An identity column is a special column that is generated automatically from an implicit sequence. It can be used to generate key values.
To create an identity column, use the GENERATED ...
AS IDENTITY
clause in CREATE TABLE
, for example:
CREATE TABLE people (
id bigint GENERATED ALWAYS AS IDENTITY,
...,
);
or alternatively
CREATE TABLE people (
id bigint GENERATED BY DEFAULT AS IDENTITY,
...,
);
See CREATE TABLE for more details.
If an INSERT
command is executed on the table with the
identity column and no value is explicitly specified for the identity
column, then a value generated by the implicit sequence is inserted. For
example, with the above definitions and assuming additional appropriate
columns, writing
INSERT INTO people (name, address) VALUES ('A', 'foo'); INSERT INTO people (name, address) VALUES ('B', 'bar');
would generate values for the id
column starting at 1
and result in the following table data:
id | name | address ----+------+--------- 1 | A | foo 2 | B | bar
Alternatively, the keyword DEFAULT
can be specified in
place of a value to explicitly request the sequence-generated value, like
INSERT INTO people (id, name, address) VALUES (DEFAULT, 'C', 'baz');
Similarly, the keyword DEFAULT
can be used in
UPDATE
commands.
Thus, in many ways, an identity column behaves like a column with a default value.
The clauses ALWAYS
and BY DEFAULT
in
the column definition determine how explicitly user-specified values are
handled in INSERT
and UPDATE
commands. In an INSERT
command, if
ALWAYS
is selected, a user-specified value is only
accepted if the INSERT
statement specifies
OVERRIDING SYSTEM VALUE
. If BY
DEFAULT
is selected, then the user-specified value takes
precedence. Thus, using BY DEFAULT
results in a
behavior more similar to default values, where the default value can be
overridden by an explicit value, whereas ALWAYS
provides
some more protection against accidentally inserting an explicit value.
The data type of an identity column must be one of the data types supported by sequences. (See CREATE SEQUENCE.) The properties of the associated sequence may be specified when creating an identity column (see CREATE TABLE) or changed afterwards (see ALTER TABLE).
An identity column is automatically marked as NOT NULL
.
An identity column, however, does not guarantee uniqueness. (A sequence
normally returns unique values, but a sequence could be reset, or values
could be inserted manually into the identity column, as discussed above.)
Uniqueness would need to be enforced using a PRIMARY KEY
or UNIQUE
constraint.
In table inheritance hierarchies, identity columns and their properties in
a child table are independent of those in its parent tables. A child table
does not inherit identity columns or their properties automatically from
the parent. During INSERT
or UPDATE
,
a column is treated as an identity column if that column is an identity
column in the table named in the statement, and the corresponding identity
properties are applied.
Partitions inherit identity columns from the partitioned table. They cannot have their own identity columns. The properties of a given identity column are consistent across all the partitions in the partition hierarchy.