Thanks, but the join clause is there, it's just buried in the subqueries.

If there is a problem, it is probably that the loop never ends.

Or it could be that the answer is exponential, and I just have too many rows in the source table and too deep a graph.

I figured out how to do it in the application with one call to the database and a simple recursive method in a class, though, so I'm not going to use a stored function in the DB.

Thanks again for responding.

Chas.

Tom Lane wrote:
"Charles F. Munat" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
Using pseudocode from Celko's "SQL for Smarties" book, I wrote the
following function that builds a path enumeration table. I hope to
trigger this function on the rare occasions that the organizations table
is updated. But when I run this function, it hangs.

I think there might be something wrong with this query:

       INSERT INTO organizations_path_enum
           SELECT o1.parent_id, r1.child_id, (o1.depth + 1)
           FROM organizations_path_enum o1, relationships r1
               -- advance existing paths by one level
           WHERE EXISTS (SELECT * FROM organizations_path_enum AS o2
WHERE r1.parent_id = o2.child_id)
               -- insert only new rows into the table
           AND NOT EXISTS (SELECT * FROM organizations_path_enum AS o3
WHERE o1.parent_id = o3.parent_id AND r1.child_id = o3.child_id);

I'm not totally clear on what this is supposed to accomplish, but
it seems like there should be some join clause between o1 and r1.

                        regards, tom lane

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