On 2/7/23 06:09, Philip Semanchuk wrote:


On Feb 7, 2023, at 3:30 AM, Laurenz Albe <laurenz.a...@cybertec.at> wrote:

On Mon, 2023-02-06 at 12:04 -0500, Philip Semanchuk wrote:
I have a column defined GENERATED ALWAYS AS {my_expression} STORED. I’d like to 
change the
{my_expression} part. After reading the documentation for ALTER TABLE
(https://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/sql-altertable.html) and trying a few 
things that
resulted in syntax errors, there doesn’t seem to be a way to alter the column’s 
GENERATED
expression in place. It seems like my only option is to drop and re-add the 
column.
Is that correct?

I think that is correct.  But changing the expression would mean rewriting the 
column
anyway.  The only downside is that a dropped column remains in the table, and 
no even
a VACUUM (FULL) will get rid of it.

Thanks for the confirmation. I hadn’t realized that the column would remain in 
the table even after a DROP + VACUUM FULL. I’m curious — its presence as a 
deleted column doesn't  affect performance in any meaningful way, does it?

From docs:

https://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/sql-altertable.html

"The DROP COLUMN form does not physically remove the column, but simply makes it invisible to SQL operations. Subsequent insert and update operations in the table will store a null value for the column. Thus, dropping a column is quick but it will not immediately reduce the on-disk size of your table, as the space occupied by the dropped column is not reclaimed. The space will be reclaimed over time as existing rows are updated.

To force immediate reclamation of space occupied by a dropped column, you can execute one of the forms of ALTER TABLE that performs a rewrite of the whole table. This results in reconstructing each row with the dropped column replaced by a null value."


In this case we have the option of dropping and re-creating the table entirely, 
and that's probably what I'll do.

Cheers
Philip


--
Adrian Klaver
adrian.kla...@aklaver.com



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