Purpose
You can use this statement to replace one or more records in a table. If no primary key or unique key conflict exists, records are directly inserted. If a conflict exists, the conflicting records are deleted. Then, the new records are inserted.
Format
replace_stmt:
REPLACE [INTO] table_factor [PARTITION (partition_name_list)] [(column_name_list)]
{VALUES | VALUE} column_value_lists;
partition_name_list:
partition_name [, partition_name ...]
column_name_list:
column_name [, column_name ...]
column_value_lists:
(column_value_list) [, (column_value_list) ...]
column_value_list:
column_value [, column_value ...]
column_value:
{expression | DEFAULT}
Parameters
| Parameter | Description |
|---|---|
| table_factor | The name of the table in which data is to be replaced. |
| column_name_list | The name of the column in which data is to be replaced. |
| partition_name_list | The name of the partition in which data is to be replaced. |
Examples
The table used in the examples is defined as follows:
obclient> CREATE TABLE test (c1 INT PRIMARY KEY, c2 VARCHAR(40));
Query OK, 0 rows affected
Replace the values in row 1 and row 2 of table
testwith'hello alibaba'andhello 'ob', respectively.obclient> REPLACE INTO test VALUES (1, 'hello alibaba'),(2, 'hello ob'); Query OK, 2 rows affected Records: 2 Duplicates: 0 Warnings: 0Query the data in row 1 and row 2 of table
test.obclient> SELECT * FROM test; +----+---------------+ | c1 | c2 | +----+---------------+ | 1 | hello alibaba | | 2 | hello ob | +----+---------------+ 2 rows in setReplace the values in row 3 and row 2 of table
testwith'hello alibaba'andhello 'oceanbase', respectively.obclient> REPLACE INTO test VALUES (3, 'hello alibaba'),(2, 'hello oceanbase'); Query OK, 3 rows affected Records: 2 Duplicates: 1 Warnings: 0Query the data in row 1, row 2, and row 3 of table
test.obclient> SELECT * FROM test; +----+-----------------+ | c1 | c2 | +----+-----------------+ | 1 | hello alibaba | | 2 | hello oceanbase | | 3 | hello alibaba | +----+-----------------+ 3 rows in set