On 02/28/2018 05:52 AM, John McKown wrote:
On Wed, Feb 28, 2018 at 7:34 AM, Jeremy Finzel <finz...@gmail.com <mailto:finz...@gmail.com>>wrote:

    We want to enforce a policy, partly just to protect those who might
    forget, for every table in a particular schema to have a primary
    key.  This can't be done with event triggers as far as I can see,
    because it is quite legitimate to do:

    BEGIN;
    CREATE TABLE foo (id int);
    ALTER TABLE foo ADD PRIMARY KEY (id);
    COMMIT;

    It would be nice to have some kind of "deferrable event trigger" or
    some way to enforce that no transaction commits which added a table
    without a primary key.

    Any ideas?

    Thanks,
    Jeremy



​What stops somebody from doing:

CREATE TABLE foo (filler text primary key default null, realcol1 int, realcol2 text);

And then just never bother to ever insert anything into the column FILLER? It fulfills your stated requirement​ of every table having a

Then you would get this:

test=# CREATE TABLE foo (filler text primary key default null, realcol1 int, realcol2 text);
CREATE TABLE
test=# insert into  foo (realcol1, realcol2) values (1, 'test');
ERROR:  null value in column "filler" violates not-null constraint
DETAIL:  Failing row contains (null, 1, test).

primary key. Of course, you could amend the policy to say a "non-NULL primary key".



--
I have a theory that it's impossible to prove anything, but I can't prove it.

Maranatha! <><
John McKown


--
Adrian Klaver
adrian.kla...@aklaver.com

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