The AUTO_INCREMENT attribute can be used to generate a unique identity for new rows:
CREATE TABLE animals (
id MEDIUMINT NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT,
name CHAR(30) NOT NULL,
PRIMARY KEY (id)
);
INSERT INTO animals (name) VALUES
('dog'),('cat'),('penguin'),
('lax'),('whale'),('ostrich');
SELECT * FROM animals;
Which returns:
+----+---------+
| id | name |
+----+---------+
| 1 | dog |
| 2 | cat |
| 3 | penguin |
| 4 | lax |
| 5 | whale |
| 6 | ostrich |
+----+---------+
No value was specified for the AUTO_INCREMENT column, so MySQL assigned sequence numbers automatically. You can also explicitly assign 0 to the column to generate sequence numbers, unless the NO_AUTO_VALUE_ON_ZERO SQL mode is enabled. For example:
INSERT INTO animals (id,name) VALUES(0,'groundhog');
If the column is declared NOT NULL, it is also possible to assign NULL to the column to generate sequence numbers. For example:
INSERT INTO animals (id,name) VALUES(NULL,'squirrel');
When you insert any other value into an AUTO_INCREMENT column, the column is set to that value and the sequence is reset so that the next automatically generated value follows sequentially from the largest column value. For example:
INSERT INTO animals (id,name) VALUES(100,'rabbit');
INSERT INTO animals (id,name) VALUES(NULL,'mouse');
SELECT * FROM animals;
+-----+-----------+
| id | name |
+-----+-----------+
| 1 | dog |
| 2 | cat |
| 3 | penguin |
| 4 | lax |
| 5 | whale |
| 6 | ostrich |
| 7 | groundhog |
| 8 | squirrel |
| 100 | rabbit |
| 101 | mouse |
+-----+-----------+
Updating an existing AUTO_INCREMENT column value also resets the AUTO_INCREMENT sequence.
You can retrieve the most recent automatically generated AUTO_INCREMENT value with the LAST_INSERT_ID() SQL function or the mysql_insert_id() C API function. These functions are connection-specific, so their return values are not affected by another connection which is also performing inserts.
Use the smallest integer data type for the AUTO_INCREMENT column that is large enough to hold the maximum sequence value you require. When the column reaches the upper limit of the data type, the next attempt to generate a sequence number fails. Use the UNSIGNED attribute if possible to allow a greater range. For example, if you use TINYINT, the maximum permissible sequence number is 127. For TINYINT UNSIGNED, the maximum is 255. See Section 13.1.2, “Integer Types (Exact Value) - INTEGER, INT, SMALLINT, TINYINT, MEDIUMINT, BIGINT” for the ranges of all the integer types.
For a multiple-row insert, LAST_INSERT_ID() and mysql_insert_id() actually return the AUTO_INCREMENT key from the first of the inserted rows. This enables multiple-row inserts to be reproduced correctly on other servers in a replication setup.
To start with an AUTO_INCREMENT value other than 1, set that value with CREATE TABLE or ALTER TABLE, like this:
mysql> ALTER TABLE tbl AUTO_INCREMENT = 100;
For information about AUTO_INCREMENT usage specific to InnoDB, see Section 17.6.1.6, “AUTO_INCREMENT Handling in InnoDB”.
-
For
MyISAMtables, you can specifyAUTO_INCREMENTon a secondary column in a multiple-column index. In this case, the generated value for theAUTO_INCREMENTcolumn is calculated asMAX(. This is useful when you want to put data into ordered groups.auto_increment_column) + 1 WHERE prefix=given-prefixCREATE TABLE animals ( grp ENUM('fish','mammal','bird') NOT NULL, id MEDIUMINT NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT, name CHAR(30) NOT NULL, PRIMARY KEY (grp,id) ) ENGINE=MyISAM; INSERT INTO animals (grp,name) VALUES ('mammal','dog'),('mammal','cat'), ('bird','penguin'),('fish','lax'),('mammal','whale'), ('bird','ostrich'); SELECT * FROM animals ORDER BY grp,id;Which returns:
+--------+----+---------+ | grp | id | name | +--------+----+---------+ | fish | 1 | lax | | mammal | 1 | dog | | mammal | 2 | cat | | mammal | 3 | whale | | bird | 1 | penguin | | bird | 2 | ostrich | +--------+----+---------+In this case (when the
AUTO_INCREMENTcolumn is part of a multiple-column index),AUTO_INCREMENTvalues are reused if you delete the row with the biggestAUTO_INCREMENTvalue in any group. This happens even forMyISAMtables, for whichAUTO_INCREMENTvalues normally are not reused. -
If the
AUTO_INCREMENTcolumn is part of multiple indexes, MySQL generates sequence values using the index that begins with theAUTO_INCREMENTcolumn, if there is one. For example, if theanimalstable contained indexesPRIMARY KEY (grp, id)andINDEX (id), MySQL would ignore thePRIMARY KEYfor generating sequence values. As a result, the table would contain a single sequence, not a sequence pergrpvalue.
More information about AUTO_INCREMENT is available here:
-
How to assign the
AUTO_INCREMENTattribute to a column: Section 15.1.20, “CREATE TABLE Statement”, and Section 15.1.9, “ALTER TABLE Statement”. -
How
AUTO_INCREMENTbehaves depending on theNO_AUTO_VALUE_ON_ZEROSQL mode: Section 7.1.11, “Server SQL Modes”. -
How to use the
LAST_INSERT_ID()function to find the row that contains the most recentAUTO_INCREMENTvalue: Section 14.15, “Information Functions”. -
Setting the
AUTO_INCREMENTvalue to be used: Section 7.1.8, “Server System Variables”. -
AUTO_INCREMENTand replication: Section 19.5.1.1, “Replication and AUTO_INCREMENT”. -
Server-system variables related to
AUTO_INCREMENT(auto_increment_incrementandauto_increment_offset) that can be used for replication: Section 7.1.8, “Server System Variables”.