On 22.07.24 12:53, jian he wrote:
another bug?
drop table gtest12v;
CREATE TABLE gtest12v (a int PRIMARY KEY, b bigint, c int GENERATED
ALWAYS AS (b * 2) VIRTUAL);
insert into gtest12v (a,b) values (11, 22147483647);
table gtest12v;
insert ok, but select error:
ERROR: integer out of range
should insert fail?
I think this is the correct behavior.
There has been a previous discussion:
https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/2e3d5147-16f8-af0f-00ab-4c72cafc896f%402ndquadrant.com
CREATE TABLE gtest12v (a int PRIMARY KEY, b bigint, c int GENERATED
ALWAYS AS (b * 2) VIRTUAL);
CREATE SEQUENCE sequence_testx OWNED BY gtest12v.c;
seems to work. But I am not sure if there are any corner cases that
make it not work.
just want to raise this issue.
I don't think this matters. You can make a sequence owned by any
column, even if that column doesn't have a default that invokes the
sequence. So nonsensical setups are possible, but they are harmless.