问题
So I'm running into an annoying problem with Laravel update and save. I have a model/table Invoice and invoices, that has a timestamp sent_at.
Invoice.php
class Invoice extends Model {
protected $dates = [
"sent_at",
];
}
I have the following function that updates the Invoice:
InvoicesController.php:
public function postPayInvoice(Request $request, $invoiceId){
$user = $this->apiResponse->user;
$invoiceItemIds = $request->input("invoice_item_ids");
$invoice = Invoice::with(["invoiceItems" => function($subQuery) use($invoiceItemIds){
return $subQuery->whereIn("invoice_items.id", $invoiceItemIds);
}])->where("id", "=", $invoiceId)->first();
\Log::info("Load: ".$invoice->sent_at);
DB::beginTransaction();
try {
foreach($invoice->invoiceItems AS $invoiceItem){
$invoiceItem->status = "paid";
$invoiceItem->paid_at = Carbon::now();
$invoiceItem->save();
}
$totalInvoices = $invoice->invoiceItems()->count();
$paidInvoiceItems = $invoice->invoiceItems()->where("status", "=", "paid")->count();
if($totalInvoices == $paidInvoiceItems){
$invoice->status = "paid";
$invoice->paid_at = Carbon::now();
} else {
$invoice->status = "partially_paid";
}
\Log::info("Pre: ".$invoice->sent_at);
$invoice->save();
\Log::info("Post: ".$invoice->sent_at);
} catch(\Exception $ex){
DB::rollBack();
return $this->apiResponse->returnFail([], "Unable to Pay Invoice: ".$ex->getMessage(), 200);
}
DB::{$request->input("rollback", null) ? "rollback" : "commit"}();
\Log::info("Post Commit: ".$invoice->sent_at);
return $this->apiResponse->returnSuccess($invoice, "Invoice paid!", 200);
}
What this does is pays the selected InvoiceItems (child model of Invoice), and, if all InvoiceItems are marked as paid, then updates invoices.status to paid (or partially_paid) and invoices.paid_at to Carbon::now() (or null).
This all works fine, but somehow, this code is also updating sent_at (hence the \Log statements). When the code loads the Invoice, after applying all save logic, right after saving and finally right after committing, the sent_at attribute is logged:
[2019-05-08 12:43:24] local.INFO: Load: 2019-05-08 12:42:50
[2019-05-08 12:43:24] local.INFO: Pre: 2019-05-08 12:42:50
[2019-05-08 12:43:24] local.INFO: Post: 2019-05-08 12:42:50
[2019-05-08 12:43:24] local.INFO: Post Commit: 2019-05-08 12:42:50
As you can see, the sent_at timestamp is consistently 2019-05-08 12:42:50. But as soon as I re-query the database, the timestamp is 2019-05-08 12:43:24, which is the value of the paid_at and updated_at timestamps.
(status, sent_at, paid_at, created_at, updated_at)
Note this is called from an API, with a subsequent request to load a list of Invoice models, which has the following logic to determine so additional logic:
$cutoff = $this->sent_at->addDays(3)->endOfDay();
But I don't see how that could modify the sent_at column (no save/update is called following, and even if it did, 2019-05-08 12:43:24 does not equate to addDays(3)->endOfDay();
Has anyone seen this before? It's messing up some ordering logic in another view, so I need to fix it eventually...
Edit
If I disable $invoice->save();, it's updated_at timestamp is still updated, but I have no idea why. And, oddly enough, disabling $invoiceTransaction->save(); and $invoiceItem->save(); results in no change to updated_at... Does result in bad data, but this is still in development.
Secondary Edit
"CREATE TABLE `invoices` (
`id` int(10) unsigned NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT,
`user_id` int(11) NOT NULL,
`account_id` int(11) NOT NULL,
`description` text,
`subtotal` decimal(10,2) NOT NULL,
`grand_total` decimal(10,2) NOT NULL,
`status` enum('pending','sent','partially_paid','paid') NOT NULL DEFAULT
'pending',
`sent_at` timestamp NOT NULL DEFAULT CURRENT_TIMESTAMP ON UPDATE CURRENT_TIMESTAMP,
`paid_at` timestamp NULL DEFAULT NULL,
`created_at` timestamp NULL DEFAULT NULL,
`updated_at` timestamp NULL DEFAULT NULL,
`deleted_at` timestamp NULL DEFAULT NULL,
PRIMARY KEY (`id`)
)
ENGINE=InnoDB AUTO_INCREMENT=2 DEFAULT CHARSET=utf8"
I believe there is an issue there:
sent_attimestamp NOT NULL DEFAULT CURRENT_TIMESTAMP ON UPDATE CURRENT_TIMESTAMP,
回答1:
This is due to the MySQL 5.7 configuration, and not Laravel.
The first TIMESTAMP column in a table, if not explicitly declared with the NULL attribute or an explicit DEFAULT or ON UPDATE attribute, is automatically declared with the DEFAULT CURRENT_TIMESTAMP and ON UPDATE CURRENT_TIMESTAMP attributes.
src - Mysql Docs
The fix is to set the timestamp to nullable in the migration, and/or alter the table manually.
ALTER TABLE invoices CHANGE sent_at sent_at timestamp NOT NULL DEFAULT CURRENT_TIMESTAMP;
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/56045660/laravel-timestamp-being-updated-without-explicit-call-to-do-so