Logo Questions Linux Laravel Mysql Ubuntu Git Menu
 

on update current_timestamp with SQLite

I want to update a field with the current timestamp whenever the row is updated.

In MySQL I would do, when declaring the table

LastUpdate TIMESTAMP DEFAULT CURRENT_TIMESTAMP NOT NULL ON UPDATE CURRENT_TIMESTAMP 

But the "on update" part does not work with SQLite. I could not find a way to do it automatically, do I need to declare a trigger?

EDIT: For the record, here is my current trigger:

CREATE TRIGGER [UpdateLastTime] AFTER UPDATE ON Package FOR EACH ROW BEGIN UPDATE Package SET LastUpdate = CURRENT_TIMESTAMP WHERE ActionId = old.ActionId; END 

Thanks

like image 241
Jonas Schmid Avatar asked Jul 05 '11 05:07

Jonas Schmid


1 Answers

Yes, you'd need to use a trigger. (Just checking: is your posted trigger working correctly? At first glance, it looks fine to me.)

MySQL's ON UPDATE CURRENT_TIMESTAMP is a pretty unique, single-purpose shortcut. It is what it is; this construct cannot be used similarly for any other values or for any column types other than TIMESTAMP. (Note how this functionality is defined on the TIMESTAMP type page instead of the CREATE TABLE page, as this functionality is specific to TIMESTAMP columns and not CREATE TABLE statements in general.) It's also worth mentioning that while it's specific to a TIMESTAMP type, SQLite doesn't even have distinct date/time types.

As far as I know, no other RDBMS offers this shortcut in lieu of using an actual trigger. From what I've read, triggers must be used to accomplish this on MS SQL, SQLite, PostgreSQL, and Oracle.


One last note for passersby:

This is not to be confused with ON UPDATE clauses in relation to foreign key constraints. That's something entirely different, which likely all RDBMSs that support foreign key constraints have (including both MySQL and SQLite).

like image 183
Wiseguy Avatar answered Oct 12 '22 00:10

Wiseguy