On Mon, 2006-09-18 at 19:47 -0300, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Hi,
> 
> I'm trying to create a table with a PRIMARY KEY. The CREATE statement looks
> like this:
> 
> CREATE TABLE  "projects" (
>   "project_id" serial,
>   "username" varchar(30) NOT NULL default '',
>   "project_name" varchar(30) NOT NULL default '',
>   PRIMARY KEY  ("project_id")
> ) ;
> 
> The problem is that sometimes, I would say 1 in 10 tries, when I use a INSERT
> command I get the following error:
> 
> "duplicate key violates unique constraint"
> 
> The INSERT query is that:
> "INSERT INTO projects (\"project_name\", \"username\") VALUES 
> ('$project_name',
> '$username')";
> 

That INSERT statement will not cause a unique constraint violation. Are
you sure that is the statement causing the problem? Are there any rules
or triggers that may modify the behavior of that INSERT?

I suggest you turn on query logging, which you can do by setting the
configuration variable "log_statement" (found in postgresql.conf) to
'all'. Then you can see exactly what queries are being sent and which
one causes the error.

Regards,
        Jeff Davis



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