Performing Transactions Using SQL

15.3.1 Problem

You need to issue a set of queries that must succeed or fail as a unit.

15.3.2 Solution

Manipulate MySQL's auto-commit mode to allow multiple-statement transactions, then commit or roll back the statements depending on whether they succeed or fail.

15.3.3 Discussion

This section describes the SQL statements that control transactional behavior in MySQL. The immediately following sections discuss how to perform transactions from within programs. Some APIs require that you implement transactions by issuing the SQL statements discussed in this section; others provide a special mechanism that allows transaction management without writing SQL directly. However, even in the latter case, the API mechanism will map program operations onto transactional SQL statements, so reading this section will give you a better understanding of what the API is doing on your behalf.

MySQL normally operates in auto-commit mode, which commits the effect of each statement as it executes. (In effect, each statement is its own transaction.) To perform a multiple-statement transaction, you must disable auto-commit mode, issue the statements that make up the transaction, and then either commit or roll back your changes. In MySQL, you can do this two ways:

Not Everything Can Be Undone

Transactions have their limits, because not all statements can be part of a transaction. For example, if you issue a DROP DATABASE statement, don't expect to get back the database by executing a ROLLBACK.

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