"Zeugswetter Andreas DCP SD" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > Imho the op should only choose that path if he wants to fill the table > before adding the inheritance. It makes no sense to add columns with default > values to existing rows of the child table, especially when you inherit the > defaults from the parent.
We already have ALTER TABLE ADD COLUMN working for columns with defaults, so I think that horse has left the barn. It was awfully annoying for users when that feature was missing. Any non-linearities in the user interface like this end up being surprises and annoyances for users. In any case there's a separate problem with defaults. We want to guarantee that you can DROP a partition and then re-ADD it and the result should be a noop at least from the user's perspective. We can't do that unless I compromise on my idea that adding a child after the fact should be equivalent to creating it with the parent in the definition. When creating a table with the parent in the definition CREATE TABLE will copy the parent's default if the default in the child is NULL: postgres=# create table b (i integer default null) inherits (a); NOTICE: merging column "i" with inherited definition CREATE TABLE postgres=# \d b Table "public.b" Column | Type | Modifiers --------+---------+----------- i | integer | default 2 Inherits: a The problem is that it's possible to fiddle with the defaults after the table is created, including dropping a default. If you drop the default and then DROP-ADD the partition it would be a problem if the default magically reappeared. The only way to allow DROP then ADD to be a noop would be to accept whatever the DEFAULT is on the child table without complaint. And I'm not just saying that because it's the easiest for me to implement :) This is already a factor for NOT NULL constraints too. When adding a parent after the fact your NULLable column can magically become NOT NULL if the parent is NOT NULL. But for adding a partition after the fact we can't just change the column to NOT NULL because there may already be NULL rows in the table. We could do a pass-3 check for the NOT NULL constraint but if we're not doing other schema changes then it makes more sense to just refuse to add such a table. -- greg ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- TIP 3: Have you checked our extensive FAQ? http://www.postgresql.org/docs/faq