On Mon, 2 Feb 2004, Jan Wieck wrote: > Stephan Szabo wrote: > > > On Sat, 31 Jan 2004, Tom Lane wrote: > > > >> Stephan Szabo <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > >> > On Mon, 26 Jan 2004, Enio Schutt Junior wrote: > >> >> In a database I am working, I sometimes have to delete all the records in > >> >> some tables. According to the referential integrity defined in the creation > >> >> of the tables, postmaster should not delete the records, but it does. I have > >> >> used the following commands: "delete from table_1" and "truncate table_1". > >> >> ... > >> >> can the postgres user delete records despite referential integrity? > >> > >> I think the first PG release or two that had TRUNCATE TABLE would allow > >> you to apply it despite the existence of foreign-key constraints on the > >> table. Recent releases won't though. > > > > Yeah, truncate didn't worry me much, but the implication that delete from > > table_1; worked did. > > TRUNCATE cannot be used inside of a transaction, and since 7.3 it checks > for foreign keys. So I guess Enio is getting but ignoring the error > message when trying the delete, but then the truncate does the job in > his pre-7.3 database.
Yes it can. I think it was starting in 7.3. => select * from test2; info ------------- abc'123 123 (2 rows) => begin; BEGIN => truncate test2; TRUNCATE TABLE => rollback; ROLLBACK => select * from test2; info ------------- abc'123 123 ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- TIP 5: Have you checked our extensive FAQ? http://www.postgresql.org/docs/faqs/FAQ.html