SERIAL data types
Informix®
SERIAL
,
BIGSERIAL
data types to produce automatic integer sequences:SERIAL
can produce 32 bit integers (INTEGER
)BIGSERIAL
can produced 64 bit integers (BIGINT
)SERIAL8
is a synonym forBIGSERIAL
- Create the table with a column using
SERIAL
, orBIGSERIAL
. - To generate a new serial, no value or a zero value is specified in the
INSERT
statement:INSERT INTO tab1 ( c ) VALUES ( 'aa' ) INSERT INTO tab1 ( k, c ) VALUES ( 0, 'aa' )
- After
INSERT
, the new value of aSERIAL
column is provided inSQLCA.SQLERRD[2]
, while the new value of aBIGSERIAL
value must be fetched with aSELECT dbinfo('bigserial')
query.
Informix allows you to insert rows with a value
different from zero for a serial column. Using an explicit value will automatically increment the
internal serial counter, to avoid conflicts with future INSERT
statements that are
using a zero value:
CREATE TABLE tab ( k SERIAL); -- internal counter = 0
INSERT INTO tab VALUES ( 0 ); -- internal counter = 1
INSERT INTO tab VALUES ( 10 ); -- internal counter = 10
INSERT INTO tab VALUES ( 0 ); -- internal counter = 11
DELETE FROM tab; -- internal counter = 11
INSERT INTO tab VALUES ( 0 ); -- internal counter = 12
IBM® DB2®
IDENTITY
columns:CREATE TABLE tab ( k INTEGER GENERATED ALWAYS AS IDENTITY, name VARCHAR(50) )
To get the last generated IDENTITY
value after an INSERT
, DB2 provides the IDENTITY_VAL_LOCAL()
function.
SEQUENCES
:CREATE SEQUENCE sq1 START WITH 100
NEXTVAL FOR
operator:INSERT INTO table VALUES ( NEXTVAL FOR sq1, ... )
PREVVAL FOR
operator:SELECT PREVVAL FOR sq1 ...
Solution
To emulate Informix serials with IBM DB2, you can use
IDENTITY
columns (1), or insert triggers using sequences (2). The first solution is
faster, but does not allow explicit serial value specification in insert statements; the second
solution is slower but allows explicit serial value specification.
IDENTITY
columns instead to get best performances.SERIAL
types is defined by the
ifxemul.datatype.serial.emulation
FGLPROFILE
parameter:dbi.database.dbname.ifxemul.datatype.serial.emulation = {"native"|"trigseq"}
- native: uses
IDENTITY
columns. - trigseq: uses insert triggers with sequences.
The default emulation technique is "native
".
dbi.database.dbname.ifxemul.datatype.serial = {true|false}
dbi.database.dbname.ifxemul.datatype.serial8 = {true|false}
dbi.database.dbname.ifxemul.datatype.bigserial = {true|false}
Using the native
serial emulation
In database creation scripts, all SERIAL[(n)]
data types must be converted by
hand to:
INTEGER GENERATED ALWAYS AS IDENTITY[( START WITH n, INCREMENT BY 1)]
SERIAL8
and BIGSERIAL[(n)]
types must be converted
to:BIGINT GENERATED ALWAYS AS IDENTITY[( START WITH n, INCREMENT BY 1)]
Tables created from the BDL programs can use the SERIAL
data type: When a BDL
program executes a CREATE [TEMP] TABLE
with a SERIAL
column, the
database interface automatically converts the SERIAL[(n)]
data type to an
IDENTITY
specification.
In BDL, the new generated SERIAL
value is available from the
SQLCA.SQLERRD[2]
variable. The database interface performs a call to the
IDENTITY_VAL_LOCAL()
function. However, SQLCA.SQLERRD[2]
is
defined as an INTEGER
, it cannot hold values from BIGINT
identity
columns. If you are using BIGINT IDENTITY
columns, you must use the
IDENTITY_VAL_LOCAL()
function.
IDENTITY
columns, it is mandatory to convert
all INSERT statements to remove the SERIAL
column from the list. For example, the
following statement:INSERT INTO tab (col1,col2) VALUES (0, p_value)
INSERT INTO tab (col2) VALUES (p_value)
Static SQL INSERT
using records defined from the schema file must also be
reviewed:
DEFINE rec LIKE tab.*
INSERT INTO tab VALUES ( rec.* ) -- will use the serial column
INSERT INTO tab VALUES rec.* -- without parentheses, serial column is removed
Using the trigseq
serial emulation
In database creation scripts, all SERIAL[(n)]
data types must be converted to
INTEGER
data types, SERIAL8/BIGSERIAL
must be converted to
BIGINT
, and you must create a sequence and a trigger for each table using a
SERIAL
.
To know how to write those triggers, you can create a small Genero program that creates a table
with a SERIAL
column. Set the FGLSQLDEBUG environment variable and run the program.
The debug output will show you the native SQL commands to create the sequence and the trigger.
Tables created from the BDL programs can use the SERIAL
data type: When a BDL
program executes a CREATE [TEMP] TABLE
with a SERIAL
column, the
database interface automatically converts the SERIAL[(n)]
data type to
INTEGER
and creates the sequence and the insert trigger.
IBM DB2 performs
NOT NULL
data controls before the execution of triggers. If the serial column must
be NOT NULL
(for example, because it is part of the primary key), you cannot
specify a NULL
value for that column in INSERT statements.
INSERT INTO tab VALUES (NULL,p_value)
INSERT INTO tab (col2) VALUES (p_value)
- IBM DB2 triggers are not automatically dropped when the corresponding table is dropped. They become inoperative instead. Database administrators must take care of this behavior when managing schemas.
- With IBM DB2,
INSERT
statements usingNULL
for theSERIAL
column will produce a new serial value:INSERT INTO tab ( col_serial, col_data ) VALUES ( NULL, 'data' )
This behavior is mandatory in order to supportINSERT
statements which do not use the serial column:INSERT INTO tab (col_data) VALUES ('data')
Check if your application uses tables with a
SERIAL
column that can contain aNULL
value. - With DB2, trigger creation is not allowed on
temporary tables. Therefore, the "
trigseq
" method cannot work with temporary tables using serials.