Hanne Moa schrieb am 19.10.2016 um 10:31:
>> You can use the following statement to find the sequences that a table uses:
>>
> Thanks. This assumes that there is only one nextval per table though.
> While this holds for the database we need this on right now, it's not a
> sufficiently generic solution. How do I, for the sake of paranoia,
> specify a column?

No, it will return that for all columns in that table that have a sequence 
default
If you add "col.attname" to the select list you can see each column.

    create sequence s1;
    create sequence s2;
    create table t1 (id1 integer default nextval('s1'), id2 integer default 
nextval('s2'), id3 integer default nextval('s2'));

    select sn.nspname as sequence_schema, s.relname as sequence_name, 
col.attname
    from pg_class s
      join pg_namespace sn on sn.oid = s.relnamespace 
      join pg_depend d on d.refobjid = s.oid and 
d.refclassid='pg_class'::regclass 
      join pg_attrdef ad on ad.oid = d.objid and d.classid = 
'pg_attrdef'::regclass
      join pg_attribute col on col.attrelid = ad.adrelid and col.attnum = 
ad.adnum
      join pg_class tbl on tbl.oid = ad.adrelid 
      join pg_namespace n on n.oid = tbl.relnamespace 
    where s.relkind = 'S' 
      and d.deptype in ('a', 'n')  
      and n.nspname = 'public'
      and tbl.relname = 't1'

Returns

    sequence_schema | sequence_name | attname
    ----------------+---------------+--------
    public          | s1            | id1    
    public          | s2            | id2    
    public          | s2            | id3    


Thomas



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