Determining the OID of a table in Postgres 9.1?
To get a table OID, cast to the object identifier type regclass
(while connected to the same DB):
SELECT 'mytbl'::regclass::oid;
This finds the first table (or view, etc.) with the given name along the search_path
or raises an exception if not found.
Schema-qualify the table name to remove the dependency on the search path:
SELECT 'myschema.mytbl'::regclass::oid;
In Postgres 9.4 or later you can also use to_regclass('myschema.mytbl')
, which doesn't raise an exception if the table is not found:
- How to check if a table exists in a given schema
Then you only need to query the catalog table pg_attribute
for the existence of the column:
SELECT TRUE AS col_exists
FROM pg_attribute
WHERE attrelid = 'myschema.mytbl'::regclass
AND attname = 'mycol'
AND NOT attisdropped -- no dropped (dead) columns
-- AND attnum > 0 -- no system columns (you may or may not want this)
The postgres catalog table pg_class
is what you should look at. There should be one row per table, with the table name in the column relname
, and the oid in the hidden column oid
.
You may also be interested in the pg_attribute
catalog table, which includes one row per table column.
See: http://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/static/catalog-pg-class.html and http://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/static/catalog-pg-attribute.html
SELECT oid FROM pg_class WHERE relname = 'tbl_name' AND relkind = 'r';