On Thursday 11 December 2003 12:42 am, John Gibson wrote: > Hi, all. > > I have a table which is continually updated with the latest totals. I > would like to take snapshots of some of the data in that table and store > it in a second table to run statistics on it later. What might some > ways of doing this be? > > Illustrative (I hope) example using fruit-qty-on-hand at a grocery store: > > Fruit_table {constantly updated by other processes} > > CREATE TABLE "fruit_table" ( > "fruit_name" varchar(20), > "fruit_qty" int4 > ); > > > ***TABLE DATA*** > fruit name fruit_qty > apple 5 > orange 8 > pear 3 > > > > monitor_table {stores snapshots of fruit table from time to time} > > CREATE TABLE "monitor_table" ( > "monitor_time" timestamp, > "mon_apples_qty" int4, > "mon_oranges_qty" int4, > "mon_pears_qty" int4 > ); > > > I got the following to timestamp a single row from the fruit_table and > put the results into the monitor_table: > > insert into monitor_table(monitor_time, mon_apples_qty) > select now(), fruit_table.fruit_qty > where fruit_name = 'apple'; > > Unfortunately, I am stuck on how to get all three into the monitor table > with the same timestamp. Since the times will be relatively long > between snapshots some type of variables or functions could be used (I > guess) to store the current time ( curr_time := now(); ) and then run > the query three times with first an insert and then two updates using > the variable time stamp on the updates to locate the record to update. > > That doesn't sound very elegant to me. Please help if you have any ideas. > > I am definately a newbie, so forgive me if this is trivial. Also, if > another forum would be better for this, I would appreciate a nudge in > that direction. :) > > ...john > > > ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- > TIP 9: the planner will ignore your desire to choose an index scan if your > joining column's datatypes do not match
First I would create a monitor table as follows CREATE TABLE "fruit_table_moinitor" ( "fruit_name" varchar(20), "fruit_qty" int4, "t_stamp" timestamp ); Then use the following transaction- BEGIN; INSERT INTO fruit_table_monitor(fruit_name,fruit_qty,t_stamp) SELECT fruit_name,fruit_qty,now() from fruit_table; COMMIT; Calling the function now() inside a transaction locks the timestamp to the time at the beginning of the transaction. -- Adrian Klaver [EMAIL PROTECTED] ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- TIP 3: if posting/reading through Usenet, please send an appropriate subscribe-nomail command to [EMAIL PROTECTED] so that your message can get through to the mailing list cleanly