UPDATE with ORDER BY
UPDATE
with ORDER BY
As to the question raised ion the title: There is no ORDER BY
in an SQL UPDATE
command. Postgres updates rows in arbitrary order. But you have (limited) options to decide whether constraints are checked after each row, after each statement or at the end of the transaction. You can avoid duplicate key violations for intermediate states with a DEFERRABLE
constraint.
I am quoting what we worked out under this question:
- Constraint defined DEFERRABLE INITIALLY IMMEDIATE is still DEFERRED?
NOT DEFERRED
constraints are checked after each row.DEFERRABLE
constraints set to IMMEDIATE
(INITIALLY IMMEDIATE
- which is the default - or via SET CONSTRAINTS
) are checked after each statement.
There are limitations, though. Foreign key constraints require non-deferrable constraints on the target column(s).
The referenced columns must be the columns of a non-deferrable unique or primary key constraint in the referenced table.
Workaround
Updated after question update.
Assuming "sequence"
is never negative in normal operation, you can avoid unique errors like this:
UPDATE tbl SET "sequence" = ("sequence" + 1) * -1
WHERE "CableLine" = 2;
UPDATE tbl SET "sequence" = "sequence" * -1
WHERE "CableLine" = 2
AND "sequence" < 0;
With a non-deferrable constraint (default), you have to run two separate commands to make this work. Run the commands in quick succession to avoid concurrency issues. The solution is obviously not fit for heavy concurrent load.
Aside:
It's OK to skip the key word AS
for table aliases, but it's discouraged to do the same for column aliases.
I'd advice not to use SQL key words as identifiers, even though that's allowed.
Avoid the problem
On a bigger scale or for databases with heavy concurrent load, it's wiser to use a serial
column for relative ordering of rows. You can generate numbers starting with 1 and no gaps with the window function row_number()
in a view or query. Consider this related answer:
- Is it possible to use a PG sequence on a per record label?
UPDATE
with ORDER BY
:
UPDATE thetable
SET columntoupdate=yourvalue
FROM (SELECT rowid, 'thevalue' AS yourvalue
FROM thetable
ORDER BY rowid
) AS t1
WHERE thetable.rowid=t1.rowid;
UPDATE
order is still random (I guess), but the values supplied to UPDATE
command are matched by thetable.rowid=t1.rowid
condition. So what I am doing is, first selecting the 'updated' table in memory, it's named t1
in the code above, and then making my physical table to look same as t1
. And the update order does not matter anymore.
As for true ordered UPDATE
, I don't think it could be useful to anyone.