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Clarify behavior of adding and altering a column in same ALTER command.
The behavior of something like ALTER TABLE transactions ADD COLUMN status varchar(30) DEFAULT 'old', ALTER COLUMN status SET default 'current'; is to fill existing table rows with 'old', not 'current'. That's intentional and desirable for a couple of reasons: * It makes the behavior the same whether you merge the sub-commands into one ALTER command or give them separately; * If we applied the new default while filling the table, there would be no way to get the existing behavior in one SQL command. The same reasoning applies in cases that add a column and then manipulate its GENERATED/IDENTITY status in a second sub-command, since the generation expression is really just a kind of default. However, that wasn't very obvious (at least not to me; earlier in the referenced discussion thread I'd thought it was a bug to be fixed). And it certainly wasn't documented. Hence, add documentation, code comments, and a test case to clarify that this behavior is all intentional. In passing, adjust ATExecAddColumn's defaults-related relkind check so that it matches up exactly with ATRewriteTables, instead of being effectively (though not literally) the negated inverse condition. The reasoning can be explained a lot more concisely that way, too (not to mention that the comment now matches the code, which it did not before). Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/10365.1558909428@sss.pgh.pa.us
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@ -203,10 +203,11 @@ WITH ( MODULUS <replaceable class="parameter">numeric_literal</replaceable>, REM
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<term><literal>SET</literal>/<literal>DROP DEFAULT</literal></term>
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<listitem>
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<para>
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These forms set or remove the default value for a column.
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Default values only apply in subsequent <command>INSERT</command>
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or <command>UPDATE</command> commands; they do not cause rows already in the
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table to change.
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These forms set or remove the default value for a column (where
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removal is equivalent to setting the default value to NULL). The new
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default value will only apply in subsequent <command>INSERT</command>
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or <command>UPDATE</command> commands; it does not cause rows already
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in the table to change.
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</para>
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</listitem>
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</varlistentry>
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@ -268,6 +269,10 @@ WITH ( MODULUS <replaceable class="parameter">numeric_literal</replaceable>, REM
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These forms change whether a column is an identity column or change the
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generation attribute of an existing identity column.
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See <xref linkend="sql-createtable"/> for details.
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Like <literal>SET DEFAULT</literal>, these forms only affect the
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behavior of subsequent <command>INSERT</command>
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and <command>UPDATE</command> commands; they do not cause rows
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already in the table to change.
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</para>
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<para>
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@ -1370,6 +1375,32 @@ WITH ( MODULUS <replaceable class="parameter">numeric_literal</replaceable>, REM
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<programlisting>
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ALTER TABLE distributors ADD COLUMN address varchar(30);
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</programlisting>
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That will cause all existing rows in the table to be filled with null
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values for the new column.
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</para>
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<para>
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To add a column with a non-null default:
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<programlisting>
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ALTER TABLE measurements
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ADD COLUMN mtime timestamp with time zone DEFAULT now();
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</programlisting>
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Existing rows will be filled with the current time as the value of the
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new column, and then new rows will receive the time of their insertion.
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</para>
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<para>
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To add a column and fill it with a value different from the default to
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be used later:
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<programlisting>
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ALTER TABLE transactions
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ADD COLUMN status varchar(30) DEFAULT 'old',
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ALTER COLUMN status SET default 'current';
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</programlisting>
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Existing rows will be filled with <literal>old</literal>, but then
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the default for subsequent commands will be <literal>current</literal>.
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The effects are the same as if the two sub-commands had been issued
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in separate <command>ALTER TABLE</command> commands.
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</para>
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<para>
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@ -6126,14 +6126,18 @@ ATExecAddColumn(List **wqueue, AlteredTableInfo *tab, Relation rel,
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* returned by AddRelationNewConstraints, so that the right thing happens
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* when a datatype's default applies.
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*
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* We skip this step completely for views and foreign tables. For a view,
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* we can only get here from CREATE OR REPLACE VIEW, which historically
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* doesn't set up defaults, not even for domain-typed columns. And in any
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* case we mustn't invoke Phase 3 on a view or foreign table, since they
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* have no storage.
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* Note: it might seem that this should happen at the end of Phase 2, so
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* that the effects of subsequent subcommands can be taken into account.
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* It's intentional that we do it now, though. The new column should be
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* filled according to what is said in the ADD COLUMN subcommand, so that
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* the effects are the same as if this subcommand had been run by itself
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* and the later subcommands had been issued in new ALTER TABLE commands.
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*
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* We can skip this entirely for relations without storage, since Phase 3
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* is certainly not going to touch them. System attributes don't have
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* interesting defaults, either.
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*/
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if (relkind != RELKIND_VIEW && relkind != RELKIND_COMPOSITE_TYPE
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&& relkind != RELKIND_FOREIGN_TABLE && attribute.attnum > 0)
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if (RELKIND_HAS_STORAGE(relkind) && attribute.attnum > 0)
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{
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/*
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* For an identity column, we can't use build_column_default(),
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@ -409,6 +409,12 @@ ALTER TABLE itest8
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ALTER COLUMN f5 DROP NOT NULL,
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ALTER COLUMN f5 SET DATA TYPE bigint;
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INSERT INTO itest8 VALUES(0), (1);
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-- This does not work when the table isn't empty. That's intentional,
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-- since ADD GENERATED should only affect later insertions:
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ALTER TABLE itest8
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ADD COLUMN f22 int NOT NULL,
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ALTER COLUMN f22 ADD GENERATED ALWAYS AS IDENTITY;
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ERROR: column "f22" contains null values
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TABLE itest8;
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f1 | f2 | f3 | f4 | f5
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----+----+----+----+----
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@ -269,6 +269,12 @@ ALTER TABLE itest8
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INSERT INTO itest8 VALUES(0), (1);
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-- This does not work when the table isn't empty. That's intentional,
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-- since ADD GENERATED should only affect later insertions:
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ALTER TABLE itest8
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ADD COLUMN f22 int NOT NULL,
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ALTER COLUMN f22 ADD GENERATED ALWAYS AS IDENTITY;
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TABLE itest8;
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\d+ itest8
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\d itest8_f2_seq
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