Jasbinder Singh Bali wrote:
Hi,

If I have a series of Insert statements within a loop in a function on the same table. Would an Insert be able to see the values of previous insert in that table ? I just wanted to know, when would the records be committed, as in, is it after the whole function is done for with its execution or
right after one single insert.

Right now what I'm observing is that all the inserts are committed after the whole function is executed and one insert doesn't see the value of its previous insert. In this scenario, how can an insert see the value of its previous insert even though the whole transaction that lies within the function is not complete.

Thanks,
~Jas
Functions are run in a single separate transaction (unless then have BEGIN ... EXCEPTION ... END block inside them which implies subtransaction) thus inside a function all statements can see results of the previous ones just like if you ran them one by one. All changes the function does are committed at the end of the transaction, whether they are visible or not from the outside of that transaction depends on the transaction isolation level. There are only two distinct levels of isolation in Postgresql: READ COMMITTED and SERIALIZABLE, hence uncommitted data can never be seen before the transaction which changed them is over, the second one makes transaction fully independent just as the name states.


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