Nikolay Samokhvalov wrote:
> On 2/7/06, Tom Lane <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > Nikolay Samokhvalov <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> > > testseq=# CREATE TABLE test(id SERIAL, data TEXT);
> > > NOTICE:  CREATE TABLE will create implicit sequence "test_id_seq" for
> > > serial column "test.id"
> > > CREATE TABLE
> > > ***
> > > ALTER TABLE test ALTER COLUMN id SET DEFAULT nextval('test_id_seq') * 10;
> >
> > The correct solution to this is to forbid ALTER COLUMN SET DEFAULT on
> > a serial column, but we haven't gotten around to enforcing that yet.
> That's wrong!
> Forget about SERIAL. I have INTEGER column with some expression as
> DEFAULT in it. I use sequence in that expression and want this to be
> dumped correctly.
> The bug doesn't concerns SERIALs, in concerns general usage of sequences.

Uh, I can't reproduce the failure:

        test=> CREATE SEQUENCE xx;
        CREATE SEQUENCE
        test=> CREATE TABLE test5(id integer DEFAULT nextval('xx'), data TEXT);
        CREATE TABLE
        test=> ALTER TABLE test5 ALTER COLUMN id SET DEFAULT 
nextval('test_id_seq') * 10;
        ALTER TABLE

pg_dump has:

        CREATE TABLE test2 (
            id integer DEFAULT (nextval('test_id_seq'::regclass) * 10),
            data text
        );

-- 
  Bruce Momjian                        |  http://candle.pha.pa.us
  pgman@candle.pha.pa.us               |  (610) 359-1001
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