Tom Lane wrote:
>
> Ed Loehr <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> > Maybe someone can confirm what looks like a long-name-truncation bug in
> > 7.0.0?
>
> I see no bug here; it told you what name it planned to use for the
> sequence:
>
> > psql:/home/ed/pgbug:8: NOTICE: CREATE TABLE will create implicit
> > sequence 'process_state_subscripti_id_seq' for SERIAL column
> > 'process_state_subscription.id'
>
> so this is not surprising:
>
> > DROP SEQUENCE process_state_subscription_id_seq;
> > psql:/home/ed/pgbug:10: NOTICE: identifier
> > "process_state_subscription_id_seq" will be truncated to
> > "process_state_subscription_id_s"
> > psql:/home/ed/pgbug:10: ERROR: Relation
> > 'process_state_subscription_id_s' does not exist
>
> It's not a bug that the sequence name is formed with a rule more complex
> than "truncate table_field_seq at the right" ... if we did that, you'd
> have a problem with sequences for tables with names longer than 32
> characters ...
Hmmm. OK, I think I understand, but it sure makes for some ugliness in
guessing what the name of the SERIAL-generated sequence name will be in
order to drop it.
Is there a clean way I can bump the 32-char limit to something much
larger to support my verbosity? Maybe NAMEDATALEN in
src/include/postgres_ext.h? Assuming sufficient memory/disk, are there
other concerns about bumping it to, say, 64 or even 1024? It's cramping
my style.
Regards,
Ed Loehr
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