Summary: in this tutorial, you will learn how to use the PostgreSQL ALTER TRIGGER
statement to rename a trigger.
Introduction to PostgreSQL ALTER TRIGGER statement
The ALTER TRIGGER
statement allows you to rename a trigger. The following shows the syntax of the ALTER TRIGGER
statement:
ALTER TRIGGER trigger_name
ON table_name
RENAME TO new_trigger_name;
In this syntax:
- First, specify the name of the trigger that you want to rename after the
ALTER TRIGGER
keyword. - Second, specify the name of the table associated with the trigger after the
ON
keyword. - Third, specify the new name of the trigger after the
RENAME TO
keyword.
PostgreSQL ALTER TRIGGER example
First, create new table called employees
:
DROP TABLE IF EXISTS employees;
CREATE TABLE employees(
employee_id INT GENERATED ALWAYS AS IDENTITY,
first_name VARCHAR(50) NOT NULL,
last_name VARCHAR(50) NOT NULL,
salary decimal(11,2) not null default 0,
PRIMARY KEY(employee_id)
);
Second, create a function that raises an exception if the new salary is greater than the old one 100%:
CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION check_salary()
RETURNS TRIGGER
LANGUAGE PLPGSQL
AS
$$
BEGIN
IF (NEW.salary - OLD.salary) / OLD.salary >= 1 THEN
RAISE 'The salary increment cannot that high.';
END IF;
RETURN NEW;
END;
$$
Third, create a before update trigger that executes the check_salary()
function before updating the salary.
CREATE TRIGGER before_update_salary
BEFORE UPDATE
ON employees
FOR EACH ROW
EXECUTE PROCEDURE check_salary();
Fourth, insert a new row into the employees
table:
INSERT INTO employees(first_name, last_name, salary)
VALUES('John','Doe',100000);
Fifth, update the salary of the employee id 1:
UPDATE employees
SET salary = 200000
WHERE employee_id = 1;
The trigger was fired and issued the following error:
ERROR: The salary increment cannot that high.
CONTEXT: PL/pgSQL function check_salary() line 4 at RAISE
SQL state: P0001
It works as expected.
Finally, use the ALTER TRIGGER
statement to rename the before_update_salary
trigger to salary_before_update
:
ALTER TRIGGER before_update_salary
ON employees
RENAME TO salary_before_update;
If you use psql tool, you can view all triggers associated with a table using the \dS
command:
\dS employees
Notice that the letter S
is uppercase.
Replacing triggers
PostgreSQL doesn’t support the OR REPLACE
statement that allows you to modify the trigger definition like the function that will be executed when the trigger is fired.
In order to do so, you can use the DROP TRIGGER
and CREATE TRIGGER
statements. You can also wrap these statements in a transaction.
The following example illustrates how to change the check_salary
function of the salary_before_update
trigger to validate_salary
:
BEGIN;
DROP TRIGGER IF EXISTS salary_before_update;
CREATE TRIGGER salary_before_udpate
BEFORE UPDATE
ON employees
FOR EACH ROW
EXECUTE PROCEDURE validate_salary();
COMMIT;
Summary
- Use the
ALTER TRIGGER
statement to rename a trigger. - Use the pair of the
DROP TRIGGER
andCREATE TRIGGER
statements to replace a trigger by a new one.
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