I\'m, generating a SQL query like this in PHP:
$sql = sprintf(\"UPDATE %s SET %s = %s WHERE %s = %s\", ...);
Since almost every part of thi
SHOW INDEX FROM <tablename>
You want the row where Key_name = PRIMARY
http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.0/en/show-index.html
You'll probably want to cache the results -- it takes a while to run SHOW statements on all the tables you might need to work with.
Based on @jake-sully and @lukmdo answers, making a merge of their code, I finished with the following snippet:
SELECT `COLUMN_NAME`
FROM `information_schema`.`COLUMNS`
WHERE (`TABLE_SCHEMA` = DATABASE())
AND (`TABLE_NAME` = '<tablename>')
AND (`COLUMN_KEY` = 'PRI');
Hope it could help someone
It might be not advised but works just fine:
SHOW INDEX FROM <table_name> WHERE Key_name = 'PRIMARY';
The solid way is to use information_schema:
SELECT k.COLUMN_NAME
FROM information_schema.table_constraints t
LEFT JOIN information_schema.key_column_usage k
USING(constraint_name,table_schema,table_name)
WHERE t.constraint_type='PRIMARY KEY'
AND t.table_schema=DATABASE()
AND t.table_name='owalog';
As presented on the mysql-list. However its a few times slower from the first solution.
Also
SHOW INDEX FROM <table_name> WHERE Key_name = 'PRIMARY';
Is equivalent to
SHOW KEYS FROM <table_name> WHERE Key_name = 'PRIMARY';
A better way to get Primary Key columns:
SELECT `COLUMN_NAME`
FROM `information_schema`.`COLUMNS`
WHERE (`TABLE_SCHEMA` = 'dbName')
AND (`TABLE_NAME` = 'tableName')
AND (`COLUMN_KEY` = 'PRI');
From http://mysql-0v34c10ck.blogspot.com/2011/05/better-way-to-get-primary-key-columns.html