(PHP 5, PHP 7, PHP 8)
mysqli::$insert_id -- mysqli_insert_id — Returns the value generated for an AUTO_INCREMENT column by the last query
Object-oriented style
Procedural style
Returns the ID generated by an INSERT or
UPDATE query on a table with a column having the
AUTO_INCREMENT attribute. In the case of a multiple-row
INSERT statement, it returns the first automatically
generated value that was successfully inserted.
Performing an INSERT or UPDATE
statement using the LAST_INSERT_ID()
MySQL function will also modify the value returned by mysqli_insert_id().
If LAST_INSERT_ID(expr) was used to generate the value of
AUTO_INCREMENT, it returns the value of the last expr
instead of the generated AUTO_INCREMENT value.
Returns 0 if the previous statement did not change an
AUTO_INCREMENT value. mysqli_insert_id() must be
called immediately after the statement that generated the value.
mysqlProcedural style only: A mysqli object returned by mysqli_connect() or mysqli_init()
The value of the AUTO_INCREMENT field that was updated
by the previous query. Returns zero if there was no previous query on the
connection or if the query did not update an AUTO_INCREMENT
value.
Only statements issued using the current connection affect the return value. The value is not affected by statements issued using other connections or clients.
Note:
If the number is greater than the maximum int value, it will be returned as a string.
Example #1 $mysqli->insert_id example
Object-oriented style
<?php
mysqli_report(MYSQLI_REPORT_ERROR | MYSQLI_REPORT_STRICT);
$mysqli = new mysqli("localhost", "my_user", "my_password", "world");
$mysqli->query("CREATE TABLE myCity LIKE City");
$query = "INSERT INTO myCity VALUES (NULL, 'Stuttgart', 'DEU', 'Stuttgart', 617000)";
$mysqli->query($query);
printf("New record has ID %d.\n", $mysqli->insert_id);
/* drop table */
$mysqli->query("DROP TABLE myCity");Procedural style
<?php
mysqli_report(MYSQLI_REPORT_ERROR | MYSQLI_REPORT_STRICT);
$link = mysqli_connect("localhost", "my_user", "my_password", "world");
mysqli_query($link, "CREATE TABLE myCity LIKE City");
$query = "INSERT INTO myCity VALUES (NULL, 'Stuttgart', 'DEU', 'Stuttgart', 617000)";
mysqli_query($link, $query);
printf("New record has ID %d.\n", mysqli_insert_id($link));
/* drop table */
mysqli_query($link, "DROP TABLE myCity");The above examples will output:
New record has ID 1.
I have received many statements that the insert_id property has a bug because it "works sometimes". Keep in mind that when using the OOP approach, the actual instantiation of the mysqli class will hold the insert_id.
The following code will return nothing.
<?php
$mysqli = new mysqli('host','user','pass','db');
if ($result = $mysqli->query("INSERT INTO t (field) VALUES ('value');")) {
echo 'The ID is: '.$result->insert_id;
}
?>
This is because the insert_id property doesn't belong to the result, but rather the actual mysqli class. This would work:
<?php
$mysqli = new mysqli('host','user','pass','db');
if ($result = $mysqli->query("INSERT INTO t (field) VALUES ('value');")) {
echo 'The ID is: '.$mysqli->insert_id;
}
?>There has been no examples with prepared statements yet.
```php
$u_name = "John Doe";
$u_email = "johndoe@example.com";
$stmt = $connection->prepare(
"INSERT INTO users (name, email) VALUES (?, ?)"
);
$stmt->bind_param('ss', $u_name, $u_email);
$stmt->execute();
echo $stmt->insert_id;
```
For UPDATE you simply change query string and binding parameters accordingly, the rest stays the same.
Of course the table needs to have AUTOINCREMENT PRIMARY KEY.Watch out for the oo-style use of $db->insert_id. When the insert_id exceeds 2^31 (2147483648) fetching the insert id renders a wrong, too large number. You better use the procedural mysqli_insert_id( $db ) instead.
[EDIT by danbrown AT php DOT net: This is another prime example of the limits of 32-bit signed integers.]If you try to INSERT a row using ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE, be aware that insert_id will not update if the ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE clause was triggered.
When you think about it, it's actually very logical since ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE is an UPDATE statement, and not an INSERT.
In a worst case scenario, if you're iterating over something and doing INSERTs while relying on insert_id in later code, you could be pointing at the wrong row on iterations where ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE is triggered!When running extended inserts on a table with an AUTO_INCREMENT field, the value of mysqli_insert_id() will equal the value of the *first* row inserted, not the last, as you might expect.
<?
//mytable has an auto_increment field
$db->query("INSERT INTO mytable (field1,field2,field3) VALUES ('val1','val2','val3'),
('val1','val2','val3'),
('val1','val2','val3')");
echo $db->insert_id; //will echo the id of the FIRST row inserted
?>When using "INSERT ... ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE `id` = LAST_INSERT_ID(`id`)", the AUTO_INCREMENT will increase in an InnoDB table, but not in a MyISAM table.What is unclear is how concurrency control affects this function. When you make two successive calls to mysql where the result of the second depends on the first, another user may have done an insert in the meantime.
The documentation is silent on this, so I always determine the value of an auto increment before and after an insert to guard against this.I was having problems with getting the inserted id, and did a bit of testing. It ended up that if you commit a transaction before getting the last inserted id, it returns 0 every time, but if you get the last inserted id before committing the transaction, you get the correct value.