On Wed, Jan 25, 2012 at 09:42:05AM -0430, Francisco Calderón wrote: > Hello, > > I am having a situation with postgresql 8.3, i have two tables, ta and tb, > with a relation "one tb has many ta" and... well, i will let the SQL talk > for me ;) > > -----------SQL----------- > CREATE TABLE tb > ( > id serial NOT NULL, > descripcion character varying(200) NOT NULL, > CONSTRAINT tb_pkey PRIMARY KEY (id) > ) > WITH (OIDS=FALSE); > INSERT INTO tb (descripcion) values ('desc 1'); > INSERT INTO tb (descripcion) values ('desc 2'); > CREATE TABLE ta > ( > id serial NOT NULL, > descripcion character varying(200), > tb_id integer default null, > CONSTRAINT ta_pkey PRIMARY KEY (id), > CONSTRAINT ta_tb_id FOREIGN KEY (tb_id) > REFERENCES tb (id) MATCH SIMPLE > ON UPDATE NO ACTION ON DELETE NO ACTION > ) > WITH (OIDS=FALSE); > > When i make an insert like this: > > INSERT INTO ta (descripcion, tb_id) values ('prueba', 0); > > we can expect this error: > > ERROR: insert or update on table "ta" violates foreign key constraint > "ta_tb_id" > DETAIL: Key (tb_id)=(0) is not present in table "tb". > > and that is what i am getting but the unusual situation is the sequence > "ta_id_seq" is incrementing every time i get the "violates foreign key > constraint" error and i think this is not a good behavior, what do you > think? >
That is how sequences work. If you want different behavior, use another process or method to produce a sequential count. Hint, it will involve a lot of locking and be much slower than a sequence. It would be better to have your application handle gaps in the sequence. Regards, Ken -- Sent via pgsql-sql mailing list (pgsql-sql@postgresql.org) To make changes to your subscription: http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-sql