Hi,

Le sam. 30 oct. 2021 à 10:55, Daniel Westermann (DWE) <
daniel.westerm...@dbi-services.com> a écrit :

> Hi all,
>
> as I could not find the reason in the source code, can someone tell me why
> the OID counter jumps by 3 between two create table statements?
>
> postgres=# create table t1 ( a int );
> CREATE TABLE
> postgres=# create table t2 ( a int );
> CREATE TABLE
> postgres=# select oid,relname from pg_class where relname in ('t1','t2');
>   oid  | relname
> -------+---------
>  16453 | t1
>  16456 | t2
> (2 rows)
>
> These seems not to happen with other objects, e.g. namespaces:
>
> postgres=# create schema a;
> CREATE SCHEMA
> postgres=# create schema b;
> CREATE SCHEMA
> postgres=# select oid,nspname from pg_namespace where nspname in ('a','b');
>   oid  | nspname
> -------+---------
>  16459 | a
>  16460 | b
> (2 rows)
>
> ... or indexes:
>
> postgres=# select oid,relname from pg_class where relname in ('i1','i2');
>   oid  | relname
> -------+---------
>  16461 | i1
>  16462 | i2
>
>
When you create a table, it also creates two data types: tablename and
_tablename. For example, for your table t1, you should have a t1 type and a
_t1 type. Both have OIDs. On my cluster, your example gives me:

# select oid,relname from pg_class where relname in ('t1','t2');
┌───────┬─────────┐
│  oid  │ relname │
├───────┼─────────┤
│ 24635 │ t1      │
│ 24638 │ t2      │
└───────┴─────────┘
(2 rows)

Time: 0.507 ms
# select oid, typname from pg_type where typname like '%t1' or typname like
'%t2' and oid>24000 order by oid;
┌───────┬─────────┐
│  oid  │ typname │
├───────┼─────────┤
│ 24636 │ _t1     │
│ 24637 │ t1      │
│ 24639 │ _t2     │
│ 24640 │ t2      │
└───────┴─────────┘
(4 rows)

Time: 1.203 ms

The jump between t1 OID (24635) and t2 OID (24638) is the _t1 data type OID
(24636) and the t1 data type OID (24637).


-- 
Guillaume.

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