Ensuring That Rows Are Renumbered in a Particular Order
Problem
You resequenced a column, but MySQL didn’t number the rows the way you want.
Solution
Select the rows into another table, using an
ORDER
BY
clause to place them in the order you
want, and let MySQL number them as it performs the operation. Then the
rows will be numbered according to the sort order.
Discussion
When you resequence an
AUTO_INCREMENT
column, MySQL is free to pick the rows from the table in any order, so
it won’t necessarily renumber them in the order that you expect. This
doesn’t matter at all if your only requirement is that each row have a
unique identifier. But you might have an application for which it’s
important that the rows be assigned sequence numbers in a particular
order. For example, you may want the sequence to correspond to the
order in which rows were created, as indicated by a TIMESTAMP
column. To assign numbers in a
particular order, use this procedure:
Create an empty clone of the table (see Cloning a Table).
Copy rows from the original into the clone using
INSERT
INTO
...SELECT
. Copy all columns except the sequence column, using anORDER
BY
clause to specify the order in which rows are copied (and thus assigned sequence numbers).Drop the original table and rename the clone to have the original table’s name.
If the table is a large MyISAM table and has multiple indexes, it will be more efficient to create the new table initially with no indexes except the one on the
AUTO_INCREMENT
column. Then ...
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