On Wed, 24 Sept 2025 at 04:25, Kirk Parker <khp@equatoria.us> wrote: > I'm a big fan of maintenance-free functions. What would you think about adding the following as an alternative trigger function, or as a replacement for the current function, to > https://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/ddl-partitioning.html#DDL-PARTITIONING-INHERITANCE-EXAMPLE , item #5? > > CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION measurement_insert_trigger() > RETURNS TRIGGER AS $$ > BEGIN > EXECUTE format('INSERT INTO measurement_%s VALUES (NEW.*)', to_char( NEW.logdate, 'YYYYMM')); > RETURN NULL; > END; > $$ > LANGUAGE plpgsql;
I've somewhat mixed feelings about that. While I do agree that it might be a good way to code things to help prevent a DBA from a midnight callout, I'm just not sure I'm that onboard with adding the example. About 10 years ago, I'd likely just have agreed, but since then we've got declarative partitioning and the legitimate use cases for using inheritance partitioning over the newer method are very limited. Today when I look at that page in the documents, I wonder how we could write less about inheritance partitioning or if we could move the inheritance section out into another page rather than having it mixed up with the declarative partitioning sections, perhaps headed up with a note to redirect people to the declarative partitioning section. I fear adding your proposed example might increase the chances of someone landing on that section if they're skimming the page.
Overall, I'm about -0.01 on your idea. I might be in favour of it if the inheritance section had a dedicated page.
David
I get what you're saying. My email sat in my drafts folder for a couple days while I was debating whether to send it or not, for the exact reason that inheritance-based partitioning is, with a few exceptions, a legacy concept.
One way to "write less about inheritance partitioning", though, would be to present the suggested new function as the only example of the trigger function. That would shorten the section by replacing the two current functions along with some of the surrounding explanatory verbiage.
Possible patch attached; this is my first ever submission so I hope I didn't miss anything.