Alvaro Herrera <alvhe...@2ndquadrant.com> writes:
> On 2019-Feb-09, Tom Lane wrote:
>> I think you're doing it to get rid of the INTERNAL dependency so that
>> deletion won't recurse across that, but why is that a good idea?  Needs
>> a comment at least.

> Yeah, it's deleting the INTERNAL dependency, because otherwise the
> trigger deletion is (correctly) forbidden, since the constraint depends
> on it.

Well, the question that's begged here is exactly why it's okay to remove
the trigger and dependency link despite the fact that the constraint needs
it.  I suppose the answer is that we'll subsequently insert a new trigger
implementing the same constraint (and internally-linked to it)?  That
information is what I'd like to have in the comment.

> Perhaps it'd be good to have it be more targetted: make sure it
> only deletes that dependency row and not any others that the trigger
> might have (though I don't have it shouldn't have any.  How could it?)  I'd do
> that by adding a new function

I'm not sure that'd be an improvement, especially in light of the
hazard that the trigger might somehow have acquired extension and/or
partition dependencies that'd also cause issues.

                        regards, tom lane

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