Thanks, that's perfect.
-kenneth
On Tue, Nov 22, 2011 at 12:53 PM, Merlin Moncure <mmoncure@gmail.com> wrote:
> On Tue, Nov 22, 2011 at 11:25 AM, Kenneth Tilton <ktilton@mcna.net> wrote:
>> Bit of a trigger NOOB Q:
>>
>> I am trying to use a trigger function to automatically populate new
>> rows in a table with a public ID of the form YYYY-NNN such that the
>> 42nd row created in 2011 would get the ID "2011-042". Each row is
>> associated via an iasid column with a row in an audit table that has a
>> timestamp column called created. This works OK, but I am worried about
>> two rows getting the same case_no if they come in at the same time
>> (whatever that means):
>>
>> declare
>> case_yr integer;
>> yr_case_count bigint;
>> begin
>> select date_part('year', created) into case_yr
>> from audit
>> where audit.sid = NEW.iasid;
>>
>> select count(*) into yr_case_count
>> from fwa_case, audit
>> where fwa_case.iasid=audit.sid
>> and date_part('year', created) = case_yr;
>>
>> NEW.case_no = to_char( case_yr, '9999' ) || '-' ||
>> to_char(1+yr_case_count, 'FM000');
>> return NEW;
>> end;
>>
>> Do I have to worry about this, or does ACID bail me out? If the
>> former, what do I do? I am thinking first put a uniqueness constraint
>> on the column and then figure out how to do retries in a trigger
>> function.
>
> ACID does not bail you out -- you've put no synchonization in to
> prevent to concurrent counts coming at roughly the same time and
> getting the same answer. A uniqueness constraint is definitely a good
> idea. In terms of doing a gapless sequence generally, see here:
> http://www.varlena.com/GeneralBits/130.php. Basically the general
> idea is to keep a counter field somewhere that you lock and update.
>
> merlin
>