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<!-- $PostgreSQL: pgsql/doc/src/sgml/ddl.sgml,v 1.63 2006/09/20 21:30:20 tgl Exp $ -->
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<chapter id="ddl">
 <title>Data Definition</title>

 <para>
  This chapter covers how one creates the database structures that
  will hold one's data.  In a relational database, the raw data is
  stored in tables, so the majority of this chapter is devoted to
  explaining how tables are created and modified and what features are
  available to control what data is stored in the tables.
  Subsequently, we discuss how tables can be organized into
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  schemas, and how privileges can be assigned to tables.  Finally,
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  we will briefly look at other features that affect the data storage,
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  such as inheritance, views, functions, and triggers.
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 </para>

 <sect1 id="ddl-basics">
  <title>Table Basics</title>

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  <indexterm zone="ddl-basics">
   <primary>table</primary>
  </indexterm>

  <indexterm>
   <primary>row</primary>
  </indexterm>

  <indexterm>
   <primary>column</primary>
  </indexterm>

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  <para>
   A table in a relational database is much like a table on paper: It
   consists of rows and columns.  The number and order of the columns
   is fixed, and each column has a name.  The number of rows is
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   variable &mdash; it reflects how much data is stored at a given moment.
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   SQL does not make any guarantees about the order of the rows in a
   table.  When a table is read, the rows will appear in random order,
   unless sorting is explicitly requested.  This is covered in <xref
   linkend="queries">.  Furthermore, SQL does not assign unique
   identifiers to rows, so it is possible to have several completely
   identical rows in a table.  This is a consequence of the
   mathematical model that underlies SQL but is usually not desirable.
   Later in this chapter we will see how to deal with this issue.
  </para>

  <para>
   Each column has a data type.  The data type constrains the set of
   possible values that can be assigned to a column and assigns
   semantics to the data stored in the column so that it can be used
   for computations.  For instance, a column declared to be of a
   numerical type will not accept arbitrary text strings, and the data
   stored in such a column can be used for mathematical computations.
   By contrast, a column declared to be of a character string type
   will accept almost any kind of data but it does not lend itself to
   mathematical calculations, although other operations such as string
   concatenation are available.
  </para>

  <para>
   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> includes a sizable set of
   built-in data types that fit many applications.  Users can also
   define their own data types.  Most built-in data types have obvious
   names and semantics, so we defer a detailed explanation to <xref
   linkend="datatype">.  Some of the frequently used data types are
   <type>integer</type> for whole numbers, <type>numeric</type> for
   possibly fractional numbers, <type>text</type> for character
   strings, <type>date</type> for dates, <type>time</type> for
   time-of-day values, and <type>timestamp</type> for values
   containing both date and time.
  </para>

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  <indexterm>
   <primary>table</primary>
   <secondary>creating</secondary>
  </indexterm>

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  <para>
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   To create a table, you use the aptly named <xref
   linkend="sql-createtable" endterm="sql-createtable-title"> command.
   In this command you specify at least a name for the new table, the
   names of the columns and the data type of each column.  For
   example:
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<programlisting>
CREATE TABLE my_first_table (
    first_column text,
    second_column integer
);
</programlisting>
   This creates a table named <literal>my_first_table</literal> with
   two columns.  The first column is named
   <literal>first_column</literal> and has a data type of
   <type>text</type>; the second column has the name
   <literal>second_column</literal> and the type <type>integer</type>.
   The table and column names follow the identifier syntax explained
   in <xref linkend="sql-syntax-identifiers">.  The type names are
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   usually also identifiers, but there are some exceptions.  Note that the
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   column list is comma-separated and surrounded by parentheses.
  </para>

  <para>
   Of course, the previous example was heavily contrived.  Normally,
   you would give names to your tables and columns that convey what
   kind of data they store.  So let's look at a more realistic
   example:
<programlisting>
CREATE TABLE products (
    product_no integer,
    name text,
    price numeric
);
</programlisting>
   (The <type>numeric</type> type can store fractional components, as
   would be typical of monetary amounts.)
  </para>

  <tip>
   <para>
    When you create many interrelated tables it is wise to choose a
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    consistent naming pattern for the tables and columns.  For
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    instance, there is a choice of using singular or plural nouns for
    table names, both of which are favored by some theorist or other.
   </para>
  </tip>

  <para>
   There is a limit on how many columns a table can contain.
   Depending on the column types, it is between 250 and 1600.
   However, defining a table with anywhere near this many columns is
   highly unusual and often a questionable design.
  </para>

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  <indexterm>
   <primary>table</primary>
   <secondary>removing</secondary>
  </indexterm>

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  <para>
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   If you no longer need a table, you can remove it using the <xref
   linkend="sql-droptable" endterm="sql-droptable-title"> command.
   For example:
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<programlisting>
DROP TABLE my_first_table;
DROP TABLE products;
</programlisting>
   Attempting to drop a table that does not exist is an error.
   Nevertheless, it is common in SQL script files to unconditionally
   try to drop each table before creating it, ignoring the error
   messages.
  </para>

  <para>
   If you need to modify a table that already exists look into <xref
   linkend="ddl-alter"> later in this chapter.
  </para>

  <para>
   With the tools discussed so far you can create fully functional
   tables.  The remainder of this chapter is concerned with adding
   features to the table definition to ensure data integrity,
   security, or convenience.  If you are eager to fill your tables with
   data now you can skip ahead to <xref linkend="dml"> and read the
   rest of this chapter later.
  </para>
 </sect1>

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 <sect1 id="ddl-default">
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  <title>Default Values</title>

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  <indexterm zone="ddl-default">
   <primary>default value</primary>
  </indexterm>

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  <para>
   A column can be assigned a default value.  When a new row is
   created and no values are specified for some of the columns, the
   columns will be filled with their respective default values.  A
   data manipulation command can also request explicitly that a column
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   be set to its default value, without having to know what that value is.
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   (Details about data manipulation commands are in <xref linkend="dml">.)
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  </para>

  <para>
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   <indexterm><primary>null value</primary><secondary>default value</secondary></indexterm>
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   If no default value is declared explicitly, the default value is the
   null value.  This usually makes sense because a null value can
   be considered to represent unknown data.
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  </para>

  <para>
   In a table definition, default values are listed after the column
   data type.  For example:
<programlisting>
CREATE TABLE products (
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    product_no integer,
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    name text,
    price numeric <emphasis>DEFAULT 9.99</emphasis>
);
</programlisting>
  </para>

  <para>
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   The default value may be an expression, which will be
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   evaluated whenever the default value is inserted
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   (<emphasis>not</emphasis> when the table is created).  A common example
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   is that a <type>timestamp</type> column may have a default of <literal>now()</>,
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   so that it gets set to the time of row insertion.  Another common
   example is generating a <quote>serial number</> for each row.
   In <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> this is typically done by
   something like
<programlisting>
CREATE TABLE products (
    product_no integer <emphasis>DEFAULT nextval('products_product_no_seq')</emphasis>,
    ...
);
</programlisting>
   where the <literal>nextval()</> function supplies successive values
   from a <firstterm>sequence object</> (see <xref
   linkend="functions-sequence">). This arrangement is sufficiently common
   that there's a special shorthand for it:
<programlisting>
CREATE TABLE products (
    product_no <emphasis>SERIAL</emphasis>,
    ...
);
</programlisting>
   The <literal>SERIAL</> shorthand is discussed further in <xref
   linkend="datatype-serial">.
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  </para>
 </sect1>

 <sect1 id="ddl-constraints">
  <title>Constraints</title>

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  <indexterm zone="ddl-constraints">
   <primary>constraint</primary>
  </indexterm>

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  <para>
   Data types are a way to limit the kind of data that can be stored
   in a table.  For many applications, however, the constraint they
   provide is too coarse.  For example, a column containing a product
   price should probably only accept positive values.  But there is no
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   standard data type that accepts only positive numbers.  Another issue is
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   that you might want to constrain column data with respect to other
   columns or rows.  For example, in a table containing product
   information, there should only be one row for each product number.
  </para>

  <para>
   To that end, SQL allows you to define constraints on columns and
   tables.  Constraints give you as much control over the data in your
   tables as you wish.  If a user attempts to store data in a column
   that would violate a constraint, an error is raised.  This applies
   even if the value came from the default value definition.
  </para>

  <sect2>
   <title>Check Constraints</title>

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   <indexterm>
    <primary>check constraint</primary>
   </indexterm>

   <indexterm>
    <primary>constraint</primary>
    <secondary>check</secondary>
   </indexterm>

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   <para>
    A check constraint is the most generic constraint type.  It allows
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    you to specify that the value in a certain column must satisfy a
    Boolean (truth-value) expression.  For instance, to require positive
    product prices, you could use:
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<programlisting>
CREATE TABLE products (
    product_no integer,
    name text,
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    price numeric <emphasis>CHECK (price &gt; 0)</emphasis>
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);
</programlisting>
   </para>

   <para>
    As you see, the constraint definition comes after the data type,
    just like default value definitions.  Default values and
    constraints can be listed in any order.  A check constraint
    consists of the key word <literal>CHECK</literal> followed by an
    expression in parentheses.  The check constraint expression should
    involve the column thus constrained, otherwise the constraint
    would not make too much sense.
   </para>

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   <indexterm>
    <primary>constraint</primary>
    <secondary>name</secondary>
   </indexterm>

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   <para>
    You can also give the constraint a separate name.  This clarifies
    error messages and allows you to refer to the constraint when you
    need to change it.  The syntax is:
<programlisting>
CREATE TABLE products (
    product_no integer,
    name text,
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    price numeric <emphasis>CONSTRAINT positive_price</emphasis> CHECK (price &gt; 0)
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);
</programlisting>
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    So, to specify a named constraint, use the key word
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    <literal>CONSTRAINT</literal> followed by an identifier followed
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    by the constraint definition.  (If you don't specify a constraint
    name in this way, the system chooses a name for you.)
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   </para>

   <para>
    A check constraint can also refer to several columns.  Say you
    store a regular price and a discounted price, and you want to
    ensure that the discounted price is lower than the regular price.
<programlisting>
CREATE TABLE products (
    product_no integer,
    name text,
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    price numeric CHECK (price &gt; 0),
    discounted_price numeric CHECK (discounted_price &gt; 0),
    <emphasis>CHECK (price &gt; discounted_price)</emphasis>
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);
</programlisting>
   </para>

   <para>
    The first two constraints should look familiar.  The third one
    uses a new syntax.  It is not attached to a particular column,
    instead it appears as a separate item in the comma-separated
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    column list.  Column definitions and these constraint
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    definitions can be listed in mixed order.
   </para>

   <para>
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    We say that the first two constraints are column constraints, whereas the
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    third one is a table constraint because it is written separately
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    from any one column definition.  Column constraints can also be
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    written as table constraints, while the reverse is not necessarily
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    possible, since a column constraint is supposed to refer to only the
    column it is attached to.  (<productname>PostgreSQL</productname> doesn't
    enforce that rule, but you should follow it if you want your table
    definitions to work with other database systems.)  The above example could
    also be written as
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<programlisting>
CREATE TABLE products (
    product_no integer,
    name text,
    price numeric,
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    CHECK (price &gt; 0),
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    discounted_price numeric,
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    CHECK (discounted_price &gt; 0),
    CHECK (price &gt; discounted_price)
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);
</programlisting>
    or even
<programlisting>
CREATE TABLE products (
    product_no integer,
    name text,
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    price numeric CHECK (price &gt; 0),
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    discounted_price numeric,
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    CHECK (discounted_price &gt; 0 AND price &gt; discounted_price)
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);
</programlisting>
    It's a matter of taste.
   </para>

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   <para>
    Names can be assigned to table constraints in just the same way as
    for column constraints:
<programlisting>
CREATE TABLE products (
    product_no integer,
    name text,
    price numeric,
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    CHECK (price &gt; 0),
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    discounted_price numeric,
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    CHECK (discounted_price &gt; 0),
    <emphasis>CONSTRAINT valid_discount</> CHECK (price &gt; discounted_price)
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);
</programlisting>
   </para>

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   <indexterm>
    <primary>null value</primary>
    <secondary sortas="check constraints">with check constraints</secondary>
   </indexterm>

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   <para>
    It should be noted that a check constraint is satisfied if the
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    check expression evaluates to true or the null value.  Since most
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    expressions will evaluate to the null value if any operand is null,
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    they will not prevent null values in the constrained columns.  To
    ensure that a column does not contain null values, the not-null
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    constraint described in the next section can be used.
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   </para>
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   <para>
    Check constraints can be useful for enhancing the performance of
    partitioned tables.  For details see <xref linkend="ddl-partitioning">.
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   </para>
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  </sect2>

  <sect2>
   <title>Not-Null Constraints</title>

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   <indexterm>
    <primary>not-null constraint</primary>
   </indexterm>

   <indexterm>
    <primary>constraint</primary>
    <secondary>NOT NULL</secondary>
   </indexterm>

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   <para>
    A not-null constraint simply specifies that a column must not
    assume the null value.  A syntax example:
<programlisting>
CREATE TABLE products (
    product_no integer <emphasis>NOT NULL</emphasis>,
    name text <emphasis>NOT NULL</emphasis>,
    price numeric
);
</programlisting>
   </para>

   <para>
    A not-null constraint is always written as a column constraint.  A
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    not-null constraint is functionally equivalent to creating a check
    constraint <literal>CHECK (<replaceable>column_name</replaceable>
    IS NOT NULL)</literal>, but in
    <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> creating an explicit
    not-null constraint is more efficient.  The drawback is that you
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    cannot give explicit names to not-null constraints created this
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    way.
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   </para>

   <para>
    Of course, a column can have more than one constraint.  Just write
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    the constraints one after another:
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<programlisting>
CREATE TABLE products (
    product_no integer NOT NULL,
    name text NOT NULL,
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    price numeric NOT NULL CHECK (price &gt; 0)
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);
</programlisting>
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    The order doesn't matter.  It does not necessarily determine in which
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    order the constraints are checked.
   </para>

   <para>
    The <literal>NOT NULL</literal> constraint has an inverse: the
    <literal>NULL</literal> constraint.  This does not mean that the
    column must be null, which would surely be useless.  Instead, this
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    simply selects the default behavior that the column may be null.
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    The <literal>NULL</literal> constraint is not defined in the SQL
    standard and should not be used in portable applications.  (It was
    only added to <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> to be
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    compatible with some other database systems.)  Some users, however,
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    like it because it makes it easy to toggle the constraint in a
    script file.  For example, you could start with
<programlisting>
CREATE TABLE products (
    product_no integer NULL,
    name text NULL,
    price numeric NULL
);
</programlisting>
    and then insert the <literal>NOT</literal> key word where desired.
   </para>

   <tip>
    <para>
     In most database designs the majority of columns should be marked
     not null.
    </para>
   </tip>
  </sect2>

  <sect2>
   <title>Unique Constraints</title>

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   <indexterm>
    <primary>unique constraint</primary>
   </indexterm>

   <indexterm>
    <primary>constraint</primary>
    <secondary>unique</secondary>
   </indexterm>

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   <para>
    Unique constraints ensure that the data contained in a column or a
    group of columns is unique with respect to all the rows in the
    table.  The syntax is
<programlisting>
CREATE TABLE products (
    product_no integer <emphasis>UNIQUE</emphasis>,
    name text,
    price numeric
);
</programlisting>
    when written as a column constraint, and
<programlisting>
CREATE TABLE products (
    product_no integer,
    name text,
    price numeric,
    <emphasis>UNIQUE (product_no)</emphasis>
);
</programlisting>
    when written as a table constraint.
   </para>

   <para>
    If a unique constraint refers to a group of columns, the columns
    are listed separated by commas:
<programlisting>
CREATE TABLE example (
    a integer,
    b integer,
    c integer,
    <emphasis>UNIQUE (a, c)</emphasis>
);
</programlisting>
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    This specifies that the combination of values in the indicated columns
    is unique across the whole table, though any one of the columns
    need not be (and ordinarily isn't) unique.
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   </para>

   <para>
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    You can assign your own name for a unique constraint, in the usual way:
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<programlisting>
CREATE TABLE products (
    product_no integer <emphasis>CONSTRAINT must_be_different</emphasis> UNIQUE,
    name text,
    price numeric
);
</programlisting>
   </para>

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   <indexterm>
    <primary>null value</primary>
    <secondary sortas="unique constraints">with unique constraints</secondary>
   </indexterm>

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   <para>
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    In general, a unique constraint is violated when there are two or
    more rows in the table where the values of all of the
    columns included in the constraint are equal.
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    However, null values are not considered equal in this
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    comparison.  That means even in the presence of a
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    unique constraint it is possible to store duplicate
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    rows that contain a null value in at least one of the constrained
    columns.  This behavior conforms to the SQL standard, but we have
    heard that other SQL databases may not follow this rule.  So be
    careful when developing applications that are intended to be
    portable.
   </para>
  </sect2>

  <sect2>
   <title>Primary Keys</title>

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   <indexterm>
    <primary>primary key</primary>
   </indexterm>

   <indexterm>
    <primary>constraint</primary>
    <secondary>primary key</secondary>
   </indexterm>

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   <para>
    Technically, a primary key constraint is simply a combination of a
    unique constraint and a not-null constraint.  So, the following
    two table definitions accept the same data:
<programlisting>
CREATE TABLE products (
    product_no integer UNIQUE NOT NULL,
    name text,
    price numeric
);
</programlisting>

<programlisting>
CREATE TABLE products (
    product_no integer <emphasis>PRIMARY KEY</emphasis>,
    name text,
    price numeric
);
</programlisting>
   </para>

   <para>
    Primary keys can also constrain more than one column; the syntax
    is similar to unique constraints:
<programlisting>
CREATE TABLE example (
    a integer,
    b integer,
    c integer,
    <emphasis>PRIMARY KEY (a, c)</emphasis>
);
</programlisting>
   </para>

   <para>
    A primary key indicates that a column or group of columns can be
    used as a unique identifier for rows in the table.  (This is a
    direct consequence of the definition of a primary key.  Note that
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    a unique constraint does not, by itself, provide a unique identifier
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    because it does not exclude null values.)  This is useful both for
    documentation purposes and for client applications.  For example,
    a GUI application that allows modifying row values probably needs
    to know the primary key of a table to be able to identify rows
    uniquely.
   </para>

   <para>
    A table can have at most one primary key (while it can have many
    unique and not-null constraints).  Relational database theory
    dictates that every table must have a primary key.  This rule is
    not enforced by <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>, but it is
    usually best to follow it.
   </para>
  </sect2>

  <sect2 id="ddl-constraints-fk">
   <title>Foreign Keys</title>

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   <indexterm>
    <primary>foreign key</primary>
   </indexterm>

   <indexterm>
    <primary>constraint</primary>
    <secondary>foreign key</secondary>
   </indexterm>

   <indexterm>
    <primary>referential integrity</primary>
   </indexterm>

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   <para>
    A foreign key constraint specifies that the values in a column (or
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    a group of columns) must match the values appearing in some row
    of another table.
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    We say this maintains the <firstterm>referential
    integrity</firstterm> between two related tables.
   </para>

   <para>
    Say you have the product table that we have used several times already:
<programlisting>
CREATE TABLE products (
    product_no integer PRIMARY KEY,
    name text,
    price numeric
);
</programlisting>
    Let's also assume you have a table storing orders of those
    products.  We want to ensure that the orders table only contains
    orders of products that actually exist.  So we define a foreign
    key constraint in the orders table that references the products
    table:
<programlisting>
CREATE TABLE orders (
    order_id integer PRIMARY KEY,
    product_no integer <emphasis>REFERENCES products (product_no)</emphasis>,
    quantity integer
);
</programlisting>
    Now it is impossible to create orders with
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    <structfield>product_no</structfield> entries that do not appear in the
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    products table.
   </para>

   <para>
    We say that in this situation the orders table is the
    <firstterm>referencing</firstterm> table and the products table is
    the <firstterm>referenced</firstterm> table.  Similarly, there are
    referencing and referenced columns.
   </para>

   <para>
    You can also shorten the above command to
<programlisting>
CREATE TABLE orders (
    order_id integer PRIMARY KEY,
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    product_no integer <emphasis>REFERENCES products</emphasis>,
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    quantity integer
);
</programlisting>
    because in absence of a column list the primary key of the
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    referenced table is used as the referenced column(s).
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   </para>

   <para>
    A foreign key can also constrain and reference a group of columns.
    As usual, it then needs to be written in table constraint form.
    Here is a contrived syntax example:
<programlisting>
CREATE TABLE t1 (
  a integer PRIMARY KEY,
  b integer,
  c integer,
  <emphasis>FOREIGN KEY (b, c) REFERENCES other_table (c1, c2)</emphasis>
);
</programlisting>
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    Of course, the number and type of the constrained columns need to
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    match the number and type of the referenced columns.
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   </para>

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   <para>
    You can assign your own name for a foreign key constraint,
    in the usual way.
   </para>

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   <para>
    A table can contain more than one foreign key constraint.  This is
    used to implement many-to-many relationships between tables.  Say
    you have tables about products and orders, but now you want to
    allow one order to contain possibly many products (which the
    structure above did not allow).  You could use this table structure:
<programlisting>
CREATE TABLE products (
    product_no integer PRIMARY KEY,
    name text,
    price numeric
);

CREATE TABLE orders (
    order_id integer PRIMARY KEY,
    shipping_address text,
    ...
);

CREATE TABLE order_items (
    product_no integer REFERENCES products,
    order_id integer REFERENCES orders,
    quantity integer,
    PRIMARY KEY (product_no, order_id)
);
</programlisting>
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    Notice that the primary key overlaps with the foreign keys in
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    the last table.
   </para>

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   <indexterm>
    <primary>CASCADE</primary>
    <secondary>foreign key action</secondary>
   </indexterm>

   <indexterm>
    <primary>RESTRICT</primary>
    <secondary>foreign key action</secondary>
   </indexterm>

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   <para>
    We know that the foreign keys disallow creation of orders that
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    do not relate to any products.  But what if a product is removed
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    after an order is created that references it?  SQL allows you to
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    handle that as well.  Intuitively, we have a few options:
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    <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
     <listitem><para>Disallow deleting a referenced product</para></listitem>
     <listitem><para>Delete the orders as well</para></listitem>
     <listitem><para>Something else?</para></listitem>
    </itemizedlist>
   </para>

   <para>
    To illustrate this, let's implement the following policy on the
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    many-to-many relationship example above: when someone wants to
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    remove a product that is still referenced by an order (via
    <literal>order_items</literal>), we disallow it.  If someone
    removes an order, the order items are removed as well.
<programlisting>
CREATE TABLE products (
    product_no integer PRIMARY KEY,
    name text,
    price numeric
);

CREATE TABLE orders (
    order_id integer PRIMARY KEY,
    shipping_address text,
    ...
);

CREATE TABLE order_items (
    product_no integer REFERENCES products <emphasis>ON DELETE RESTRICT</emphasis>,
    order_id integer REFERENCES orders <emphasis>ON DELETE CASCADE</emphasis>,
    quantity integer,
    PRIMARY KEY (product_no, order_id)
);
</programlisting>
   </para>

   <para>
    Restricting and cascading deletes are the two most common options.
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    <literal>RESTRICT</literal> prevents deletion of a
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    referenced row. <literal>NO ACTION</literal> means that if any
    referencing rows still exist when the constraint is checked, an error
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    is raised; this is the default behavior if you do not specify anything.
    (The essential difference between these two choices is that
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    <literal>NO ACTION</literal> allows the check to be deferred until
    later in the transaction, whereas <literal>RESTRICT</literal> does not.)
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    <literal>CASCADE</> specifies that when a referenced row is deleted,
    row(s) referencing it should be automatically deleted as well.
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    There are two other options:
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    <literal>SET NULL</literal> and <literal>SET DEFAULT</literal>.
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    These cause the referencing columns to be set to nulls or default
    values, respectively, when the referenced row is deleted.
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    Note that these do not excuse you from observing any constraints.
    For example, if an action specifies <literal>SET DEFAULT</literal>
    but the default value would not satisfy the foreign key, the
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    operation will fail.
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   </para>

   <para>
    Analogous to <literal>ON DELETE</literal> there is also
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    <literal>ON UPDATE</literal> which is invoked when a referenced
    column is changed (updated).  The possible actions are the same.
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   </para>

   <para>
    More information about updating and deleting data is in <xref
    linkend="dml">.
   </para>

   <para>
    Finally, we should mention that a foreign key must reference
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    columns that either are a primary key or form a unique constraint.
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    If the foreign key references a unique constraint, there are some
    additional possibilities regarding how null values are matched.
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    These are explained in the reference documentation for
    <xref linkend="sql-createtable" endterm="sql-createtable-title">.
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   </para>
  </sect2>
 </sect1>

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 <sect1 id="ddl-system-columns">
  <title>System Columns</title>

  <para>
   Every table has several <firstterm>system columns</> that are
   implicitly defined by the system.  Therefore, these names cannot be
   used as names of user-defined columns.  (Note that these
   restrictions are separate from whether the name is a key word or
   not; quoting a name will not allow you to escape these
   restrictions.)  You do not really need to be concerned about these
   columns, just know they exist.
  </para>

  <indexterm>
   <primary>column</primary>
   <secondary>system column</secondary>
  </indexterm>

  <variablelist>
   <varlistentry>
    <term><structfield>oid</></term>
    <listitem>
     <para>
      <indexterm>
       <primary>OID</primary>
       <secondary>column</secondary>
      </indexterm>
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      The object identifier (object ID) of a row. This column is only
      present if the table was created using <literal>WITH
      OIDS</literal>, or if the <xref linkend="guc-default-with-oids">
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      configuration variable was set. This column is of type
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      <type>oid</type> (same name as the column); see <xref
      linkend="datatype-oid"> for more information about the type.
     </para>
    </listitem>
   </varlistentry>

   <varlistentry>
    <term><structfield>tableoid</></term>
    <listitem>
     <indexterm>
      <primary>tableoid</primary>
     </indexterm>

     <para>
      The OID of the table containing this row.  This column is
      particularly handy for queries that select from inheritance
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      hierarchies (see <xref linkend="ddl-inherit">), since without it,
      it's difficult to tell which individual table a row came from.  The
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      <structfield>tableoid</structfield> can be joined against the
      <structfield>oid</structfield> column of
      <structname>pg_class</structname> to obtain the table name.
     </para>
    </listitem>
   </varlistentry>

   <varlistentry>
    <term><structfield>xmin</></term>
    <listitem>
     <indexterm>
      <primary>xmin</primary>
     </indexterm>

     <para>
      The identity (transaction ID) of the inserting transaction for
      this row version.  (A row version is an individual state of a
      row; each update of a row creates a new row version for the same
      logical row.)
     </para>
    </listitem>
   </varlistentry>

   <varlistentry>
    <term><structfield>cmin</></term>
    <listitem>
     <indexterm>
      <primary>cmin</primary>
     </indexterm>

     <para>
      The command identifier (starting at zero) within the inserting
      transaction.
     </para>
    </listitem>
   </varlistentry>

   <varlistentry>
    <term><structfield>xmax</></term>
    <listitem>
     <indexterm>
      <primary>xmax</primary>
     </indexterm>

     <para>
      The identity (transaction ID) of the deleting transaction, or
      zero for an undeleted row version.  It is possible for this column to
      be nonzero in a visible row version. That usually indicates that the
      deleting transaction hasn't committed yet, or that an attempted
      deletion was rolled back.
     </para>
    </listitem>
   </varlistentry>

   <varlistentry>
    <term><structfield>cmax</></term>
    <listitem>
     <indexterm>
      <primary>cmax</primary>
     </indexterm>

     <para>
      The command identifier within the deleting transaction, or zero.
     </para>
    </listitem>
   </varlistentry>

   <varlistentry>
    <term><structfield>ctid</></term>
    <listitem>
     <indexterm>
      <primary>ctid</primary>
     </indexterm>

     <para>
      The physical location of the row version within its table.  Note that
      although the <structfield>ctid</structfield> can be used to
      locate the row version very quickly, a row's
      <structfield>ctid</structfield> will change each time it is
      updated or moved by <command>VACUUM FULL</>.  Therefore
      <structfield>ctid</structfield> is useless as a long-term row
      identifier.  The OID, or even better a user-defined serial
      number, should be used to identify logical rows.
     </para>
    </listitem>
   </varlistentry>
  </variablelist>

   <para>
    OIDs are 32-bit quantities and are assigned from a single
    cluster-wide counter.  In a large or long-lived database, it is
    possible for the counter to wrap around.  Hence, it is bad
    practice to assume that OIDs are unique, unless you take steps to
    ensure that this is the case.  If you need to identify the rows in
    a table, using a sequence generator is strongly recommended.
    However, OIDs can be used as well, provided that a few additional
    precautions are taken:

    <itemizedlist>
     <listitem>
      <para>
       A unique constraint should be created on the OID column of each
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       table for which the OID will be used to identify rows.  When such
       a unique constraint (or unique index) exists, the system takes
       care not to generate an OID matching an already-existing row.
       (Of course, this is only possible if the table contains fewer
       than 2<superscript>32</> (4 billion) rows, and in practice the
       table size had better be much less than that, or performance
       may suffer.)
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      </para>
     </listitem>
     <listitem>
      <para>
       OIDs should never be assumed to be unique across tables; use
       the combination of <structfield>tableoid</> and row OID if you
       need a database-wide identifier.
      </para>
     </listitem>
     <listitem>
      <para>
       The tables in question should be created using <literal>WITH
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       OIDS</literal>.  As of <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> 8.1,
       <literal>WITHOUT OIDS</> is the default.
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      </para>
     </listitem>
    </itemizedlist>
   </para>

   <para>
    Transaction identifiers are also 32-bit quantities.  In a
    long-lived database it is possible for transaction IDs to wrap
    around.  This is not a fatal problem given appropriate maintenance
    procedures; see <xref linkend="maintenance"> for details.  It is
    unwise, however, to depend on the uniqueness of transaction IDs
    over the long term (more than one billion transactions).
   </para>

   <para>
    Command
    identifiers are also 32-bit quantities.  This creates a hard limit
    of 2<superscript>32</> (4 billion) <acronym>SQL</acronym> commands
    within a single transaction.  In practice this limit is not a
    problem &mdash; note that the limit is on number of
    <acronym>SQL</acronym> commands, not number of rows processed.
   </para>
 </sect1>

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 <sect1 id="ddl-alter">
  <title>Modifying Tables</title>
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  <indexterm zone="ddl-alter">
   <primary>table</primary>
   <secondary>modifying</secondary>
  </indexterm>
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  <para>
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   When you create a table and you realize that you made a mistake, or
   the requirements of the application change, then you can drop the
   table and create it again.  But this is not a convenient option if
   the table is already filled with data, or if the table is
   referenced by other database objects (for instance a foreign key
   constraint).  Therefore <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>
   provides a family of commands to make modifications to existing
   tables.  Note that this is conceptually distinct from altering
   the data contained in the table: here we are interested in altering
   the definition, or structure, of the table.
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  </para>
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  <para>
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   You can
   <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
    <listitem>
     <para>Add columns,</para>
    </listitem>
    <listitem>
     <para>Remove columns,</para>
    </listitem>
    <listitem>
     <para>Add constraints,</para>
    </listitem>
    <listitem>
     <para>Remove constraints,</para>
    </listitem>
    <listitem>
     <para>Change default values,</para>
    </listitem>
    <listitem>
     <para>Change column data types,</para>
    </listitem>
    <listitem>
     <para>Rename columns,</para>
    </listitem>
    <listitem>
     <para>Rename tables.</para>
    </listitem>
   </itemizedlist>
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   All these actions are performed using the
   <xref linkend="sql-altertable" endterm="sql-altertable-title">
   command.
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  </para>

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  <sect2>
   <title>Adding a Column</title>

   <indexterm>
    <primary>column</primary>
    <secondary>adding</secondary>
   </indexterm>
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   <para>
    To add a column, use a command like this:
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<programlisting>
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ALTER TABLE products ADD COLUMN description text;
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</programlisting>
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    The new column is initially filled with whatever default
    value is given (null if you don't specify a <literal>DEFAULT</> clause).
   </para>
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   <para>
    You can also define constraints on the column at the same time,
    using the usual syntax:
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<programlisting>
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ALTER TABLE products ADD COLUMN description text CHECK (description &lt;&gt; '');
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</programlisting>
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    In fact all the options that can be applied to a column description
    in <command>CREATE TABLE</> can be used here.  Keep in mind however
    that the default value must satisfy the given constraints, or the
    <literal>ADD</> will fail.  Alternatively, you can add
    constraints later (see below) after you've filled in the new column
    correctly.
   </para>
  </sect2>
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  <sect2>
   <title>Removing a Column</title>
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   <indexterm>
    <primary>column</primary>
    <secondary>removing</secondary>
   </indexterm>
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   <para>
    To remove a column, use a command like this:
<programlisting>
ALTER TABLE products DROP COLUMN description;
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</programlisting>
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    Whatever data was in the column disappears.  Table constraints involving
    the column are dropped, too.  However, if the column is referenced by a
    foreign key constraint of another table,
    <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> will not silently drop that
    constraint.  You can authorize dropping everything that depends on
    the column by adding <literal>CASCADE</>:
<programlisting>
ALTER TABLE products DROP COLUMN description CASCADE;
</programlisting>
    See <xref linkend="ddl-depend"> for a description of the general
    mechanism behind this.
   </para>
  </sect2>
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  <sect2>
   <title>Adding a Constraint</title>
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   <indexterm>
    <primary>constraint</primary>
    <secondary>adding</secondary>
   </indexterm>
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   <para>
    To add a constraint, the table constraint syntax is used.  For example:
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<programlisting>
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ALTER TABLE products ADD CHECK (name &lt;&gt; '');
ALTER TABLE products ADD CONSTRAINT some_name UNIQUE (product_no);
ALTER TABLE products ADD FOREIGN KEY (product_group_id) REFERENCES product_groups;
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</programlisting>
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    To add a not-null constraint, which cannot be written as a table
    constraint, use this syntax:
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<programlisting>
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ALTER TABLE products ALTER COLUMN product_no SET NOT NULL;
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</programlisting>
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   </para>
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   <para>
    The constraint will be checked immediately, so the table data must
    satisfy the constraint before it can be added.
   </para>
  </sect2>
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  <sect2>
   <title>Removing a Constraint</title>
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   <indexterm>
    <primary>constraint</primary>
    <secondary>removing</secondary>
   </indexterm>
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   <para>
    To remove a constraint you need to know its name.  If you gave it
    a name then that's easy.  Otherwise the system assigned a
    generated name, which you need to find out.  The
    <application>psql</application> command <literal>\d
    <replaceable>tablename</replaceable></literal> can be helpful
    here; other interfaces might also provide a way to inspect table
    details.  Then the command is:
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<programlisting>
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ALTER TABLE products DROP CONSTRAINT some_name;
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</programlisting>
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    (If you are dealing with a generated constraint name like <literal>$2</>,
    don't forget that you'll need to double-quote it to make it a valid
    identifier.)
   </para>
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   <para>
    As with dropping a column, you need to add <literal>CASCADE</> if you
    want to drop a constraint that something else depends on.  An example
    is that a foreign key constraint depends on a unique or primary key
    constraint on the referenced column(s).
   </para>
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   <para>
    This works the same for all constraint types except not-null
    constraints. To drop a not null constraint use
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<programlisting>
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ALTER TABLE products ALTER COLUMN product_no DROP NOT NULL;
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</programlisting>
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    (Recall that not-null constraints do not have names.)
   </para>
  </sect2>

  <sect2>
   <title>Changing a Column's Default Value</title>

   <indexterm>
    <primary>default value</primary>
    <secondary>changing</secondary>
   </indexterm>

   <para>
    To set a new default for a column, use a command like this:
<programlisting>
ALTER TABLE products ALTER COLUMN price SET DEFAULT 7.77;
</programlisting>
    Note that this doesn't affect any existing rows in the table, it
    just changes the default for future <command>INSERT</> commands.
   </para>

   <para>
    To remove any default value, use
<programlisting>
ALTER TABLE products ALTER COLUMN price DROP DEFAULT;
</programlisting>
    This is effectively the same as setting the default to null.
    As a consequence, it is not an error
    to drop a default where one hadn't been defined, because the
    default is implicitly the null value.
   </para>
  </sect2>

  <sect2>
   <title>Changing a Column's Data Type</title>

   <indexterm>
    <primary>column data type</primary>
    <secondary>changing</secondary>
   </indexterm>

   <para>
    To convert a column to a different data type, use a command like this:
<programlisting>
ALTER TABLE products ALTER COLUMN price TYPE numeric(10,2);
</programlisting>
    This will succeed only if each existing entry in the column can be
    converted to the new type by an implicit cast.  If a more complex
    conversion is needed, you can add a <literal>USING</> clause that
    specifies how to compute the new values from the old.
   </para>

   <para>
    <productname>PostgreSQL</> will attempt to convert the column's
    default value (if any) to the new type, as well as any constraints
    that involve the column.  But these conversions may fail, or may
    produce surprising results.  It's often best to drop any constraints
    on the column before altering its type, and then add back suitably
    modified constraints afterwards.
   </para>
  </sect2>

  <sect2>
   <title>Renaming a Column</title>

   <indexterm>
    <primary>column</primary>
    <secondary>renaming</secondary>
   </indexterm>

   <para>
    To rename a column:
<programlisting>
ALTER TABLE products RENAME COLUMN product_no TO product_number;
</programlisting>
   </para>
  </sect2>

  <sect2>
   <title>Renaming a Table</title>

   <indexterm>
    <primary>table</primary>
    <secondary>renaming</secondary>
   </indexterm>

   <para>
    To rename a table:
<programlisting>
ALTER TABLE products RENAME TO items;
</programlisting>
   </para>
  </sect2>
 </sect1>

 <sect1 id="ddl-priv">
  <title>Privileges</title>

  <indexterm zone="ddl-priv">
   <primary>privilege</primary>
  </indexterm>

  <indexterm>
   <primary>permission</primary>
   <see>privilege</see>
  </indexterm>
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  <para>
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   When you create a database object, you become its owner.  By
   default, only the owner of an object can do anything with the
   object. In order to allow other users to use it,
   <firstterm>privileges</firstterm> must be granted.  (However,
   users that have the superuser attribute can always
   access any object.)
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  </para>

  <para>
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   There are several different privileges: <literal>SELECT</>,
   <literal>INSERT</>, <literal>UPDATE</>, <literal>DELETE</>,
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   <literal>REFERENCES</>, <literal>TRIGGER</>,
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   <literal>CREATE</>, <literal>CONNECT</>, <literal>TEMPORARY</>,
   <literal>EXECUTE</>, and <literal>USAGE</>.
   The privileges applicable to a particular
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   object vary depending on the object's type (table, function, etc).
   For complete information on the different types of privileges
   supported by <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>, refer to the
   <xref linkend="sql-grant" endterm="sql-grant-title"> reference
   page.  The following sections and chapters will also show you how
   those privileges are used.
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  </para>

  <para>
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   The right to modify or destroy an object is always the privilege of
   the owner only.
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  </para>

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  <note>
   <para>
    To change the owner of a table, index, sequence, or view, use the
    <xref linkend="sql-altertable" endterm="sql-altertable-title">
    command.  There are corresponding <literal>ALTER</> commands for
    other object types.
   </para>
  </note>

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  <para>
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   To assign privileges, the <command>GRANT</command> command is
   used. For example, if <literal>joe</literal> is an existing user, and
   <literal>accounts</literal> is an existing table, the privilege to
   update the table can be granted with
<programlisting>
GRANT UPDATE ON accounts TO joe;
</programlisting>
   To grant a privilege to a group, use this syntax:
<programlisting>
GRANT SELECT ON accounts TO GROUP staff;
</programlisting>
   The special <quote>user</quote> name <literal>PUBLIC</literal> can
   be used to grant a privilege to every user on the system. Writing
   <literal>ALL</literal> in place of a specific privilege grants all
   privileges that are relevant for the object type.
  </para>

  <para>
   To revoke a privilege, use the fittingly named
   <command>REVOKE</command> command:
<programlisting>
REVOKE ALL ON accounts FROM PUBLIC;
</programlisting>
   The special privileges of the object owner (i.e., the right to do
   <command>DROP</>, <command>GRANT</>, <command>REVOKE</>, etc.)
   are always implicit in being the owner,
   and cannot be granted or revoked.  But the object owner can choose
   to revoke his own ordinary privileges, for example to make a
   table read-only for himself as well as others.
  </para>

  <para>
   Ordinarily, only the object's owner (or a superuser) can grant or
   revoke privileges on an object.  However, it is possible to grant a
   privilege <quote>with grant option</>, which gives the recipient
   the right to grant it in turn to others.  If the grant option is
   subsequently revoked then all who received the privilege from that
   recipient (directly or through a chain of grants) will lose the
   privilege.  For details see the <xref linkend="sql-grant"
   endterm="sql-grant-title"> and <xref linkend="sql-revoke"
   endterm="sql-revoke-title"> reference pages.
  </para>
 </sect1>

 <sect1 id="ddl-schemas">
  <title>Schemas</title>

  <indexterm zone="ddl-schemas">
   <primary>schema</primary>
  </indexterm>

  <para>
   A <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> database cluster
   contains one or more named databases.  Users and groups of users are
   shared across the entire cluster, but no other data is shared across
   databases.  Any given client connection to the server can access
   only the data in a single database, the one specified in the connection
   request.
  </para>

  <note>
   <para>
    Users of a cluster do not necessarily have the privilege to access every
    database in the cluster.  Sharing of user names means that there
    cannot be different users named, say, <literal>joe</> in two databases
    in the same cluster; but the system can be configured to allow
    <literal>joe</> access to only some of the databases.
   </para>
  </note>

  <para>
   A database contains one or more named <firstterm>schemas</>, which
   in turn contain tables.  Schemas also contain other kinds of named
   objects, including data types, functions, and operators.  The same
   object name can be used in different schemas without conflict; for
   example, both <literal>schema1</> and <literal>myschema</> may
   contain tables named <literal>mytable</>.  Unlike databases,
   schemas are not rigidly separated: a user may access objects in any
   of the schemas in the database he is connected to, if he has
   privileges to do so.
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  </para>

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  <para>
1455
   There are several reasons why one might want to use schemas:
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   <itemizedlist>
    <listitem>
     <para>
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      To allow many users to use one database without interfering with
      each other.
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     </para>
    </listitem>

    <listitem>
     <para>
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      To organize database objects into logical groups to make them
      more manageable.
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     </para>
    </listitem>

    <listitem>
     <para>
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      Third-party applications can be put into separate schemas so
      they cannot collide with the names of other objects.
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     </para>
    </listitem>
   </itemizedlist>

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   Schemas are analogous to directories at the operating system level,
   except that schemas cannot be nested.
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  </para>
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  <sect2 id="ddl-schemas-create">
   <title>Creating a Schema</title>

   <indexterm zone="ddl-schemas-create">
    <primary>schema</primary>
    <secondary>creating</secondary>
   </indexterm>

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   <para>
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    To create a schema, use the <xref linkend="sql-createschema"
    endterm="sql-createschema-title"> command.  Give the schema a name
    of your choice.  For example:
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<programlisting>
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CREATE SCHEMA myschema;
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</programlisting>
   </para>

   <indexterm>
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    <primary>qualified name</primary>
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   </indexterm>

   <indexterm>
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    <primary>name</primary>
    <secondary>qualified</secondary>
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   </indexterm>

   <para>
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    To create or access objects in a schema, write a
    <firstterm>qualified name</> consisting of the schema name and
    table name separated by a dot:
<synopsis>
<replaceable>schema</><literal>.</><replaceable>table</>
</synopsis>
    This works anywhere a table name is expected, including the table
    modification commands and the data access commands discussed in
    the following chapters.
    (For brevity we will speak of tables only, but the same ideas apply
    to other kinds of named objects, such as types and functions.)
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   </para>

   <para>
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    Actually, the even more general syntax
<synopsis>
<replaceable>database</><literal>.</><replaceable>schema</><literal>.</><replaceable>table</>
</synopsis>
    can be used too, but at present this is just for <foreignphrase>pro
    forma</> compliance with the SQL standard.  If you write a database name,
    it must be the same as the database you are connected to.
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   </para>

   <para>
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    So to create a table in the new schema, use
<programlisting>
CREATE TABLE myschema.mytable (
 ...
);
</programlisting>
   </para>
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   <indexterm>
    <primary>schema</primary>
    <secondary>removing</secondary>
   </indexterm>
1547

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   <para>
    To drop a schema if it's empty (all objects in it have been
    dropped), use
<programlisting>
DROP SCHEMA myschema;
</programlisting>
    To drop a schema including all contained objects, use
<programlisting>
DROP SCHEMA myschema CASCADE;
</programlisting>
    See <xref linkend="ddl-depend"> for a description of the general
    mechanism behind this.
   </para>
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   <para>
    Often you will want to create a schema owned by someone else
    (since this is one of the ways to restrict the activities of your
    users to well-defined namespaces).  The syntax for that is:
<programlisting>
CREATE SCHEMA <replaceable>schemaname</replaceable> AUTHORIZATION <replaceable>username</replaceable>;
</programlisting>
    You can even omit the schema name, in which case the schema name
    will be the same as the user name.  See <xref
    linkend="ddl-schemas-patterns"> for how this can be useful.
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   </para>

   <para>
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    Schema names beginning with <literal>pg_</> are reserved for
    system purposes and may not be created by users.
   </para>
  </sect2>
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  <sect2 id="ddl-schemas-public">
   <title>The Public Schema</title>
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   <indexterm zone="ddl-schemas-public">
    <primary>schema</primary>
    <secondary>public</secondary>
   </indexterm>
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   <para>
    In the previous sections we created tables without specifying any
    schema names.  By default, such tables (and other objects) are
    automatically put into a schema named <quote>public</quote>.  Every new
    database contains such a schema.  Thus, the following are equivalent:
<programlisting>
CREATE TABLE products ( ... );
</programlisting>
    and
<programlisting>
CREATE TABLE public.products ( ... );
</programlisting>
   </para>
  </sect2>
1602

1603 1604
  <sect2 id="ddl-schemas-path">
   <title>The Schema Search Path</title>
1605

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   <indexterm>
    <primary>search path</primary>
   </indexterm>
1609

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   <indexterm>
    <primary>unqualified name</primary>
   </indexterm>
1613

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   <indexterm>
    <primary>name</primary>
    <secondary>unqualified</secondary>
   </indexterm>
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   <para>
    Qualified names are tedious to write, and it's often best not to
    wire a particular schema name into applications anyway.  Therefore
    tables are often referred to by <firstterm>unqualified names</>,
    which consist of just the table name.  The system determines which table
    is meant by following a <firstterm>search path</>, which is a list
    of schemas to look in.  The first matching table in the search path
    is taken to be the one wanted.  If there is no match in the search
    path, an error is reported, even if matching table names exist
    in other schemas in the database.
   </para>
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   <indexterm>
    <primary>schema</primary>
    <secondary>current</secondary>
   </indexterm>
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   <para>
    The first schema named in the search path is called the current schema.
    Aside from being the first schema searched, it is also the schema in
    which new tables will be created if the <command>CREATE TABLE</>
    command does not specify a schema name.
   </para>
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   <indexterm>
    <primary>search_path</primary>
   </indexterm>

   <para>
    To show the current search path, use the following command:
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<programlisting>
1650
SHOW search_path;
1651
</programlisting>
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    In the default setup this returns:
<screen>
 search_path
--------------
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 "$user",public
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</screen>
    The first element specifies that a schema with the same name as
    the current user is to be searched.  If no such schema exists,
    the entry is ignored.  The second element refers to the
    public schema that we have seen already.
   </para>
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   <para>
    The first schema in the search path that exists is the default
    location for creating new objects.  That is the reason that by
    default objects are created in the public schema.  When objects
    are referenced in any other context without schema qualification
    (table modification, data modification, or query commands) the
    search path is traversed until a matching object is found.
    Therefore, in the default configuration, any unqualified access
    again can only refer to the public schema.
   </para>
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   <para>
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    To put our new schema in the path, we use
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<programlisting>
1678
SET search_path TO myschema,public;
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</programlisting>
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    (We omit the <literal>$user</literal> here because we have no
    immediate need for it.)  And then we can access the table without
    schema qualification:
<programlisting>
DROP TABLE mytable;
</programlisting>
    Also, since <literal>myschema</literal> is the first element in
    the path, new objects would by default be created in it.
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   </para>

1690
   <para>
1691
    We could also have written
1692
<programlisting>
1693
SET search_path TO myschema;
1694
</programlisting>
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    Then we no longer have access to the public schema without
    explicit qualification.  There is nothing special about the public
    schema except that it exists by default.  It can be dropped, too.
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   </para>

   <para>
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    See also <xref linkend="functions-info"> for other ways to manipulate
    the schema search path.
   </para>

   <para>
    The search path works in the same way for data type names, function names,
    and operator names as it does for table names.  Data type and function
    names can be qualified in exactly the same way as table names.  If you
    need to write a qualified operator name in an expression, there is a
    special provision: you must write
<synopsis>
<literal>OPERATOR(</><replaceable>schema</><literal>.</><replaceable>operator</><literal>)</>
</synopsis>
    This is needed to avoid syntactic ambiguity.  An example is
1715
<programlisting>
1716
SELECT 3 OPERATOR(pg_catalog.+) 4;
1717
</programlisting>
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    In practice one usually relies on the search path for operators,
    so as not to have to write anything so ugly as that.
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   </para>
  </sect2>

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  <sect2 id="ddl-schemas-priv">
   <title>Schemas and Privileges</title>
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   <indexterm zone="ddl-schemas-priv">
    <primary>privilege</primary>
    <secondary sortas="schemas">for schemas</secondary>
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   </indexterm>

1731
   <para>
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    By default, users cannot access any objects in schemas they do not
    own.  To allow that, the owner of the schema needs to grant the
    <literal>USAGE</literal> privilege on the schema.  To allow users
    to make use of the objects in the schema, additional privileges
    may need to be granted, as appropriate for the object.
   </para>

   <para>
    A user can also be allowed to create objects in someone else's
    schema.  To allow that, the <literal>CREATE</literal> privilege on
    the schema needs to be granted.  Note that by default, everyone
    has <literal>CREATE</literal> and <literal>USAGE</literal> privileges on
    the schema
    <literal>public</literal>.  This allows all users that are able to
    connect to a given database to create objects in its
    <literal>public</literal> schema.  If you do
    not want to allow that, you can revoke that privilege:
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<programlisting>
1750
REVOKE CREATE ON SCHEMA public FROM PUBLIC;
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</programlisting>
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    (The first <quote>public</quote> is the schema, the second
    <quote>public</quote> means <quote>every user</quote>.  In the
    first sense it is an identifier, in the second sense it is a
    key word, hence the different capitalization; recall the
    guidelines from <xref linkend="sql-syntax-identifiers">.)
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   </para>
  </sect2>

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  <sect2 id="ddl-schemas-catalog">
   <title>The System Catalog Schema</title>
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   <indexterm zone="ddl-schemas-catalog">
    <primary>system catalog</primary>
    <secondary>schema</secondary>
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   </indexterm>

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   <para>
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    In addition to <literal>public</> and user-created schemas, each
    database contains a <literal>pg_catalog</> schema, which contains
    the system tables and all the built-in data types, functions, and
    operators.  <literal>pg_catalog</> is always effectively part of
    the search path.  If it is not named explicitly in the path then
    it is implicitly searched <emphasis>before</> searching the path's
    schemas.  This ensures that built-in names will always be
    findable.  However, you may explicitly place
    <literal>pg_catalog</> at the end of your search path if you
    prefer to have user-defined names override built-in names.
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   </para>

   <para>
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    In <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> versions before 7.3,
    table names beginning with <literal>pg_</> were reserved.  This is
    no longer true: you may create such a table name if you wish, in
    any non-system schema.  However, it's best to continue to avoid
    such names, to ensure that you won't suffer a conflict if some
    future version defines a system table named the same as your
    table.  (With the default search path, an unqualified reference to
    your table name would be resolved as the system table instead.)
    System tables will continue to follow the convention of having
    names beginning with <literal>pg_</>, so that they will not
    conflict with unqualified user-table names so long as users avoid
    the <literal>pg_</> prefix.
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   </para>
  </sect2>

1797 1798
  <sect2 id="ddl-schemas-patterns">
   <title>Usage Patterns</title>
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   <para>
    Schemas can be used to organize your data in many ways.  There are
    a few usage patterns that are recommended and are easily supported by
    the default configuration:
    <itemizedlist>
     <listitem>
      <para>
       If you do not create any schemas then all users access the
       public schema implicitly.  This simulates the situation where
       schemas are not available at all.  This setup is mainly
       recommended when there is only a single user or a few cooperating
       users in a database.  This setup also allows smooth transition
       from the non-schema-aware world.
      </para>
     </listitem>

     <listitem>
      <para>
       You can create a schema for each user with the same name as
       that user.  Recall that the default search path starts with
       <literal>$user</literal>, which resolves to the user name.
       Therefore, if each user has a separate schema, they access their
       own schemas by default.
      </para>

      <para>
       If you use this setup then you might also want to revoke access
       to the public schema (or drop it altogether), so users are
       truly constrained to their own schemas.
      </para>
     </listitem>

     <listitem>
      <para>
       To install shared applications (tables to be used by everyone,
       additional functions provided by third parties, etc.), put them
       into separate schemas.  Remember to grant appropriate
       privileges to allow the other users to access them.  Users can
       then refer to these additional objects by qualifying the names
       with a schema name, or they can put the additional schemas into
       their search path, as they choose.
      </para>
     </listitem>
    </itemizedlist>
   </para>
  </sect2>

  <sect2 id="ddl-schemas-portability">
   <title>Portability</title>
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   <para>
1851 1852 1853 1854 1855 1856 1857 1858 1859 1860 1861
    In the SQL standard, the notion of objects in the same schema
    being owned by different users does not exist.  Moreover, some
    implementations do not allow you to create schemas that have a
    different name than their owner.  In fact, the concepts of schema
    and user are nearly equivalent in a database system that
    implements only the basic schema support specified in the
    standard.  Therefore, many users consider qualified names to
    really consist of
    <literal><replaceable>username</>.<replaceable>tablename</></literal>.
    This is how <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> will effectively
    behave if you create a per-user schema for every user.
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   </para>

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   <para>
1865 1866 1867
    Also, there is no concept of a <literal>public</> schema in the
    SQL standard.  For maximum conformance to the standard, you should
    not use (perhaps even remove) the <literal>public</> schema.
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   </para>

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   <para>
1871 1872 1873 1874 1875
    Of course, some SQL database systems might not implement schemas
    at all, or provide namespace support by allowing (possibly
    limited) cross-database access.  If you need to work with those
    systems, then maximum portability would be achieved by not using
    schemas at all.
1876 1877
   </para>
  </sect2>
1878
 </sect1>
1879

1880 1881
 <sect1 id="ddl-inherit">
  <title>Inheritance</title>
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1883 1884 1885
  <indexterm>
   <primary>inheritance</primary>
  </indexterm>
1886

1887 1888 1889 1890
  <indexterm>
   <primary>table</primary>
   <secondary>inheritance</secondary>
  </indexterm>
1891

1892 1893 1894 1895 1896 1897
  <para>
   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> implements table inheritance
   which can be a useful tool for database designers.  (SQL:1999 and
   later define a type inheritance feature, which differs in many
   respects from the features described here.)
  </para>
1898

1899 1900 1901 1902 1903 1904 1905 1906 1907 1908 1909
  <para>
   Let's start with an example: suppose we are trying to build a data
   model for cities.  Each state has many cities, but only one
   capital. We want to be able to quickly retrieve the capital city
   for any particular state. This can be done by creating two tables,
   one for state capitals and one for cities that are not
   capitals. However, what happens when we want to ask for data about
   a city, regardless of whether it is a capital or not? The
   inheritance feature can help to resolve this problem. We define the
   <structname>capitals</structname> table so that it inherits from
   <structname>cities</structname>:
1910 1911

<programlisting>
1912 1913 1914 1915 1916
CREATE TABLE cities (
    name            text,
    population      float,
    altitude        int     -- in feet
);
1917

1918 1919 1920 1921
CREATE TABLE capitals (
    state           char(2)
) INHERITS (cities);
</programlisting>
1922

1923 1924 1925 1926 1927
   In this case, the <structname>capitals</> table <firstterm>inherits</>
   all the columns of its parent table, <structname>cities</>. State
   capitals also have an extra column, <structfield>state</>, that shows
   their state.
  </para>
1928

1929 1930 1931 1932 1933 1934 1935 1936
  <para>
   In <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>, a table can inherit from
   zero or more other tables, and a query can reference either all
   rows of a table or all rows of a table plus all of its descendant tables.
   The latter behavior is the default.
   For example, the following query finds the names of all cities,
   including state capitals, that are located at an altitude over
   500ft:
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1938
<programlisting>
1939 1940 1941
SELECT name, altitude
    FROM cities
    WHERE altitude &gt; 500;
1942 1943
</programlisting>

1944 1945
   Given the sample data from the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>
   tutorial (see <xref linkend="tutorial-sql-intro">), this returns:
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1947
<programlisting>
1948 1949 1950 1951 1952
   name    | altitude
-----------+----------
 Las Vegas |     2174
 Mariposa  |     1953
 Madison   |      845
1953
</programlisting>
1954
  </para>
1955

1956 1957 1958
  <para>
   On the other hand, the following query finds all the cities that
   are not state capitals and are situated at an altitude over 500ft:
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1960 1961 1962 1963
<programlisting>
SELECT name, altitude
    FROM ONLY cities
    WHERE altitude &gt; 500;
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1965 1966 1967 1968 1969
   name    | altitude
-----------+----------
 Las Vegas |     2174
 Mariposa  |     1953
</programlisting>
1970 1971 1972
  </para>

  <para>
1973 1974 1975 1976 1977 1978 1979
   Here the <literal>ONLY</literal> keyword indicates that the query
   should apply only to <structname>cities</structname>, and not any tables
   below <structname>cities</structname> in the inheritance hierarchy.  Many
   of the commands that we have already discussed &mdash;
   <command>SELECT</command>, <command>UPDATE</command> and
   <command>DELETE</command> &mdash; support the
   <literal>ONLY</literal> keyword.
1980 1981 1982
  </para>

  <para>
1983 1984 1985 1986
   In some cases you may wish to know which table a particular row
   originated from. There is a system column called
   <structfield>tableoid</structfield> in each table which can tell you the
   originating table:
1987

1988 1989 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994
<programlisting>
SELECT c.tableoid, c.name, c.altitude
FROM cities c
WHERE c.altitude &gt; 500;
</programlisting>

   which returns:
1995

1996
<programlisting>
1997 1998 1999 2000 2001
 tableoid |   name    | altitude
----------+-----------+----------
   139793 | Las Vegas |     2174
   139793 | Mariposa  |     1953
   139798 | Madison   |      845
2002
</programlisting>
2003 2004 2005 2006 2007

   (If you try to reproduce this example, you will probably get
   different numeric OIDs.)  By doing a join with
   <structname>pg_class</> you can see the actual table names:

2008
<programlisting>
2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021
SELECT p.relname, c.name, c.altitude
FROM cities c, pg_class p
WHERE c.altitude &gt; 500 and c.tableoid = p.oid;
</programlisting>

   which returns:

<programlisting>
 relname  |   name    | altitude
----------+-----------+----------
 cities   | Las Vegas |     2174
 cities   | Mariposa  |     1953
 capitals | Madison   |      845
2022 2023 2024 2025
</programlisting>
  </para>

  <para>
2026 2027 2028 2029
   Inheritance does not automatically propagate data from
   <command>INSERT</command> or <command>COPY</command> commands to
   other tables in the inheritance hierarchy. In our example, the
   following <command>INSERT</command> statement will fail:
2030
<programlisting>
2031 2032
INSERT INTO cities (name, population, altitude, state)
VALUES ('New York', NULL, NULL, 'NY');
2033
</programlisting>
2034 2035 2036 2037 2038 2039 2040 2041
   We might hope that the data would somehow be routed to the
   <structname>capitals</structname> table, but this does not happen:
   <command>INSERT</command> always inserts into exactly the table
   specified.  In some cases it is possible to redirect the insertion
   using a rule (see <xref linkend="rules">).  However that does not
   help for the above case because the <structname>cities</> table
   does not contain the column <structfield>state</>, and so the
   command will be rejected before the rule can be applied.
2042
  </para>
2043 2044

  <para>
2045 2046 2047 2048
   Check constraints can be defined on tables within an inheritance
   hierarchy. All check constraints on a parent table are
   automatically inherited by all of its children.  Other types of
   constraints are not inherited, however.
2049
  </para>
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2051 2052 2053 2054 2055 2056 2057 2058 2059 2060 2061
  <para>
   A table can inherit from more than one parent table, in which case it has
   the union of the columns defined by the parent tables.  Any columns
   declared in the child table's definition are added to these.  If the
   same column name appears in multiple parent tables, or in both a parent
   table and the child's definition, then these columns are <quote>merged</>
   so that there is only one such column in the child table.  To be merged,
   columns must have the same data types, else an error is raised.  The
   merged column will have copies of all the check constraints coming from
   any one of the column definitions it came from.
  </para>
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  <para>
2064 2065 2066 2067 2068 2069 2070 2071 2072 2073 2074 2075 2076 2077 2078 2079 2080
   Table inheritance can be defined using the <xref linkend="sql-createtable"
   endterm="sql-createtable-title"> statement using the
   <command>INHERITS</command> keyword. However the related statement
   <command>CREATE TABLE AS</command> does not allow inheritance to be
   specified. 
  </para>

  <para>
   Alternatively a table which is already defined in a compatible way can have
   a new parent added with <xref linkend="sql-altertable"
   endterm="sql-altertable-title"> using the <command>INHERIT</command>
   subform. To do this the new child table must already include columns with
   the same name and type as the columns of the parent. It must also include
   check constraints with the same name and check expression as those of the
   parent. Similarly an inheritance link can be removed from a child using the
   <command>ALTER TABLE</command> using the <command>NO INHERIT</command>
   subform.
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  </para>
2082 2083

  <para>
2084 2085 2086 2087 2088 2089 2090 2091
   One convenient way to create a compatible table to be a new child
   is specify the <command>LIKE</command> clause in <command>CREATE
   TABLE</command>. This creates a new table with the same columns as
   the source table. If there are any <command>CHECK</command>
   constraints defined on the parent table, the <command>INCLUDING
   CONSTRAINTS</command> option to <command>LIKE</command> may be
   useful, as the new child must have constraints matching the parent
   to be considered compatible. Alternatively a compatible table can
2092
   be created by first creating a new child using <command>CREATE
2093 2094
   TABLE</command> then removing the inheritance link with
   <command>ALTER TABLE</command>.
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  </para>
2096 2097 2098 2099 2100 2101 2102

  <para>
   A parent table cannot be dropped while any
   of its children remain. If you wish to remove a table and all of its
   descendants, one easy way is to drop the parent table with the
   <literal>CASCADE</literal> option. Neither can columns of child tables be
   dropped or altered if they are inherited from any parent tables.
2103
  </para>
2104 2105

  <para>
2106
   <xref linkend="sql-altertable" endterm="sql-altertable-title"> will
2107 2108 2109 2110
   propagate any changes in column data definitions and check constraints down
   the inheritance hierarchy. <command>ALTER TABLE</command> follows the same
   rules for duplicate column merging and rejection that apply during
   <command>CREATE TABLE</command>. 
2111 2112
  </para>

2113 2114
 <sect2 id="ddl-inherit-caveats">
  <title>Caveats</title>
2115 2116

  <para>
2117 2118 2119 2120 2121 2122
   Table access permissions are not automatically inherited.  Therefore,
   a user attempting to access a parent table must either have permissions
   to do the operation on all its child tables as well, or must use the
   <literal>ONLY</literal> notation.  When adding a new child table to
   an existing inheritance hierarchy, be careful to grant all the needed
   permissions on it.
2123
  </para>
2124
 
2125
  <para>
2126 2127 2128 2129 2130
   A serious limitation of the inheritance feature is that indexes (including
   unique constraints) and foreign key constraints only apply to single
   tables, not to their inheritance children. This is true on both the
   referencing and referenced sides of a foreign key constraint. Thus,
   in the terms of the above example:
2131 2132 2133 2134

   <itemizedlist>
    <listitem>
     <para>
2135 2136 2137 2138 2139 2140 2141 2142 2143
      If we declared <structname>cities</>.<structfield>name</> to be
      <literal>UNIQUE</> or a <literal>PRIMARY KEY</>, this would not stop the
      <structname>capitals</> table from having rows with names duplicating
      rows in <structname>cities</>.  And those duplicate rows would by
      default show up in queries from <structname>cities</>.  In fact, by
      default <structname>capitals</> would have no unique constraint at all,
      and so could contain multiple rows with the same name.
      You could add a unique constraint to <structname>capitals</>, but this
      would not prevent duplication compared to <structname>cities</>.
2144 2145 2146 2147 2148
     </para>
    </listitem>

    <listitem>
     <para>
2149 2150 2151 2152 2153 2154
      Similarly, if we were to specify that
      <structname>cities</>.<structfield>name</> <literal>REFERENCES</> some
      other table, this constraint would not automatically propagate to
      <structname>capitals</>.  In this case you could work around it by
      manually adding the same <literal>REFERENCES</> constraint to
      <structname>capitals</>.
2155 2156 2157 2158 2159
     </para>
    </listitem>

    <listitem>
     <para>
2160 2161 2162
      Specifying that another table's column <literal>REFERENCES
      cities(name)</> would allow the other table to contain city names, but
      not capital names.  There is no good workaround for this case.
2163 2164
     </para>
    </listitem>
2165 2166 2167 2168 2169 2170 2171 2172 2173 2174

    <listitem>
     <para>
      If a table is ever removed from the inheritance structure using
      <command>ALTER TABLE</command> then all its columns will be marked as
      being locally defined. This means <command>DROP COLUMN</command> on the
      parent table will never cascade to drop those columns on the child
      table. They must be dropped manually.
     </para>
    </listitem>
2175 2176
   </itemizedlist>

2177 2178 2179
   These deficiencies will probably be fixed in some future release,
   but in the meantime considerable care is needed in deciding whether
   inheritance is useful for your problem.
2180 2181
  </para>

2182 2183
  <note>
   <title>Deprecated</title>
2184
   <para>
2185
     In releases of <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> prior to 7.1, the
2186
     default behavior was not to include child tables in queries. This was
2187 2188 2189
     found to be error prone and also in violation of the SQL
     standard.  You can get the pre-7.1 behavior by turning off the
     <xref linkend="guc-sql-inheritance"> configuration
2190
     option.
2191
   </para>
2192 2193 2194 2195 2196 2197 2198
  </note>

   </sect2>
  </sect1>

  <sect1 id="ddl-partitioning">
   <title>Partitioning</title>
2199 2200

   <indexterm>
2201
    <primary>partitioning</primary>
2202 2203 2204
   </indexterm>

   <indexterm>
2205 2206
    <primary>table</primary>
    <secondary>partitioning</secondary>
2207 2208 2209
   </indexterm>

   <para>
2210
    <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> supports basic table
2211
    partitioning. This section describes why and how to implement
2212
    partitioning as part of your database design.
2213 2214
   </para>

2215 2216 2217
   <sect2 id="ddl-partitioning-overview">
     <title>Overview</title>

2218
   <para>
2219 2220 2221 2222 2223 2224
    Partitioning refers to splitting what is logically one large table
    into smaller physical pieces.
    Partitioning can provide several benefits:
   <itemizedlist>
    <listitem>
     <para>
2225 2226 2227 2228 2229
      Query performance can be improved when partition constraints can be
      combined with local indexes to reduce the number of records that need to
      be accessed for a query. Whereas the alternative, adding those columns
      to every index, increases space usage which can erase any
      performance gain.
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     </para>
2231 2232 2233 2234 2235 2236

     <para>
      When most of the heavily accessed area of the table is in a single
      partition or a small number of partitions. That partition and its
      indexes are more likely to fit within memory than the index of the
      entire table.
2237 2238 2239 2240 2241
     </para>
    </listitem>

    <listitem>
     <para>
2242 2243 2244 2245
      When queries or updates access a large percentage of a a single
      partition performance can be improved dramatically by taking advantage
      of sequential disk access of a single partition instead of using an
      index and random access reads across the whole table.
2246 2247 2248 2249 2250
     </para>
    </listitem>

    <listitem>
     <para>
2251 2252 2253 2254 2255
      Bulk loads and deletes may be accomplished by simply removing or adding
      one of the partitions. <command>ALTER TABLE</> is far faster than a bulk
      and takes the same amount of time regardless of the amount of data being
      added or removed. It also entirely avoids the <command>VACUUM</command>
      overhead caused by a bulk <command>delete</>.
2256 2257 2258 2259 2260 2261 2262 2263 2264 2265 2266 2267 2268 2269 2270
     </para>
    </listitem>

    <listitem>
     <para>
      Seldom-used data can be migrated to cheaper and slower storage media.
     </para>
    </listitem>
   </itemizedlist>

    The benefits will normally be worthwhile only when a table would
    otherwise be very large. The exact point at which a table will
    benefit from partitioning depends on the application, although a
    rule of thumb is that the size of the table should exceed the physical
    memory of the database server.
2271 2272 2273
   </para>

   <para>
2274 2275 2276 2277 2278
    Currently, <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> supports partitioning
    via table inheritance.  Each partition must be created as a child
    table of a single parent table.  The parent table itself is normally
    empty; it exists just to represent the entire data set.  You should be
    familiar with inheritance (see <xref linkend="ddl-inherit">) before
2279
    attempting to set up partitioning.
2280 2281
   </para>

2282 2283 2284 2285 2286 2287 2288 2289 2290 2291 2292 2293 2294 2295 2296 2297 2298 2299 2300 2301 2302 2303 2304 2305 2306 2307 2308 2309 2310 2311 2312 2313 2314 2315 2316 2317 2318 2319 2320 2321 2322 2323 2324 2325 2326 2327 2328 2329 2330 2331 2332 2333 2334 2335 2336 2337 2338 2339 2340 2341 2342 2343 2344 2345 2346 2347 2348 2349 2350 2351 2352 2353
   <para>
    The following forms of partitioning can be implemented in
    <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>:

    <variablelist>
     <varlistentry>
      <term>Range Partitioning</term>

      <listitem>
       <para>
        The table is partitioned into <quote>ranges</quote> defined
        by a key column or set of columns, with no overlap between
        the ranges of values assigned to different partitions.  For
        example one might partition by date ranges, or by ranges of
        identifiers for particular business objects.
       </para>
      </listitem>
     </varlistentry>

     <varlistentry>
      <term>List Partitioning</term>

      <listitem>
       <para>
        The table is partitioned by explicitly listing which key values
        appear in each partition.
       </para>
      </listitem>
     </varlistentry>
    </variablelist>

    Hash partitioning is not currently supported.
   </para>
   </sect2>

   <sect2 id="ddl-partitioning-implementation">
     <title>Implementing Partitioning</title>

    <para>
     To set up a partitioned table, do the following:
     <orderedlist spacing=compact>
      <listitem>
       <para>
        Create the <quote>master</quote> table, from which all of the
        partitions will inherit.
       </para>
       <para>
        This table will contain no data.  Do not define any check
        constraints on this table, unless you intend them to
        be applied equally to all partitions.  There is no point
        in defining any indexes or unique constraints on it, either.
       </para>
      </listitem>

      <listitem>
       <para>
        Create several <quote>child</quote> tables that each inherit from
        the master table.  Normally, these tables will not add any columns
        to the set inherited from the master.
       </para>

       <para>
        We will refer to the child tables as partitions, though they
        are in every way normal <productname>PostgreSQL</> tables.
       </para>
      </listitem>

      <listitem>
       <para>
        Add table constraints to the partition tables to define the
        allowed key values in each partition.
       </para>
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2355 2356
       <para>
        Typical examples would be:
2357
<programlisting>
2358 2359 2360
CHECK ( x = 1 )
CHECK ( county IN ( 'Oxfordshire', 'Buckinghamshire', 'Warwickshire' ))
CHECK ( outletID >= 100 AND outletID < 200 )
2361
</programlisting>
2362 2363 2364
        Ensure that the constraints guarantee that there is no overlap
        between the key values permitted in different partitions.  A common
        mistake is to set up range constraints like this:
2365
<programlisting>
2366 2367
CHECK ( outletID BETWEEN 100 AND 200 )
CHECK ( outletID BETWEEN 200 AND 300 )
2368
</programlisting>
2369 2370 2371
        This is wrong since it is not clear which partition the key value
        200 belongs in.
       </para>
2372

2373 2374 2375 2376 2377 2378
       <para>
        Note that there is no difference in
        syntax between range and list partitioning; those terms are
        descriptive only.
       </para>
      </listitem>
2379

2380 2381 2382 2383 2384 2385 2386 2387 2388 2389
      <listitem>
       <para>
        For each partition, create an index on the key column(s),
        as well as any other indexes you might want.  (The key index is
        not strictly necessary, but in most scenarios it is helpful.
        If you intend the key values to be unique then you should
        always create a unique or primary-key constraint for each
        partition.)
       </para>
      </listitem>
2390

2391 2392 2393 2394 2395 2396
      <listitem>
       <para>
        Optionally, define a rule or trigger to redirect modifications
        of the master table to the appropriate partition.
       </para>
      </listitem>
2397

2398 2399 2400 2401 2402 2403 2404 2405 2406 2407 2408 2409 2410 2411 2412 2413 2414
      <listitem>
       <para>
        Ensure that the <xref linkend="guc-constraint-exclusion">
        configuration
        parameter is enabled in <filename>postgresql.conf</>.  Without
        this, queries will not be optimized as desired.
       </para>
      </listitem>

     </orderedlist>
    </para>

    <para>
     For example, suppose we are constructing a database for a large
     ice cream company. The company measures peak temperatures every
     day as well as ice cream sales in each region. Conceptually,
     we want a table like this:
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2416
<programlisting>
2417 2418 2419 2420 2421 2422
CREATE TABLE measurement (
    city_id         int not null,
    logdate         date not null,
    peaktemp        int,
    unitsales       int
);
2423 2424
</programlisting>

2425 2426 2427 2428 2429 2430 2431
     We know that most queries will access just the last week's, month's or
     quarter's data, since the main use of this table will be to prepare
     online reports for management.
     To reduce the amount of old data that needs to be stored, we
     decide to only keep the most recent 3 years worth of data. At the
     beginning of each month we will remove the oldest month's data.
    </para>
2432

2433 2434 2435 2436 2437
    <para>
     In this situation we can use partitioning to help us meet all of our
     different requirements for the measurements table. Following the
     steps outlined above, partitioning can be set up as follows:
    </para>
2438

2439 2440 2441 2442 2443 2444 2445 2446
    <para>
     <orderedlist spacing=compact>
      <listitem>
       <para>
        The master table is the <structname>measurement</> table, declared
        exactly as above.
       </para>
      </listitem>
2447

2448 2449 2450
      <listitem>
       <para>
        Next we create one partition for each active month:
2451

2452
<programlisting>
2453 2454
CREATE TABLE measurement_y2004m02 ( ) INHERITS (measurement);
CREATE TABLE measurement_y2004m03 ( ) INHERITS (measurement);
2455
...
2456 2457 2458
CREATE TABLE measurement_y2005m11 ( ) INHERITS (measurement);
CREATE TABLE measurement_y2005m12 ( ) INHERITS (measurement);
CREATE TABLE measurement_y2006m01 ( ) INHERITS (measurement);
2459
</programlisting>
2460

2461 2462 2463 2464
        Each of the partitions are complete tables in their own right,
        but they inherit their definition from the
        <structname>measurement</> table.
       </para>
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2466 2467 2468 2469 2470 2471 2472
       <para>
        This solves one of our problems: deleting old data. Each
        month, all we will need to do is perform a <command>DROP
        TABLE</command> on the oldest child table and create a new
        child table for the new month's data.
       </para>
      </listitem>
2473

2474 2475 2476 2477
      <listitem>
       <para>
        We must add non-overlapping table constraints, so that our
        table creation script becomes:
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2479
 <programlisting>
2480
CREATE TABLE measurement_y2004m02 (
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    CHECK ( logdate &gt;= DATE '2004-02-01' AND logdate &lt; DATE '2004-03-01' )
2482
) INHERITS (measurement);
2483
CREATE TABLE measurement_y2004m03 (
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    CHECK ( logdate &gt;= DATE '2004-03-01' AND logdate &lt; DATE '2004-04-01' )
2485 2486
) INHERITS (measurement);
...
2487
CREATE TABLE measurement_y2005m11 (
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    CHECK ( logdate &gt;= DATE '2005-11-01' AND logdate &lt; DATE '2005-12-01' )
2489
) INHERITS (measurement);
2490
CREATE TABLE measurement_y2005m12 (
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    CHECK ( logdate &gt;= DATE '2005-12-01' AND logdate &lt; DATE '2006-01-01' )
2492
) INHERITS (measurement);
2493
CREATE TABLE measurement_y2006m01 (
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    CHECK ( logdate &gt;= DATE '2006-01-01' AND logdate &lt; DATE '2006-02-01' )
2495
) INHERITS (measurement);
2496
</programlisting>
2497 2498
       </para>
      </listitem>
2499

2500 2501 2502
      <listitem>
       <para>
        We probably need indexes on the key columns too:
2503

2504
 <programlisting>
2505 2506
CREATE INDEX measurement_y2004m02_logdate ON measurement_y2004m02 (logdate);
CREATE INDEX measurement_y2004m03_logdate ON measurement_y2004m03 (logdate);
2507
...
2508 2509 2510
CREATE INDEX measurement_y2005m11_logdate ON measurement_y2005m11 (logdate);
CREATE INDEX measurement_y2005m12_logdate ON measurement_y2005m12 (logdate);
CREATE INDEX measurement_y2006m01_logdate ON measurement_y2006m01 (logdate);
2511
</programlisting>
2512 2513 2514 2515 2516 2517 2518 2519 2520 2521 2522 2523

        We choose not to add further indexes at this time.
       </para>
      </listitem>

      <listitem>
       <para>
        If data will be added only to the latest partition, we can
        set up a very simple rule to insert data. We must
        redefine this each month so that it always points to the
        current partition.

2524
<programlisting>
2525 2526 2527
CREATE OR REPLACE RULE measurement_current_partition AS
ON INSERT TO measurement
DO INSTEAD
2528
    INSERT INTO measurement_y2006m01 VALUES ( NEW.city_id,
2529 2530 2531
                                              NEW.logdate,
                                              NEW.peaktemp,
                                              NEW.unitsales );
2532 2533
</programlisting>

2534 2535 2536 2537
        We might want to insert data and have the server automatically
        locate the partition into which the row should be added. We
        could do this with a more complex set of rules as shown below.

2538
<programlisting>
2539
CREATE RULE measurement_insert_y2004m02 AS
2540
ON INSERT TO measurement WHERE
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    ( logdate &gt;= DATE '2004-02-01' AND logdate &lt; DATE '2004-03-01' )
2542
DO INSTEAD
2543
    INSERT INTO measurement_y2004m02 VALUES ( NEW.city_id,
2544 2545 2546 2547
                                              NEW.logdate,
                                              NEW.peaktemp,
                                              NEW.unitsales );
...
2548
CREATE RULE measurement_insert_y2005m12 AS
2549
ON INSERT TO measurement WHERE
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    ( logdate &gt;= DATE '2005-12-01' AND logdate &lt; DATE '2006-01-01' )
2551
DO INSTEAD
2552
    INSERT INTO measurement_y2005m12 VALUES ( NEW.city_id,
2553 2554 2555
                                              NEW.logdate,
                                              NEW.peaktemp,
                                              NEW.unitsales );
2556
CREATE RULE measurement_insert_y2006m01 AS
2557
ON INSERT TO measurement WHERE
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    ( logdate &gt;= DATE '2006-01-01' AND logdate &lt; DATE '2006-02-01' )
2559
DO INSTEAD
2560
    INSERT INTO measurement_y2006m01 VALUES ( NEW.city_id,
2561 2562 2563
                                              NEW.logdate,
                                              NEW.peaktemp,
                                              NEW.unitsales );
2564
</programlisting>
2565 2566 2567 2568 2569 2570

        Note that the <literal>WHERE</literal> clause in each rule
        exactly matches the the <literal>CHECK</literal>
        constraint for its partition.
       </para>
      </listitem>
2571 2572
     </orderedlist>
    </para>
2573

2574 2575 2576 2577 2578 2579
    <para>
     As we can see, a complex partitioning scheme could require a
     substantial amount of DDL. In the above example we would be
     creating a new partition each month, so it may be wise to write a
     script that generates the required DDL automatically.
    </para>
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   </sect2>
2581 2582 2583 2584 2585 2586 2587 2588 2589 2590 2591 2592 2593 2594

   <sect2 id="ddl-partitioning-managing-partitions">
   <title>Managing Partitions</title>

   <para>
     Normally the set of partitions established when initially
     defining the table are not intended to remain static. It is
     common to want to remove old partitions of data and periodically
     add new partitions for new data. One of the most important
     advantages of partitioning is precisely that it allows this
     otherwise painful task to be executed nearly instantaneously by
     manipulating the partition structure, rather than moving large
     amounts of data around physically.
   </para>
2595

2596 2597 2598
   <para>
     The simplest option for removing old data is to simply drop the partition
     that is no longer necessary:
2599
<programlisting>
2600
DROP TABLE measurement_y2003mm02;
2601
</programlisting>
2602 2603 2604
     This can very quickly delete millions of records because it doesn't have
     to individually delete every record.
   </para>
2605

2606 2607 2608 2609 2610 2611 2612 2613 2614 2615 2616 2617 2618 2619
   <para>
     Another option that is often preferable is to remove the partition from
     the partitioned table but retain access to it as a table in its own
     right:
<programlisting>
ALTER TABLE measurement_y2003mm02 NO INHERIT measurement;
</programlisting>
     This allows further operations to be performed on the data before
     it is dropped. For example, this is often a useful time to backup
     the data using <command>COPY</>, <application>pg_dump</>, or
     similar tools. It can also be a useful time to aggregate data
     into smaller formats, perform other data manipulations, or run
     reports.
   </para>
2620

2621 2622 2623 2624
   <para>
     Similarly we can add a new partition to handle new data. We can create an
     empty partition in the partitioned table just as the original partitions
     were created above. 
2625 2626

<programlisting>
2627
CREATE TABLE measurement_y2006m02 (
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    CHECK ( logdate &gt;= DATE '2006-02-01' AND logdate &lt; DATE '2006-03-01' )
2629
) INHERITS (measurement);
2630 2631
</programlisting>

2632 2633 2634 2635
     As an alternative, it is sometimes more convenient to create the
     new table outside the partition structure, and make it a proper
     partition later. This allows the data to be loaded, checked, and
     transformed prior to it appearing in the partitioned table.
2636

2637 2638 2639 2640
<programlisting>
CREATE TABLE measurement_y2006m02 (LIKE measurement INCLUDING DEFAULTS INCLUDING CONSTRAINTS);
\COPY measurement_y2006m02 FROM 'measurement_y2006m02'
UPDATE ... ;
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ALTER TABLE measurement_y2006m02 ADD CONSTRAINT y2006m02 CHECK ( logdate &gt;= DATE '2006-02-01' AND logdate &lt; DATE '2006-03-01' );
2642 2643
ALTER TABLE measurement_y2006m02 INHERIT measurement;
</programlisting>
2644
    </para>
2645
   </sect2>
2646

2647 2648 2649
   <sect2 id="ddl-partitioning-caveats">
   <title>Caveats</title>
 
2650
   <para>
2651
    The following caveats apply to partitioned tables:
2652 2653 2654 2655 2656 2657 2658 2659 2660 2661 2662 2663 2664 2665 2666 2667 2668 2669 2670 2671 2672
   <itemizedlist>
    <listitem>
     <para>
      There is currently no way to verify that all of the
      <literal>CHECK</literal> constraints are mutually
      exclusive. Care is required by the database designer.
     </para>
    </listitem>

    <listitem>
     <para>
      There is currently no simple way to specify that rows must not be
      inserted into the master table. A <literal>CHECK (false)</literal>
      constraint on the master table would be inherited by all child
      tables, so that cannot be used for this purpose.  One possibility is
      to set up an <literal>ON INSERT</> trigger on the master table that
      always raises an error.  (Alternatively, such a trigger could be
      used to redirect the data into the proper child table, instead of
      using a set of rules as suggested above.)
     </para>
    </listitem>
2673 2674 2675

    <listitem>
     <para>
2676 2677 2678 2679 2680 2681
      When using the <literal>LIKE</> option above to create new
      partitions, <literal>CHECK</> constraints are not copied from
      the parent. If there are any <literal>CHECK</> constraints
      defined for the parent, they must be manually created in new
      partitions before <command>ALTER TABLE</command> will allow them
      to be added.
2682 2683
     </para>
    </listitem>
2684
   </itemizedlist>
2685 2686 2687
   </para>

   <para>
2688 2689 2690
    Partitioning can also be arranged using a <literal>UNION ALL</literal>
    view:

2691
<programlisting>
2692
CREATE VIEW measurement AS
2693 2694
          SELECT * FROM measurement_y2004m02
UNION ALL SELECT * FROM measurement_y2004m03
2695
...
2696 2697 2698
UNION ALL SELECT * FROM measurement_y2005m11
UNION ALL SELECT * FROM measurement_y2005m12
UNION ALL SELECT * FROM measurement_y2006m01;
2699
</programlisting>
2700

2701
    However, the need to
2702 2703
    recreate the view adds an extra step to adding and dropping
    individual partitions of the dataset.
2704
   </para>
2705
   </sect2>
2706

2707 2708
   <sect2 id="ddl-partitioning-constraint-exclusion">
   <title>Partitioning and Constraint Exclusion</title>
2709

2710 2711
   <indexterm>
    <primary>constraint exclusion</primary>
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   </indexterm>

2714
   <para>
2715 2716 2717
    <firstterm>Constraint exclusion</> is a query optimization technique
    that improves performance for partitioned tables defined in the
    fashion described above.  As an example:
2718 2719

<programlisting>
2720
SET constraint_exclusion = on;
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SELECT count(*) FROM measurement WHERE logdate &gt;= DATE '2006-01-01';
2722
</programlisting>
2723 2724 2725 2726 2727 2728 2729 2730

    Without constraint exclusion, the above query would scan each of
    the partitions of the <structname>measurement</> table. With constraint
    exclusion enabled, the planner will examine the constraints of each
    partition and try to prove that the partition need not
    be scanned because it could not contain any rows meeting the query's
    <literal>WHERE</> clause.  When the planner can prove this, it
    excludes the partition from the query plan.
2731 2732
   </para>

2733 2734 2735 2736
   <para>
    You can use the <command>EXPLAIN</> command to show the difference
    between a plan with <varname>constraint_exclusion</> on and a plan
    with it off.  A typical default plan for this type of table setup is:
2737

2738 2739
<programlisting>
SET constraint_exclusion = off;
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EXPLAIN SELECT count(*) FROM measurement WHERE logdate &gt;= DATE '2006-01-01';
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2742 2743 2744
                                          QUERY PLAN
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Aggregate  (cost=158.66..158.68 rows=1 width=0)
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   -&gt;  Append  (cost=0.00..151.88 rows=2715 width=0)
         -&gt;  Seq Scan on measurement  (cost=0.00..30.38 rows=543 width=0)
               Filter: (logdate &gt;= '2006-01-01'::date)
         -&gt;  Seq Scan on measurement_y2004m02 measurement  (cost=0.00..30.38 rows=543 width=0)
               Filter: (logdate &gt;= '2006-01-01'::date)
         -&gt;  Seq Scan on measurement_y2004m03 measurement  (cost=0.00..30.38 rows=543 width=0)
               Filter: (logdate &gt;= '2006-01-01'::date)
2752
...
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         -&gt;  Seq Scan on measurement_y2005m12 measurement  (cost=0.00..30.38 rows=543 width=0)
               Filter: (logdate &gt;= '2006-01-01'::date)
         -&gt;  Seq Scan on measurement_y2006m01 measurement  (cost=0.00..30.38 rows=543 width=0)
               Filter: (logdate &gt;= '2006-01-01'::date)
2757 2758 2759 2760 2761 2762 2763 2764 2765 2766
</programlisting>

    Some or all of the partitions might use index scans instead of
    full-table sequential scans, but the point here is that there
    is no need to scan the older partitions at all to answer this query.
    When we enable constraint exclusion, we get a significantly
    reduced plan that will deliver the same answer:

<programlisting>
SET constraint_exclusion = on;
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EXPLAIN SELECT count(*) FROM measurement WHERE logdate &gt;= DATE '2006-01-01';
2768 2769 2770
                                          QUERY PLAN
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Aggregate  (cost=63.47..63.48 rows=1 width=0)
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   -&gt;  Append  (cost=0.00..60.75 rows=1086 width=0)
         -&gt;  Seq Scan on measurement  (cost=0.00..30.38 rows=543 width=0)
               Filter: (logdate &gt;= '2006-01-01'::date)
         -&gt;  Seq Scan on measurement_y2006m01 measurement  (cost=0.00..30.38 rows=543 width=0)
               Filter: (logdate &gt;= '2006-01-01'::date)
2776
</programlisting>
2777 2778 2779
   </para>

   <para>
2780 2781 2782 2783 2784 2785 2786
    Note that constraint exclusion is driven only by <literal>CHECK</>
    constraints, not by the presence of indexes.  Therefore it isn't
    necessary to define indexes on the key columns.  Whether an index
    needs to be created for a given partition depends on whether you
    expect that queries that scan the partition will generally scan
    a large part of the partition or just a small part.  An index will
    be helpful in the latter case but not the former.
2787 2788 2789
   </para>

   <para>
2790
    The following caveats apply:
2791

2792 2793 2794 2795 2796 2797 2798 2799
   <itemizedlist>
    <listitem>
     <para>
      Constraint exclusion only works when the query's <literal>WHERE</>
      clause contains constants.  A parameterized query will not be
      optimized, since the planner cannot know what partitions the
      parameter value might select at runtime.  For the same reason,
      <quote>stable</> functions such as <function>CURRENT_DATE</function>
2800
      must be avoided.
2801 2802
     </para>
    </listitem>
2803

2804 2805 2806 2807 2808 2809 2810 2811 2812 2813 2814 2815 2816 2817 2818 2819 2820 2821 2822 2823 2824 2825
    <listitem>
     <para>
      Avoid cross-datatype comparisons in the <literal>CHECK</>
      constraints, as the planner will currently fail to prove such
      conditions false.  For example, the following constraint
      will work if <varname>x</varname> is an <type>integer</type>
      column, but not if <varname>x</varname> is a
      <type>bigint</type>:
<programlisting>
CHECK ( x = 1 )
</programlisting>
      For a <type>bigint</type> column we must use a constraint like:
<programlisting>
CHECK ( x = 1::bigint )
</programlisting>
      The problem is not limited to the <type>bigint</type> data type
      &mdash; it can occur whenever the default data type of the
      constant does not match the data type of the column to which it
      is being compared.  Cross-datatype comparisons in the supplied
      queries are usually OK, just not in the <literal>CHECK</> conditions.
     </para>
    </listitem>
2826

2827 2828 2829 2830 2831 2832 2833
    <listitem>
     <para>
      All constraints on all partitions of the master table are considered for
      constraint exclusion, so large numbers of partitions are likely to
      increase query planning time considerably.
     </para>
    </listitem>
2834

2835 2836 2837 2838 2839 2840 2841 2842 2843 2844
    <listitem>
     <para>
      Don't forget that you still need to run <command>ANALYZE</command>
      on each partition individually. A command like
<programlisting>
ANALYZE measurement;
</programlisting>
      will only process the master table.
     </para>
    </listitem>
2845

2846
   </itemizedlist>
2847 2848
   </para>
  </sect2>
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 </sect1>

 <sect1 id="ddl-others">
  <title>Other Database Objects</title>

  <para>
   Tables are the central objects in a relational database structure,
   because they hold your data.  But they are not the only objects
   that exist in a database.  Many other kinds of objects can be
   created to make the use and management of the data more efficient
   or convenient.  They are not discussed in this chapter, but we give
   you a list here so that you are aware of what is possible.
  </para>

  <itemizedlist>
   <listitem>
    <para>
     Views
    </para>
   </listitem>

   <listitem>
    <para>
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     Functions and operators
    </para>
   </listitem>

   <listitem>
    <para>
     Data types and domains
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    </para>
   </listitem>

   <listitem>
    <para>
     Triggers and rewrite rules
    </para>
   </listitem>
  </itemizedlist>
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  <para>
   Detailed information on
   these topics appears in <xref linkend="server-programming">.
  </para>
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 </sect1>

 <sect1 id="ddl-depend">
  <title>Dependency Tracking</title>

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  <indexterm zone="ddl-depend">
   <primary>CASCADE</primary>
   <secondary sortas="DROP">with DROP</secondary>
  </indexterm>

  <indexterm zone="ddl-depend">
   <primary>RESTRICT</primary>
   <secondary sortas="DROP">with DROP</secondary>
  </indexterm>

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  <para>
   When you create complex database structures involving many tables
   with foreign key constraints, views, triggers, functions, etc. you
   will implicitly create a net of dependencies between the objects.
   For instance, a table with a foreign key constraint depends on the
   table it references.
  </para>

  <para>
   To ensure the integrity of the entire database structure,
   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> makes sure that you cannot
   drop objects that other objects still depend on.  For example,
   attempting to drop the products table we had considered in <xref
   linkend="ddl-constraints-fk">, with the orders table depending on
   it, would result in an error message such as this:
<screen>
2924 2925
DROP TABLE products;

2926
NOTICE:  constraint orders_product_no_fkey on table orders depends on table products
2927 2928
ERROR:  cannot drop table products because other objects depend on it
HINT:  Use DROP ... CASCADE to drop the dependent objects too.
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</screen>
2930
   The error message contains a useful hint: if you do not want to
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   bother deleting all the dependent objects individually, you can run
<screen>
DROP TABLE products CASCADE;
</screen>
2935
   and all the dependent objects will be removed.  In this case, it
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   doesn't remove the orders table, it only removes the foreign key
2937
   constraint.  (If you want to check what <command>DROP ... CASCADE</> will do,
2938
   run <command>DROP</> without <literal>CASCADE</> and read the <literal>NOTICE</> messages.)
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  </para>

  <para>
   All drop commands in <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> support
   specifying <literal>CASCADE</literal>.  Of course, the nature of
   the possible dependencies varies with the type of the object.  You
   can also write <literal>RESTRICT</literal> instead of
2946
   <literal>CASCADE</literal> to get the default behavior, which is to
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   prevent drops of objects that other objects depend on.
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  </para>

  <note>
   <para>
    According to the SQL standard, specifying either
    <literal>RESTRICT</literal> or <literal>CASCADE</literal> is
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    required.  No database system actually enforces that rule, but
2955 2956
    whether the default behavior is <literal>RESTRICT</literal> or
    <literal>CASCADE</literal> varies across systems.
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   </para>
  </note>
2959 2960 2961

  <note>
   <para>
2962 2963 2964
    Foreign key constraint dependencies and serial column dependencies
    from <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> versions prior to 7.3
    are <emphasis>not</emphasis> maintained or created during the
2965
    upgrade process.  All other dependency types will be properly
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    created during an upgrade from a pre-7.3 database.
2967 2968
   </para>
  </note>
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 </sect1>

</chapter>