SERIAL and BIGSERIAL data types

Informix®

Informix supports the SERIAL, BIGSERIAL data types to produce automatic integer sequences:
  • SERIAL can produce 32 bit integers (INTEGER)
  • BIGSERIAL can produce 64 bit integers (BIGINT)
  • SERIAL8 is a synonym for BIGSERIAL
Steps to use serials with Informix:
  1. Create the table with a column using SERIAL, or BIGSERIAL.
  2. 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' )
  3. After INSERT, the new value of a SERIAL column is provided in sqlca.sqlerrd[2], while the new value of a BIGSERIAL value must be fetched with a SELECT 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:

SQL statement                                               Internal serial counter
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
CREATE TABLE tab ( pkey SERIAL, name VARCHAR(50) );                    0
INSERT INTO tab VALUES (  0, 'aaa' );                                  1
INSERT INTO tab VALUES ( 10, 'bbb' );                                 10
INSERT INTO tab VALUES (  0, 'ccc' );                                 11
DELETE FROM tab;                                                      11
INSERT INTO tab VALUES (  0, 'ddd' );                                 12

PostgreSQL

PostgreSQL provides native SERIAL and BIGSERIAL data types, which are similar to Informix SERIAL and BIGSERIAL types. However, native PostgreSQL serial types behave differently:

  • It is not possible to define a start value directly such as SERIAL(100). To modify the next generated serial, use the setval('sequence', value, true/false) SQL function. The name of the sequence can be found with the pg_get_serial_sequence(tabname, colname) SQL function.
  • Unlike Informix, no serial value will be generated when the value zero is specified for the serial column during the INSERT: The PostgreSQL native serial types are based on default values. To get an auto-incremented value, you must omit the serial column in the INSERT statement.
  • When a value is specified for the serial column in an INSERT, the underlying sequence will not be incremented. As result, by default, the next INSERT that does not specify the serial column may get a new sequence that was already inserted explicitly. In such case, the sequence must be reset with the setval() SQL function.
PostgreSQL identity columns:
  • Auto-incremented "identity" columns can be defined with
    GENERATED { ALWAYS | BY DEFAULT } AS IDENTITY [ ( sequence-options ) ]
  • A start value can be specified at table creation in the sequence-options with (START WITH start-value)
  • Specifying zero for the identity column during INSERT will not generate a new serial value. To get a new generated incremented value, the serial column must be omitted in the INSERT statement.
  • Specifying a non-zero value for the identity column during INSERT will not adapt the underlying sequence. This must be done manually with setval('sequence', value, true/false)

PostgreSQL sequences:

  • The purpose of sequences is to provide unique integer numbers.
  • To create a sequence, you must use the CREATE SEQUENCE statement:
    CREATE SEQUENCE tab1_seq START WITH 100;
  • To get a new sequence value, you must use the nextval() function:
    INSERT INTO tab1 VALUES ( nextval('tab1_seq'), ... )
  • To get the last generated number, PostgreSQL provides the currval() function:
    SELECT currval('tab1_seq')
  • To reset a sequence, use the setval('sequence', value, true/false) function:
    SELECT setval('tab1_seq',200,false);

See PostgreSQL documentation for more details about serial types and sequences features in this database engine.

Solution

Note:

For best SQL portability when using different types of databases, consider using sequences as described in Solution 3: Use native SEQUENCE database objects.

The Informix SERIAL and BIGSERIAL data types can be emulated with three different methods.

The method used to emulate serial types is defined by the ifxemul.datatype.serial.emulation FGLPROFILE parameter:
dbi.database.dbname.ifxemul.datatype.serial.emulation = {"native"|"regtable"|"trigseq"}
  • native: uses the native PostgreSQL serial data types (SERIAL or BIGSERIAL).
  • regtable: uses INSERT triggers with the SERIALREG table.
  • trigseq: uses INSERT triggers with sequences.

The default emulation technique is "native".

Important:

Do not mix a serial emulation modes: Choose one of the provided serial emulations for all the tables of the application database. Do note create the tables with a given serial emulation, and later switch to another serial emulation for INSERT statements. This is not supported.

None of the provided methods use PostgreSQL GENERATED ... AS IDENTITY columns: This feature does not bring sufficient added value compared to PostgreSQL native SERIAL and BIGSERIAL types.

For serial emulations using PostgreSQL sequences ("native" and "trigseq"), if the table with serial column is owned by another user, the current user must have sufficient privileges to use, query and modify the underlying sequence. To grant globally permissions on serial sequences in a given schema, use the following SQL commands:
-- For existing sequences
GRANT USAGE, SELECT, UPDATE
   ON ALL SEQUENCES IN SCHEMA public
      TO user-name;
-- For future created sequences (if needed)
ALTER DEFAULT PRIVILEGES IN SCHEMA public
   GRANT USAGE, SELECT, UPDATE ON SEQUENCES
      TO user-name;
The serial type emulation can be enabled or disabled with the following FGLPROFILE entries:
dbi.database.dbname.ifxemul.datatype.serial = {true|false}
dbi.database.dbname.ifxemul.datatype.serial8 = {true|false}
dbi.database.dbname.ifxemul.datatype.bigserial = {true|false}

Disabling automatic serial retrieval for sqlca.sqlerrd[2]

For Informix compatibility, when the SERIAL type emulation is active, the ODI drivers automatically execute another SQL query (or do a DB client API call when possible) after each INSERT statement, to get the last generated serial, and fill the sqlca.sqlerrd[2] register. This results in some overhead that can be avoided, if the sqlca.sqlerrd[2] register is not used by the program.

When serial emulation is required (to create temp tables with a serial column during program execution), and the sqlca.sqlerrd[2] register does not need to be filled, (typically because you use your own method to retrieve the last generated serial), you can set the ifxemul.datatype.serial.sqlerrd2 FGLPROFILE entry to false. This will avoid the automatic retrieval of last serial value to fill sqlca.sqlerrd[2]:

dbi.database.dbname.ifxemul.datatype.serial.sqlerrd2 = false
The above FGLPROFILE entry is useless, if Informix SERIAL type emulation is disabled with:
dbi.database.dbname.ifxemul.datatype.serial = false

See also db_get_last_serial().

Using the native serial emulation

The "native" mode is the default serial emulation mode, using the native PostgreSQL SERIAL or BIGSERIAL data type. In this mode, the original type name will be left untouched by the SQL Translator to get the PostgreSQL SERIAL/BIGSERIAL column types, based on sequences and the DEFAULT clause.

When creating a table with a serial column using start value, the PostgreSQL ODI driver will convert the Informix type (SERIAL(100)) to a PostgreSQL native type, without the start value (SERIAL), and after executing the CREATE TABLE statement, the driver will perform a call to the setval('sequence-name',start-value,false) SQL function, to reset the underlying sequence. As result, the next inserted row will get the serial value start-value.

INSERT statements that should generate an automatic serial must not use the serial column and value as NULL or zero: When using a NULL value explicity, PostgreSQL will report an non-null constraint error. When using zero, PostgreSQL will insert that value as is without incrementing the serial as Informix does.

When the Informix serial emulation is enabled, the PostgreSQL ODI driver will automatically add a RETURNING clause to the INSERT statements having a serial column. The purpose of that RETURNING clause is to fetch the new generate serial value, and reset the underlying sequence, if a serial value is explicitly provided and is greater than or equal to the last generate serial. Therefore, INSERT statements can specify an explicit value that is greater than zero, and the underlying sequence will be reset. When using the LOAD instruction, the sequence for native serial/bigserial columns will also be automatically reset.

If the serial emulation is disabled, or when inserting rows from outside a Genero program, the underlying sequence will not be reset by PostgreSQL when a value is specified explicitly. In such case, you need to manually reset the sequence with:
SELECT setval(pg_get_serial_sequence('[schema.]tabname','colname'),
       (SELECT MAX(colname) FROM tabname), true)
After an INSERT execution, the last generated SERIAL value can be found in the sqlca.sqlerrd[2] register, as an INTEGER. For BIGSERIAL columns, you need to execute the following query:
SELECT currval(pg_get_serial_sequence('[schema.]tabname','colname'));
Important:

If the PostgreSQL sequence was not yet used in the SQL session to generate a new serial number (typically because the INSERT specifies an explicit value for the serial column), the currval() function will produce an SQL error, that will cancel the current transaction. This problem does not occur using serial emulation and sqlca.sqlerrd[2]. Without serial emulation, or when using currval() to retrieve a BIGSERIAL value, make sure to call currval() only after an INSERT that does not provide a value for the serial column.

See also the PostgreSQL documentation for more details about the native serial types.

Using the regtable serial emulation

With the "regtable" mode, the SERIAL data type is emulated with a PostgreSQL INTEGER data type and INSERT triggers using the table SERIALREG, which is dedicated to sequence production. Similarly, BIGSERIAL is converted to BIGINT and INSERT trigger.

The triggers can be created manually during the application database installation procedure, or automatically from a BDL program: When a BDL program executes a CREATE [TEMP] TABLE with a SERIAL column, the database interface automatically converts the SERIAL/BIGSERIAL data types to INTEGER/BIGINT and dynamically creates the triggers.

With the "regtable" emulation, the SERIALREG table must be created as follows:

CREATE TABLE SERIALREG (
   TABLENAME VARCHAR(50) NOT NULL,
   LASTSERIAL DECIMAL(20,0) NOT NULL,
   PRIMARY KEY ( TABLENAME )
)
Make sure that other users can read from the SERIALREG table:
GRANT SELECT ON SERIALREG TO PUBLIC
Important:

The SERIALREG table must be created before the triggers. The serial production is based on the SERIALREG table which registers the last generated number for each table. If you delete rows of this table, sequences will restart at 1 and you will get unexpected data.

In database creation scripts, all SERIAL[(start-value)] data types must be converted to INTEGER data types and you must create one trigger for each table. 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 trigger creation command.

After an INSERT execution, the last generated SERIAL value can be found in the sqlca.sqlerrd[2] register, as an INTEGER. For BIGSERIAL, you need to query the SERIALREG table after the INSERT:
SELECT lastserial FROM serialreg WHERE tablename = 'tabname'
With this emulation mode, INSERT statements using NULL for the serial columns will produce a new serial value:
INSERT INTO tab ( col1, col2 ) VALUES ( NULL, 'data' )
This behavior is mandatory in order to support INSERT statements that do not use the serial column:
INSERT INTO tab (col2) VALUES ('data')

When the Informix serial emulation is enabled, the PostgreSQL ODI driver will automatically add a RETURNING clause to the INSERT statements having a serial column. The purpose of that RETURNING clause is to return the new generate serial value.

Check if your application uses tables with a SERIAL/BIGSERIAL column that can contain a NULL value. Consider removing the serial column from the INSERT statements.

Using the trigseq serial emulation

With "trigseq", the SERIAL data type is emulated with a PostgreSQL INTEGER data type and INSERT triggers using a sequence tablename_seq. Similarly, BIGSERIAL is converted to BIGINT and INSERT trigger.

The triggers can be created manually during the application database installation procedure, or automatically from a BDL program: When a BDL program executes a CREATE [TEMP] TABLE with a serial column, the database interface automatically converts the SERIAL/BIGSERIAL data types to INTEGER/BIGINT and dynamically creates the triggers.

In database creation scripts, all SERIAL[(start-value)] data types must be converted to INTEGER data types and you must create one trigger for each table. 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 trigger creation command.

After an INSERT execution, the last generated SERIAL value can be found in the sqlca.sqlerrd[2] register, as an INTEGER. For BIGSERIAL, you need to execute the following query:
SELECT currval('[schema.]tabname'_seq);
Important:

If the PostgreSQL sequence was not yet used in the SQL session to generate a new serial number (typically because the INSERT specifies an explicit value for the serial column), the currval() function will produce an SQL error, that will cancel the current transaction. This problem does not occur using serial emulation and sqlca.sqlerrd[2]. Without serial emulation, or when using currval() to retrieve a BIGSERIAL value, make sure to call currval() only after an INSERT that does not provide a value for the serial column.

With the "trigseq" emulation mode, INSERT statements using NULL for the serial column will produce a new serial value:
INSERT INTO tab ( col1, col2 ) VALUES ( NULL, 'data' )
This behavior is mandatory in order to support INSERT statements which do not use the serial column:
INSERT INTO tab (col2) VALUES ('data')

When the Informix serial emulation is enabled, the PostgreSQL ODI driver will automatically add a RETURNING clause to the INSERT statements having a serial column. The purpose of that RETURNING clause is to return the new generate serial value.

Check if your application uses tables with a SERIAL/BIGSERIAL column that can contain a NULL value. Consider removing the serial column from the INSERT statements.

Notes common to all serial emulation modes

Since sqlca.sqlerrd[2] is defined as an INTEGER, it cannot hold values from BIGSERIAL (BIGINT) auto incremented columns. If you are using BIGSERIAL columns, you must query the sequence pseudo-column currval() or fetch the LASTSERIAL column from the SERIALREG table if used.

Note:

The serial emulation assume that the same PostgreSQL schema is used when creating the tables and when executing the INSERT statements. Mixing or switching between PostgreSQL schemas is not supported.

For SQL portability, it is recommended to review INSERT statements to remove the serial column from the list.

For example, the following statement:

INSERT INTO tab (col1,col2) VALUES ( 0 , p_value )

can be converted to:

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

can be converted to:

INSERT INTO tab VALUES rec.* -- without parentheses, serial column is removed
Important:

When using the Static SQL INSERT and UPDATE syntax using record.* without parentheses, make sure that you database schema files contain information about serials: This information can be lost when extracting the schema from a PostgreSQL database which does not use native serial emulation. See Database Schema for more details about the serial flag in column type encoding (data type code must be 6)