Mysql 使用相同的 now()更新多个列

我需要更新2个日期时间列,我需要它们完全相同,使用 mysql 版本4.1.20。我用这个问题:

mysql> update table set last_update=now(), last_monitor=now() where id=1;

这是安全的,或有一个机会,列更新不同的时间,因为2个可见的调用 now()
我不认为它可以更新不同的值(我认为在内部 mysql 调用 now()只是一次每行或类似的东西) ,但我不是一个专家,你怎么看?

更新: 第二个问题提取 给你

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If you really need to be sure that now() has the same value you can run two queries (that will answer to your second question too, in that case you are asking to update last_monitor = to last_update but last_update hasn't been updated yet)

you could do something like:

mysql> update table set last_update=now() where id=1;
mysql> update table set last_monitor = last_update where id=1;

anyway I think that mysql is clever enough to ask for now() only once per query.

You can store the value of a now() in a variable before running the update query and then use that variable to update both the fields last_update and last_monitor.

This will ensure the now() is executed only once and same value is updated on both columns you need.

Found a solution:

mysql> UPDATE table SET last_update=now(), last_monitor=last_update WHERE id=1;

I found this in MySQL Docs and after a few tests it works:

the following statement sets col2 to the current (updated) col1 value, not the original col1 value. The result is that col1 and col2 have the same value. This behavior differs from standard SQL.

UPDATE t1 SET col1 = col1 + 1, col2 = col1;

You can put the following code on the default value of the timestamp column: CURRENT_TIMESTAMP ON UPDATE CURRENT_TIMESTAMP, so on update the two columns take the same value.

Mysql isn't very clever. When you want to use the same timestamp in multiple update or insert queries, you need to declare a variable.

When you use the now() function, the system will call the current timestamp every time you call it in another query.

MySQL evaluates now() once per statement when the statement commences execution. So it is safe to have multiple visible now() calls per statement.

select now(); select now(), sleep(10), now(); select now();
+---------------------+
| now()               |
+---------------------+
| 2018-11-05 16:54:00 |
+---------------------+
1 row in set (0.00 sec)


+---------------------+-----------+---------------------+
| now()               | sleep(10) | now()               |
+---------------------+-----------+---------------------+
| 2018-11-05 16:54:00 |         0 | 2018-11-05 16:54:00 |
+---------------------+-----------+---------------------+
1 row in set (10.00 sec)


+---------------------+
| now()               |
+---------------------+
| 2018-11-05 16:54:10 |
+---------------------+
1 row in set (0.00 sec)

There are 2 ways to this;

First, I would advice you declare now() as a variable before injecting it into the sql statement. Lets say;

var x = now();
mysql> UPDATE table SET last_update=$x, last_monitor=$x WHERE id=1;

Logically if you want a different input for last_monitor then you will add another variable like;

var y = time();
mysql> UPDATE table SET last_update=$x, last_monitor=$y WHERE id=1;

This way you can use the variables as many times as you can, not only in mysql statements but also in the server-side scripting-language(like PHP) you are using in your project. Remember these same variables can be inserted as inputs in a form on the front-end of the application. That makes the project dynamic and not static.

Secondly if now() indicates time of update then using mysql you can decalre the property of the row as a timestamp. Every time a row is inserted or updated time is updated too.