Documentation Home
MySQL 9.0 Reference Manual
Related Documentation Download this Manual
PDF (US Ltr) - 40.0Mb
PDF (A4) - 40.1Mb
Man Pages (TGZ) - 258.7Kb
Man Pages (Zip) - 365.9Kb
Info (Gzip) - 4.0Mb
Info (Zip) - 4.0Mb


MySQL 9.0 Reference Manual  /  ...  /  INSERT ... SELECT Statement

15.2.7.1 INSERT ... SELECT Statement

INSERT [LOW_PRIORITY | HIGH_PRIORITY] [IGNORE]
    [INTO] tbl_name
    [PARTITION (partition_name [, partition_name] ...)]
    [(col_name [, col_name] ...)]
    {   SELECT ... 
      | TABLE table_name 
      | VALUES row_constructor_list
    }
    [ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE assignment_list]


value:
    {expr | DEFAULT}

value_list:
    value [, value] ...

row_constructor_list:
    ROW(value_list)[, ROW(value_list)][, ...]

assignment:
    col_name = 
          value
        | [row_alias.]col_name
        | [tbl_name.]col_name
        | [row_alias.]col_alias

assignment_list:
    assignment [, assignment] ...

With INSERT ... SELECT, you can quickly insert many rows into a table from the result of a SELECT statement, which can select from one or many tables. For example:

INSERT INTO tbl_temp2 (fld_id)
  SELECT tbl_temp1.fld_order_id
  FROM tbl_temp1 WHERE tbl_temp1.fld_order_id > 100;

TABLE statement in place of SELECT, as shown here:

INSERT INTO ta TABLE tb;

TABLE tb is equivalent to SELECT * FROM tb. It can be useful when inserting all columns from the source table into the target table, and no filtering with WHERE is required. In addition, the rows from TABLE can be ordered by one or more columns using ORDER BY, and the number of rows inserted can be limited using a LIMIT clause. For more information, see Section 15.2.16, “TABLE Statement”.

The following conditions hold for INSERT ... SELECT statements, and, except where noted, for INSERT ... TABLE as well:

  • Specify IGNORE to ignore rows that would cause duplicate-key violations.

  • The target table of the INSERT statement may appear in the FROM clause of the SELECT part of the query, or as the table named by TABLE. However, you cannot insert into a table and select from the same table in a subquery.

    When selecting from and inserting into the same table, MySQL creates an internal temporary table to hold the rows from the SELECT and then inserts those rows into the target table. However, you cannot use INSERT INTO t ... SELECT ... FROM t when t is a TEMPORARY table, because TEMPORARY tables cannot be referred to twice in the same statement. For the same reason, you cannot use INSERT INTO t ... TABLE t when t is a temporary table. See Section 10.4.4, “Internal Temporary Table Use in MySQL”, and Section B.3.6.2, “TEMPORARY Table Problems”.

  • AUTO_INCREMENT columns work as usual.

  • To ensure that the binary log can be used to re-create the original tables, MySQL does not permit concurrent inserts for INSERT ... SELECT or INSERT ... TABLE statements (see Section 10.11.3, “Concurrent Inserts”).

  • To avoid ambiguous column reference problems when the SELECT and the INSERT refer to the same table, provide a unique alias for each table used in the SELECT part, and qualify column names in that part with the appropriate alias.

    The TABLE statement does not support aliases.

You can explicitly select which partitions or subpartitions (or both) of the source or target table (or both) are to be used with a PARTITION clause following the name of the table. When PARTITION is used with the name of the source table in the SELECT portion of the statement, rows are selected only from the partitions or subpartitions named in its partition list. When PARTITION is used with the name of the target table for the INSERT portion of the statement, it must be possible to insert all rows selected into the partitions or subpartitions named in the partition list following the option. Otherwise, the INSERT ... SELECT statement fails. For more information and examples, see Section 26.5, “Partition Selection”.

TABLE does not support a PARTITION clause.

For INSERT ... SELECT statements, see Section 15.2.7.2, “INSERT ... ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE Statement” for conditions under which the SELECT columns can be referred to in an ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE clause. This also works for INSERT ... TABLE.

The order in which a SELECT or TABLE statement with no ORDER BY clause returns rows is nondeterministic. This means that, when using replication, there is no guarantee that such a SELECT returns rows in the same order on the source and the replica, which can lead to inconsistencies between them. To prevent this from occurring, always write INSERT ... SELECT or INSERT ... TABLE statements that are to be replicated using an ORDER BY clause that produces the same row order on the source and the replica. See also Section 19.5.1.19, “Replication and LIMIT”.

Due to this issue, INSERT ... SELECT ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE and INSERT IGNORE ... SELECT statements are flagged as unsafe for statement-based replication. Such statements produce a warning in the error log when using statement-based mode and are written to the binary log using the row-based format when using MIXED mode. (Bug #11758262, Bug #50439)

See also Section 19.2.1.1, “Advantages and Disadvantages of Statement-Based and Row-Based Replication”.