Re: DETACH PARTITION and FOR EACH ROW triggers on partitioned tables

Поиск
Список
Период
Сортировка
От Tom Lane
Тема Re: DETACH PARTITION and FOR EACH ROW triggers on partitioned tables
Дата
Msg-id 5954.1586369358@sss.pgh.pa.us
обсуждение исходный текст
Ответ на Re: DETACH PARTITION and FOR EACH ROW triggers on partitioned tables  (Alvaro Herrera <alvherre@2ndquadrant.com>)
Ответы Re: DETACH PARTITION and FOR EACH ROW triggers on partitioned tables  (Amit Langote <amitlangote09@gmail.com>)
Список pgsql-hackers
Alvaro Herrera <alvherre@2ndquadrant.com> writes:
> On 2020-Apr-08, Tom Lane wrote:
>> I think that #1 would soon lead to needing all the same infrastructure
>> as we have for inherited columns and constraints, ie triggers would need
>> equivalents of attislocal and attinhcount.  I don't really want to go
>> there, so I'd vote for #2.

> Hmm.  Those things are used for the legacy inheritance case supporting
> multiple inheritance, where we need to figure out which parent the table
> is being detached (disinherited) from.  But for partitioning we know
> which parent it is, since there can only be one.  So I don't think that
> argument applies.

My point is that so long as you only allow the case of exactly one parent,
you can just delete the child trigger, because it must belong to that
parent.  As soon as there's any flexibility, you are going to end up
reinventing all the stuff we had to invent to manage
maybe-or-maybe-not-inherited columns.  So I think the "detach" idea
is the first step on that road, and I counsel not taking that step.

(This implies that when creating a child trigger, we should error out,
*not* allow the case, if there's already a trigger by that name.  Not
sure if that's what happens today, but again I'd say that's what we
should do to avoid complicated cases.)

            regards, tom lane



В списке pgsql-hackers по дате отправления:

Предыдущее
От: Stephen Frost
Дата:
Сообщение: Re: where should I stick that backup?
Следующее
От: Mahendra Singh Thalor
Дата:
Сообщение: Re: Vacuum o/p with (full 1, parallel 0) option throwing an error