How to create sequence if not exists
Postgres 9.5 or later
IF NOT EXISTS
was added to CREATE SEQUENCE
in Postgres 9.5. That's the simple solution now:
CREATE SEQUENCE IF NOT EXISTS myschema.myseq;
But consider details of the outdated answer anyway ...
And you know about serial
or IDENTITY
columns, right?
Postgres 9.4 or older
Sequences share the namespace with several other table-like objects. The manual:
The sequence name must be distinct from the name of any other sequence, table, index, view, or foreign table in the same schema.
Bold emphasis mine. So there are three cases:
- Name does not exist. -> Create sequence.
- Sequence with the same name exists. -> Do nothing? Any output? Any logging?
- Other conflicting object with the same name exists. -> Do something? Any output? Any logging?
Specify what to do in either case. A DO
statement could look like this:
DO$do$DECLARE _kind "char";BEGIN SELECT relkind FROM pg_class WHERE oid = 'myschema.myseq'::regclass -- sequence name, optionally schema-qualified INTO _kind; IF NOT FOUND THEN -- name is free CREATE SEQUENCE myschema.myseq; ELSIF _kind = 'S' THEN -- sequence exists -- do nothing? ELSE -- object name exists for different kind -- do something! END IF;END$do$;
Object types (relkind
) in pg_class
according to the manual:
r = ordinary table
i = index
S = sequence
v = view
m = materialized view
c = composite type
t = TOAST table
f = foreign table
Related:
I went a different route: just catch the exception:
DO$$BEGIN CREATE SEQUENCE myseq;EXCEPTION WHEN duplicate_table THEN -- do nothing, it's already thereEND$$ LANGUAGE plpgsql;
One nice benefit to this is that you don't need to worry about what your current schema is.
If you don't need to preserve the potentially existing sequence, you could just drop it and then recreate it:
DROP SEQUENCE IF EXISTS id_seq;CREATE SEQUENCE id_seq;