I would disagree with this last statement.  you are gauranteed
to get the     correct value from $seq.currval in a non-threaded
environment and your     session is not shared by anything else.  And if
you are threading (say in     Java.  I still don't with perl) I would
hope that each of your worker     threads are not sharing a single
session.  Because if they are, you have     much bigger problems than
just getting the correct value returned to you     from $seq.currval.

>>>Reidy, Ron <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>     06/16 2:58 am >>>
Yes, using the SP hides the details.     Getting the value just inserted
via currval is not guaranteed to return     the value you just fetched.
Better to use 'insert ... returning col     into' to get the value used
in
your session's insert statement.

    -----------------
Ron Reidy
Senior DBA
Array BioPharma, Inc.



-----Original Message-----
From: Peter J. Holzer [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
    Sent: Wednesday, June 16, 2004 9:46 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
    Subject: Re: Best Way to Auto Increment with Oracle


On     2004-06-16 09:14:25 -0600, Reidy, Ron wrote:
>Better? Maybe. Consider.
>
>Your program connects via SQL*net to the DB. At insert time, you need
to fetch a sequence, so you issue 'select seq.nextval from dual'. Seems
harmless enough until ...
>
>1. The select statement must be passed     across the SQL*Net
connection.
>2. The statement must be parsed.     Maybe the worst you will have here
is a soft parse, but non the less,     you are using the CPU for this.
>3. The statement is executed and the     fetch occurs.
>4. The result is passed back to your program.
>5. You bind the value (hopefully) to your statement handle.
>6.     You then execute the insert statement.
>
>If you use a BEFORE     INSERT trigger to fetch the sequence, you will
eliminate steps 1, 2, 3,     4, 5 from the flow.

You can get the next value from a sequence in     the insert statement
(see
my previous mail in this thread), so with or     without the trigger,
you
have to parse (once) and execute (possibly     many times) only the
insert
statement.

The difference is:

    With a trigger, you hide the details of the sequence from the insert
    statement.
This makes the insert statement simpler and more portable.     OTOH, you
don't know which value you just inserted (you can get at it     with
select
$sequence.currval from dual but then you lose these     advantages).

hp

--
_ | Peter J.     Holzer | Shooting the users in the foot is bad.
|_|_) | Sysadmin WSR / LUGA | Giving them a gun isn't.
| | |     [EMAIL PROTECTED] | -- Gordon Schumacher,
__/ | http://www.hjp.at/ | mozilla bug #84128

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