Daniil Davydov <3daniss...@gmail.com> writes: > I found that this command sequence leads to an error. :
> session 1: > begin; > create or replace function *some funcion*; > session 2: > begin; > create or replace function *same function as above*; > session 1: > commit; > session 2: > ERROR: duplicate key value violates unique constraint > "pg_proc_proname_args_nsp_index" This is operating as designed, more or less. The error message isn't terribly user-friendly perhaps, but I think it's quite reasonable to throw an error. Otherwise, which transaction's definition should win out? The transactions are notionally operating at "the same time", so saying that either the first-to-insert or the last-to-insert ought to (silently) win isn't very satisfactory semantically. Certainly, if you imagined that this were being done under SERIALIZABLE transaction rules, you'd expect one of the transactions to error out. I actually think that the behavior is worse in the situation where the function already existed: in that case both transactions try to do an UPDATE, and one will fail with ERROR: tuple concurrently updated which is even less user-friendly. But again, this is about the usefulness of the error message, not about whether we need to avoid throwing any error. In short: CREATE OR REPLACE is not a substitute for thinking about how your application behaves. Why do you need to have multiple transactions creating the same function at the same time? regards, tom lane