On 1/16/20 12:14 AM, Werner Kuhnle wrote:
Thanks Michael und Adrian for your answers.
I think that
"
My guess is that the SERIAL was defined for the column, then the data
was added with id values, but the counter for the sequence behind the
SERIAL was not updated to a value greater the the last id added.
"
is a correct description of what happens.
For avoiding the need of an additional command for updating the sequence
before every insert statement:
You don't have to update the sequence before every INSERT. For each
SERIAL column do this one time:
1) Find current max(id) for the column.
2) Update the the sequence:
select setval('seq_name', max_id);
From then on the sequence will automatically increment the id with
values that are greater then those in the table and you will not get the
unique violation errors. The caveat is that if you manually supply an id
value then all bets are off.
For more information on sequences see:
https://www.postgresql.org/docs/12/sql-createsequence.html
For SERIAL see:
https://www.postgresql.org/docs/12/datatype-numeric.html#DATATYPE-SERIAL
If you want more control over what is accepted for the value then you
can use an IDENTITY column:
https://www.postgresql.org/docs/12/sql-createtable.html
GENERATED { ALWAYS | BY DEFAULT } AS IDENTITY [ ( sequence_options ) ]
As to below, no.
Is there a way to specify the desired behaviour
(that PG always provides conflict-free id values, eg. max(id)+1 when
id values are not given explicitly in the INSERT statement)
already whend defining(!) the table in the CREATE TABLE statement ?
Original Message processed by david® <https://david.tobit.software>
*Re: Problem with SqlState=23505 when inserting rows*15. Januar
2020, 17:51 Uhr
*Von* Michael Lewis <mailto:mle...@entrata.com>
*An* Werner Kuhnle <mailto:w...@kuhnle.com>
*Cc* PostgreSQL General <mailto:pgsql-general@lists.postgresql.org>
On Wed, Jan 15, 2020 at 9:41 AM Werner Kuhnle <w...@kuhnle.com
<mailto:w...@kuhnle.com>> wrote:
I've tried to using the newer definition:
id int GENERATED BY DEFAULT AS IDENTITY PRIMARY KEY
but that does not solve the problem.
Is there a way to define id columns to that when the database
provides values,
it recognizes already existing values avoiding conflicts.
You'll need to run something like the below to set the next value to
the max current value. You'll just have to figure out the name of
the sequence that is automatically created whether you use the
pseudo type serial, or the newer IDENTITY option. Both are
implemented with a sequence.
--set sequence to max ID on a table
select setval( 'table_name_id_seq', ( select max(id) + 1 from
table_name ) );
--
Adrian Klaver
adrian.kla...@aklaver.com