Re: increment Rows in an SQL Result Set postgresql - Mailing list pgsql-performance

From Hassan
Subject Re: increment Rows in an SQL Result Set postgresql
Date
Msg-id 20060715185307.5589.qmail@web30109.mail.mud.yahoo.com
Whole thread Raw
In response to Re: increment Rows in an SQL Result Set postgresql  ("Craig A. James" <cjames@modgraph-usa.com>)
List pgsql-performance
Sadly I didnt write this function. It was written in C and packaged in a shared module .so. I access it thru postgresql
asplpgsql function. I cannot edit the function thus.  

 I tried this

 CREATE TEMPORARY SEQUENCE serial START 1;
  SELECT nextval('serial'), astext(tmp.the_geom), street FROM shortest_path_as_geometry('bklion', 185, 10953) AS tmp
LEFTJOIN (SELECT * FROM bklion) AS ss ON ss.the_geom = tmp.the_geom;  

 I know this is inefficient, and I surely dont know the repercussion of using the temporary sequence in a web
application.Do you? 

 Appreciate any input.

 Thanks!

 - Hassan Adekoya


----- Original Message ----
From: Craig A. James <cjames@modgraph-usa.com>
To: Hassan Adekoya <hechy_man@yahoo.com>
Cc: pgsql-performance@postgresql.org
Sent: Saturday, July 15, 2006 1:27:20 PM
Subject: Re: [PERFORM] increment Rows in an SQL Result Set postgresql

Hassan,

> 1. I have a function that given two parameter produces an arbitrary id, and
> text. However arbitrary the id and text are, they are in certain order. i.e. it
> is imperative that whatever processing I do, the order is preserved.

What type of function is this?  Did you write it in C?  An SQL procedure?

If the function is written in C, you can create a static local variable which you increment every time you call your
function,and which you return along with your other two values.  As long as your client is connected to the back-end
server,you're guaranteed that it's a single process, and it's not multi-threaded, so this is a safe approach.  However,
notethat if you disconnect and reconnect, your counter will be reset to zero. 

If your function is written in a different language or is a procedure, you might create a sequence that your function
canquery. 

The trick is that it is the function itself that must return the incremented value, i.e. you must return three, not
two,values from your function.  That way, you're not relying on any specific features of the planner, so your three
valueswill stick together. 

Craig




pgsql-performance by date:

Previous
From: "Craig A. James"
Date:
Subject: Re: increment Rows in an SQL Result Set postgresql
Next
From: Michael Fuhr
Date:
Subject: Re: Big differences in plans between 8.0 and 8.1