pg_trigger
The catalog pg_trigger
stores triggers on tables
and views.
See CREATE TRIGGER
for more information.
Table 52.56. pg_trigger
Columns
Column Type Description |
---|
Row identifier |
The table this trigger is on |
Parent trigger that this trigger is cloned from, zero if not a clone; this happens when partitions are created or attached to a partitioned table. |
Trigger name (must be unique among triggers of same table) |
The function to be called |
Bit mask identifying trigger firing conditions |
Controls in which session_replication_role modes
the trigger fires.
|
True if trigger is internally generated (usually, to enforce
the constraint identified by |
The table referenced by a referential integrity constraint |
The index supporting a unique, primary key, referential integrity, or exclusion constraint |
The |
True if constraint trigger is deferrable |
True if constraint trigger is initially deferred |
Number of argument strings passed to trigger function |
Column numbers, if trigger is column-specific; otherwise an empty array |
Argument strings to pass to trigger, each NULL-terminated |
Expression tree (in |
|
|
Currently, column-specific triggering is supported only for
UPDATE
events, and so tgattr
is relevant
only for that event type. tgtype
might
contain bits for other event types as well, but those are presumed
to be table-wide regardless of what is in tgattr
.
When tgconstraint
is nonzero,
tgconstrrelid
, tgconstrindid
,
tgdeferrable
, and tginitdeferred
are
largely redundant with the referenced pg_constraint
entry.
However, it is possible for a non-deferrable trigger to be associated
with a deferrable constraint: foreign key constraints can have some
deferrable and some non-deferrable triggers.
pg_class.relhastriggers
must be true if a relation has any triggers in this catalog.