Re: [HACKERS] Add column if not exists (CINE)

2010-07-25 Thread Robert Haas
On Thu, Jul 22, 2010 at 4:34 PM, Kjell Rune Skaaraas  wrote:
> At least from a performance point of view CINE should never cause a table 
> rewrite, it should either execute as a plain CREATE or as "nothing". I don't 
> mind if the CINE fails if the column already exists but with a different 
> definition, so maybe it could be worded differently to make it clearer what 
> you get?

That's what I want, too.  The people saying we should implement COR
for columns seem to be, by and large, people who have never wished for
this feature and have no particular use case for either one.  I have
stated my use case in the past, but it has been dismissed as stupid or
contrived.  I can live with the possibility that I'm dumb, but, for
the record, I'm not making this up.

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Re: [HACKERS] Add column if not exists (CINE)

2010-07-25 Thread Robert Haas
On Fri, Jul 23, 2010 at 2:46 AM, Bernd Helmle  wrote:
> Yes, i agree. I would like to mark this patch "Ready for Committer", if
> that's okay for you (since you are a committer you might want to commit it
> yourself).

I see that it is so marked, so, committed, with a minor correction to
my original docs.

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Re: [HACKERS] Add column if not exists (CINE)

2010-07-23 Thread Robert Haas
On Fri, Jul 23, 2010 at 2:46 AM, Bernd Helmle  wrote:
>
>
> --On 21. Juli 2010 17:16:13 -0400 Robert Haas  wrote:
>
>> I get the same error message from concurrent CREATE TABLE commands
>> even without CINE...
>>
>> S1:
>> rhaas=# begin;
>> BEGIN
>> rhaas=# create table foo (id int);
>> CREATE TABLE
>>
>> S2:
>> rhaas=# begin;
>> BEGIN
>> rhaas=# create table foo (id int);
>> 
>>
>> S1:
>> rhaas=# commit;
>> COMMIT
>>
>> S2:
>> ERROR:  duplicate key value violates unique constraint
>> "pg_type_typname_nsp_index"
>> DETAIL:  Key (typname, typnamespace)=(foo, 2200) already exists.
>>
>
> Funny, never realized that before, but you're right.
>
>> I agree it would be nice to fix this.  I'm not sure how hard it is.  I
>> don't think it's the job of this patch.  :-)
>
> Yes, i agree. I would like to mark this patch "Ready for Committer", if
> that's okay for you (since you are a committer you might want to commit it
> yourself). Given that there's still some discussion in progress, i'm not
> sure about it, however. The patch itself looks fine to me and I'm traveling
> this weekend, so i don't want to hold it off as long as necessary.

As far as I can see, the other emails were regarding adding columns,
whereas this patch is about creating tables.  So I think it's OK...

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Re: [HACKERS] Add column if not exists (CINE)

2010-07-22 Thread Bernd Helmle



--On 21. Juli 2010 17:16:13 -0400 Robert Haas  wrote:


I get the same error message from concurrent CREATE TABLE commands
even without CINE...

S1:
rhaas=# begin;
BEGIN
rhaas=# create table foo (id int);
CREATE TABLE

S2:
rhaas=# begin;
BEGIN
rhaas=# create table foo (id int);


S1:
rhaas=# commit;
COMMIT

S2:
ERROR:  duplicate key value violates unique constraint
"pg_type_typname_nsp_index"
DETAIL:  Key (typname, typnamespace)=(foo, 2200) already exists.



Funny, never realized that before, but you're right.


I agree it would be nice to fix this.  I'm not sure how hard it is.  I
don't think it's the job of this patch.  :-)


Yes, i agree. I would like to mark this patch "Ready for Committer", if 
that's okay for you (since you are a committer you might want to commit it 
yourself). Given that there's still some discussion in progress, i'm not 
sure about it, however. The patch itself looks fine to me and I'm traveling 
this weekend, so i don't want to hold it off as long as necessary.


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Re: [HACKERS] Add column if not exists (CINE)

2010-07-22 Thread Kjell Rune Skaaraas
Hello,

At least from a performance point of view CINE should never cause a table 
rewrite, it should either execute as a plain CREATE or as "nothing". I don't 
mind if the CINE fails if the column already exists but with a different 
definition, so maybe it could be worded differently to make it clearer what you 
get? How about something like:

"ALTER TABLE foo ADD OR MATCH COLUMN bar INTEGER"
a) doesn't exist => create
b) exists and matches => nothing
c) exists and doesn't match => error

if COR semantics should ever be implmented they could be

"ALTER TABLE foo ADD OR REPLACE COLUMN bar INTEGER"
a) doesn't exist => create
b) exists and matches => nothing
c) exists and doesn't match => replace

However, I don't want it to fail unless there's an explicit conflict, because I 
tend to modify the columns later:
"ALTER TABLE foo ADD COLUMN bar INTEGER"
"ALTER TABLE foo ALTER COLUMN bar SET DEFAULT 0"
"ALTER TABLE foo ALTER COLUMN bar SET NOT NULL"
"ALTER TABLE foo ADD OR MATCH COLUMN bar INTEGER" <-- succeed or fail?

Personally, I'm only interested to match on TYPE so possibly:
"ALTER TABLE foo ADD OR MATCH TYPE COLUMN bar INTEGER" <-- succeed
"ALTER TABLE foo ADD OR MATCH [ALL] COLUMN bar INTEGER" <-- fail

To be honest, I think this becomes more complicated than a CINE, but as I felt 
that got a rather lukewarm reception maybe this sounds better. The syntax 
leaves it open for COR later, and the matching code should be useful to 
determine if the COR actually needs to do a REPLACE. Opinions?

Regards,
Kjell Rune

--- Den tor 2010-07-22 skrev Simon Riggs :

> Fra: Simon Riggs 
> Emne: Re: [HACKERS] Add column if not exists (CINE)
> Til: "Tom Lane" 
> Kopi: "Robert Haas" , "Heikki Linnakangas" 
> , "Andrew Dunstan" 
> , "Takahiro Itagaki" , 
> "Kjell Rune Skaaraas" , pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org
> Dato: Torsdag 22. juli 2010 02.43
> On Wed, 2010-04-28 at 21:15 -0400,
> Tom Lane wrote:
> 
> > I still say
> > that COR rather than CINE semantics would be
> appropriate for columns.
> 
> Viewed from a locking perspective, I would disagree.
> 
> COR semantics force a table rewrite, in certain cases. That
> makes it
> hard to predict externally how long the command will run
> for.
> 
> As a DBA, I would want a command that executes without
> rewrite (if
> appropriate) or does nothing.
> 
> Predictable behaviour is the most important concern.
> 
> That isn't necessarily an argument in favour of CINE, which
> seems
> slightly less clear about what we might expect from that,
> in my reading
> at least.
> 
> -- 
>  Simon Riggs       
>    www.2ndQuadrant.com
>  PostgreSQL Development, 24x7 Support, Training and
> Services
> 
> 



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Re: [HACKERS] Add column if not exists (CINE)

2010-07-21 Thread Simon Riggs
On Wed, 2010-04-28 at 21:15 -0400, Tom Lane wrote:

> I still say
> that COR rather than CINE semantics would be appropriate for columns.

Viewed from a locking perspective, I would disagree.

COR semantics force a table rewrite, in certain cases. That makes it
hard to predict externally how long the command will run for.

As a DBA, I would want a command that executes without rewrite (if
appropriate) or does nothing.

Predictable behaviour is the most important concern.

That isn't necessarily an argument in favour of CINE, which seems
slightly less clear about what we might expect from that, in my reading
at least.

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Re: [HACKERS] Add column if not exists (CINE)

2010-07-21 Thread Robert Haas
On Wed, Jul 21, 2010 at 2:53 PM, Bernd Helmle  wrote:
>
>
> --On 1. Mai 2010 23:09:23 -0400 Robert Haas  wrote:
>
>> On Wed, Apr 28, 2010 at 9:15 PM, Tom Lane  wrote:

 CREATE OR REPLACE is indeed much more complicated.  In fact, for
 tables, I maintain that you'll need to link with -ldwim to make it
 work properly.
>>>
>>> This may in fact be an appropriate way to handle the case for tables,
>>> given the complexity of their definitions.
>>
>> Patch attached.
>
> I had an initial look at Robert's patch. Patch applies cleanly,
> documentation and regression tests included, everything works as expected.
> When looking at the functionality there's one thing that strikes me a
> little:
>
> be...@localhost:bernd #*= CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS foo(id int);
> ERROR:  duplicate key value violates unique constraint
> "pg_type_typname_nsp_index"
> DETAIL:  Key (typname, typnamespace)=(foo, 2200) already exists.
>
> This is what you get from concurrent CINE commands. The typname thingie
> might be confusing by unexperienced users, but i think its hard to do
> anything about it ?

I get the same error message from concurrent CREATE TABLE commands
even without CINE...

S1:
rhaas=# begin;
BEGIN
rhaas=# create table foo (id int);
CREATE TABLE

S2:
rhaas=# begin;
BEGIN
rhaas=# create table foo (id int);


S1:
rhaas=# commit;
COMMIT

S2:
ERROR:  duplicate key value violates unique constraint
"pg_type_typname_nsp_index"
DETAIL:  Key (typname, typnamespace)=(foo, 2200) already exists.

I agree it would be nice to fix this.  I'm not sure how hard it is.  I
don't think it's the job of this patch.  :-)

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Re: [HACKERS] Add column if not exists (CINE)

2010-07-21 Thread Bernd Helmle



--On 1. Mai 2010 23:09:23 -0400 Robert Haas  wrote:


On Wed, Apr 28, 2010 at 9:15 PM, Tom Lane  wrote:

CREATE OR REPLACE is indeed much more complicated.  In fact, for
tables, I maintain that you'll need to link with -ldwim to make it
work properly.


This may in fact be an appropriate way to handle the case for tables,
given the complexity of their definitions.


Patch attached.




I had an initial look at Robert's patch. Patch applies cleanly, 
documentation and regression tests included, everything works as expected. 
When looking at the functionality there's one thing that strikes me a 
little:


be...@localhost:bernd #*= CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS foo(id int);
ERROR:  duplicate key value violates unique constraint 
"pg_type_typname_nsp_index"

DETAIL:  Key (typname, typnamespace)=(foo, 2200) already exists.

This is what you get from concurrent CINE commands. The typname thingie 
might be confusing by unexperienced users, but i think its hard to do 
anything about it ?





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Re: [HACKERS] Add column if not exists (CINE)

2010-05-01 Thread Kjell Rune Skaaraas
--- Den fre 2010-04-30 skrev Bruce Momjian :
> Tom Lane wrote:
> > Robert Haas 
> writes:
> > > We can artificially make this problem as
> complicated as we wish, but
> > > the people who are asking for this feature
> (including me) will, I
> > > believe, be quite happy with a solution that
> throws, say, a NOTICE
> > > instead of an ERROR when the object already
> exists, and then returns
> > > without doing anything further.  There are
> very few, if any,
> > > definitional issues here, except by people who
> are brainstorming crazy
> > > alternative behaviors whose actual usefulness I
> very much doubt.
> > 
> > > CREATE OR REPLACE is indeed much more
> complicated.  In fact, for
> > > tables, I maintain that you'll need to link with
> -ldwim to make it
> > > work properly.
> > 
> > This may in fact be an appropriate way to handle the
> case for tables,
> > given the complexity of their definitions. 
> However, the original
> > point of the thread was about what to do for
> columns.  I still say
> > that COR rather than CINE semantics would be
> appropriate for columns.
> 
> I have added this TODO item:
> 
>     Allow CREATE TABLE to optionally create
> a table if it does not already
>     exist, without throwing an error
>     
>         The fact that tables
> contain data makes this more complex than other
>     CREATE OR REPLACE operations.

If you could write a COR for columns, then a COR for tables would be 
90% done by calling COR on each column and drop/keep the rest (COR 
WITH/WITHOUT DROP?). You'd have to deal with table constraints but you 
also have to handle column constraints to do COR on columns. 

In other words, pretty much all the hard bits I seem to hear people agree 
on exist still apply to the single column. COR for columns was suggested 
already back in the same thread in 2005:

http://archives.postgresql.org/pgsql-hackers/2005-10/msg00644.php

We're already talking 2010, what I fear is that COR is that shiny goal 
far, far out there but if I come back in 2015 there'll still be neither 
COR or CINE. I really can't understand how CINE can be equally hard to 
implement as COR, since CINE is simply to NOT throw an error.

Regards,
Kjell Rune



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Re: [HACKERS] Add column if not exists (CINE)

2010-05-01 Thread Robert Haas
On Wed, Apr 28, 2010 at 9:15 PM, Tom Lane  wrote:
>> CREATE OR REPLACE is indeed much more complicated.  In fact, for
>> tables, I maintain that you'll need to link with -ldwim to make it
>> work properly.
>
> This may in fact be an appropriate way to handle the case for tables,
> given the complexity of their definitions.

Patch attached.

...Robert


create_table_if_not_exists.patch
Description: Binary data

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Re: [HACKERS] Add column if not exists (CINE)

2010-05-01 Thread Robert Haas
On Sat, May 1, 2010 at 2:26 PM, Kjell Rune Skaaraas  wrote:
> In other words, pretty much all the hard bits I seem to hear people agree
> on exist still apply to the single column. COR for columns was suggested
> already back in the same thread in 2005:
>
> http://archives.postgresql.org/pgsql-hackers/2005-10/msg00644.php
>
> We're already talking 2010, what I fear is that COR is that shiny goal
> far, far out there but if I come back in 2015 there'll still be neither
> COR or CINE. I really can't understand how CINE can be equally hard to
> implement as COR, since CINE is simply to NOT throw an error.

It's not hard to implement at all; this whole discussion - and all the
ones that have preceded it - are based on the theory that people who
are asking for CINE are too stupid to see that CINE isn't really going
to fix their problem.  That comes in several flavors, including:

- 90% of the things you would want to do in real life are way more
complicated anyway, so CINE by itself is no use,
- COR is really what you want but since you're too lazy to implement
that you want CINE instead,
- MySQL has it so it must be a bad idea (even though that was part of
our justification for adopting DIE), and/or
- most people agree that we shouldn't implement CINE.

I am usually very supportive of our community's decision-making
process, but in this case I think we're just being extraordinarily
stubborn, and frankly insulting the intelligence of our end-users,
among whom I number myself.

Q. I ran CREATE IF NOT EXISTS and it didn't magically make my table
match the column list I gave!
A1. Duh.
A2. Did you notice the part where it said:
NOTICE: table "dwiw" already exists, skipping
...and if yes, what did you think the word "skipping" (which also
appears in the similar notice we give for DROP IF EXISTS) meant?

...Robert

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Re: [HACKERS] Add column if not exists (CINE)

2010-04-30 Thread Bruce Momjian
Tom Lane wrote:
> Robert Haas  writes:
> > We can artificially make this problem as complicated as we wish, but
> > the people who are asking for this feature (including me) will, I
> > believe, be quite happy with a solution that throws, say, a NOTICE
> > instead of an ERROR when the object already exists, and then returns
> > without doing anything further.  There are very few, if any,
> > definitional issues here, except by people who are brainstorming crazy
> > alternative behaviors whose actual usefulness I very much doubt.
> 
> > CREATE OR REPLACE is indeed much more complicated.  In fact, for
> > tables, I maintain that you'll need to link with -ldwim to make it
> > work properly.
> 
> This may in fact be an appropriate way to handle the case for tables,
> given the complexity of their definitions.  However, the original
> point of the thread was about what to do for columns.  I still say
> that COR rather than CINE semantics would be appropriate for columns.

I have added this TODO item:

Allow CREATE TABLE to optionally create a table if it does not already
exist, without throwing an error

The fact that tables contain data makes this more complex than other
CREATE OR REPLACE operations.

* 
http://archives.postgresql.org/pgsql-hackers/2010-04/msg01300.php 

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Re: [HACKERS] Add column if not exists (CINE)

2010-04-29 Thread Chris Browne
robertmh...@gmail.com (Robert Haas) writes:
> On Wed, Apr 28, 2010 at 1:40 PM, Dimitri Fontaine
>  wrote:
>> Robert Haas  writes:
>>> Well, how would you define CREATE OR REPLACE TABLE?  I think that
>>> doesn't make much sense, which is why I think CREATE IF NOT EXISTS is
>>> a reasonable approach.
>>
>> 
>>
>> The behavior I'd like to have would be to allow me to give a SELECT
>> query to run for replacing what is there if there's something. If the
>> query can not be run on the existing data set, error out of course.
>>
>> So you know the state for sure after the command, but it depends on your
>> query being correct. And you can (de)normalize existing data using joins.
>>
>> The REPLACE keyword would here mean that there's a CTAS going under the
>> hood, then we add the constraints and indexes and triggers etc. That
>> would mean being able to express those entities changes too, but it
>> seems important.
>>
>> Well, that may be not precise enough as a spec, but at least that's food
>> for though I hope.
>
> This type of hand-waving convinces me more than ever that we should
> just implement CINE, and it should just C if it doesn't already E.
> This is what has been requested multiple times, by multiple people,
> including various people who don't normally poke their head into
> -hackers.  I think the resistance to a straightforward implementation
> with easy-to-understand behavior is completely unjustifiable.  It's
> completely unobvious to me that all of the above will work at all and,
> if it did, whether it would actually solve the problems that I care
> about, like being able to write schema-upgrade scripts that would work
> in a simple and predictable fashion.

I tend to agree with you here.

While yes, "CINE is a simplification of COR (CREATE OR REPLACE)", I'm
not at all sure that it's reasonable to hope for the latter, in that it
elides potentially grave problems that aren't reasonable to expect
solved.

Notably, the "and what if a substantial data transformation is needed to
accomplish this?"

CINE doesn't propose to try to do that transformation, which seems like
the right choice to me.

When I put my "we've got things replicating using Slony-I" hat on, CINE
looks pretty preferable to me.  It's unambitious - but it is certainly
NOT doing a bunch of magic behind your back so as to make it tougher to
predict what might happen in a trigger-replicated environment.

In any case, CINE seems pretty useful to me.  I'm prepared to listen to
persuasion, but thus far, it looks like a "+1 from me."

An alternative that seems likable is "COR, raising an exception if
there's a type mismatch." Where there's certainly room to debate how
much of a difference represents a "mismatch."
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Re: [HACKERS] Add column if not exists (CINE)

2010-04-28 Thread Tom Lane
Robert Haas  writes:
> We can artificially make this problem as complicated as we wish, but
> the people who are asking for this feature (including me) will, I
> believe, be quite happy with a solution that throws, say, a NOTICE
> instead of an ERROR when the object already exists, and then returns
> without doing anything further.  There are very few, if any,
> definitional issues here, except by people who are brainstorming crazy
> alternative behaviors whose actual usefulness I very much doubt.

> CREATE OR REPLACE is indeed much more complicated.  In fact, for
> tables, I maintain that you'll need to link with -ldwim to make it
> work properly.

This may in fact be an appropriate way to handle the case for tables,
given the complexity of their definitions.  However, the original
point of the thread was about what to do for columns.  I still say
that COR rather than CINE semantics would be appropriate for columns.

regards, tom lane

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Re: [HACKERS] Add column if not exists (CINE)

2010-04-28 Thread Robert Haas
On Wed, Apr 28, 2010 at 2:57 PM, Tom Lane  wrote:
> Heikki Linnakangas  writes:
>> Robert Haas wrote:
>>> Well, how would you define CREATE OR REPLACE TABLE?
>
>> It the table doesn't exist, create it. If it exists with the same name
>> and same columns and constraints and all, do nothing. Otherwise throw an
>> error.
>
>> Maybe it should also check that the existing table is empty.
>
> The last bit doesn't seem to make sense.  If you want an empty table,
> you can do DROP IF EXISTS and then CREATE.  ISTM that the use-cases
> where you don't want to do that are cases where you don't want to lose
> existing data.

Right.

> For either CINE or COR, there are a number of issues that are being
> hand-waved away here: is it OK to change ownership and/or permissions?
> What about foreign key constraints relating this table to others?
> For that matter it's not real clear that indexes, check constraints,
> etc should be allowed to survive.  If they are allowed to survive then
> CINE TABLE is just the tip of the iceberg: to do anything useful you'd
> also need CINE for ADD CONSTRAINT, CREATE INDEX, ADD FOREIGN KEY, etc.
> And the more of those you add, the more problematic it gets to allow
> existing objects that don't quite match what the command says.
>
> Any of these commands are headache-y for something as complicated
> as a table.  I'm not at all impressed by the argument that mysql
> does it, because they are *notorious* for being willing to ship
> half-baked solutions.

We can artificially make this problem as complicated as we wish, but
the people who are asking for this feature (including me) will, I
believe, be quite happy with a solution that throws, say, a NOTICE
instead of an ERROR when the object already exists, and then returns
without doing anything further.  There are very few, if any,
definitional issues here, except by people who are brainstorming crazy
alternative behaviors whose actual usefulness I very much doubt.

CREATE OR REPLACE is indeed much more complicated.  In fact, for
tables, I maintain that you'll need to link with -ldwim to make it
work properly.

...Robert

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Re: [HACKERS] Add column if not exists (CINE)

2010-04-28 Thread Tom Lane
Heikki Linnakangas  writes:
> Robert Haas wrote:
>> Well, how would you define CREATE OR REPLACE TABLE?

> It the table doesn't exist, create it. If it exists with the same name
> and same columns and constraints and all, do nothing. Otherwise throw an
> error.

> Maybe it should also check that the existing table is empty.

The last bit doesn't seem to make sense.  If you want an empty table,
you can do DROP IF EXISTS and then CREATE.  ISTM that the use-cases
where you don't want to do that are cases where you don't want to lose
existing data.

For either CINE or COR, there are a number of issues that are being
hand-waved away here: is it OK to change ownership and/or permissions?
What about foreign key constraints relating this table to others?
For that matter it's not real clear that indexes, check constraints,
etc should be allowed to survive.  If they are allowed to survive then
CINE TABLE is just the tip of the iceberg: to do anything useful you'd
also need CINE for ADD CONSTRAINT, CREATE INDEX, ADD FOREIGN KEY, etc.
And the more of those you add, the more problematic it gets to allow
existing objects that don't quite match what the command says.

Any of these commands are headache-y for something as complicated
as a table.  I'm not at all impressed by the argument that mysql
does it, because they are *notorious* for being willing to ship
half-baked solutions.

regards, tom lane

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Re: [HACKERS] Add column if not exists (CINE)

2010-04-28 Thread Kjell Rune Skaaraas


--- Den ons 2010-04-28 skrev Tom Lane :

> Fra: Tom Lane 
> Emne: Re: [HACKERS] Add column if not exists (CINE)
> Til: "Robert Haas" 
> Kopi: "Andrew Dunstan" , "Takahiro Itagaki" 
> , "Kjell Rune Skaaraas" , 
> pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org
> Dato: Onsdag 28. april 2010 17.20
> Robert Haas 
> writes:
> > I don't believe you are fairly stating the consensus
> from previous
> > discussion and I believe that you are actually in the
> minority on this
> > one.  I agree that we probably don't need to
> support this for object
> > types for which CREATE OR REPLACE is available or can
> be made
> > available, but that isn't feasible for all object
> types - tables and
> > columns being the obvious examples.
> 
> What's obvious about it?  In particular, I should
> think that ADD OR
> REPLACE COLUMN would usefully be defined as "ADD if no such
> column,
> else ALTER COLUMN as necessary to match this spec". 
> Dropping the
> ALTER part of that has no benefit except to lazy
> implementors; it
> certainly is not more useful to users if they can't be sure
> of the
> column properties after issuing the command.

To me this construct seems horribly ambigious. Imagine I did a ALTER TABLE foo 
ADD COLUMN bar INTEGER NOT NULL UNIQUE DEFAULT 10, then an ALTER TABLE foo ADD 
OR REPLACE COLUMN bar BIGINT. Would I get a BIGINT NOT NULL UNIQUE DEFAULT 10 
or a plain BIGINT? Either way I think one group will be disappointed because it 
either trashes all your other setup *or* forces you to call DROP NOT NULL, DROP 
DEFAULT etc. when you don't want it.

There's a reason why there's no ALTER TABLE foo SET COLUMN bar [definition]" 
and instead many statements. Remember it has to deal with all these possible 
column constraints in ADD COLUMN:

where column_constraint is:

[ CONSTRAINT constraint_name ]
{ NOT NULL | 
  NULL | 
  UNIQUE index_parameters |
  PRIMARY KEY index_parameters |
  CHECK ( expression ) |
  REFERENCES reftable [ ( refcolumn ) ] [ MATCH FULL | MATCH PARTIAL | MATCH 
SIMPLE ]
[ ON DELETE action ] [ ON UPDATE action ] }
[ DEFERRABLE | NOT DEFERRABLE ] [ INITIALLY DEFERRED | INITIALLY IMMEDIATE ]

What about something like CHECK? Would you assume it's a complete set of CHECKs 
and drop the rest? Or just keep creating new CHECKs every time it is run? Dupe 
checking?

CINE has none of these problems, either the column didn't exist before so 
there's nothing to worry about or the command does nothing. True, you may have 
a borked column but not if you follow a simple design pattern of never 
recasting a column type but rather add a new, migrate your data and update your 
queries. And for the exceptions to that rule, you can add a ALTER COLUMN SET 
DATA TYPE (or any of the other ALTERs) after the CINE in your scipt. If the 
CINE triggered all is the latest version, if not the detailed ALTERs will 
change any column that needs changing. Clean and simple.

Regards,
Kjell Rune



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Re: [HACKERS] Add column if not exists (CINE)

2010-04-28 Thread Heikki Linnakangas
Robert Haas wrote:
> On Wed, Apr 28, 2010 at 12:07 PM, Heikki Linnakangas
>  wrote:
>> Robert Haas wrote:
>>> On Wed, Apr 28, 2010 at 11:20 AM, Tom Lane  wrote:
 Robert Haas  writes:
> I don't believe you are fairly stating the consensus from previous
> discussion and I believe that you are actually in the minority on this
> one.  I agree that we probably don't need to support this for object
> types for which CREATE OR REPLACE is available or can be made
> available, but that isn't feasible for all object types - tables and
> columns being the obvious examples.
 What's obvious about it?  In particular, I should think that ADD OR
 REPLACE COLUMN would usefully be defined as "ADD if no such column,
 else ALTER COLUMN as necessary to match this spec".  Dropping the
 ALTER part of that has no benefit except to lazy implementors; it
 certainly is not more useful to users if they can't be sure of the
 column properties after issuing the command.
>>> Actually, that's a good idea.  But how will you handle tables?
>> What do you mean?
> 
> Well, how would you define CREATE OR REPLACE TABLE?

It the table doesn't exist, create it. If it exists with the same name
and same columns and constraints and all, do nothing. Otherwise throw an
error.

Maybe it should also check that the existing table is empty.

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Re: [HACKERS] Add column if not exists (CINE)

2010-04-28 Thread Dimitri Fontaine
Robert Haas  writes:
> Well, how would you define CREATE OR REPLACE TABLE?  I think that
> doesn't make much sense, which is why I think CREATE IF NOT EXISTS is
> a reasonable approach.



The behavior I'd like to have would be to allow me to give a SELECT
query to run for replacing what is there if there's something. If the
query can not be run on the existing data set, error out of course.

So you know the state for sure after the command, but it depends on your
query being correct. And you can (de)normalize existing data using joins.

The REPLACE keyword would here mean that there's a CTAS going under the
hood, then we add the constraints and indexes and triggers etc. That
would mean being able to express those entities changes too, but it
seems important.

Well, that may be not precise enough as a spec, but at least that's food
for though I hope.

Regards,
-- 
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Re: [HACKERS] Add column if not exists (CINE)

2010-04-28 Thread Robert Haas
On Wed, Apr 28, 2010 at 1:40 PM, Dimitri Fontaine
 wrote:
> Robert Haas  writes:
>> Well, how would you define CREATE OR REPLACE TABLE?  I think that
>> doesn't make much sense, which is why I think CREATE IF NOT EXISTS is
>> a reasonable approach.
>
> 
>
> The behavior I'd like to have would be to allow me to give a SELECT
> query to run for replacing what is there if there's something. If the
> query can not be run on the existing data set, error out of course.
>
> So you know the state for sure after the command, but it depends on your
> query being correct. And you can (de)normalize existing data using joins.
>
> The REPLACE keyword would here mean that there's a CTAS going under the
> hood, then we add the constraints and indexes and triggers etc. That
> would mean being able to express those entities changes too, but it
> seems important.
>
> Well, that may be not precise enough as a spec, but at least that's food
> for though I hope.

This type of hand-waving convinces me more than ever that we should
just implement CINE, and it should just C if it doesn't already E.
This is what has been requested multiple times, by multiple people,
including various people who don't normally poke their head into
-hackers.  I think the resistance to a straightforward implementation
with easy-to-understand behavior is completely unjustifiable.  It's
completely unobvious to me that all of the above will work at all and,
if it did, whether it would actually solve the problems that I care
about, like being able to write schema-upgrade scripts that would work
in a simple and predictable fashion.

...Robert

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Re: [HACKERS] Add column if not exists (CINE)

2010-04-28 Thread Robert Haas
On Wed, Apr 28, 2010 at 12:07 PM, Heikki Linnakangas
 wrote:
> Robert Haas wrote:
>> On Wed, Apr 28, 2010 at 11:20 AM, Tom Lane  wrote:
>>> Robert Haas  writes:
 I don't believe you are fairly stating the consensus from previous
 discussion and I believe that you are actually in the minority on this
 one.  I agree that we probably don't need to support this for object
 types for which CREATE OR REPLACE is available or can be made
 available, but that isn't feasible for all object types - tables and
 columns being the obvious examples.
>>> What's obvious about it?  In particular, I should think that ADD OR
>>> REPLACE COLUMN would usefully be defined as "ADD if no such column,
>>> else ALTER COLUMN as necessary to match this spec".  Dropping the
>>> ALTER part of that has no benefit except to lazy implementors; it
>>> certainly is not more useful to users if they can't be sure of the
>>> column properties after issuing the command.
>>
>> Actually, that's a good idea.  But how will you handle tables?
>
> What do you mean?

Well, how would you define CREATE OR REPLACE TABLE?  I think that
doesn't make much sense, which is why I think CREATE IF NOT EXISTS is
a reasonable approach.

...Robert

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Re: [HACKERS] Add column if not exists (CINE)

2010-04-28 Thread Tom Lane
Robert Haas  writes:
> Actually, that's a good idea.  But how will you handle tables?

Well, tables are a special case, mainly because it's not clear how to
avoid accidentally throwing away data.  (In particular if some column in
the existing table isn't there in the new definition.  It's a bit scary
to just drop the column, IMO.)  I don't see that that argument applies
to doing an automatic ALTER COLUMN, though, especially since the only
column type alterations that will go through without a USING clause are
reasonably straightforward.

regards, tom lane

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Re: [HACKERS] Add column if not exists (CINE)

2010-04-28 Thread Andrew Dunstan



Robert Haas wrote:

On Wed, Apr 28, 2010 at 11:20 AM, Tom Lane  wrote:
  

Robert Haas  writes:


I don't believe you are fairly stating the consensus from previous
discussion and I believe that you are actually in the minority on this
one.  I agree that we probably don't need to support this for object
types for which CREATE OR REPLACE is available or can be made
available, but that isn't feasible for all object types - tables and
columns being the obvious examples.
  

What's obvious about it?  In particular, I should think that ADD OR
REPLACE COLUMN would usefully be defined as "ADD if no such column,
else ALTER COLUMN as necessary to match this spec".  Dropping the
ALTER part of that has no benefit except to lazy implementors; it
certainly is not more useful to users if they can't be sure of the
column properties after issuing the command.



Actually, that's a good idea.  But how will you handle tables?


  


I think I Iike Heikki's suggestion better, to error out if the object 
exists but the properties differ. At least I'd like an option for that.


cheers

andrew

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Re: [HACKERS] Add column if not exists (CINE)

2010-04-28 Thread Heikki Linnakangas
Robert Haas wrote:
> On Wed, Apr 28, 2010 at 11:20 AM, Tom Lane  wrote:
>> Robert Haas  writes:
>>> I don't believe you are fairly stating the consensus from previous
>>> discussion and I believe that you are actually in the minority on this
>>> one.  I agree that we probably don't need to support this for object
>>> types for which CREATE OR REPLACE is available or can be made
>>> available, but that isn't feasible for all object types - tables and
>>> columns being the obvious examples.
>> What's obvious about it?  In particular, I should think that ADD OR
>> REPLACE COLUMN would usefully be defined as "ADD if no such column,
>> else ALTER COLUMN as necessary to match this spec".  Dropping the
>> ALTER part of that has no benefit except to lazy implementors; it
>> certainly is not more useful to users if they can't be sure of the
>> column properties after issuing the command.
> 
> Actually, that's a good idea.  But how will you handle tables?

What do you mean?

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Re: [HACKERS] Add column if not exists (CINE)

2010-04-28 Thread Robert Haas
On Wed, Apr 28, 2010 at 11:20 AM, Tom Lane  wrote:
> Robert Haas  writes:
>> I don't believe you are fairly stating the consensus from previous
>> discussion and I believe that you are actually in the minority on this
>> one.  I agree that we probably don't need to support this for object
>> types for which CREATE OR REPLACE is available or can be made
>> available, but that isn't feasible for all object types - tables and
>> columns being the obvious examples.
>
> What's obvious about it?  In particular, I should think that ADD OR
> REPLACE COLUMN would usefully be defined as "ADD if no such column,
> else ALTER COLUMN as necessary to match this spec".  Dropping the
> ALTER part of that has no benefit except to lazy implementors; it
> certainly is not more useful to users if they can't be sure of the
> column properties after issuing the command.

Actually, that's a good idea.  But how will you handle tables?

...Robert

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Re: [HACKERS] Add column if not exists (CINE)

2010-04-28 Thread Heikki Linnakangas
Tom Lane wrote:
> Robert Haas  writes:
>> I don't believe you are fairly stating the consensus from previous
>> discussion and I believe that you are actually in the minority on this
>> one.  I agree that we probably don't need to support this for object
>> types for which CREATE OR REPLACE is available or can be made
>> available, but that isn't feasible for all object types - tables and
>> columns being the obvious examples.
> 
> What's obvious about it?  In particular, I should think that ADD OR
> REPLACE COLUMN would usefully be defined as "ADD if no such column,
> else ALTER COLUMN as necessary to match this spec".  Dropping the
> ALTER part of that has no benefit except to lazy implementors; it
> certainly is not more useful to users if they can't be sure of the
> column properties after issuing the command.

Right. A trivial implementation of CREATE OR REPLACE is to create the
object if it doesn't exist, do nothing if it exists already and is
identical to the new definition, and throw an error if it's not
identical. That covers the same use case as CREATE IF NOT EXISTS, but
you know what the state is after a successful execution, is easy to
implement, and is in line with the existing CREATE OR REPLACE commands.
And can be extended in the future to alter the existing object instead
of throwing an error.

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Re: [HACKERS] Add column if not exists (CINE)

2010-04-28 Thread Tom Lane
Robert Haas  writes:
> I don't believe you are fairly stating the consensus from previous
> discussion and I believe that you are actually in the minority on this
> one.  I agree that we probably don't need to support this for object
> types for which CREATE OR REPLACE is available or can be made
> available, but that isn't feasible for all object types - tables and
> columns being the obvious examples.

What's obvious about it?  In particular, I should think that ADD OR
REPLACE COLUMN would usefully be defined as "ADD if no such column,
else ALTER COLUMN as necessary to match this spec".  Dropping the
ALTER part of that has no benefit except to lazy implementors; it
certainly is not more useful to users if they can't be sure of the
column properties after issuing the command.

regards, tom lane

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Re: [HACKERS] Add column if not exists (CINE)

2010-04-28 Thread Robert Haas
On Wed, Apr 28, 2010 at 9:58 AM, Tom Lane  wrote:
> Andrew Dunstan  writes:
>> Takahiro Itagaki wrote:
>>> But before developing, we need to decide how to handle an added object
>>> that has the same name but has different definitions.
>
>> The OP explicitly stated that in his opinion nothing should be done in
>> such cases. That's a defensible position, in the case of objects such as
>> tables that must be unique by name (e.g. tables).  But what would we do
>> about objects where the name could be overloaded?
>
> Even if it's defensible, the consensus position so far has been that
> it's a bad design.  Every time we've looked at this, we have concluded
> that CREATE OR REPLACE semantics are considerably safer to use, because
> there is no question what the state of the object is afterwards.  That
> argument is just as valid for a column as for anything larger.
>
> AFAICS, the only excuse CINE has for living is that (people think)
> it would take less work to implement.

I don't believe you are fairly stating the consensus from previous
discussion and I believe that you are actually in the minority on this
one.  I agree that we probably don't need to support this for object
types for which CREATE OR REPLACE is available or can be made
available, but that isn't feasible for all object types - tables and
columns being the obvious examples.

...Robert

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Re: [HACKERS] Add column if not exists (CINE)

2010-04-28 Thread Ross J. Reedstrom
On Tue, Apr 27, 2010 at 08:18:13PM -0400, Robert Haas wrote:
> On Tue, Apr 27, 2010 at 6:45 PM, Kjell Rune Skaaraas  
> wrote:
[snip]
> > I saw some indications that this might be a minority opinion, well I would 
> > like to cast a vote FOR this functionality. The workarounds are ugly, the 
> > solution simple and while I agree it's possible to misuse it, my opinion is 
> > that you shouldn't become a surgeon if you can't handle a scalpel. In this 
> > case I get the feeling I'm reading instructions on how to do surgery with a 
> > butter knife because we don't dare hand out anything sharper.
> 
> I've already said my piece on this, but I couldn't agree more.  Well
> said, and your use case is exactly the one I want it for.
> 

+1 (Scribbles down the phrase "instructions on how to do surgery with a
butter knife because we don't dare hand out anything sharper" for future
repurposing)

Ross
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Re: [HACKERS] Add column if not exists (CINE)

2010-04-28 Thread Tom Lane
Andrew Dunstan  writes:
> Takahiro Itagaki wrote:
>> But before developing, we need to decide how to handle an added object
>> that has the same name but has different definitions. 

> The OP explicitly stated that in his opinion nothing should be done in 
> such cases. That's a defensible position, in the case of objects such as 
> tables that must be unique by name (e.g. tables).  But what would we do 
> about objects where the name could be overloaded?

Even if it's defensible, the consensus position so far has been that
it's a bad design.  Every time we've looked at this, we have concluded
that CREATE OR REPLACE semantics are considerably safer to use, because
there is no question what the state of the object is afterwards.  That
argument is just as valid for a column as for anything larger.

AFAICS, the only excuse CINE has for living is that (people think)
it would take less work to implement.

regards, tom lane

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Re: [HACKERS] Add column if not exists (CINE)

2010-04-28 Thread Andrew Dunstan



Takahiro Itagaki wrote:

Kjell Rune Skaaraas  wrote:

  

I've been reading the earlier threads at:
http://archives.postgresql.org/pgsql-hackers/2009-05/thrd7.php#00252
http://archives.postgresql.org/pgsql-hackers/2005-10/thrd4.php#00632
and I'm not sure I have anything that substantially new to add but:

I saw some indications that this might be a minority opinion,
well I would like to cast a vote FOR this functionality.



+1 for CINE, just because MySQL supports it.
  


MySQL compatibility has never been our aim. We should adopt ideas from 
other projects because they are good, not just because they are there.


That doesn't mean I don't think this is a good idea.


But before developing, we need to decide how to handle an added object
that has the same name but has different definitions. 
  


The OP explicitly stated that in his opinion nothing should be done in 
such cases. That's a defensible position, in the case of objects such as 
tables that must be unique by name (e.g. tables).  But what would we do 
about objects where the name could be overloaded? Since we would 
presumably want to do this for all (or almost all) of our CREATE/ADD 
commands, we'd need a policy on those.

Also, developers should consider not only ADD COLUMN but also other
CREATE or ADD commands. The patch will be large, including documentation
adjustments in many places -- it would be hard work.


  


I can speak with some experience on this at least. :-) I don't see that 
it would be a heck of a lot bigger than the DROP IF EXISTS cases, which 
after the first few had been done were not hard, merely tedious to do :-)


cheers

andrew


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Re: [HACKERS] Add column if not exists (CINE)

2010-04-27 Thread Takahiro Itagaki

Kjell Rune Skaaraas  wrote:

> I've been reading the earlier threads at:
> http://archives.postgresql.org/pgsql-hackers/2009-05/thrd7.php#00252
> http://archives.postgresql.org/pgsql-hackers/2005-10/thrd4.php#00632
> and I'm not sure I have anything that substantially new to add but:
> 
> I saw some indications that this might be a minority opinion,
> well I would like to cast a vote FOR this functionality.

+1 for CINE, just because MySQL supports it.

But before developing, we need to decide how to handle an added object
that has the same name but has different definitions. 

Also, developers should consider not only ADD COLUMN but also other
CREATE or ADD commands. The patch will be large, including documentation
adjustments in many places -- it would be hard work.

Regards,
---
Takahiro Itagaki
NTT Open Source Software Center



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Re: [HACKERS] Add column if not exists (CINE)

2010-04-27 Thread Robert Haas
On Tue, Apr 27, 2010 at 6:45 PM, Kjell Rune Skaaraas  wrote:
> Hello,
>
> I've been reading the earlier threads at:
> http://archives.postgresql.org/pgsql-hackers/2009-05/thrd7.php#00252
> http://archives.postgresql.org/pgsql-hackers/2005-10/thrd4.php#00632
> and I'm not sure I have anything that substantially new to add but:
>
> 1. I can't see there's an unambiguity about what the syntax would do. It is 
> IF NOT EXISTS, not IF NOT LIKE. Anyone who shoots themselves in the foot by 
> calling a CINE and thinking that a preexisting differently defined column is 
> magically converted deserves it. Either it should act exactly like the 
> non-CINE command, or do nothing at all as if the statement wasn't there.
>
> 2. The use case is pretty clear to me - flexible scripts that'll bring all 
> earlier database versions to the latest schema. I've been experimenting in 
> 9.0 alpha with calling DROP CONSTRAINT IF EXISTS then ADD CONSTRAINT with 
> named constants for a CINE effect. which as a side effect will correct any 
> updated constraints too - and it works great. Unfortunately DROP COLUMN IF 
> EXISTS then ADD COLUMN has the side effect of deleting all the data, so 
> that's hardly usable.
>
> I saw some indications that this might be a minority opinion, well I would 
> like to cast a vote FOR this functionality. The workarounds are ugly, the 
> solution simple and while I agree it's possible to misuse it, my opinion is 
> that you shouldn't become a surgeon if you can't handle a scalpel. In this 
> case I get the feeling I'm reading instructions on how to do surgery with a 
> butter knife because we don't dare hand out anything sharper.

I've already said my piece on this, but I couldn't agree more.  Well
said, and your use case is exactly the one I want it for.

...Robert

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[HACKERS] Add column if not exists (CINE)

2010-04-27 Thread Kjell Rune Skaaraas
Hello,

I've been reading the earlier threads at:
http://archives.postgresql.org/pgsql-hackers/2009-05/thrd7.php#00252
http://archives.postgresql.org/pgsql-hackers/2005-10/thrd4.php#00632
and I'm not sure I have anything that substantially new to add but:

1. I can't see there's an unambiguity about what the syntax would do. It is IF 
NOT EXISTS, not IF NOT LIKE. Anyone who shoots themselves in the foot by 
calling a CINE and thinking that a preexisting differently defined column is 
magically converted deserves it. Either it should act exactly like the non-CINE 
command, or do nothing at all as if the statement wasn't there.

2. The use case is pretty clear to me - flexible scripts that'll bring all 
earlier database versions to the latest schema. I've been experimenting in 9.0 
alpha with calling DROP CONSTRAINT IF EXISTS then ADD CONSTRAINT with named 
constants for a CINE effect. which as a side effect will correct any updated 
constraints too - and it works great. Unfortunately DROP COLUMN IF EXISTS then 
ADD COLUMN has the side effect of deleting all the data, so that's hardly 
usable.

I saw some indications that this might be a minority opinion, well I would like 
to cast a vote FOR this functionality. The workarounds are ugly, the solution 
simple and while I agree it's possible to misuse it, my opinion is that you 
shouldn't become a surgeon if you can't handle a scalpel. In this case I get 
the feeling I'm reading instructions on how to do surgery with a butter knife 
because we don't dare hand out anything sharper.

Regards,
Kjell Rune Skaaraas



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