On 06/02/07 13:35, Jasbinder Singh Bali wrote:
On 6/2/07, Michael Glaesemann <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:


On Jun 2, 2007, at 11:08 , Harpreet Dhaliwal wrote:

> Whats so novel about postgresql here?
> This would happen in any RDBMS. right?
> You induced divide by zero exception that crashed the whole
> transaction and it did not create the table bar?

[Please don't top-post. It makes the discussion hard to follow.]

I used the divide by zero to raise an error to show that both the
CREATE TABLE and the INSERT were rolled back when the transaction
failed. If there's another definition of transactional DDL, I'd like
to know what it is.

Michael Glaesemann
grzm seespotcode net


This is what happens in every RDBMS. Whats so special about postgres then?

But it's NOT what happens in every RDBMS. Oracle implicitly executes a COMMIT after every DDL statement.

--
Ron Johnson, Jr.
Jefferson LA  USA

Give a man a fish, and he eats for a day.
Hit him with a fish, and he goes away for good!


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