postgresql/src/test/regress/expected/sequence.out
Tom Lane aa731ed843 Change nextval and other sequence functions to specify their sequence
argument as a 'regclass' value instead of a text string.  The frontend
conversion of text string to pg_class OID is now encapsulated as an
implicitly-invocable coercion from text to regclass.  This provides
backwards compatibility to the old behavior when the sequence argument
is explicitly typed as 'text'.  When the argument is just an unadorned
literal string, it will be taken as 'regclass', which means that the
stored representation will be an OID.  This solves longstanding problems
with renaming sequences that are referenced in default expressions, as
well as new-in-8.1 problems with renaming such sequences' schemas or
moving them to another schema.  All per recent discussion.
Along the way, fix some rather serious problems in dbmirror's support
for mirroring sequence operations (int4 vs int8 confusion for instance).
2005-10-02 23:50:16 +00:00

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---
--- test creation of SERIAL column
---
CREATE TABLE serialTest (f1 text, f2 serial);
NOTICE: CREATE TABLE will create implicit sequence "serialtest_f2_seq" for serial column "serialtest.f2"
INSERT INTO serialTest VALUES ('foo');
INSERT INTO serialTest VALUES ('bar');
INSERT INTO serialTest VALUES ('force', 100);
INSERT INTO serialTest VALUES ('wrong', NULL);
ERROR: null value in column "f2" violates not-null constraint
SELECT * FROM serialTest;
f1 | f2
-------+-----
foo | 1
bar | 2
force | 100
(3 rows)
-- basic sequence operations using both text and oid references
CREATE SEQUENCE sequence_test;
SELECT nextval('sequence_test'::text);
nextval
---------
1
(1 row)
SELECT nextval('sequence_test'::regclass);
nextval
---------
2
(1 row)
SELECT currval('sequence_test'::text);
currval
---------
2
(1 row)
SELECT currval('sequence_test'::regclass);
currval
---------
2
(1 row)
SELECT setval('sequence_test'::text, 32);
setval
--------
32
(1 row)
SELECT nextval('sequence_test'::regclass);
nextval
---------
33
(1 row)
SELECT setval('sequence_test'::text, 99, false);
setval
--------
99
(1 row)
SELECT nextval('sequence_test'::regclass);
nextval
---------
99
(1 row)
SELECT setval('sequence_test'::regclass, 32);
setval
--------
32
(1 row)
SELECT nextval('sequence_test'::text);
nextval
---------
33
(1 row)
SELECT setval('sequence_test'::regclass, 99, false);
setval
--------
99
(1 row)
SELECT nextval('sequence_test'::text);
nextval
---------
99
(1 row)
DROP SEQUENCE sequence_test;
-- renaming sequences
CREATE SEQUENCE foo_seq;
ALTER TABLE foo_seq RENAME TO foo_seq_new;
SELECT * FROM foo_seq_new;
sequence_name | last_value | increment_by | max_value | min_value | cache_value | log_cnt | is_cycled | is_called
---------------+------------+--------------+---------------------+-----------+-------------+---------+-----------+-----------
foo_seq | 1 | 1 | 9223372036854775807 | 1 | 1 | 1 | f | f
(1 row)
DROP SEQUENCE foo_seq_new;
-- renaming serial sequences
ALTER TABLE serialtest_f2_seq RENAME TO serialtest_f2_foo;
INSERT INTO serialTest VALUES ('more');
SELECT * FROM serialTest;
f1 | f2
-------+-----
foo | 1
bar | 2
force | 100
more | 3
(4 rows)
--
-- Check dependencies of serial and ordinary sequences
--
CREATE TEMP SEQUENCE myseq2;
CREATE TEMP SEQUENCE myseq3;
CREATE TEMP TABLE t1 (
f1 serial,
f2 int DEFAULT nextval('myseq2'),
f3 int DEFAULT nextval('myseq3'::text)
);
NOTICE: CREATE TABLE will create implicit sequence "t1_f1_seq" for serial column "t1.f1"
-- Both drops should fail, but with different error messages:
DROP SEQUENCE t1_f1_seq;
ERROR: cannot drop sequence t1_f1_seq because table t1 column f1 requires it
HINT: You may drop table t1 column f1 instead.
DROP SEQUENCE myseq2;
NOTICE: default for table t1 column f2 depends on sequence myseq2
ERROR: cannot drop sequence myseq2 because other objects depend on it
HINT: Use DROP ... CASCADE to drop the dependent objects too.
-- This however will work:
DROP SEQUENCE myseq3;
DROP TABLE t1;
-- Fails because no longer existent:
DROP SEQUENCE t1_f1_seq;
ERROR: sequence "t1_f1_seq" does not exist
-- Now OK:
DROP SEQUENCE myseq2;
--
-- Alter sequence
--
CREATE SEQUENCE sequence_test2 START WITH 32;
SELECT nextval('sequence_test2');
nextval
---------
32
(1 row)
ALTER SEQUENCE sequence_test2 RESTART WITH 16
INCREMENT BY 4 MAXVALUE 22 MINVALUE 5 CYCLE;
SELECT nextval('sequence_test2');
nextval
---------
16
(1 row)
SELECT nextval('sequence_test2');
nextval
---------
20
(1 row)
SELECT nextval('sequence_test2');
nextval
---------
5
(1 row)
-- Test comments
COMMENT ON SEQUENCE asdf IS 'won''t work';
ERROR: relation "asdf" does not exist
COMMENT ON SEQUENCE sequence_test2 IS 'will work';
COMMENT ON SEQUENCE sequence_test2 IS NULL;
-- Test lastval()
CREATE SEQUENCE seq;
SELECT nextval('seq');
nextval
---------
1
(1 row)
SELECT lastval();
lastval
---------
1
(1 row)
SELECT setval('seq', 99);
setval
--------
99
(1 row)
SELECT lastval();
lastval
---------
99
(1 row)
CREATE SEQUENCE seq2;
SELECT nextval('seq2');
nextval
---------
1
(1 row)
SELECT lastval();
lastval
---------
1
(1 row)
DROP SEQUENCE seq2;
-- should fail
SELECT lastval();
ERROR: lastval is not yet defined in this session
CREATE USER seq_user;
BEGIN;
SET LOCAL SESSION AUTHORIZATION seq_user;
CREATE SEQUENCE seq3;
SELECT nextval('seq3');
nextval
---------
1
(1 row)
REVOKE ALL ON seq3 FROM seq_user;
SELECT lastval();
ERROR: permission denied for sequence seq3
ROLLBACK;
DROP USER seq_user;
DROP SEQUENCE seq;