is used of rows with duplicates on a unique key, The other conflicting rows are deleted. Incorrect values are truncated to the closest matching acceptable value

I am guessing 'first' here means the one with the smallest ID, assuming the ID is the primary key.

Also note:

As of MySQL 5.7.4, the IGNORE clause for ALTER TABLE is removed and its use produces an error.

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Galz Avatar answered Nov 11 '22 10:11

Galz


It appears that your problem is one of the very reasons that ALTER IGNORE has been deprecated.

This is from the MySQL notes on the ALTER IGNORE deprecation:

"This feature is badly defined (what is the first row?), causes problems for replication, disables online alter for unique index creation and has caused problems with foreign keys (rows removed in parent table)."

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Sally Levesque Avatar answered Nov 11 '22 10:11

Sally Levesque