« first day (155 days earlier)      last day (2503 days later) » 

07:48
hai
morning
08:12
i have a q
go ahead
 
2 hours later…
Qsp
Qsp
10:30
Hello, i've just posted a question on how to set a field for all inserts during the lenght of a session. Take a look at it, if you can, and leave your opinion. Thank you.
1
Q: Mysql set a field value for all INSERTS during the current session

QspI'm developing a system in C that commits updates into a mysql database. The client isn't always online and therefore the application will save the SQL commands that would be executed into a *.sql when the server is inaccessible. I'm thinking of adding a BOOLEAN field named late_commit to the ta...

11:23
room topic changed to MySQL: a room for MySQL Geniues [mysql]
 
4 hours later…
15:37
@MarcGravell Yet the misspelling remains!
16:12
is there anyone?
17:11
Oh, there is.
Qsp
Qsp
17:45
@tehshrike ah! your site just solved me a doubt. +1 to your prepared statements article :)
18:10
Yay!
I'm glad it was useful :-D
@Qsp How did you get linked to it?
Qsp
Qsp
19:05
@TehShrike SO profile. i'm attempting to solve the question i posted earlier. and i looked around to understand if a prepared statement would solve my issue, as suggested. and it turns out it wont. because the prepared query needs to be connected to the server, to execute.
/me reads the question
Personally, I would probably store the timestamp of when each query was created locally. Then, when you insert the row into the database, have one column where you store the number of seconds between when the query was created, and when it was run against the database.
So for queries that got inserted right away, the number would be 0 or 1 or something.
But for queries that were held in the queue for exactly 2 minutes, you'd see the number 120
Qsp
Qsp
mmm
But I imagine it depends on what you need that information for in the first place
Qsp
Qsp
well, its a sos phone system (those that exist in the highways, for emergency calls). the current program was written in c and had no logging of any sort. and i'm improving it with sql logs that are sent to a server with info about what button was pressed, the lenght of the voip call and its reason to end, battery voltage, etc..
But why do you care if the data gets reported a few seconds late, or a few minutes late?
Qsp
Qsp
19:18
well. the linux system boots up and execute the call action, and then returns to its of state. thats why i thouht of saving the queries in the sql file, so it will upate them the next time it is up
but your idea works
as i already have my tables with an entrytimestamp
and a systemtimestamp the client one
so i can just compare those dates
but in order to have a flag, i'd have to perform a check on the database, compare the 2 timestamps and then set it to true or false
but it can be done :) the most important is that this additional logic runs on the server. due to the resources constraints of the client. i wrote down your suggestion. when i finish this i'll also put your option on the question if you don't mind, so it can be a useful repository with means to tag late commits.
@Qsp Or your queries could just check for entered_timestamp > created_timestamp, you wouldn't have to store another value
Qsp
Qsp
yes, i see 3 options based on this idea: 1.store the difference as seconds, as you said with a column set to 'systemdate' - 'entrystamp'; 2. run periodically a query (or maybe set up a trigger) that compares those values and sets a bollean field; 3. just dont make any such field and set the delay when i consult the data.

« first day (155 days earlier)      last day (2503 days later) »