Thank you very much, I on my previous try I did not include the FROM. I
will just do thoroughly checks before COMMIT. Thanks very much.



*From:* ccur...@gmail.com [mailto:ccur...@gmail.com] *On Behalf Of *Chris
Curvey
*Sent:* Friday, March 28, 2014 2:38 PM
*To:* Khangelani Gama
*Cc:* pgsql
*Subject:* Re: [GENERAL] Synchronizing a table that is in two different
databases : Need to dump a table as inserts from db1 and change the insert
statements into UPDATE statements



I think the convention on this list is to bottom-post.

On Fri, Mar 28, 2014 at 7:59 AM, Khangelani Gama <kg...@argility.com> wrote:

Hi Chris



I did replace foo and bar tables with my tables, in db2 I have table
foo(the one to be updated) and the table bar(the one which has data I got
from db1)



*From:* ccur...@gmail.com [mailto:ccur...@gmail.com] *On Behalf Of *Chris
Curvey
*Sent:* Friday, March 28, 2014 1:50 PM
*To:* Khangelani Gama
*Cc:* pgsql
*Subject:* Re: [GENERAL] Synchronizing a table that is in two different
databases : Need to dump a table as inserts from db1 and change the insert
statements into UPDATE statements







On Fri, Mar 28, 2014 at 5:56 AM, Khangelani Gama <kg...@argility.com> wrote:

Hi Chris or anyone who can help



When I try this just below, it complains about foo , saying "ERROR: schema
"foo" does not exist." I got stuck on this error for a while now but still
trying to see why but still no luck so far. If you have something please
help





begin;



update foo

set br_desc = bar.br_desc

, br_active = bar.br_active

(rest of columns)

where foo.br_cde = bar.br_cde;





you need to replace "foo" and "bar" with the names of your tables.



I'm stumped.  Here's the test that I just ran on both 9.2 and 8.4, and I'm
not getting an error:



drop table if exists foo;

drop table if exists bar;



create table foo (a int, b int);

create table bar (a int, b int);



insert into foo values (1, 1);

insert into foo values (2, 2);



insert into bar values (1, 3);

insert into bar values (4, 4);



update foo

set b = bar.b

from bar

where foo.a = bar.a;



select * from bar;



Perhaps if you want to privately send me the exact statement you are using,
I can take quick look and see if there's something obvious.



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