9.17. Sequence Manipulation Functions
This section describes functions for operating on sequence objects , also called sequence generators or just sequences. Sequence objects are special single-row tables created with CREATE SEQUENCE . Sequence objects are commonly used to generate unique identifiers for rows of a table. The sequence functions, listed in Table 9.50 , provide simple, multiuser-safe methods for obtaining successive sequence values from sequence objects.
Table 9.50. Sequence Functions
Function Description |
---|
Advances the sequence object to its next value and returns that value.
This is done atomically: even if multiple sessions
execute
This function requires
|
Sets the sequence object's current value, and optionally
its
SELECT setval('myseq', 42); Next
The result returned by
This function requires
|
Returns the value most recently obtained
by
This function requires
|
Returns the value most recently returned by
This function requires
|
Caution
To avoid blocking concurrent transactions that obtain numbers from
the same sequence, a
nextval
operation is never
rolled back; that is, once a value has been fetched it is considered
used and will not be returned again. This is true even if the
surrounding transaction later aborts, or if the calling query ends
up not using the value. For example an
INSERT
with
an
ON CONFLICT
clause will compute the to-be-inserted
tuple, including doing any required
nextval
calls, before detecting any conflict that would cause it to follow
the
ON CONFLICT
rule instead. Such cases will leave
unused
"
holes
"
in the sequence of assigned values.
Thus,
PostgreSQL
sequence
objects
cannot be used to obtain
"
gapless
"
sequences
.
Likewise, any sequence state changes made by
setval
are not undone if the transaction rolls back.
The sequence to be operated on by a sequence function is specified by
a
regclass
argument, which is simply the OID of the sequence in the
pg_class
system catalog. You do not have to look up the
OID by hand, however, since the
regclass
data type's input
converter will do the work for you. See
Section 8.19
for details.