Ray O'Donnell schrieb am 22.04.2019 um 17:30:
I'm probably doing something silly.... I'm migrating data from one
database table to another, where the old table used a SERIAL primary
key and the new one uses GENERATED BY DEFAULT AS IDENTITY. Having
loaded the data into the new table, I need to reset the underlying
sequence so that it picks up from the highest existing value.

I'm using PostgreSQL 11.2 on Debian 9.

I've tried:

=# alter table orders alter column order_id restart with (
select max(order_id) + 1 from orders);

ERROR:  syntax error at or near "("
LINE 1: ...r table orders alter column order_id restart with (select ma...


What am I missing?

I should add that this is part of a larger migration script; otherwise I could 
just do it by hand the command line.

As you noticed, an identity column is backed by a sequence, just like a serial 
column, so you can use setval() to sync the sequence.

To get the name of the sequence you can also use pg_get_serial_sequence() 
(despite its name):


   select setval(pg_get_serial_sequence('orders', 'order_id'), (select 
max(order_id) from x));

Thomas



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