Tom Lane <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:

> Jerry Sievers <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> 
> > I believe what's happening here is that the server doesn't realize
> > that the new column is going to have all nulls and that the check
> > constraint allows nulls.  As such, the check evidently is being
> > evaluated for each row of the table.
> 
> Yup, that's right.  There are some corner cases that make that harder to
> optimize than it might look:
> 
> * volatile functions in the constraint might possibly deliver different
> answers at different rows

Understood.

> * if table is in fact empty, we should not throw an error, nor indeed
> evaluate the constraint even once (again, volatile functions...)

The table is big, the check constraint is trivial and the col values
will be all null.  This is a tempting hack-around case.

Think I'm going to hide the constraint by temporarily toggling to zero
the contypid field in pg_constraint, around the alter table add column
statement.  I've tested this and it allows the alter to happen fast.

Thanks for the information. 

>                       regards, tom lane
> 
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Jerry Sievers   732 365-2844 (work)     Production Database Administrator
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