Tom Lane wrote:
Steven Brown <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
When I change an id (primary key serial) in a table, the next value returned by the sequence for the id can conflict with that id (e.g., change the id to be id + 1).
[...]
Plan A: don't do that.  Why in the world is it a good idea to modify an
artificial primary key?  It's not like there's some external meaning to
the values.

I'm granting access to insert/update/delete rows of a table to people, but I don't want all future inserts to fail if they decided to change an id (which they obviously shouldn't, but they /can/). It makes for a fragile system.

Should I just be using some sort of trigger to block them from modifying the id, or is there another way to handle it? I.e., how do people normally handle that? It's a migration thing - MySQL prevented this situation due to the way it handles auto_increment (it will never assign you an id that already exists).


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TIP 9: In versions below 8.0, the planner will ignore your desire to
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