TRUNCATE [TABLE] tbl_name
TRUNCATE TABLE
empties a table
completely. Logically, this is equivalent to a
DELETE
statement that deletes all
rows, but there are practical differences under some
circumstances.
For an InnoDB
table before version 5.0.3,
InnoDB
processes TRUNCATE
TABLE
by deleting rows one by one. As of MySQL 5.0.3,
row by row deletion is used only if there are any FOREIGN
KEY
constraints that reference the table. If there are
no FOREIGN KEY
constraints,
InnoDB
performs fast truncation by dropping the
original table and creating an empty one with the same definition,
which is much faster than deleting rows one by one. (When fast
truncation is used, it resets any
AUTO_INCREMENT
counter to zero. From MySQL
5.0.13 on, the AUTO_INCREMENT
counter is reset
to zero by TRUNCATE TABLE
,
regardless of whether there is a foreign key constraint.)
In the case that FOREIGN KEY
constraints
reference the table, InnoDB
deletes rows one by
one and processes the constraints on each one. If the
FOREIGN KEY
constraint specifies
DELETE CASCADE
, rows from the child
(referenced) table are deleted, and the truncated table becomes
empty. If the FOREIGN KEY
constraint does
not specify CASCADE
, the
TRUNCATE TABLE
statement deletes
rows one by one and stops if it encounters a parent row that is
referenced by the child, returning this error:
ERROR 1451 (23000): Cannot delete or update a parent row: a foreign key constraint fails (`test`.`child`, CONSTRAINT `child_ibfk_1` FOREIGN KEY (`parent_id`) REFERENCES `parent` (`id`))
This is the same as a DELETE
statement with no WHERE
clause.
The count of rows affected by TRUNCATE
TABLE
is accurate only when it is mapped to a
DELETE
statement.
For other storage engines, TRUNCATE
TABLE
differs from DELETE
in the following ways in MySQL 5.0:
Truncate operations drop and re-create the table, which is much faster than deleting rows one by one, particularly for large tables.
As of MySQL 5.0.8, truncate operations cause an implicit commit. Before 5.0.8, truncate operations are not transaction-safe; an error occurs when attempting one in the course of an active transaction.
Truncation operations cannot be performed if the session holds an active table lock.
Truncation operations do not return a meaningful value for the number of deleted rows. The usual result is “0 rows affected,” which should be interpreted as “no information.”
As long as the table format file
is valid, the table can be re-created as an empty table with
tbl_name
.frmTRUNCATE TABLE
, even if the
data or index files have become corrupted.
The table handler does not remember the last used
AUTO_INCREMENT
value, but starts counting
from the beginning. This is true even for
MyISAM
and InnoDB
, which
normally do not reuse sequence values.
Since truncation of a table does not make any use of
DELETE
, the
TRUNCATE TABLE
statement does
not invoke ON DELETE
triggers.
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