Re: foreign key locks, 2nd attempt
Vik Reykja <vikreykja@gmail.com>
From: Vik Reykja <vikreykja@gmail.com>
To: Kevin Grittner <Kevin.Grittner@wicourts.gov>
Cc: Alvaro Herrera <alvherre@commandprompt.com>, Simon Riggs <simon@2ndquadrant.com>, Noah Misch <noah@leadboat.com>, Pg Hackers <pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org>, Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us>
Date: 2012-02-25T01:06:49Z
Lists: pgsql-hackers
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On Thu, Feb 23, 2012 at 19:44, Kevin Grittner <Kevin.Grittner@wicourts.gov>wrote: > One of the problems that Florian was trying to address is that > people often have a need to enforce something with a lot of > similarity to a foreign key, but with more subtle logic than > declarative foreign keys support. One example would be the case > Robert has used in some presentations, where the manager column in > each row in a project table must contain the id of a row in a person > table *which has the project_manager boolean column set to TRUE*. > Short of using the new serializable transaction isolation level in > all related transactions, hand-coding enforcement of this useful > invariant through trigger code (or application code enforced through > some framework) is very tricky. The change to SELECT FOR UPDATE > that Florian was working on would make it pretty straightforward. > I'm not sure what Florian's patch does, but I've been trying to advocate syntax like the following for this exact scenario: foreign key (manager_id, true) references person (id, is_manager) Basically, allow us to use constants instead of field names as part of foreign keys. I have no idea what the implementation aspect of this is, but I need the user aspect of it and don't know the best way to get it.